Do i need to put it in my perl script?
Or it is a linux command?
Sorry for the silly question.
And I want to generate output file name according to the file in A
such as
perl script.pl A/1.txt B/name.txt > C/1.gff
---------- Post updated at 04:19 PM ---------- Previous update was at 04:16 PM ----------
Do i need to put it in my perl script?
Or it is a linux command?
Sorry for the silly question.
And I want to generate output file name according to the file in A
such as
perl script.pl A/1.txt B/name.txt > C/1.gff
Question for anyone that might be able to help:
My objective is to eheck if a file (a source file) exists in a directory. If it does then, I'd like to call an application (Informatica ETL file...not necessary to know) to run a program which extracts data and loads it into multiple targets.
... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I have thousands of files in a directory that have the following 2 formats:
289620178.aln
289620179.aln
289620180.aln
289620183.aln
289620184.aln
289620185.aln
289620186.aln
289620187.aln
289620188.aln
289620189.aln
289620190.aln
289620192.aln....
and:
alnCDS_1.fasta (1 Reply)
Hi,
I want to run a Perl script on multiple files, with same name ("Data.txt") but in different directories (eg : 2010_06_09_A/Data.txt, 2010_06_09_B/Data.txt).
I know how to run this perl script on files in the same directory like:
for $i in *.txt
do
perl myscript.pl $i > $i.new... (8 Replies)
I have a local linux machine in which the files are dumped by a remote ubuntu server. If the process in remote server has any problem then empty files are created in local machine. Is there any way using perl script to check if the empty files are being created and delete them and then run a shell... (2 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I have two types of files in a directory:
*.txt
*.info
I have a perl script that uses these two files as arguments, and produces a result file:
perl myScript.pl abc.txt abc.xml
How can I run this script (in a "for" loop , looping through both types of files)... (4 Replies)
How can I run the following command on multiple files and print out the corresponding multiple files.
perl script.pl genome.gff 1.txt > 1.gff
However, there are multiples files of 1.txt, from 1----100.txt
Thank you so much.
No duplicate posting! Continue here. (0 Replies)
How can I Run one script on multiple files and print out multiple files.
FOR EXAMPLE
i want to run script.pl on 100 files named 1.txt ....100.txt under same directory and print out corresponding file 1.gff ....100.gff.THANKS (4 Replies)
I have a script that I need to run on one file at a time. Unfortunately using for i in F* or cat F* is not possible. When I run the script using that, it jumbles the files and they are out of order. Here is the script:
gawk '{count++; keyword = $1}
END {
for (k in count)
{if (count == 2)... (18 Replies)
Hi All,
I would like to use a Perl (not Bash) script to work with multiple files of the same name in different directories (all in the same parent directory). I tried to create a loop to do so, but it isn't working.
My code so far:
while (defined(my $file = glob("./*/filename.txt")) or... (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
I've been having a look around to try and understand how i can do the below however havent come across anything that will work.
Basically I have a parser script that I need to run across all files in a certain directory, I can do this one my by one on comand line however I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mutley2202
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
binfmt.d
BINFMT.D(5) binfmt.d BINFMT.D(5)NAME
binfmt.d - Configure additional binary formats for executables at boot
SYNOPSIS
/etc/binfmt.d/*.conf
/run/binfmt.d/*.conf
/usr/lib/binfmt.d/*.conf
DESCRIPTION
At boot, systemd-binfmt.service(8) reads configuration files from the above directories to register in the kernel additional binary formats
for executables.
CONFIGURATION FORMAT
Each file contains a list of binfmt_misc kernel binary format rules. Consult binfmt_misc.txt[1] for more information on registration of
additional binary formats and how to write rules.
Empty lines and lines beginning with ; and # are ignored. Note that this means you may not use ; and # as delimiter in binary format rules.
Each configuration file shall be named in the style of program.conf. Files in /etc/ override files with the same name in /usr/lib/ and
/run/. Files in /run/ override files with the same name in /usr/lib/. Packages should install their configuration files in /usr/lib/, files
in /etc/ are reserved for the local administrator, who may use this logic to override the configuration files installed from vendor
packages. All files are sorted by their filename in lexicographic order, regardless of which of the directories they reside in. If multiple
files specify the same binary type name, the entry in the file with the lexicographically latest name will be applied.
If the administrator wants to disable a configuration file supplied by the vendor, the recommended way is to place a symlink to /dev/null
in /etc/binfmt.d/ bearing the same filename.
EXAMPLE
Example 1. /etc/binfmt.d/wine.conf example:
# Start WINE on Windows executables
:DOSWin:M::MZ::/usr/bin/wine:
SEE ALSO systemd(1), systemd-binfmt.service(8), systemd-delta(1), wine(8)NOTES
1. binfmt_misc.txt
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/binfmt_misc.txt
systemd 208BINFMT.D(5)