Hello All,
I have an awk script which parses my log file and prints number grepping from a specific line/pattern, now i have to come with a shell script to continue reading the log untill the job is completed, which i would know while reading session log untill process encounters a final line/statement as shown in the IF LOOP of my below shell script, encountering that line shell script should exit. so while reading this log file this awk script should be executed on the same log file to print latest number only, say my awk script output is as shown below
everytime a new logfile get created at certain interval of time and i want a
simple shell script program which cat the lastest log file when manually excuted (1 Reply)
I want to loop through files in a directory but omit the file with the latest date in my list of files. How would I accomplish this?
Thanks (2 Replies)
Have checked the forums and couldnt locate help on this.
I want to grep a log file for a pattern using a script - I need to grep the latest log file and not sure how I am able to ensure I am greping the latest log file.
Here is sample of log files for yestersday and I effectively need to grep... (10 Replies)
in the below .. i want to pick the latest logfile which is having JPS.PR inside..
that means i want particularly "spgport040408041223.log:@@@@@@@@ 04:13:09 Adding: JPS.PR."
which is latest among these..
is it possible to compare the current time with logfile time ?
reptm@xblr0758rop>... (4 Replies)
How can I print number pyramid with for loop(not while only for) in unix like:
1
22
333
4444
55555
---------- Post updated at 09:09 AM ---------- Previous update was at 09:07 AM ----------
I forgot it is in ksh...I wrote a script in bash but it is nt wrkng in ksh...
bash script... (12 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file po8282.fmt998.fbi.mopac.x.macs.btt.txt . I want to parse the first field which is separated by "." and then find the number and add 1 to it.
here is what I am doing to get the first field, but not sure how to only pick the number and add 1 to it... (5 Replies)
I've been finding myself using a log file colorizer written in perl to reformat and colorize the output from many different programs. Mainly, however, I use it to make the output from "tail -f" commands more readable.
The base perl script I use is based on "colorlogs.pl" available from the... (1 Reply)
I have a big file with many brackets () in it from which I need to parse number characters and numbers. Below is an example of my file
14 (((A__0:0.02,B__1:0.3)0:0.04,C__0:0.025)2:0.01),(D__0:0.00978,E__2:0.01031)1:0.00362;
15... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I need some advise on how to print 'sections' of the attached file. I am searching for some that says Marked Corrupt and print some lines after it.
At the moment I am running the command below:
sed -n -e '/Marked Corrupt/{N;N;p;}' rman_list_validate.txtThis gives me the following... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Let's say I have a control file like this:
RHEL apple "echo apple"
RHEL bravo "ls -l bravo*"
RHEL church "chmod church.txt"
SUSE drive "chown user1 drive.txt"
SUSE eagle "echo "eagle flies""
SUSE feather "ls -l feather*"
HP-UX google "sed 's/^Google.*$/&\
ACTION: go to... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: The Gamemaster
14 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
xfs_logprint
xfs_logprint(8) System Manager's Manual xfs_logprint(8)NAME
xfs_logprint - print the log of an XFS filesystem
SYNOPSIS
xfs_logprint [ options ] device
DESCRIPTION
xfs_logprint prints the log of an XFS filesystem (see xfs(5)). The device argument is the pathname of the partition or logical volume con-
taining the filesystem. The device can be a regular file if the -f option is used. The contents of the filesystem remain undisturbed.
There are two major modes of operation in xfs_logprint.
One mode is better for filesystem operation debugging. It is called the transactional view and is enabled through the -t option. The
transactional view prints only the portion of the log that pertains to recovery. In other words, it prints out complete transactions
between the tail and the head. This view tries to display each transaction without regard to how they are split across log records.
The second mode starts printing out information from the beginning of the log. Some error blocks might print out in the beginning because
the last log record usually overlaps the oldest log record. A message is printed when the physical end of the log is reached and when the
logical end of the log is reached. A log record view is displayed one record at a time. Transactions that span log records may not be
decoded fully.
OPTIONS -b Extract and print buffer information. Only used in transactional view.
-c Attempt to continue when an error is detected.
-C filename
Copy the log from the filesystem to the file filename. The log itself is not printed.
-d Dump the log from front to end, printing where each log record is located on disk.
-D Do not decode anything; just print data.
-e Exit when an error is found in the log. Normally, xfs_logprint tries to continue and unwind from bad logs. However, sometimes it
just dies in bad ways. Using this option prevents core dumps.
-f Specifies that the filesystem image to be processed is stored in a regular file at device (see the mkfs.xfs(8)-d file option).
This might happen if an image copy of a filesystem has been made into an ordinary file with xfs_copy(8).
-l logdev
External log device. Only for those filesystems which use an external log.
-i Extract and print inode information. Only used in transactional view.
-q Extract and print quota information. Only used in transactional view.
-n Do not try and interpret log data; just interpret log header information.
-o Also print buffer data in hex. Normally, buffer data is just decoded, so better information can be printed.
-s start-block
Override any notion of where to start printing.
-t Print out the transactional view.
SEE ALSO mkfs.xfs(8), mount(8).
xfs_logprint(8)