Please tell me how can I replace control characters with normal string. I have a file that contains normal string and ^A ^C control characters. I tried to use sed and awk without any luck.
Used grep to find ^A characters, but it's not finding. tr tool is working fine. But if I use tr it will completely remove all control characters from file. But I need to change control characters with normal string. How can I achieve this. Please help me
using c-shell, does anyone know how to send control characters to the printer before the job?
I need to set a printer to print in condensed mode
HELP (1 Reply)
Hi,
When I do a man and save it into a file, I end up getting a lot of control characters. How can I remove them??
I tried this:
/1,$ s/^H//g
But I get an error saying "no previous regular expression".
Can someone help me with this.
Thanks,
Aravind (5 Replies)
Hi ,
I have special character control M in many of my files as below
ersNet-Telnet-3.03/Makefile.PL100644 21166 144 612 7113770214 135
77 0ustar jayusers## -*- Perl -*-^M
^M
use ExtUtils::MakeMaker qw(WriteMakefile);^M
^M
WriteMakefile(NAME => "Net::Telnet",^M
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone help me with controlling the cursor position from a shell script. Things like moving left,right,up,down etc
Anyone have any ideas? (2 Replies)
Can somebody please help me with the query. ?
I want a part of program of which should look for control characters in the flat file , when it finds it, displaying message that Control Characters found..!
Please help me (1 Reply)
Can somebody please help me with the query. ?
I want a part of program of which should look for control characters in the flat file , when it finds it, displaying message that Control Characters found..!
Please help me (13 Replies)
sed -e "s// /g" old.txt > new.txt
While I do know some control characters need to be escaped, can normal characters also be escaped and still work the same way? Basically I do not know all control characters that have a special meaning, for example, ?, ., % have a meaning and have to be escaped... (11 Replies)
Hi,
My files are showing some control characters in vi editor
^M
^@ and somtimes
^H
I removed ^M with %s/^M//g command
but how to represent ^@ and ^H
e.g. for ^M it is hold ctrl then v and m..
Please help..
I am very new to unix.. (7 Replies)
Hallo Team,
I am trying to get rid of the dollar sign. I managed to remove all the other special characters but i am struggling with this one.
-bash-3.2$ cat -e missing_revenue_20141112.csv|less|head
BW0522168531211141180935668@196.23.110.141$
BW092218784121114-370120610@196.23.110.141$... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kekanap
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
logprof.conf
LOGPROF.CONF(5) AppArmor LOGPROF.CONF(5)NAME
logprof.conf - configuration file for expert options that modify the behavior of the AppArmor logprof(1) program.
DESCRIPTION
The logprof(1) program can be configured to have certain default behavior by the contents of logprof.conf.
The [qualifiers] section lists specific programs that should have a subset of the full ix/px/ux list when asking what mode to execute it
using.
Since creating a separate profile for /bin/bash is dangerous, we can specify that for /bin/bash, only (I)nherit, (U)nconstrained, and
(D)eny should be allowed options and only those will show up in the prompt when we're asking about adding that to a profile.
Likewise, if someone currently exec's /bin/mount in ix or px mode, things won't work, so we can provide only (U)nconstrained and (D)eny as
options.
And certain apps like grep, awk, sed, cp, and mkdir should always inherit the parent profile rather than having their own profile or
running unconfined, so for them we can specify that only (I)nherit and (D)eny are the allowed options.
Any programs that are not listed in the qualifiers section get the full (I)nherit / (P)rofile / (U)nconstrained / (D)eny option set.
If the user is doing something tricky and wants different behavior, they can tweak or remove the corresponding line in the conf file.
The [defaulthat] section lists changehat-aware programs and what hat logprof(1) will collapse the entries to for that program if the user
specifies that the access should be allowed, but should not have it's own hat.
The [globs] section allows modification of the logprof rule engine with respect to globbing suggestions that the user will be prompted
with.
The format of each line is-- "<perl glob> = <apparmor glob>".
When logprof(1) asks about a specific path, if the perl glob matches the path, it replaces the part of the path that matched with the
corresponding apparmor glob and adds it to the list of globbing suggestions.
Lines starting with # are comments and are ignored.
EXAMPLE
[qualifiers]
# things will very likely be painfully broken if bash has it's own profile
/bin/bash = iu
# mount doesn't work if it's confined
/bin/mount = u
# these helper utilities should inherit the parent profile and
# shouldn't have their own profiles
/bin/awk = i
/bin/grep = i
/bin/sed = i
[defaulthat]
/usr/sbin/sshd = EXEC
/usr/sbin/httpd2 = DEFAULT_URI
/usr/sbin/httpd2-prefork = DEFAULT_URI
[globs]
# /foo/bar/lib/libbaz.so -> /foo/bar/lib/lib*
/lib/lib[^/]+so[^/]*$ = /lib/lib*so*
# strip kernel version numbers from kernel module accesses
^/lib/modules/[^/]+/ = /lib/modules/*/
# strip pid numbers from /proc accesses
^/proc/d+/ = /proc/*/
BUGS
None. Please report any you find to bugzilla at <http://bugzilla.novell.com>.
SEE ALSO apparmor(7), apparmor.d(5), enforce(1), change_hat(2), complain(1), logprof(1), genprof(1), and
<http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/project/?apparmor>.
NOVELL /SUSE 2007-04-03 LOGPROF.CONF(5)