Hi im new to unix and need to find a way to grep the top 5 numbers in a file and put them into another file. For example my file looks like this
abcdef 50000
abcdef 45000
abcdef 40000
abcdef 35000
abcdef 30000
abcdef 25000
abcdef 20000
abcdef 15000
abcdef 10000
and so on...
How can... (1 Reply)
Howdy experts,
We have some ranges of number which belongs to particual group as below.
GroupNo StartRange EndRange
Group0125 935300 935399
Group2006 935400 935476
937430 937459
Group0324 935477 935549
... (6 Replies)
I want to print between the range two patterns if a particular pattern is present in between the two patterns. I am new to Unix. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
e.g.
Pattern1
Bombay
Calcutta
Delhi
Pattern2
Pattern1
Patna
Madras
Gwalior
Delhi
Pattern2
Pattern1... (2 Replies)
hi working with sed in a shell script
using sed to print a range of lines from a given file
for example to print lines 12-24 from a file
sed 12,24p <filename>
however i need to print the line numbers, alongwith the actual lines
would this be possible at all?
Thanks (1 Reply)
Dear Friends,
I want to know how to grep for the lines that has a number between given range(start and end).
I have tried the following sed command.
sed -n -e '/20030101011442/,/20030101035519/p'
However this requires both start and end to be part of the content being grepped. However... (4 Replies)
I am trying to extract specific information from a large *.sam file (it's originally 28Gb).
I want to extract all lines that are on chr3 somewhere in the range of 112,937,439-113,437,438.
Here is a sample line from my file so you can get a feel for what each line looks like:
seq.4 0 ... (8 Replies)
Hi,
In an ideal scenario, I will have a listing of db transaction log that gets copied to a DR site and if I have them all, they will be numbered consecutively like below.
1_79811_01234567.arc
1_79812_01234567.arc
1_79813_01234567.arc
1_79814_01234567.arc
1_79815_01234567.arc... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT POSIX
escape
escape(1) Mail Avenger 0.8.3 escape(1)NAME
escape - escape shell special characters in a string
SYNOPSIS
escape string
DESCRIPTION
escape prepends a "" character to all shell special characters in string, making it safe to compose a shell command with the result.
EXAMPLES
The following is a contrived example showing how one can unintentionally end up executing the contents of a string:
$ var='; echo gotcha!'
$ eval echo hi $var
hi
gotcha!
$
Using escape, one can avoid executing the contents of $var:
$ eval echo hi `escape "$var"`
hi ; echo gotcha!
$
A less contrived example is passing arguments to Mail Avenger bodytest commands containing possibly unsafe environment variables. For
example, you might write a hypothetical reject_bcc script to reject mail not explicitly addressed to the recipient:
#!/bin/sh
formail -x to -x cc -x resent-to -x resent-cc
| fgrep "$1" > /dev/null
&& exit 0
echo "<$1>.. address does not accept blind carbon copies"
exit 100
To invoke this script, passing it the recipient address as an argument, you would need to put the following in your Mail Avenger rcpt
script:
bodytest reject_bcc `escape "$RECIPIENT"`
SEE ALSO avenger(1),
The Mail Avenger home page: <http://www.mailavenger.org/>.
BUGS
escape is designed for the Bourne shell, which is what Mail Avenger scripts use. escape might or might not work with other shells.
AUTHOR
David Mazieres
Mail Avenger 0.8.3 2012-04-05 escape(1)