Hello,
I have a situation where I have filenames with timestamps like
abc20060509452313.txt
i need the most recent file, and i am using this command in the script:
recent_file=`ls ${Location}/$file*| head -1`
where $Location is the directory and $file is the base filename like abc.
When i... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I am new to unix,please help me on the following its urgent
I have 2 question
1 question
I need a script for following senario
I have get some files in directory by using grep
i need to sort all files to new files for example (abc.dat --> abc.dat.sort)
ex:grep *050508* ... (3 Replies)
I have a directory called test, which contains multiple sub directories namely TF80A, TF80B, TF80C.
I need to sort these directories by name, so in the above case TF80A Is the oldest and TF80C is the latest.
Is there a ksh script that would loop through the directories and sort these... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a datahash with 'n' number of values in perl script. I am writing a xml file from the datahash. I am getting output with sorting(Field sorting). My question is that i don't want any default sorting.whatever i am inserting into datahash it should give same xml file.
Any help?
... (0 Replies)
Hi I am trying to get a bourne shell script to sort a file for me. Here is what i currently have:
#/bin/sh
echo "Name Exam1 Exam2 Exam3 Total Grade" > final.txt
awk -f 9.awk grades.txt | sort +4 -5 >> final.txt
#BEGIN {printf "Name\tExam1\tExam2\tExam3\tTotal\tGrade";}
{
... (12 Replies)
I want to sort like below
Suppose few lines in a file is like this
systemid:ABC messagedestination:batchxpr replytoqname: myca
systemid:BCD messagedestination:realtime replytoqname: myca
systemid:ABC messagedestination:realtime replytoqname: eac
systemid: BCD messagedestination:mqonline... (1 Reply)
the thing which i require is very very complex.. i tried hard to find the solution but couldnt..
the thing i need to achieve is say i have a file
cat delta.sql
CREATE VIEW Austin
Etc etc
.
.
.
CREATE VIEW Barabara
AS
SELECT blah blah blah
FROM Austin z, Cluster s, Instance i
WHERE... (4 Replies)
Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
You will write a script that will read a tab-separated file that contains the names of all 50 states &... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I have the following list:
42A
42AA
42B
42BB
42AAA
42BBB
49A
49AA
49B
49AAA
49BB
I need it to be sorted as following:
42A
42B (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sairamtejaswi
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
alevt-date
ALEVT-DATE(1) Teletext time ALEVT-DATE(1)NAME
alevt-date - display/set time received via Teletext
SYNOPSIS
alevt-date [options]
DESCRIPTION
alevt-date displays the time received from a Teletext source. It can be used to set the system time. The date is not interpreted (not
even transmitted on most channels). So it allows only adjustment of +/-12 hours. The default allowed adjustment is limited to +/-2 hours
(use -delta to change). Without the -set option it just displays the date in the format of the date(1) command.
OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below.
-set Set system time from time received via Teletext.
-delta seconds Maximum allowed adjustment made to the system time. The default is 7200 seconds (2 hours) and the maximum that may be
given is 12 hours.
-format string Format string to used to print the time. Look at strftime(3) for possible control sequences.
-vbi device Use the given device name (default: /dev/vbi0).
-timeout seconds If the time can't be detected in seconds, the program is terminated with a SIGALRM.
--help Show summary of options.
--version Show version of program.
Before starting this program, you have to set the TV channel with another program like xawtv of set-tv.
Note: This program does not set the battery backed up clock of your computer. clock -w will do this.
FILES
/dev/vbi*
SEE ALSO alevt(1x), alevt-cap(1), strftime(3), date(1), clock(8).
BUGS
This program is just a toy. The time transmitted by the TV stations is more than inaccurate. Some are within a few seconds of your local
time reference but others are more then 15 minutes off. You've been warned. (And don't assume the pkt8/30 time is better. It's even
worse.)
No bug reports to <froese@gmx.de> *g*.
LINUX 1.6.2 ALEVT-DATE(1)