I get this on my Linux box, the results are actually the same, my linux system just doesn't do an actually process the new line...but the results are the same.
When I do this; however, on linux...
-E is the default for echo on linux and that means "disable interpretation of backslash escapes"
I want to block all special characters except alphanumerics.. and "."(dot ) character
currently am using //
I want to even block only single dot or multiple dots..
ex:
. or .............. should be blocked.
please provide me the reg ex.
---------- Post updated at 05:11 AM... (10 Replies)
Good morning all!!
In my code I and looking through file /etc/syslog.congf and printing every line that has /var/log in it. I need to turn the if 9$line) into a regex code instead.
#!/usr/bin/perl
@file= 'cat /etc/syslog.conf'; //when
foreach $line (@file){
if ($line =~... (3 Replies)
I am trying to grep the following line in a file using a bash shell:
(..)
admin1::14959::::::
(..)
It works with the following expression (as expected)
# cat file | grep ^*::
admin1::14959::::::
but it does not work with (not expected)
# cat /etc/shadow | grep ^+::
I assume the... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I found this command works on Linux:
$ echo `uptime` | awk -F "load average: " '{ print $2 }'
1.60, 1.53, 1.46
but got error on Solaris:
$ echo `uptime` | awk -F "load average: " '{ print $2 }'
awk: syntax error near line 1
awk: bailing out near line 1
$ which awk... (2 Replies)
Hello,
Could someone explain why this one returns nothing:
$ x=/jon/
$ echo jon | awk -v xa=$x '$1~xa {print}'
$
while the following works fine:
$ x=jon
$ echo jon | awk -v xa=$x '$1==xa {print}'
$ jon
and the following works fine:
$ echo jon | awk '$1~/jon/ {print}'
$ jon
... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a sftp session log where I am transferring multi files by issuing "mput abc*.dat". The contents of the logfile is below -
#################################################
Connecting to 10.75.112.194...
Changing to: /home/dasd9x/testing1
sftp> mput abc*.dat
Uploading... (7 Replies)
Using awk variables for regular expressions is working for me in AIX. It is failing for me in SunOS. I don't know why. Can someone explain and/or suggest a fix for the SunOS version?
Here is a little test script. It runs fine in AIX:
$ cat test.ksh
#! /bin/ksh
print "Executed on OS: $(... (6 Replies)
# check host value regex='^(||1|2|25)(\.(||1|2|25)){3}$' if ')" != "" ]; then if ]; then echo host $host not found exit 4 fi elif ]; then echo $host is an invalid host address exit 5 fi (1 Reply)
On linux i have the below command working fine.
awk '/<app-deploy>/{A=1;++i} /<\/app-deploy>/{print >> "found"i".tmp";A=0} A{;print >> "found"i".tmp"}' deploy.xml
But the same is failing on Solaris
Output:
awk: syntax error near line 1
awk: bailing out near line 1
uname -a SunOS mymac 5.10... (5 Replies)
I have a XML file where there is a tag with like
<wd:address_line_1>1234 Street</wd:address_line_1>
I want to replace the values "1234 Street" with "Test Data". Different people have different address lines and i want to replace with a fixed value to mask the file. I was trying to use sed... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: dr46014
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
fspy
fspy(1) User Commands fspy(1)NAME
fspy - filesystem activity monitoring tool
SYNOPSIS
fspy [options] [file/dir]
OPTIONS -F, --filter STRING/REGEX
a string or regular expression which will be used to filter the output. (the regex will be matched against the whole path e.g.
[/etc/passwd])
-I, --inverted STRING/REGEX
its the same like -F/--filter but inverted. you can combine both. e.g. -F '.conf' -I 'wvdial.conf' will filter for files with
".conf" in its name but without "wvdial.conf" in it.
-R, --recursive NUMBER
enables the recursive engine to look at a depth of NUMBER.
-A, --adaptive
(HIGHLY-EXPERIMENTAL) enables the adaptive mode. e.g. if new items will be added within the path fspy will automatically add those
items to the watch list.
-D, --diff VALUE
(EXPERIMENTAL) enables the diffing feature. VALUE may be a comma separated list of: s - element size (byte) A - last access time
(e.g. Mon Jul 21 21:32:31 2008) M - last modification time (e.g. Mon Jul 21 21:32:31 2008) S - last status change time (e.g. Mon Jul
21 21:32:31 2008) O - permissions (octal) U - owner (uid) G - group (gid) I - inode number D - device id
-T, --type VALUE
specifies the type of objects to look for. VALUE may be a comma separated list of: f - regular file d - directory s - symlink p -
FIFO/pipe c - character device b - block device o - socket default is any.
-O, --output VALUE
specifies output format. VALUE may be a comma separated list of: f - filename p - path d - access description t - element type s -
element size (byte) w - watch descriptor (inotify manpage) c - cookie (inotify manpage) m - access mask (inotify manpage | src/fsev-
ents.h) l - len (inotify manpage) A - last access time (e.g. Mon Jul 21 21:32:31 2008) M - last modification time (e.g. Mon Jul 21
21:32:31 2008) S - last status change time (e.g. Mon Jul 21 21:32:31 2008) O - permissions (octal) U - owner (uid) G - group (gid) I
- inode number D - device id T - date and time (for this event) (e.g. Tue Mar 25 09:23:16 CET 2008) e.g.: '[,T,], ,d,:,p,f' would
result in: '[Mon Sep 1 12:31:25 2008] file was opened:/etc/passwd' (take a look at the README).
-h, --help
this short help.
--version
version information.
AUTHOR
fspy is Copyright 2008-2009, Richard Sammet
This manual page was written by Giuseppe Iuculano <giuseppe@iuculano.it>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
fspy 0.1.0 January 2009 fspy(1)