Hi,
I want to search for a return code of -3. Using grep "-3" *.* is giving a syntax error. Please suggest as to how can we search for this pattern using grep.
Thanks,
Krishna (2 Replies)
Hi gurus,
A file contains many words in format "ABC.XXXX.XXXX.X.GET.LOG" (X->varying). Now my shell script want this list (only words in formatABC.XXXX.XXXX.X.GET.LOG ) to continue the process. Pls help me.
Thanks,
Poova. (8 Replies)
Hello, I am trying to write a bash script which will give me the most negative number. Here is an example input:
Ce 3.7729752124 -4.9505731588 -4.1061257680
Ce -6.9156611391 -0.5991784762 7.3051893138
Ce 7.6489739875 0.3513020731 ... (6 Replies)
Hi folks...
Relatively new to scripting, but really struggling with something that will no doubt be second nature to most people on here:
Trying to get an exact match on $sub, where sub is an ip address.
subnet ()
{
clear
while true
do
... (18 Replies)
Hi,
I need to make a script to extract the number that are not in a file.
Example:
I have file-A that has 100000 (70000-799999) numbers. And a file-B with number that already are in the system. Now I need to know/get the numbers that are not in system.
I was thinking something like this:... (5 Replies)
I am totally unexperienced in writing scripts of any kind.
I am working on Mac OS X and would like to run a shell script to find files in a directory that do not conform to a specific naming convention and print to a text file in the same directory.
For example, I have a folder called... (9 Replies)
I am trying to find patterns in files using grep -l -e. I specifically am searching for abc. I want any file that has abc in it, but not just the letters abc. I am searching for a pattern a followed by b followed by c. I have tried egrep -l and also I have tried the following:
grep -el... (2 Replies)
I am trying to understand what the grep command in ubuntu is trying to do here.
The contents of my test file is given below
harsha@harsha-H67MA-USB3-B3:~/Documents$ cat data
abcd
efghi
jklmno
pqr
stuv
wxyz
When I grep for 3 dots (...) without the parenthesis as follows I would expect the... (4 Replies)
May somebody can give me a hint. I want to find using the command "grep" a certain word or term in a foo.txt file. By using the following command
grep -i word file1 > newfile4
it puts it into a new foo.txt-file, the n times it matches. Fine, it matches n times, but how could I specify where... (2 Replies)
i have a file where the hostnames and variables are in same line in below format, am able extract some part variables while otherlike subscriptions and handler is missing.
can you please correct me if grep is able to perform this ?
cat /tmp/test
localhost subscriptions='' handler="genie"... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: rakeshkumar
14 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
ne_addr_first
NE_ADDR_RESOLVE(3) neon API reference NE_ADDR_RESOLVE(3)NAME
ne_addr_resolve, ne_addr_result, ne_addr_first, ne_addr_next, ne_addr_error, ne_addr_destroy - functions to resolve hostnames to addresses
SYNOPSIS
#include <ne_socket.h>
ne_sock_addr *ne_addr_resolve(const char *hostname, int flags);
int ne_addr_result(const ne_sock_addr *addr);
const ne_inet_addr *ne_addr_first(ne_sock_addr *addr);
const ne_inet_addr *ne_addr_next(ne_sock_addr *addr);
char *ne_addr_error(const ne_sock_addr *addr, char *buffer, size_t bufsiz);
void ne_addr_destroy(ne_sock_addr *addr);
DESCRIPTION
The ne_addr_resolve function resolves the given hostname, returning an ne_sock_addr object representing the address (or addresses)
associated with the hostname. The flags parameter is currently unused, and must be passed as 0.
The hostname passed to ne_addr_resolve can be a DNS hostname (e.g. "www.example.com") or an IPv4 dotted quad (e.g. "192.0.34.72"); or, on
systems which support IPv6, an IPv6 hex address, which may be enclosed in brackets, e.g. "[::1]".
To determine whether the hostname was successfully resolved, the ne_addr_result function is used, which returns non-zero if an error
occurred. If an error did occur, the ne_addr_error function can be used, which will copy the error string into a given buffer (of size
bufsiz).
The functions ne_addr_first and ne_addr_next are used to retrieve the Internet addresses associated with an address object which has been
successfully resolved. ne_addr_first returns the first address; ne_addr_next returns the next address after the most recent call to
ne_addr_next or ne_addr_first, or NULL if there are no more addresses. The ne_inet_addr pointer returned by these functions can be passed
to ne_sock_connect to connect a socket.
After the address object has been used, it should be destroyed using ne_addr_destroy.
RETURN VALUE
ne_addr_resolve returns a pointer to an address object, and never NULL. ne_addr_error returns the buffer parameter .
EXAMPLES
The code below prints out the set of addresses associated with the hostname www.google.com.
ne_sock_addr *addr;
char buf[256];
addr = ne_addr_resolve("www.google.com", 0);
if (ne_addr_result(addr)) {
printf("Could not resolve www.google.com: %s
",
ne_addr_error(addr, buf, sizeof buf));
} else {
const ne_inet_addr *ia;
printf("www.google.com:");
for (ia = ne_addr_first(addr); ia != NULL; ia = ne_addr_next(addr)) {
printf(" %s", ne_iaddr_print(ia, buf, sizeof buf));
}
putchar('
');
}
ne_addr_destroy(addr);
SEE ALSO
ne_iaddr_print
AUTHOR
Joe Orton <neon@lists.manyfish.co.uk>
Author.
COPYRIGHT neon 0.29.6 3 May 2011 NE_ADDR_RESOLVE(3)