Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Assign a variable with awk
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Assign a variable with awk Post 302910457 by Akshay Hegde on Thursday 24th of July 2014 03:20:13 PM
Old 07-24-2014
Code:
$ netstat -a | grep -q 'ESTABLISHED' && var=1 || var=0
$ echo $var
1

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk: assign a printf value to a variable

Is there any way to something like this?: variable=printf("%30s",var1) Thx. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Klashxx
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

assign value to variable using AWK

Dear Friends I have text file as like below, AAAAA|BHBHBH|VERYSMART AAAAA| KKKKKK|GOOD BBBBBB|JJJJJJJ|VERYGOOD CCCCC|HJHJHJ|BETTER CCCCC|UUUUU|GOOD i need to split into seperate files based on column 1 like as below AAAAA.TXT contains -------------------- BHBHBH.VERYSMART... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: HAA
4 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

assign awk command result to a variable

#!/bin/sh # ## MYSTRING = `awk '/myApp.app/' /Users/$USER/Library/Preferences/loginwindow.plist` if then echo String not found defaults write /Users/$USER/Library/Preferences/loginwindow AutoLaunchedApplicationDictionary -dict-add -string Hide -bool YES -string Path -string... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: dedmakar
9 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Assign o/p of awk to a variable

:confused: Hi UNIX gurus, I am facing a typical problem while assigining while assigining output of awk to a variable. I have a fixed length file say myinputfile.txt When I allow the value/output of an awk to be redirected to a file, it works fine. i.e. awk "/^.{232}$acctNum/ {... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: c2b2
8 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk: assign variable with -v didn't work in awk filter

I want to filter 2nd column = 2 using awk $ cat t 1 2 2 4 $ VAR=2 #variable worked in print $ cat t | awk -v ID=$VAR ' { print ID}' 2 2 # but variable didn't work in awk filter $ cat t | awk -v ID=$VAR '$2~/ID/ { print $0}' (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: honglus
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

assign awk's variable to shell script's variable?

Dear All, we have a command output which looks like : Total 200 queues in 30000 Kbytes and we're going to get "200" and "30000" for further process. currently, i'm using : numA=echo $OUTPUT | awk '{print $2}' numB=echo $OUTPUT | awk '{print $5}' my question is : can I use just one... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: tiger2000
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

help on awk---- need to assign the output of awk to a variable

hi i want to find the size of a folder and assign it to a variable and then compare if it is greater than 1 gb. i am doin this script, but it is throwing error.... #!/bin/ksh cd . | du -s | size = awk '{print $1}' if size >= 112000 then echo size high fi ERROR : (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nithz
4 Replies

8. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How can I assign awk's variable to shell script's variable?

I have the following script, and I want to assign the output ($10 and $5) from awk to N and L: grdinfo data.grd | awk '{print $10,$5}'| read N L output from gridinfo data.grd is: data.grd 50 100 41 82 -2796 6944 0.016 0.016 3001 2461. where N and L is suppose to be 3001 and 100. I use... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: geomarine
8 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How to assign a value to a variable in awk scripting?

Hi, I am trying to assign a value using below command and it is assigning the command to the variable not the output of the command? out_value="echo $0 | cut -c 9-11"; How can i assign the output to the variable instead of whole command? This is inside my awk script (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: bhagya123
7 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to assign awk values to shell variable?

Hi Gurus, I have a script which assign awk output to shell variable. current it uses two awk command to assign value to two variables. I want to use one command to assign two values to two variables. I tried the code, but it does't work. kindly provide your suggestion. current code... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: green_k
2 Replies
FindRef(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					      FindRef(3pm)

NAME
Devel::FindRef - where is that reference to my variable hiding? SYNOPSIS
use Devel::FindRef; print Devel::FindRef::track $some_variable; DESCRIPTION
Tracking down reference problems (e.g. you expect some object to be destroyed, but there are still references to it that keep it alive) can be very hard. Fortunately, perl keeps track of all its values, so tracking references "backwards" is usually possible. The "track" function can help track down some of those references back to the variables containing them. For example, for this fragment: package Test; use Devel::FindRef; use Scalar::Util; our $var = "hi "; my $global_my = $var; our %global_hash = (ukukey => $var); our $global_hashref = { ukukey2 => $var }; sub testsub { my $testsub_local = $global_hashref; print Devel::FindRef::track $var; } my $closure = sub { my $closure_var = $_[0]; Scalar::Util::weaken (my $weak_ref = $var); testsub; }; $closure->($var); The output is as follows (or similar to this, in case I forget to update the manpage after some changes): SCALAR(0x7cc888) [refcount 6] is +- referenced by REF(0x8abcc8) [refcount 1], which is | in the lexical '$closure_var' in CODE(0x8abc50) [refcount 4], which is | +- the closure created at tst:18. | +- referenced by REF(0x7d3c58) [refcount 1], which is | | in the lexical '$closure' in CODE(0x7ae530) [refcount 2], which is | | +- the containing scope for CODE(0x8ab430) [refcount 3], which is | | | in the global &Test::testsub. | | +- the main body of the program. | +- in the lexical '&' in CODE(0x7ae530) [refcount 2], which was seen before. +- referenced by REF(0x7cc7c8) [refcount 1], which is | in the lexical '$global_my' in CODE(0x7ae530) [refcount 2], which was seen before. +- in the global $Test::var. +- referenced by REF(0x7cc558) [refcount 1], which is | in the member 'ukukey2' of HASH(0x7ae140) [refcount 2], which is | +- referenced by REF(0x8abad0) [refcount 1], which is | | in the lexical '$testsub_local' in CODE(0x8ab430) [refcount 3], which was seen before. | +- referenced by REF(0x8ab4f0) [refcount 1], which is | in the global $Test::global_hashref. +- referenced by REF(0x7ae518) [refcount 1], which is | in the member 'ukukey' of HASH(0x7d3bb0) [refcount 1], which is | in the global %Test::global_hash. +- referenced by REF(0x7ae2f0) [refcount 1], which is a temporary on the stack. It is a bit convoluted to read, but basically it says that the value stored in $var is referenced by: - the lexical $closure_var(0x8abcc8), which is inside an instantiated closure, which in turn is used quite a bit. - the package-level lexical $global_my. - the global package variable named $Test::var. - the hash element "ukukey2", in the hash in the my variable $testsub_local in the sub "Test::testsub" and also in the hash "$referenced by Test::hash2". - the hash element with key "ukukey" in the hash stored in %Test::hash. - some anonymous mortalised reference on the stack (which is caused by calling "track" with the expression "$var", which creates the reference). And all these account for six reference counts. EXPORTS
None. FUNCTIONS
$string = Devel::FindRef::track $ref[, $depth] Track the perl value pointed to by $ref up to a depth of $depth and return a descriptive string. $ref can point at any perl value, be it anonymous sub, hash, array, scalar etc. This is the function you most often use. @references = Devel::FindRef::find $ref Return arrayrefs that contain [$message, $ref] pairs. The message describes what kind of reference was found and the $ref is the reference itself, which can be omitted if "find" decided to end the search. The returned references are all weak references. The "track" function uses this to find references to the value you are interested in and recurses on the returned references. $ref = Devel::FindRef::ptr2ref $integer Sometimes you know (from debugging output) the address of a perl scalar you are interested in (e.g. "HASH(0x176ff70)"). This function can be used to turn the address into a reference to that scalar. It is quite safe to call on valid addresses, but extremely dangerous to call on invalid ones. # we know that HASH(0x176ff70) exists, so turn it into a hashref: my $ref_to_hash = Devel::FindRef::ptr2ref 0x176ff70; $ref = Devel::FindRef::ref2ptr $reference The opposite of "ptr2ref", above: returns the internal address of the value pointed to by the passed reference. No checks whatsoever will be done, so don't use this. ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
You can set the environment variable "PERL_DEVEL_FINDREF_DEPTH" to an integer to override the default depth in "track". If a call explicitly specified a depth it is not overridden. AUTHOR
Marc Lehmann <pcg@goof.com>. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2007, 2008 by Marc Lehmann. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. perl v5.14.2 2009-08-30 FindRef(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:55 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy