I have text files, fields separated by commas, and there are 115 fields.
I need to use nawk to look at each line, if field $4==10, then count how many times the combination of field $5 and field $11 occur in the file.
I tried the following:
Code:
nawk -F, '{if($4==10){tg[$5]++;cd[$11]++,tgcd[$5 $11]++}}END{for(i in tgcd){print i"\t"tgcd[i]}}' *20130226093*
With the following error:
Code:
nawk: syntax error at source line 1
context is
>>> {if($4==10){tg[$5]++;cd[$11]++, <<<
nawk: illegal statement at source line 1
I am way out of my depth here.
Last edited by Scrutinizer; 02-26-2013 at 03:28 PM..
Reason: extra code tags
I have two files. File A and File B.
File A has two fields separated by comma
352020252365988, 652020100572356
546876543215667, 652065465654686
...
File B has many Fields separate by spaces
Date Name 352020252365988 Reference
Date2 Name2 546876543215667 Reference
I want to... (4 Replies)
I need help counting the fields and field separators using Nawk.
I have a file that has multiple lines on it and I need to read the file 1 at a time and then count the fields and field separators and then store those numbers in variables. I then need to delete the first 5 fields and the blank... (3 Replies)
I've written a script to count the total size of SAN storage LUNs, and also display the LUN sizes.
From server to server, the LUNs sizes differ.
What I want to do is count the occurances as they occur and change.
These are the LUN sizes:
49.95
49.95
49.95
49.95
49.95
49.95
49.95
49.95... (2 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I wanted to count the number of records for a particular field of a file. whose fields are separated by comma","
I fI use this command.
cat "filename" cut -sd "," -f13 | wc -l
This shows all the lines count including the blank values for the field number 13. I wanted to count... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have a text file with n lines in the following format (9 column fields):
Example:
contig00012 149606 G C 49 68 60 18 c$cccccacccccccccc^c
I need to count the number of lower-case and upper-case occurences in column 9, respectively, of the... (3 Replies)
Hi;
i have a file and i want to get;
- If the last word in line 14 is NOT equal to "Set."; then print 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th values of 3rd line.
and my code is:
nawk 'NR==14 {if ($NF!="Set.") (NR==3{print $2,$3,$4,$5}) }' file.txt
but no result?? :confused::(:confused::( (4 Replies)
Thanks for giving your time and effort to answer questions and helping newbies like me understand awk.
I have a huge file, millions of lines, so perl takes quite a bit of time, I'd like to convert these perl one liners to awk.
Basically I'd like all lines with ISA sandwiched between... (9 Replies)
Input:
A|1
B|2
C|3
D|4
Output:
A+B|3
A+C|4
A+D|5
B+C|5
B+D|6
C+D|7
A+B+C|6
A+B+D|7
A+C+D|8
B+C+D|9
A+B+C+D|10
I only managed to get the output for pairs of $1 values (i.e. combination of length 2): (4 Replies)
I used the following one liner (obtained from an old thread on this site) to look for RSS size of a process and convert it to Mb (I am using process nfsmapid as an example):
ps -eo rss,args | nawk 'END { print s/1024, "Mb" } /nfsmapid/ { s += $1 }'
I found that the RSS Mb displayed was always... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: thaebich
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
ucblinks
ucblinks(1B) SunOS/BSD Compatibility Package Commands ucblinks(1B)NAME
ucblinks - adds /dev entries to give SunOS 4.x compatible names to SunOS 5.x devices
SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/ucblinks [-e rulebase] [-r rootdir]
DESCRIPTION
ucblinks creates symbolic links under the /dev directory for devices whose SunOS 5.x names differ from their SunOS 4.x names. Where possi-
ble, these symbolic links point to the device's SunOS 5.x name rather than to the actual /devices entry.
ucblinks does not remove unneeded compatibility links; these must be removed by hand.
ucblinks should be called each time the system is reconfiguration-booted, after any new SunOS 5.x links that are needed have been created,
since the reconfiguration may have resulted in more compatibility names being needed.
In releases prior to SunOS 5.4, ucblinks used a nawk rule-base to construct the SunOS 4.x compatible names. ucblinks no longer uses nawk
for the default operation, although nawk rule-bases can still be specifed with the -e option. The nawk rule-base equivalent to the SunOS
5.4 default operation can be found in /usr/ucblib/ucblinks.awk.
OPTIONS-e rulebase Specify rulebase as the file containing nawk(1) pattern-action statements.
-r rootdir Specify rootdir as the directory under which dev and devices will be found, rather than the standard root directory /.
FILES
/usr/ucblib/ucblinks.awk sample rule-base for compatibility links
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWscpu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSOdevlinks(1M), disks(1M), ports(1M), tapes(1M), attributes(5)SunOS 5.10 13 Apr 1994 ucblinks(1B)