Anyway, you use awk in a shell script the same way as you do that in a shell.
In your code like example, you used -f to give awk a script file. The last argument is always the file name of the file to be processed (for example data, logs...).
I am not sure if this hits what you are looking for - else a bit more detailed explanation could help, or maybe another poster understands it, sorry.
Hi, I am trying to write a ftp script which will read a file for filenames and ftp those files to another server. Here's my ftp script, but it's scanning the current directory for file names.
My question is how can I pass multiple files (these files will have the name of data files that need to... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
I wish to automate the unix command 'su' through a shell script.
I would like to pass the content of a file as password to 'su' command.
My script is as below,
#! /bin/sh
su userA
while read line
do
rpm -ivh $line
done < pwd.txt
where pwd.txt contains the password of... (6 Replies)
I have two files.
Fileone contains
text string one
text string two
text string three
Filetwo contains
Name:
Address:
Summary:
Name:
Address:
Summary:
Name:
Address:
Summary:
I would like to use sed to read each line of file one and put it at the end of the summary line of file... (3 Replies)
Being new to awk I have a really basic question. It just has to be in the archives but it didn't bite me when I went looking for it.
I've written an awk script, placed it in a file, added the "#!/usr/bin/awk -f" at the top of the script and away I go. "% myAwk <inputfile>" gives me exactly what... (2 Replies)
1) I wrote a script and gave the desired permissions using "chmod 755 scriptname". Now if i edit the script file, why do i need to set the permission again? Didn't i set the permission attribute.. or if i edit the file, does the inode number of file changes?
2) I am running my unix on a server... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I want to write a small code in which script changes command line input to some form.
Example
script.sh a1 a2 a3 a4 .....
output should be "a1|a2|a3|....."
Number of inputs in command line can be any variable (2 Replies)
I've got a file that looks like this (spaces before first entries intentional):
12345650-000005000GL140227 ANNUAL HELC FEE EN
22345650-000005000GL140227 ANNUAL HELC FEE EN
32345650-000005000GL140227 ANNUAL HELC FEE EN
I want to read through the file line by line,... (6 Replies)
Team ,
I am trying to write a case condition for database backups.But I am unable to make the script to read input from command line .
while true ;do
read -p "Do You Wish To Take Database Backup ?? " yn
case $yn in
*) echo " YES take backup ";;
*) echo " NO BACKUP " ;;
... (9 Replies)
I have files named with different prefixes. From each I want to extract the first line containing a specific string, and then print that line along with the prefix.
I've tried to do this with a while loop, but instead of printing the prefix I print the first line of the file twice.
Files:... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pathunkathunk
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
ps2epsi
PS2EPSI(1) Ghostscript Tools PS2EPSI(1)NAME
ps2epsi - generate conforming Encapsulated PostScript
SYNOPSIS
ps2epsi infile.ps [ outfile.epsi ] (Unix)
ps2epsi infile.ps [ outfile.epi ] (DOS)
DESCRIPTION
ps2epsi uses gs(1) to process a PostScript(tm) file and generate as output a new file which conforms to Adobe's Encapsulated PostScript
Interchange (EPSI) format. EPSI is a special form of encapsulated PostScript (EPS) which adds to the beginning of the file in the form of
PostScript comments a bitmapped version of the final displayed page. Programs which understand EPSI (usually word processors or DTP pro-
grams) can use this bitmap to give a preview version on screen of the PostScript. The displayed quality is often not very good (e.g., low
resolution, no colours), but the final printed version uses the real PostScript, and thus has the normal PostScript quality.
USAGE
On Unix systems invoke ps2epsi like this:
ps2epsi infile.ps [ outfile.epsi ]
where "infile.ps" is the input file and "outfile.epsi" is the resulting EPSI file. If the output filename is omitted, it is generated from
the input filename. When a standard extension (".ps", ".cps", ".eps" or ".epsf") is used, it is replaced with the output extension
".epsi". On DOS systems the command is:
ps2epsi infile.ps outfile.epi
where "infile.ps" is the original PostScript file, and "outfile.epi" is the name of the output file.
LIMITATIONS
Not every PostScript file can be encapsulated successfully, because there are restrictions on what PostScript constructs a correct encapsu-
lated file may contain. ps2epsi does a little extra work to try to help encapsulation, and it automatically calculates the bounding box
required for all encapsulated PostScript files, so most of the time it does a pretty good job. There are certain to be cases, however,
where the encapsulation does not work because of the content of the original PostScript file.
COMPATIBILITY
The Framemaker DTP system is one application which understands EPSI files, and ps2epsi has been tested on a number of PostScript diagrams
from a variety of sources, using Framemaker 3.0 on a Sun workstation. Framemaker on other platforms should be able to use these files,
although I have not been able to test this.
FILES
ps2epsi Unix shell script
ps2epsi.bat DOS batch file
ps2epsi.ps the Ghostscript program which does the work
SEE ALSO
gs (1)
VERSION
This document was last revised for Ghostscript version 8.63. However, the content may be obsolete, or inconsistent with ps2epsi.txt.
AUTHOR
George Cameron
8.63 1 August 2008 PS2EPSI(1)