Thanks for your suggestion, but I did get it solved:
I tried this:
egrep worked for me don't know why grep didn't.
I think you're kidding yourself.
The grep and egrep utilities should treat these expressions the same way. We need to see how you are setting bpx (or in your earlier example var) and a sample of the lines in your input file that you expect the expression to match to figure our what is really going on here.
And, for the record:
is much more efficiently written as:
I need to pass a parameter that will then be grepped.
I need it to grep /paramater and then have a space
so if 123 was passed my grep would be grep '/123 ' sample.log
this works fine from the command line
but when i try and set it searchThis="/$2 "
and then run grep $searchThis... (6 Replies)
Hello,
I would like for the user to input the date for a particular log file, then have the input sent to a variable, which is then used via grep to extra the logs for the specific date the user request.
I did some searching, but I still don't understand why I'm not seeing any result.
... (4 Replies)
Hi
I am having hard time getting this right and need some help. I Have several log files, and everyone contains the following 3 lines at the end:
4 ETW000 Disconnected from database.
4 ETW000 End of Transport (0000).
4 ETW000 date&time: 13.01.2011 - 08:03:28
I need to capture the value... (7 Replies)
I have a list of fields that I want to check a file for, returning that field if it not found at all in the file. Is there a way to do a grep -lc and return the passed variable too rather then just the count?
I am doing some crappy work-around now but I was not sure how to regrep this for :0 so... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a text file which looks like this:
computer programming
systems engineering
I want to get rid of these square brackets and also the text that is inside these brackets. So that my final text file looks like this:
computer programming
systems engineering
I am using... (3 Replies)
Hello Team,
I have a script which will grep for a time from a file. I have following code to grep for a time in a file.
node=`hostname`
current_date=`date`
file11=weblogic.log
next_date=`date '+%b %e, %Y'`
next_date_time11=`grep -i "${#next_date}" ${file11}| tail -1 | awk... (3 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I want to set a variable which happend to have square brackets in them. I tried multiple ways that is by escaping it with quotes (both single and double ) but it didn't help.
All I want is:
set x = slicearray.slice\.post
My failed attempts were:
set x = "slicearray.slice\.post"... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
When i am logged into a server , i am able to assign grep value to a variable as follows.
VAR=`grep 'Listener stopped' /logs/perf.log`
However, when i log out of the server, and try to execute the following command by first SSHing into server, it throws error.
$ VAR=`ssh Server... (4 Replies)
I have a lot of files with keywords and unique names. I'm using a shell script to refer to a simple pattern file with comma separated values in order to match on certain keywords. The problem is that I don't understand how to handle the wildcard values when I want to skip over the unique names.
... (5 Replies)
Im trying to search for a single variable in the first field and from that output use awk to extract out the lines that contain a value less than a value stored in another variable. Both the variables are associated with each other.
Any guidance is appreciated.
File that contains the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ncwxpanther
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
plan9-cat
CAT(1) General Commands Manual CAT(1)NAME
cat, read, nobs - catenate files
SYNOPSIS
cat [ file ... ]
read [ -m ] [ -n nline ] [ file ... ]
nobs [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Cat reads each file in sequence and writes it on the standard output. Thus
cat file
prints a file and
cat file1 file2 >file3
concatenates the first two files and places the result on the third.
If no file is given, cat reads from the standard input. Output is buffered in blocks matching the input.
Read copies to standard output exactly one line from the named file, default standard input. It is useful in interactive rc(1) scripts.
The -m flag causes it to continue reading and writing multiple lines until end of file; -n causes it to read no more than nline lines.
Read always executes a single write for each line of input, which can be helpful when preparing input to programs that expect line-at-a-
time data. It never reads any more data from the input than it prints to the output.
Nobs copies the named files to standard output except that it removes all backspace characters and the characters that precede them. It is
useful to use as $PAGER with the Unix version of man(1) when run inside a win (see acme(1)) window.
SOURCE
/src/cmd/cat.c
/src/cmd/read.c
/bin/nobs
SEE ALSO cp(1)DIAGNOSTICS
Read exits with status eof on end of file or, in the -n case, if it doesn't read nlines lines.
BUGS
Beware of and which destroy input files before reading them.
CAT(1)