Hi there could someone explain what is happening in the following function/statement for me, im just a little confused
code = 'BEGIN{FS=","}
{
printf ("%-11s,%s%s%s,%07.2f,%14s,%-3s\n",$1,substr($2,9,2),substr($2,6,2),substr($
2,3,2),$9,$10,$12)
}
this function is called later in the... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am at a point in my script where I defined the number of the command line parameter I would like to set a variable equal to:
parameter_number=14
I would then like to set a variable equal to the correct parameter:
variable=$parameter_number
The issue here is that {} is required... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Have to check file names in some given directory.
SO, What is the right syntax here:
*$3*=="'$object_list'" - just wanted to check if $3 is in the object_list.
And also, Do I need so many quotes around? (5 Replies)
There are are lots of examples of piping output FROM the 'ls' command TO another command, but how does one pipe output TO the 'ls -l' command?
For example, use 'which' to find a file, then use 'ls -l' to view the permissions, groups, etc. in a single step:
which <filename> | ls -l
returns... (4 Replies)
Hi
I use awk command to delete the first blanc line of a file:
awk '/^$/ && !f{f=1;next}1' infile > outfile
can somebody please explain me what the last "1'" in !f{f=1;next}1' stands for... Thansk a lot -A (3 Replies)
Hello,
I need to create an snmp.comf file that defines 2 IPs to the same community string.
Do I need to have 2 community strings with the same name and diff't IPs?
Or should I have 1 string and list the IPs? (comma seperated?)
Example:
rocommunity EC_8000_RO
arguments EC_8000_RO... (2 Replies)
I am writing a perl script to tar multiple files (in unix) from a given directory to a given output directory. I do NOT want the file path included in the tar, so I've flagged the -C option. Example:
tar -cvf tar/1.tar -C htmp/source/ 1-1-1.xml
However, I need to do this for a number of target... (3 Replies)
first of all.. sorry about all the question bombing.. im bored atm so im currently playing around with sh scripting hehe
s = `expr ls -s Documents | grep Music | awk '{ print $1 }' `
t = `expr $t + $s`
it give syntax error
s not found
t not found lol...
any idea why? (7 Replies)
Hallo everybody,
I have a following problem - I'm doing a map funciont to fill in a HTML table and I want to use some radiobutton groups. Unfortunatelly, they are grouped by names, so I have to add some "counter" that will divide one row from another, and I'm using CGI.pm for generating the... (3 Replies)
Greetings!
Here's what I believe is a "simple one" for the community tonight ;)
What I'm trying to do is assign a "true/false" value to a variable depending upon whether a named process (some-process) exists; and then test for this value in the succeeding logic. I banged my head against the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: LinQ
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
dos2unix
dos2unix(1) General Commands Manual dos2unix(1)NAME
dos2unix - mtools utility to convert a DOS file to UNIX
SYNOPSIS
dos2unix msdosfile
OPTIONS
None
OPERANDS
Name of the file to convert.
DESCRIPTION
The dos2unix command converts a file from DOS format to UNIX format. The converted file replaces the original file.
Subdirectory names that contain the '/' or '' separator are supported. If you use the '' separator or wildcards, you must enclose file
names in quotes to protect them from the shell.
The mcd command can be used to establish the device and the current working directory (relative to DOS), otherwise the default is A:.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: Success. Failure.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables affect the execution of dos2unix: If set, this variable names the file that contains the name of the
current mtools working directory as established by the mcd command. If this variable is not set, the file $HOME/.mcwd is used.
FILES
Contains the name of the current mtools working directory as established by the mcd command. If this file does not exist, the default
mtools working directory is A:. Executable file
SEE ALSO
Commands: mcopy(1), mread(1), mtools(1)mtype(1), mwrite(1)dos2unix(1)