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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How do you tell awk to use different files? Post 302797601 by hanson44 on Monday 22nd of April 2013 11:29:00 PM
Old 04-23-2013
Quote:
the first block contains instructions for file1, the
second block contains instructions for the second file
As you suggest, it definitely does not work that way. Instead, it read the first file, then the second file, etc. and applies all blocks as each line is read. And you can have as many blocks as you want, has nothing to do with number of files.

getline is one way to read from different files, and perhaps accomplish what you want.
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RK(4)							     Kernel Interfaces Manual							     RK(4)

NAME
rk - RK-11/RK03 or RK05 disk DESCRIPTION
Rk? refers to an entire disk as a single sequentially-addressed file. Its 256-word blocks are numbered 0 to 4871. Minor device numbers are drive numbers on one controller. The rk files discussed above access the disk via the system's normal buffering mechanism and may be read and written without regard to physical disk records. There is also a `raw' interface which provides for direct transmission between the disk and the user's read or write buffer. A single read or write call results in exactly one I/O operation and therefore raw I/O is considerably more efficient when many words are transmitted. The names of the raw RK files begin with rrk and end with a number which selects the same disk as the corre- sponding rk file. In raw I/O the buffer must begin on a word boundary, and counts should be a multiple of 512 bytes (a disk block). Likewise seek calls should specify a multiple of 512 bytes. FILES
/dev/rk?, /dev/rrk? BUGS
In raw I/O read and write(2) truncate file offsets to 512-byte block boundaries, and write scribbles on the tail of incomplete blocks. Thus, in programs that are likely to access raw devices, read, write and lseek(2) should always deal in 512-byte multiples. RK(4)
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