Hi All,
I am a newbie to Shell Scripting.
I have a File
The Server Name
XXX002
-------------------------
2.1 LAPD
Iface Id Link MTU Side
ecc_3_1 4 Up 512 User
ecc_3_2 5 Up 512 User
The Server Name
XXX003
-------------------------
2.1 LAPD (4 Replies)
Hi
I want to extract certain text between two line numbers like
23234234324 and
54446655567567
How do I do this with a simple sed or awk command?
Thank you.
---------- Post updated at 06:16 PM ---------- Previous update was at 05:55 PM ----------
found it:
sed -n '#1,#2p'... (1 Reply)
How can i break a text file into parts that occur between a specific pattern?
I have text file having various xml many tags like which starts with the tag "<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>" . I have to break the whole file into several xmls by looking for the above pattern.
All the... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I need to extract <APPNUMBER> tag alone, if the <college> haas IIT Chennai value. college tag value will have spaces embedded. Those spaces should not be suppresses.
My Source file
<Record><sno>1</sno><empid>E0001</empid><name>Rejsh suderam</name><college>IIT ... (3 Replies)
I have a txt file having rows and coulmns, i want to perform some operation on a specific coulmn starting from a specific line.
eg:
50.000000 1 1 1
1000.00000
1000.00000
50000.000
19
19
3.69797533E-07 871.66394 ... (3 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I am on AIX (6.1). I can only use shell (ksh) script.
I can't do this on my own, so will do my best to explain my needs.I also do not know what is the best idea to make it work, so here is what I am thinking, but I may wrong.
I need help to extract info on... (3 Replies)
In the below file I am trying to grep or similar, all lines where only AF= is less than 0.4.. Thank you :).
grep
grep "AF=" ,+ .4 file
file
12 112036782 . T C 34.0248 PASS ... (3 Replies)
I am trying to rename all text files in a directory that match a pattern. The current command below seems to be using the directory path in the name and since it already exists, will not do the rename. I am not sure what I am missing? Thank you :).
Files to rename in... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cg
CG(1)CG(1)NAME
cg - Recursively grep for a pattern and store it.
SYNOPSIS
cg [ -l ] | [ [ -i ] pattern [ files ] ]
DESCRIPTION
cg does a search though text files (usually source code) recursively for a pattern, storing matches and displaying the output in a human-
readable fashion. It is intended to give some of the functionaly of AT&T's cscope(1) tool, with the advantages of simplicity and not being
language-specific. The script will colorize output if configured as such.
It is typically run with a Perl regular expression to search for. The search can be made case insensitive by using the -i option. A list
of files may also be specified with an additional argument after the pattern. Put the files pattern in quotes to make it be matched by
Perl rather than by the shell. Running the script with no arguments will recall the results of the previous search. After the search,
entries found can be edited using the vg(1) script. The -l option shows the last log made.
SOME EXAMPLES
cg - alone recalls the previous search results.
cg -i pattern - search the default list of files for all files matching the pattern (and case-insensitively).
cg pattern '*.c' - search recursively for pattern in all *.c files. This automatically converts '*' to '.*' and '.' to '.' for you and
does a Perl pattern match on all files in the tree.
cg pattern *.c - search through the shell-expanded list of *.c files, so not done recursively (in other words, only the files your shell
pass to the script as arguments).
cg -l - show the last log made.
COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS-i Do a case-insensitive search.
-l Show the last log made.
-p Toggle the default pager option. cg has a bulit-in pager function, which can be enabled or disabled by default (in .cgvgrc). If the
default is enabled, this option disables the pager; if the default is disabled, this option enables it.
-P Force the built-in pager to be disabled.
FILES
${HOME}/.cglast
Log file of the last search.
${HOME}/.cgvgrc
Per-user configuration file (if the defaults are not desireable).
${HOME}/.cgvg/*
Log files in $HOSTNAME.shell_pid form with the log of the last search.
SEE ALSO vg(1), perl(1), find(1), grep(1), cscope(1)AUTHOR
cg was written by Joshua Uziel <uzi@uzix.org>.
13 Mar 2002 CG(1)