Hi, try:
Only space (no newline) was used in the matching regex, because space was used to glue two lines together in the variable b The expression will never be on more that two lines and there cannot be two matches on a single line... The substitution (sub() ) is necessary for cases where a match occurs on a single line...
It is a bit much for a single line, so this may be more readable:
This should work with regular awk. With gawk <= version 3 try gawk --re-interval . With mawk it will not function because it cannot do {m,n} interval expressions, so in that case the regex would need to be expanded..
Last edited by Scrutinizer; 08-24-2013 at 07:25 AM..
Hi
I have a file (say 'file1')and I want to search for a first occurence of pattern (say 'ERROR') and print ten lines in the file below pattern. I have to code it in PERL and I am using Solaris 5.9.
I appreciate any help with code
Thanks
Ammu (6 Replies)
I have sql file containing lot of queries on different database table. I have to filter specific table queries.
Let say i need all queries of test1,test2,test3 along with four lines above it and sql queries can be multi lines or in single line.
Input file contains.
set INSERT_ID=1;
set... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have two files. 1st file has 1 column (huge file containing ~19200000 lines) and 2nd file has 2 columns (small file containing ~6000 lines).
#################################
huge_file.txt
a
a
ab
b
##################################
small_file.txt
a 1.5
b 2.5
ab ... (4 Replies)
The question is not as simple as the title... I have a file, it looks like this
<string name="string1">RZ-LED</string>
<string name="string2">2.0</string>
<string name="string2">Version 2.0</string>
<string name="string3">BP</string>
I would like to check for duplicate entries of... (11 Replies)
Hey :3
I am moving some stuff between different servers.
I do it like this:
scp -r -P 22 -i ~/new.ppk /var/www/bigfile.tar.gz user@123.123.123.123:/var/www/bigfile.tar.gz
Lets say, this file is 50 GiB. I would like to know, if its possible to split the file in different parts,... (2 Replies)
Hello everyone,
Maybe somebody could help me with an awk script.
I have this input (field separator is comma ","):
547894982,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1
234900027,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1
234900023,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,54,3,1,1
234900028,M|H|J,S|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1
234900030,M|N|J,U|F|P,98,101,0,1,1... (2 Replies)
Hi
I have a problem where I have a large amount of files that I need to scan and return a line and its following line, but only when the following line begins with a string.
String one - line one must begin with 'Bill'
String two - line two must begin with 'Jones'.
If these two... (7 Replies)
I'd like to ask people who knows bash scripting to write me a script which would open a specific screen and match lines.
Here is algorithm I'm thinking about.
Find SCREENS named name1, name2.... and nameX.
Open them one by one and type 'STATS'
Match last lines of the screen before command... (3 Replies)
Hi
I am using delimited sequence file. Delimter we are using is pipe .But for some of the records for one of the column the values are getting split into different lines as shown below
"113"|"0155"|"2016-04-27 07:59:04"|"1930"|"TEST@TEST"|"2016-04-27 11:04:04.357000000"|"BO"|"Hard... (13 Replies)
I cannot seem to get what should be a simple awk one-liner to work correctly and cannot figure out why. I would like to use patterns from a specific field in one file as regex to search for matching strings in the entire line ($0) of another file.
I would like to output the lines of File2 which... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jvoot
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
grep
grep(1) General Commands Manual grep(1)Name
grep, egrep, fgrep - search file for regular expression
Syntax
grep [option...] expression [file...]
egrep [option...] [expression] [file...]
fgrep [option...] [strings] [file]
Description
Commands of the family search the input files (standard input default) for lines matching a pattern. Normally, each line found is copied
to the standard output.
The command patterns are limited regular expressions in the style of which uses a compact nondeterministic algorithm. The command patterns
are full regular expressions. The command uses a fast deterministic algorithm that sometimes needs exponential space. The command pat-
terns are fixed strings. The command is fast and compact.
In all cases the file name is shown if there is more than one input file. Take care when using the characters $ * [ ^ | ( ) and in the
expression because they are also meaningful to the Shell. It is safest to enclose the entire expression argument in single quotes ' '.
The command searches for lines that contain one of the (new line-separated) strings.
The command accepts extended regular expressions. In the following description `character' excludes new line:
A followed by a single character other than new line matches that character.
The character ^ matches the beginning of a line.
The character $ matches the end of a line.
A . (dot) matches any character.
A single character not otherwise endowed with special meaning matches that character.
A string enclosed in brackets [] matches any single character from the string. Ranges of ASCII character codes may be abbreviated
as in `a-z0-9'. A ] may occur only as the first character of the string. A literal - must be placed where it can't be mistaken as
a range indicator.
A regular expression followed by an * (asterisk) matches a sequence of 0 or more matches of the regular expression. A regular
expression followed by a + (plus) matches a sequence of 1 or more matches of the regular expression. A regular expression followed
by a ? (question mark) matches a sequence of 0 or 1 matches of the regular expression.
Two regular expressions concatenated match a match of the first followed by a match of the second.
Two regular expressions separated by | or new line match either a match for the first or a match for the second.
A regular expression enclosed in parentheses matches a match for the regular expression.
The order of precedence of operators at the same parenthesis level is the following: [], then *+?, then concatenation, then | and new
line.
Options-b Precedes each output line with its block number. This is sometimes useful in locating disk block numbers by context.
-c Produces count of matching lines only.
-e expression
Uses next argument as expression that begins with a minus (-).
-f file Takes regular expression (egrep) or string list (fgrep) from file.
-i Considers upper and lowercase letter identical in making comparisons and only).
-l Lists files with matching lines only once, separated by a new line.
-n Precedes each matching line with its line number.
-s Silent mode and nothing is printed (except error messages). This is useful for checking the error status (see DIAGNOSTICS).
-v Displays all lines that do not match specified expression.
-w Searches for an expression as for a word (as if surrounded by `<' and `>'). For further information, see only.
-x Prints exact lines matched in their entirety only).
Restrictions
Lines are limited to 256 characters; longer lines are truncated.
Diagnostics
Exit status is 0 if any matches are found, 1 if none, 2 for syntax errors or inaccessible files.
See Alsoex(1), sed(1), sh(1)grep(1)