scriptscript, did you try to do it yourself? With a little bit of research on how to open files and how to use variables in perl you could do it yourself:
i have a file with some 1000 entries it will contain entries like
1000,ram
2000,pankaj
1001,rahim
1000,ram
2532,govind
2000,pankaj
3000,venkat
2532,govind
what i want is i want to extract only the distinct rows from this file
so my output should contain only
1000,ram... (2 Replies)
I have data like this:
It's sorted by the 2nd field (TID).
envoy,90000000000000634600010001,04/11/2008,23:19:27,RB00266,0015,DETAIL,ERROR,
envoy,90000000000000634600010001,04/12/2008,04:23:45,RB00266,0015,DETAIL,ERROR,... (1 Reply)
hey all,
I need some help.
I have a text file with names in it.
My target is that if a particular pattern exists in that file more than once..then i want to rename all the occurences of that pattern by alternate patterns..
for e.g if i have PATTERN occuring 5 times then i want to... (3 Replies)
I have a log file with posts looking like this:
--
Messages can be delivered by different systems at different times. The id number is used to sort out duplicate messages. What I need is to strip the arrival time from each post, sort posts by id number, and reattach arrival time to respective... (2 Replies)
Hi Experts,
Please check the following new requirement. I got data like the following in a file.
FILE_HEADER
01cbbfde7898410| 3477945| home| 1
01cbc275d2c122| 3478234| WORK| 1
01cbbe4362743da| 3496386| Rich Spare| 1
01cbc275d2c122| 3478234| WORK| 1
This is pipe separated file with... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file that I want to change the format of. It is a large file in rows but I want it to be comma separated (comma then a space).
The current file looks like this:
HI, Joe, Bob, Jack, Jack
After I would want to remove any duplicates so it would look like this:
HI, Joe,... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I am merging files coming from 2 different systems ,while doing that I am getting duplicates entries in the merged file
I,01,000131,764,2,4.00
I,01,000131,765,2,4.00
I,01,000131,772,2,4.00
I,01,000131,773,2,4.00
I,01,000168,762,2,2.00
I,01,000168,763,2,2.00... (5 Replies)
i hav two files like
i want to remove/delete all the duplicate lines in file2 which are viz unix,unix2,unix3.I have tried previous post also,but in that complete line must be similar.In this case i have to verify first column only regardless what is the content in succeeding columns. (3 Replies)
Hello !
I'm quite new to linux but haven't found a script to do this task, unfortunately my knowledge is quite limited on shellscripts...
Could you guys help me removing the duplicate lines of a file, based only on a single "column"?
For example:
M202034357;01/2008;J30RJ021;Ciclo 01... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rufinofr
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
man.conf
MAN.CONF(5) BSD File Formats Manual MAN.CONF(5)NAME
man.conf --man(1) and manpath(1) configuration files
DESCRIPTION
The man.conf file is used to configure the manual search path, locales, and utility set for man(1) and its related utilities. During ini-
tialization, man(1) reads the configuration files located at /usr/local/etc/man.d/*.conf and /etc/man.conf.
The files contained in /usr/local/etc/man.d/*.conf are intended to be used by the ports(7) system for extending the manual set to support
additional paths and locales. /etc/man.conf is intended to be used by the local administrator to set additional policy.
Currently supported configuration variables include:
MANCONFIG Overrides the default location to import additional manual configuration files. Defaults to /usr/local/etc/man.d/*.conf.
MANPATH Adds the specified directory to the manual search path.
MANLOCALE Indicates support is available for the given locale.
For pages in a given language, overriding the default toolset for display is supported via the following definitions:
EQN_LANG
NROFF_LANG
PIC_LANG
TBL_LANG
TROFF_LANG
REFER_LANG
VGRIND_LANG
See the EXAMPLES section for how to use these variables.
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
The parser used for this utility is very basic and only supports comment characters (#) at the beginning of a line.
FILES
/etc/man.conf System configuration file.
/usr/local/etc/man.d/*.conf Local configuration files.
EXAMPLES
A perl port that needs to install additional manual pages outside of the default location could install a file in
/usr/local/etc/man.d/perl.conf with the following contents:
# Add perl man pages to search path
MANPATH /usr/local/lib/perl5/5.8.9/man
MANPATH /usr/local/lib/perl5/5.8.9/perl/man
A Japanese localization port could install a custom toolset and include a file in /usr/local/etc/man.d/ja-man-doc.conf with the following
contents:
# Setup Japanese toolset
MANLOCALE ja_JP.eucJP
EQN_JA /usr/local/bin/geqn
PIC_JA /usr/local/bin/gpic
TBL_JA /usr/local/bin/gtbl
NROFF_JA /usr/local/bin/groff -man -dlang=ja_JP.eucJP
TROFF_JA /usr/local/bin/groff -man -dlang=ja_JP.euc.jp
If the system administrator decides to override the LOCALBASE make(1) variable causing all ports(7) to be installed into /opt instead of
/usr/local, specifying the following in /etc/man.conf will accommodate this change:
# Look for additional configuration files
MANCONFIG /opt/etc/man.d/*.conf
SEE ALSO apropos(1), man(1), manpath(1), whatis(1)BSD June 3, 2011 BSD