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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Comm giving unexpected results Post 302878991 by Akshay Hegde on Tuesday 10th of December 2013 03:53:19 AM
Old 12-10-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by vedanta
Hi
I am comparing two files with comm -13 < (sort acc11.txt) < (sort acc12.txt) > output.txt
purpose: Get non matching records which are in acc12 but not in acc11...
TI am getting WRONG output.

Is there any constraints with record length with comm? The above files are the two consective
dumps of tables ( have clob data) of two different day.
Show your input and expected output.
 

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ldns-gen-zone(1)					      General Commands Manual						  ldns-gen-zone(1)

NAME
ldns-gen-zone - read a zonefile and print it while adding DS records and extra RR's SYNOPSIS
ldns-gen-zone ZONEFILE DESCRIPTION
ldns-gen-zone reads a DNS zone file and prints it. It is build for speed, not for a nice formatting. The output has one resource record per line and no pretty-printing makeup. DNSSEC data (NSEC, NSEC3, RRSIG or DNSKEY) is not stripped. You may want to use ldns-read-zone for that. Existing DS records are also not stripped. The idea is to use this tool for quickly generating a representative artificial zonefile from a real zonefile, to use it for testing pur- poses. OPTIONS
-a NUM Adds NUM extra artificial NS RRSets to the output. The RRSets owner names start with 'xn--' in an attempt to ensure uniqueness (nl.-zone does not support IDN's - and this tool was written with that knowledge in mind). An artificial NS RRSet has two NS records; ns1.example.com and ns2.example.com. -p NUM Add NUM% of DS RRSets to the NS RRSets (anywhere between 1-4 DS records per RRSet). -o ORIGIN Sets an $ORIGIN, which can be handy if the one in the zonefile is set to '@' for example. If there is an $ORIGIN in the zonefile, this option will silently be ignored. -s This is the recommended way of processing large zones that are already sorted and canonicalized (ie lowercase). It skips the sorting and canonicalization step that is required for properly grouping RRSets together (before adding any DS records to them. Skipping this step will speed things up. It is not recommended to use this option if you want to add DS records to unsorted, non-canonicalized zones. -h Show usage and exit. -v Show version and exit. EXAMPLES
ldns-gen-zone -a 100000 -p 10 -s ./zonefile.txt Read a zonefile, add 100.000 artificial NS RRSets and 10% of DS records, print it to standard output. Don't sort (will only work well if the input zonefile is already sorted and canonicalized). ldns-gen-zone -p 10 -s -o nl zonefile.txt | named-compilezone -s relative -i none -o zonefile_10.txt nl /dev/stdin This creates a nicely formatted zone file with the help of named-compilezone. It adds 10% DS records to the .nl zone, reformats it and saves it as zonefile_10.txt. AUTHOR
Initially written by Marco Davids, several modifications added by Miek Gieben, both from SIDN. REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <ldns-team@nlnetlabs.nl>. BUGS
Only undiscovered ones. CAVEATS
May require a machine with a considerable amount of memory for large zone files. Fake DS records hashes are generated as digest type SHA-256 (RFC4509). Be aware not to change the DIGESTTYPE #define in the source code in anything else but 2 if you want to keep things realistic. Despite a number of efforts, this program is still not the fastest in the world. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2010 SIDN. This is free software. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. 10 June 2010 ldns-gen-zone(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:39 PM.
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