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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Concatenate three lines into one Post 302913139 by RavinderSingh13 on Thursday 14th of August 2014 02:53:29 AM
Old 08-14-2014
Posted by DON:

Quote:
I think Corona688 missed the fact that you want CRLF line terminators in your output too. To do that, this trivial modification to his code:


Code:
awk '{ gsub(/[\r\n]/, ""); L=L$0 } /<\/Commit>/ { print L "\r"; L="" }' inputfile > outputfile

should do what you want as long as the 1st line in every set of 3 adjacent lines in your input file contains "client" starting in column 29 (columns are numbered starting from 1; not 0; in awk . If you want to discard other types of records, this more complicated script should work:


Code:
awk 'cnt { out = out $0 if(--cnt == 0) { gsub("\r", "", out) print out "\r" } next}substr($0, 29, 6) == "client" { cnt = 2 out = $0}' inputfile > outuptfile
Hello Don,

As per user's request I can see user wants crlf at last only.

Code:
awk '/^<Commit ts/ {gsub(/\(crlf\)/,X,$0);a=$0;getline;gsub(/\(crlf\)/,X,$0);gsub(/crlf/,X,$0);a=a $0;getline;a=a $0; print a}'  filename

Output will be as follows.

Code:
<Commit ts="20140812153817" client="AAAAAA">"144","AAAAAA","00.00.000.000","User 'AAAAAA' successfully logged in from address '00.00.000.000'."</Commit>crlf
<Commit ts="20140812160347" client="BBBBBB">"144","BBBBBB","00.0.000.00","User 'BBBBBB' successfully logged in from address '00.0.000.00'."</Commit>(crlf)
<Commit ts="20140812170838" client="CCCCCC">"144","CCCCCC","00.0.000.00","User 'CCCCCC' successfully logged in from address '00.0.000.00'."</Commit>(crlf)


Thanks,
R. Singh
This User Gave Thanks to RavinderSingh13 For This Post:
 

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Agent::Tag::Priority(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 Agent::Tag::Priority(3pm)

NAME
Log::Agent::Tag::Priority - a log priority tag string SYNOPSIS
Not intended to be used directly Inherits from Log::Agent::Tag. DESCRIPTION
This class represents a log priority tag string. CREATION ROUTINE PARAMETERS
The following parameters are defined, in alphabetical order: "-display" => string Specifies the priority/level string to display, with minimal variable substitution. For instance: -display => '[$priority/$level]' The defined variables are documented in the DISPLAY VARIABLES section underneath. "-level" => level This parameter is internally added by "Log::Agent" when computing the priority tag, since only it knows the level of the current messsage. "-postfix" => flag Whether tag should be placed after or before the log message. By default, it is prepended to the log message, i.e. this parameter is false. "-priority" => prio This parameter is internally added by "Log::Agent" when computing the priority tag, since only it knows the priority of the current messsage. "-separator" => string The separation string between the tag and the log message. A single space by default. DISPLAY VARIABLES
The "-display" switch understands a few variables that can be substituted in the supplied string. Both $var and "${var}" forms are supported. Unknown variables are left untouched. $priority The full priority name of the logged message, e.g. "warning" or "error". $level The associated priority level of the logged message, a number. For instance, the level associated to "warning" is 4. See Log::Agent::Priorities for the default name -> level mapping. AUTHOR
Raphael Manfredi <Raphael_Manfredi@pobox.com> SEE ALSO
Log::Agent::Tag(3), Log::Agent::Message(3), Log::Agent::Priorities(3). perl v5.10.0 2002-03-09 Agent::Tag::Priority(3pm)
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