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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Help with awk'ing formatting this Post 302825001 by newbie_01 on Sunday 23rd of June 2013 01:22:10 AM
Old 06-23-2013
Help with awk'ing formatting this

Hi,

I have a file below that I am wanting to awk. The lines of relevance are lines 7 and 9

Code:
$ nl /tmp/x

     1  ADRCI: Release 11.2.0.3.0 - Production on Sun Jun 23 17:01:02 2013

     2  Copyright (c) 1982, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates.  All rights reserved.

     3  ADR base = "/u01/app/grid"
     4  adrci> adrci>
     5  ADR Home = /u01/app/grid/diag/asm/user_grid/host_3970975860_80:
     6  *************************************************************************
     7  ADRID                SHORTP_POLICY        LONGP_POLICY         LAST_MOD_TIME                            LAST_AUTOPRG_TIME                        LAST_MANUPRG_TIME                        ADRDIR_VERSION       ADRSCHM_VERSION      ADRSCHMV_SUMMARY     ADRALERT_VERSION     CREATE_TIME             
     8  -------------------- -------------------- -------------------- ---------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- -------------------- -------------------- -------------------- -------------------- ----------------------------------------
     9  1459756123           720                  8760                 2011-05-16 18:00:59.590482 +12:00                                                                                          1                    2                    80                   1                    2011-05-16 18:00:59.590482 +12:00
    10  1 rows fetched

    11  adrci>
$

At the moment what I am doing is re-directing both lines to a file each using sed. Is there any way that I can awk it right away once I re-direct the output to a file?

The line that is important is line 7, I was hoping I can reference each field based on each heading. For example, if want to be able access SHORTP_POLICY and shows 720 :-)

I do not have much control on how the output looks like and I hope it stays this way even on future Oracle upgrades ... grrr ....

FYI, shell that I am using is ksh.

Any feedback much appreciated. Thanks in advance.
 

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PYP(1)							      General Commands Manual							    PYP(1)

NAME
pyp - The Pyed Piper: A Modern Python Alternative to awk, sed and Other Unix Text Manipulation Utilities SYNOPSIS
pyp [options] files ... DESCRIPTION
pyp, the Pyed Piper, is a command line tool for text manipulation. It is similar to awk and sed in functionality, but its subcommands are Python based, and thus more familiar to many programmers. It can operate both on a per-line base and on the complete input stream. Different features can be pipelined in a single command by using the pipe character familiar from shell commands. pyp backs up its input for reruns with modified commands, and can save commands as macros. On the downside, the rerun feature makes it unsuitable for continuous pipe operation. OPTIONS
These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is included below. For a complete description, use --manual. -h, --help Show this help message and exit. -m, --manual Prints out extended help. -l, --macro_list Lists all available macros. -s MACRO_SAVE_NAME, --macro_save=MACRO_SAVE_NAME Saves current command as macro. use "#" for adding comments EXAMPLE: pyp -s "great_macro # prints first letter" "p[1]". -f MACRO_FIND_NAME, --macro_find=MACRO_FIND_NAME Searches for macros with keyword or user name. -d MACRO_DELETE_NAME, --macro_delete=MACRO_DELETE_NAME Deletes specified public macro. -g, --macro_group Specify group macros for save and delete; default is user. -t TEXT_FILE, --text_file=TEXT_FILE Specify text file to load. For advanced users, you should typically cat a file into pyp. -x, --execute Execute all commands. -c, --turn_off_color Prints raw, uncolored output. -u, --unmodified_config Prints out generic PypCustom.py config file. -b BLANK_INPUTS, --blank_inputs=BLANK_INPUTS Generate this number of blank input lines; useful for generating numbered lists with variable 'n'. -n, --no_input Use with command that generates output with no input; same as --dummy_input 1. -k, --keep_false Print blank lines for lines that test as False. default is to filter out False lines from the output. -r, --rerun Rerun based on automatically cached data from the last run. Use this after executing "pyp", pasting input into the shell, and hitting CTRL-D. SEE ALSO
awk(1), grep(1), sed(1). AUTHOR
pyp was written by Toby Rosen <tobyrosen@gmail.com>. This manual page was written by Khalid El Fathi <khalid@elfathi.fr>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others). March 19, 2012 PYP(1)
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