Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Searching and printing only required pattern Post 302885976 by bartus11 on Wednesday 29th of January 2014 09:43:55 AM
Old 01-29-2014
Try:
Code:
print_manifest | perl -nle '/(\d+) logical processors/&&print $1'

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Pattern searching pattern in c files

I have a problem in searching a specific pattern in c files. My requirement: I have to find all the division operator in all cfiles. The problem is, the multi line comments and single line comments will also have forward slash in it. Even after avoiding these comments also, if both... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: murthybptl
6 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching a pattern in file and deleting th ewhole line containing the pattern

Hi All, Please can someone assist in the script I have made that searches a pattern in a file and delete the whole line containing the pattern. #!bin/sh # The pattern that user want to add to the files echo "Enter the pattern of the redirect" read value # check if the user has... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Shazin
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help required on Printing of Numbers, which are missing in the range

Hi Experts, Need help on printing of numbers, which are missing in the range. Pls find the details below Input 1000000002 1000000007 1234007940 1234007946 Output 1000000003 1000000004 1000000005 1000000006 1234007941 (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: krao
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching using awk - Help required

Hi... I am working on script to search some records in a file based on certain fields and each record is a ASCII fixed size. I was using awk to search based on certain condition. But the length of the record is too much that awk is giving syntax error near unexpected token `(' Request... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ysrikanth
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching for a pattern and extracting records related to that pattern

Hi there, Looking forward to your advice for the below: I have a file which contains 2 paragraphs related to a particular pattern. I have to search for those paragraphs from a log file and then print a particular line from those paragraphs. Sample: I have one file with the fixed... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: danish0909
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching and printing the only pattern using awk,sed or perl

Hi All, i have an output of command vmstat as below : $ vmstat System configuration: lcpu=4 mem=5376MB ent=1.00 kthr memory page faults cpu ----- ----------- ------------------------ ------------ ----------------------- r b avm fre re pi... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: omkar.jadhav
10 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help required in searching of pattern.

i m searching a zone file my domain name is abcd.com my zone file looks like this. abcd.com. IN SOA ns1.abcd.com. root.abcd.com. ( abcd.com. 400 IN A 15.1.1.1 Then i am searching that abcd.com have if below ip... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: learnbash
14 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sed: printing lines AFTER pattern matching EXCLUDING the line containing the pattern

'Hi I'm using the following code to extract the lines(and redirect them to a txt file) after the pattern match. But the output is inclusive of the line with pattern match. Which option is to be used to exclude the line containing the pattern? sed -n '/Conn.*User/,$p' > consumers.txt (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: essem
11 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help required in printing in specific format

Hi All, I 'm matching two files based on the first 2 columns and then populate other fields along with subtraction of few fields. I have managed to get the output. However, is there a easier way in formatting the output as shown below instead of using additional printf for getting fixed width... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: shash
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Echo not printing the variables with delimiters as required

This is the file which contains only neccessary values from the output of curl command i.e TEMP_FILE Proxy Hostname server0123.domain.com Proxy IP address XXX.XXX.XX.XX port 0000 Proxy Version SGOS X.X.X.X Proxy Serial # ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramprabhum
5 Replies
coreadm(1M)															       coreadm(1M)

NAME
coreadm - core file administration SYNOPSIS
pattern] pattern] option] option] [pid...] [pid...] [arguments] [pid...] DESCRIPTION
The command is used for user space application core file management by specifying the name and the location of core files for abnormally terminating processes. See core(4). The command can be used to control system wide and process specific core file placement. The path and pattern is used by the operating system when generating a core file. The first form shown in can be used to control system wide core file settings or specify a pattern for init(1M). System administration privilege is required to change global core file settings. Global core file setting, including the setting for init(1M), is preserved across system reboot. Non-privileged users can change per-process core file settings for processes owned by that user. The real or the effective user ID of the calling process must match the real or the saved user ID of the receiving process unless the effective user ID of the calling process is a user who as appropriate privileges. A core file name pattern is a normal file system path name with embedded variables, specified with a leading character, that are expanded from values in effect when a core file is generated by the operating system. An expanded pattern over will be truncated to The possible pattern variables are: Options The following options are supported for Disable or enable the specified core file option. The and options can only be exercised with root privilege. The valid options for and are: Allow (or disallow) core dumps using the global core pattern. Allow (or disallow) core dumps using the per-process core pattern. Allow (or disallow) core dumps using the global core pattern for processes. Allow (or disallow) core dumps using the process core pattern for processes. Set the global core file name pattern to pattern. The pattern must start with an absolute path name which exists and can contain any of the special % variables described in the section. This option can only be exercised by the super-user. This is identical to specifying a per-process pattern only that the setting is applied to init(1M) and is preserved across reboot. Set the per-process core file name pattern to pattern for each of the specified process-ID's. The pattern can contain any of the special variables described in and need not begin with If it does not begin with the core file name will be evaluated relative to the current working directory at the time of core file creation. This option can be used by non-privileged users to specify core file settings for processes owned by that user. Super-users can apply it to any process. The per-process core file will be inherited by the future child processes of the affected pro- cesses. See fork(2). This option, when invoked without a PID will apply the settings to the calling process (usually the invoking shell). This option is used in conjunction with The option will execute the command specified with the per-process pattern that was specified with This option can be used to enable or disable core file creation for the target process. As an example, a user may choose to add the disable in the shell startup script to avoid creation of core files by that user. EXAMPLES
The following examples assume that the user has appropriate privilege. 1. To examine the current core file settings: $ coreadm global core file pattern: init(1M) core file pattern: global core dumps: disabled per-process core dumps: enabled global setid core dumps: disabled per-process setid core dumps: disabled 2. Set global core file settings to include process-ID and machine name and place the core file in the location $ coreadm -e global -g /mnt/cores/core.%p.%n A process with PID 1777 on the machine breaker will generate a core file in as (in addition to the core file generated in the CWD of PID 1777). 3. Examine the per process core file settings for process-IDs 1777 and 1778 $ coreadm 1777 1778 1777: core.%p.%u 1778: /nethome/gandalf/core/core.%f.%p.%t 4. A user can disable creation of core files completely by specifying in the shell startup file (for example, $ coreadm -P disable $$ $ coreadm $$ 1157: (Disabled) WARNINGS
The output format of may change without notice. Applications parsing the output, should not rely on the compatibility of the output format between releases. SEE ALSO
umask(1), init(1M), coreadm(2), core(4). coreadm(1M)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:22 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy