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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Write out specific data from log to a new file Post 302845747 by batka on Thursday 22nd of August 2013 07:44:26 AM
Old 08-22-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by rdcwayx
Ok, for example, you have a gz log file named access.2013-08-13.log.gz

You save below line in a script file name batka.sh

Code:
cat batka.sh

gzcat $1|awk '/Received XML TextMessage/{print RS s RS $0}{s=$0}' RS="2013-"

then you run below command:
Code:
chmod +x batka.sh
./batka.sh access.2013-08-13.log.gz

then you should get the output. If you still don't get it, then you have to learn by yourself to understand how shell programming is.
I got this now:
Code:
#!/usr/bin/awk -f

BEGIN { FS=":|," }
FNR==NR && /INFO/ {
        a[$0,$1,$2,$3,$4,$5,$6,$7,$8,$9,$10]++ ;
        next

}

END

{
        for (i in a) print i
}

This prints the line where INFO message presents, i need to print the XML messages too where same sessionID presents as the INFO lines GId+UId into a new file named by sessionID. Every pair of message (INFO contained log line + XML message) into a new file.

Last edited by Franklin52; 08-22-2013 at 09:03 AM.. Reason: Please use code tags
 

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IPTABLES-XML(8) 														   IPTABLES-XML(8)

NAME
iptables-xml -- Convert iptables-save format to XML SYNOPSIS
iptables-xml [-c] [-v] DESCRIPTION
iptables-xml is used to convert the output of iptables-save into an easily manipulatable XML format to STDOUT. Use I/O-redirection pro- vided by your shell to write to a file. -c, --combine combine consecutive rules with the same matches but different targets. iptables does not currently support more than one target per match, so this simulates that by collecting the targets from consecutive iptables rules into one action tag, but only when the rule matches are identical. Terminating actions like RETURN, DROP, ACCEPT and QUEUE are not combined with subsequent targets. -v, --verbose Output xml comments containing the iptables line from which the XML is derived iptables-xml does a mechanistic conversion to a very expressive xml format; the only semantic considerations are for -g and -j targets in order to discriminate between <call> <goto> and <nane-of-target> as it helps xml processing scripts if they can tell the difference between a target like SNAT and another chain. Some sample output is: <iptables-rules> <table name="mangle"> <chain name="PREROUTING" policy="ACCEPT" packet-count="63436" byte-count="7137573"> <rule> <conditions> <match> <p>tcp</p> </match> <tcp> <sport>8443</sport> </tcp> </conditions> <actions> <call> <check_ip/> </call> <ACCEPT/> </actions> </rule> </chain> </table> </iptables-rules> Conversion from XML to iptables-save format may be done using the iptables.xslt script and xsltproc, or a custom program using libxsltproc or similar; in this fashion: xsltproc iptables.xslt my-iptables.xml | iptables-restore BUGS
None known as of iptables-1.3.7 release AUTHOR
Sam Liddicott <azez@ufomechanic.net> SEE ALSO
iptables-save(8), iptables-restore(8), iptables(8) Jul 16, 2007 IPTABLES-XML(8)
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