As you said the pipeline is seprator then it should be in second place (as emntioned below) not in the 4th place, also not sure what colon : plays here
I'm having a file with 5 fields.
I want to sort that file according to one field
no 3. How shall I do using awk programming.
Any input appreciatable.
regards,
vadivel. (7 Replies)
hi
how to get the values in two columns (may be 2nd and 5th column) of a file line by line.
either i want to get the two fields into different variables and use a for loop to get these values line by line. (3 Replies)
i have a file like this:
awk.lst
smith : sales : 1200 : 2
jones:it:25000 : 2
roger : it : 1500 : 2
ravi | acct | 15000
i have 3 doubts
1)
when i say
awk -F ":" '$2 ~ /'it'/ {print $0}' awk.lst
i am not able to get jones in the ouput , is it because of space issue?
2)how to... (2 Replies)
Hello people
I have a doubt about awk... I´m using it to create a condition where I do not want to use the 0 (zero) value of a certain column.
- This is the original file:
string,number,date
abc,0,20050101
def,1,20060101
ghi,2,20040101
jkl,12,20090101
mno,123,20020101... (2 Replies)
I have executed the below command:
find . -name "Ks*" -type f -exec ls -ltr {} \; | awk '{printf("%ld %s %d %s \n",$5,$6,$7,$8,$9)}'
and here is the output:
1282 Oct 7 2004
51590 Jul 10 2006
921 Oct 7 2004
1389 Jun 4 2003
1037 May 19 2004
334 Mar 24 2004
672 Jul 8 2003
977... (6 Replies)
I have a file sample.txt with the following contents:
the following gives output as
awk 'NF{s=$0; print s}' sample.txt
but,
awk 'NF{s=$0}{print s}' sample.txtgives output as
why this difference, can someone explain me? (6 Replies)
instead of writing print command in awk, i saw in some posts that we can simply write a number before we end the awk command and it will print the file.
As given below:
$awk '{some manipulation; print}' filename
$awk '{some manipulation}1' filename
I also tried replacing the... (2 Replies)
DE_CODE|1{AXXANY}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|NY
DE_CODE|1{AXXATX}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|TX
DE_CODE|1{AXXABT}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|BT
DE_CODE|1{AXXANJ}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|NJ
i have out put file like below i have to convert it in the format as below.
DE_CODE = AXXANY
APP_NAME= TELCO
LOC = NY... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mail2sant
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
csreq
CSREQ(1) BSD General Commands Manual CSREQ(1)NAME
csreq -- Expert tool for manipulating Code Signing Requirement data
SYNOPSIS
csreq [-v] -r requirement-input -t
csreq [-v] -r requirement-input -b outputfile
DESCRIPTION
The csreq command manipulates Code Signing Requirement data. It reads one requirement from a file or command arguments, converts it into
internal form, checks it, and then optionally outputs it in a different form.
The options are as follows:
-b path
Requests that the requirement read be written in binary form to the path given.
-r requirement-input
Specifies the input requirement. See "specifying requirements" below. This is exactly the same format as is accepted by the -r and -R
options of the codesign(1) command.
-t Requests that the requirement read be written as text to standard output.
-v Increases the verbosity of output. Multiple instances of -v produce increasing levels of commentary output.
In the first synopsis form, csreq reads a Code Requirement and writes it to standard output as canonical source text. Note that with text
input, this actually compiles the requirement into internal form and then converts it back to text, giving you the system's view of the
requirement code.
In the second synopsis form, csreq reads a Code Requirement and writes its binary representation to a file. This is the same form produced by
the SecRequirementCopyData API, and is readily acceptable as input to Code Signing verification APIs. It can also be used as input to subse-
quent invocations of csreq by passing the filename to the -r option.
SPECIFYING REQUIREMENTS
The requirement argument (-r) can be given in various forms. A plain text argument is taken to be a path to a file containing the require-
ment. This program will accept both binary files containing properly compiled requirements code, and source files that are automatically com-
piled for use. An argument of "-" requests that the requirement(s) are read from standard input. Again, standard input can contain either
binary form or text. Finally, an argument that begins with an equal sign "=" is taken as a literal requirements source text, and is compiled
accordingly for use.
EXAMPLES
To compile an explicit requirement program and write its binary form to file "output":
csreq -r="identifier com.foo.test" -b output.csreq
To display the requirement program embedded at offset 1234 of file "foo":
tail -b 1234 foo | csreq -r- -t
FILES DIAGNOSTICS
The csreq program exits 0 on success or 1 on failure. Errors in arguments yield exit code 2.
SEE ALSO codesign(1)HISTORY
The csreq command first appeared in Mac OS 10.5.0 .
BSD June 1, 2006 BSD