I 'm trying to grep 2 fieldds on 2 differnt lines. Like this:
psit > file
egrep -e '(NS|ES)' $file. Not working. If this succeeds then run next cmd else exit. Pls Help
Gundu (13 Replies)
Hey guys:
I've been meaning to post this question for awhile...it is regarding grep. Let's say for example that the following entry is in logxx:
Wed Feb 2 07:44:11 <vsm> 91030 Line 5 Severity 1 Vps 6
Call Answered - DN:8753101 CLID:5164665761 PI:83
If I do a grep 91030... (27 Replies)
Hi.
I have this format on a textfile:
VG Name /dev/vg00
PV Name /dev/dsk/c16t0d0
PV Name /dev/dsk/c18t0d0
PV Name /dev/dsk/c16t4d0
VG Name /dev/vg01
PV Name ... (6 Replies)
I want to search files (basically .cc files) in /xx folder and subfolders.
Those files (*.cc files) must contain #include "header.h" AND x() function.
I am writing it another way to make it clear,
I wanna list of *.cc files that have 'header.h' & 'x()'. They must have two strings, header.h... (2 Replies)
hi
i have kind of below text in a file.
I want to get a complete paragraph starting with START and ending with before another START) which has a particular string say XYZ or ABC
START XYZ hshjghkjh 45 ljkfd
fldjlj d jldf
START 3493u ABC 454
4545454
4545454 45454
4545454
START ...... (3 Replies)
How do you grep 'select * from table_name' string from a script if the select * and from table_name are on 2 different lines ? like
select *
from table_name
Any help would be greatly appreciated !!!
Thanks
RDR (4 Replies)
I want to grep multiple lines from a text file. I want to grep all lines containing X,Y and NA in a single command. How do I go about doing that?
This is what my text files look like:
rs1983866 0.0983 10 100016313
rs1983865 0.5994 X 100016339
rs1983864 0.3272 11 100017453
rs7077266... (2 Replies)
Hello all,
I have been struggling to get grep work to my requirements. Basically I have to filter out patterns spread across multiple lines over hundreds of .gz files in a folder. And the output needs to be piped to a file.
Here is the example:
folder name: logs
files in this folder:... (4 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have a log file that generates multiple logs about a query.
<query time='2016-04-13 13:01:50.825'>
<PagingRequestHandler>
<Before>brand:vmu</Before>
<After>brand:vmu</After>
</PagingRequestHandler>
<GroupDeviceFilterHandler>
<Before>brand:vmu</Before>
... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I'm working on a shell script that reports service status on a database server.
There are some services that are in disabled status that the script should ignore and only check the services that are in Enabled status.
I output the service configuration to a file and use that information to... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: senthil3d
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
trans
trans(1) General Commands Manual trans(1)NAME
trans - translation tool for use with source message catalogs
SYNOPSIS
trans [-c] [-o name] file.msg
OPTIONS
Display comment lines beginning with a dollar sign ($) for translation, in addition to messages. Call the output file name. The default is
output file name is trans.msg.
DESCRIPTION
The trans command assists in the translation of source message catalogs. The command reads input from file.msg and writes its output to
either a file named trans.msg or a file you name on the command line. The command displays file.msg in a multiple window screen that lets
you simultaneously see the original message, the translated text you enter, and any messages from the trans command. This multiple window
screen is easier to use for translating messages than a single window screen.
The top window in the multiple window screen displays the text in the message source file file.msg. The editor displays the current message
in reverse video.
In the center window, trans displays a prompt that asks you to enter a translated message. You use a control key editor to move the cursor
and delete text in the center window. The control key sequences are defined as follows:
------------------------------------------
Key Sequence Meaning
------------------------------------------
CTRL/k Display control key help
CTRL/h Back space
CTRL/l Forward space
CTRL/w Back word
CTRL/f Forward word
CTRL/e Move to end of input
CTRL/b Move to beginning of input
CTRL/n Next line
CTRL/p Previous line
CTRL/u Delete input
CTRL/i Insert mode (default)
CTRL/r Replace mode
DEL Delete previous character
------------------------------------------
If you need to span more than one line with the translated text, type a backslash () and press the RETURN key to enable line continuation.
After you finish entering the translated text, press the RETURN key to signal that you have finished translating that message.
The bottom window displays any messages generated by trans. If an error occurs, trans prompts you to re-enter the entire line, including
the message label or number.
RESTRICTIONS
Your terminal must be 80 columns by 24 lines for trans to display its three-window screen.
You cannot interrupt a trans session and restart it at the point you stopped. You must complete the all the changes to a file before exit-
ing a file.
SEE ALSO extract(1), gencat(1), strextract(1), strmerge(1)
Writing Software for the International Market
trans(1)