give me a shell-script which extract data from log file on a server by giving date and time as input (for both start time and end time) and it will give the logs generated during the given time as output. (4 Replies)
Hi , I am having a script which will start a process and appends the process related logs to a log file. The log file writes logs with every line starting with date in the format of: date +"%Y %b %d %H:%M:%S".
So, in the script, before I start the process, I am storing the date as DATE=`date +"%Y... (5 Replies)
Dear All,
Please apology to me if this question already posted, because I try to find it but not found.
I have make bash script to automatically download data from ftp and this running very well. and after the data downloaded it will automatically extract the data and keep in the specific... (2 Replies)
Looking for a shell script or a simple perl script . I am new to scripting and not very good at it .
I have 2 directories . One of them holds a text file with list of files in it and the second one is a daily log which shows the file completion time. I need to co-relate both and make a report.
... (0 Replies)
If I have a log like :
Mon Jul 19 05:07:34 2010; TCP; eth3; 52 bytes; from abc to def
Mon Jul 19 05:07:35 2010; UDP; eth3; 46 bytes; from aaa to bbb
Mon Jul 19 05:07:35 2010; TCP; eth3; 52 bytes; from def to ghi
I will need an output like this :
Time abc to def... (1 Reply)
Please help me out to extract the Data from the XML Log files.
So here is the data
ERROR|2010-08-26 00:05:52,958|SERIAL_ID=128279996|ST=2010-08-2600:05:52|DEVICE=113.2.21.12:601|TYPE=TransactionLog... (9 Replies)
I was searching for parsing a log file and found what I need in this link
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7575267/extract-data-from-log-file-in-specified-range-of-time
But the most useful answer (posted by @Kent):
# this variable you could customize, important is convert to seconds.
# e.g... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to extract lines of data within a log file on a Redhat 5 Linux system.
eg I need all the lines with a particular username over the last 3 minutes.
the log file may read like this, and I want a way to search all the lines extracting all the relevant lines over the last 3... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a log file that gets updated every second. Currently the size has grown to 20+ GB. I need to have a command/script, that will try to get the actual size of the file and will remove 50% of the data that are in the log file. I don't mind removing the data as the size has grown to huge... (8 Replies)
Hi, I would like to seek your help for a script that will extract data from log file and put it in a file.
Sample log file
2018-10-23 12:33:21 AI ERROR -- tpid: SAMPLE_TH account: 123456789 aiSessionNumber: 660640464 mapName: xxx to yyy
errorDesc: Translation Error:ErrorNumber : 993 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: neverwinter112
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
xinetd.log
XINETD.LOG(5) File Formats Manual XINETD.LOG(5)NAME
xinetd.log - xinetd service log format
DESCRIPTION
A service configuration may specify various degrees of logging when attempts are made to access the service. When logging for a service is
enabled, xinetd will generate one-line log entries which have the following format (all entries have a timestamp as a prefix):
entry: service-id data
The data depends on the entry. Possible entry types include:
START generated when a server is started
EXIT generated when a server exits
FAIL generated when it is not possible to start a server
USERID generated if the USERID log option is used.
NOID generated if the USERID log option is used, and the IDONLY service flag is used, and the remote end does not identify
who is trying to access the service.
In the following, the information enclosed in brackets appears if the appropriate log option is used.
A START entry has the format:
START: service-id [pid=%d] [from=%d.%d.%d.%d]
An EXIT entry has the format:
EXIT: service-id [type=%d] [pid=%d] [duration=%d(sec)]
type can be either status or signal. The number is either the exit status or the signal that caused process termination.
A FAIL entry has the format:
FAIL: service-id reason [from=%d.%d.%d.%d]
Possible reasons are:
fork a certain number of consecutive fork attempts failed (this number is a configurable parameter)
time the time check failed
address the address check failed
service_limit the allowed number of server instances for this service would be exceeded
process_limit a limit on the number of forked processes was specified and it would be exceeded
A DATA entry has the format:
DATA: service-id data
The data logged depends on the service.
login remote_user=%s local_user=%s tty=%s
exec remote_user=%s verify=status command=%s
Possible status values:
ok the password was correct
failed the password was incorrect
baduser no such user
shell remote_user=%s local_user=%s command=%s
finger received string or EMPTY-LINE
A USERID entry has the format:
USERID: service-id text
The text is the response of the identification daemon at the remote end excluding the port numbers (which are included in the response).
A NOID entry has the format:
NOID: service-id IP-address reason
SEE ALSO xinetd(1L), xinetd.conf(5)
28 April 1993 XINETD.LOG(5)