Hi
I need to append the following block of statements in the middle of the file:
#
openpipe tsdbdwn2
set -x
exec >> /tmp/tsdbdwn2.fifo 2>&1
#
This needs to be appended right after another block of statements:
if test $# -eq 0 ;then
echo "Safety check - do you really wish to run" $0 "... (5 Replies)
(1) Yes but how is this block different from the other 24? You will need this information in order to identify and replace this block correctly (out of the 25).
Ans: The 1st line and last line of this block are unique from other block.
The 1st line is “rem Subset Rows (&&tempName.*) and
The... (1 Reply)
Hi there, If I run "ipmitool bmc info" on any of my x86 boxes, i get
Device ID : 32
Device Revision : 1
Firmware Revision : 1.1
IPMI Version : 2.0
Manufacturer ID : 42
Manufacturer Name : Sun Microsystems
Product ID ... (7 Replies)
I was reading a book on UNIX internals "The design of the UNIX Operating system." There are two memory structures that are confusing me:
1) Buffer cache
2) Inode cache
My questions are
1) Does a process get both buffer cache and Indoe cache allocated when it opens/creates a file?
2) if no,... (1 Reply)
Hei buddies,
Need ur help once again.
I have a file which has bunch of lines which starts from a fixed pattern and ends with another fixed pattern.
I want to make use of these fixed starting and ending patterns to select the bunch, one at a time.
The input file is as follows.
Hi welcome... (12 Replies)
I have a "main" file which has blocks of data for each user defined by tags BEGIN and END.
BEGIN
ID_NUM:24879
USER:abc123
HOW:47M
CMD1:xyz1
CMD2:arp2
STATE:active
PROCESS:id60
END
BEGIN
ID_NUM:24880
USER:def123
HOW:4M
CMD1:xyz1
CMD2:xyz2
STATE:running
PROCESS:id64
END (7 Replies)
I want to process a file block by block using sed, and if that block does not contain two patterns, then that complete block has to be printed.
See below for the example data.
................................server 1...............................
running process 1
running... (8 Replies)
please consider the following file, there are repeated blocks of m values, and nested s values within. there are 2 columns (cols 3 and 4)associated with each m,s combination. All s1 rows must get a value of a(col 3 in output), all s2 values must get a value of b(col 3 in output). If s1 and s2 rows... (1 Reply)
I need to search for a block with the starting pattern say
"tabId": "table_1", and ending pattern say "]"
and then add a few lines before "]"
"block1":"block_111"
"tabId": "table_1",
"title":"My title"
.....
....
}]
how do I achieve it using awk and sed.
Thanks,
Lakshmi (3 Replies)
Hi,
Could you please help me finding a way to replace a specific value in a text block when matching a key pattern ?
I got the keys and the values from a command similar to:
echo -e "key01 Nvalue01-1 Nvalue01-2 Nvalue01-3\nkey02 Nvalue02-1 Nvalue02-2 Nvalue02-3 \nkey03 Nvalue03-1... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: alex2005
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
html::formatter
HTML::Formatter(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation HTML::Formatter(3)NAME
HTML::Formatter - Base class for HTML formatters
SYNOPSIS
use HTML::FormatSomething;
my $infile = "whatever.html";
my $outfile = "whatever.file";
open OUT, ">$outfile"
or die "Can't write-open $outfile: $!
Aborting";
binmode(OUT);
print OUT HTML::FormatSomething->format_file(
$infile,
'option1' => 'value1',
'option2' => 'value2',
...
);
close(OUT);
DESCRIPTION
HTML::Formatter is a base class for classes that take HTML and format it to some output format. When you take an object of such a base
class and call "$formatter->format( $tree )" with an HTML::TreeBuilder (or HTML::Element) object, they return the
HTML formatters are able to format a HTML syntax tree into various printable formats. Different formatters produce output for different
output media. Common for all formatters are that they will return the formatted output when the format() method is called. The format()
method takes a HTML::Element object (usually the HTML::TreeBuilder root object) as parameter.
Here are the four main methods that this class provides:
SomeClass->format_file( $filename, option1 => value1, option2 => value2, ... )
This returns a string consisting of the result of using the given class to format the given HTML file according to the given (optional)
options. Internally it calls "SomeClass->new( ... )->format( ... )" on a new HTML::TreeBuilder object based on the given HTML file.
SomeClass->format_string( $html_source, option1 => value1, option2 => value2, ... )
This returns a string consisting of the result of using the given class to format the given HTML source according to the given
(optional) options. Internally it calls "SomeClass->new( ... )->format( ... )" on a new HTML::TreeBuilder object based on the given
source.
$formatter = SomeClass->new( option1 => value1, option2 => value2, ... )
This creates a new formatter object with the given options.
$render_string = $formatter->format( $html_tree_object )
This renders the given HTML object accerting to the options set for $formatter.
After you've used a particular formatter object to format a particular HTML tree object, you probably should not use either again.
SEE ALSO
HTML::FormatText, HTML::FormatPS, HTML::FormatRTF
HTML::TreeBuilder, HTML::Element, HTML::Tree
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1995-2002 Gisle Aas, and 2002- Sean M. Burke. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of
merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
AUTHOR
Current maintainer: Sean M. Burke <sburke@cpan.org>
Original author: Gisle Aas <gisle@aas.no>
perl v5.12.1 2004-06-02 HTML::Formatter(3)