Hello Everyone
In my shell script, I am retrieving the cluster ID and node number of an LPAR using the following command -
lsclcfg -l
This command's output looks as follows -
CLUSTER_NAME CLUSTER_ID NODE_NR
sch1h004 6104567 3
I want to store only the... (3 Replies)
Friends,
I need help with the following in UNIX.
Merge all csv files in one folder considering only 1 header row and ignoring header of all other files.
FYI - All files are in same format and contains same headers.
Thank you (4 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I have a file like:
mainfile.txt:
-------------
file1 abc def xyz
file1 aaa pqr xyz
file2 lmn ghi xyz
file2 bbb tuv xyz
I need output having two files file1 and file2.
file1:
------
Name State Country
abc def xyz
aaa pqr xyz
file2: (3 Replies)
Hi! Is there a way to append column and row header to a file in awk script.
For example if I have
Jane F 39 manager
Carlos M 40 system administrator
Sam F 20 programmer
and I want it to be
# name gend age occup
1 Jane F 39 manager
2 Carlos M ... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
File contains header row.. we need to exclude the header row...no need to validate the first row in the file.
Data in the file should take valid data(two columns)..we need to exclude the more than two columns in the file except the first line.
email|firstname
a|123|100
b|345... (4 Replies)
I have a script that is inventorying (not sure if thats a word) my environment.
It goes out and pulls Hostname OS, IP, and ENV (dev, prod, etc)..then spits all that to a logfile
At the top of my script i have a check to see if the logfile exist.
] || touch $LOGFILE && echo "ENV" "\t"... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have an input like this
1 2 3 4
2 3 4 5
4 5 6 7
I would like to count the no. of columns and print a header with a prefix "Col".
I would also like to count the no. of rows and print as first column with each line number with a prefix "Row"
So, my output would be
... (2 Replies)
Hi There!
I am saving the file count of all files in a directory to an output file using:
wc -l * > FileCount.txt
I get:
114 G4SXORD
3 G4SXORH
0 G4SXORP
117 total
But this count includes header and footer. I want to subtract 2 from the count and get
... (7 Replies)
Hi,
So I am trying to print the first row(header) first column alongwith the matched value. But I am not sure how do I print the same, by matching a pattern located in the file
eg
File contents
Name Place
Jim NY
Jill NJ
Cathy CA
Sam TX
Daniel FL
And what I want is... (2 Replies)
Hi ALL,
We have requirement in a file, i have multiple rows.
Example below:
Input file rows
01,1,102319,0,0,70,26,U,1,331,000000113200000011920000001212
01,1,102319,0,1,80,20,U,1,241,00000059420000006021
I need my output file should be as mentioned below. Last field should split for... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kotra
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
test::synopsis
Test::Synopsis(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::Synopsis(3pm)NAME
Test::Synopsis - Test your SYNOPSIS code
SYNOPSIS
# xt/synopsis.t (with Module::Install::AuthorTests)
use Test::Synopsis;
all_synopsis_ok();
# Or, run safe without Test::Synopsis
use Test::More;
eval "use Test::Synopsis";
plan skip_all => "Test::Synopsis required for testing" if $@;
all_synopsis_ok();
DESCRIPTION
Test::Synopsis is an (author) test module to find .pm or .pod files under your lib directory and then make sure the example snippet code in
your SYNOPSIS section passes the perl compile check.
Note that this module only checks the perl syntax (by wrapping the code with "sub") and doesn't actually run the code.
Suppose you have the following POD in your module.
=head1 NAME
Awesome::Template - My awesome template
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Awesome::Template;
my $template = Awesome::Template->new;
$tempalte->render("template.at");
=head1 DESCRIPTION
An user of your module would try copy-paste this synopsis code and find that this code doesn't compile because there's a typo in your
variable name $tempalte. Test::Synopsis will catch that error before you ship it.
VARIABLE DECLARATIONS
Sometimes you might want to put some undeclared variables in your synopsis, like:
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Data::Dumper::Names;
print Dumper($scalar, @array, \%hash);
This assumes these variables like $scalar are defined elsewhere in module user's code, but Test::Synopsis, by default, will complain that
these variables are not declared:
Global symbol "$scalar" requires explicit package name at ...
In this case, you can add the following POD sequence elsewhere in your POD:
=for test_synopsis
no strict 'vars'
Or more explicitly,
=for test_synopsis
my($scalar, @array, %hash);
Test::Synopsis will find these "=for" blocks and these statements are prepended before your SYNOPSIS code when being evaluated, so those
variable name errors will go away, without adding unnecessary bits in SYNOPSIS which might confuse users.
AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <miyagawa@bulknews.net>
Goro Fuji blogged about the original idea at <http://d.hatena.ne.jp/gfx/20090224/1235449381> based on the testing code taken from
Test::Weaken.
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Test::Pod, Test::UseAllModules, Test::Inline, Test::Snippet
perl v5.10.1 2009-07-06 Test::Synopsis(3pm)