Stop the match at the end-of-line (indicated by the $-sign following $tariff):
There's options to grep as well that make it match whole words or entire lines only ... see man grep.
I have some basic doubts. Can someone clarify in this forum?
1)if
then
eval ' tset -s -Q -m ':?hp' '
else
eval ' tset -s -Q '
what does it exactly mean in .profile?
2) what are 'nobody' and 'noaccess' usernames in /etc/passwd file.
... (3 Replies)
Hello all. Let me start off by saying I know a little more then it seems by me asking this question... here goes
I have an old 486 box and I want to start messing around with unix. I've been taking classes for 3 or 4 years in c programming in unix, so I am used to the commands and such, but I... (1 Reply)
Could someone tell me the command to find out the OS version which will give 12 character not the 9 characters(which is usually machine id).
uname -i gives machine id and uname -a is more comprehensive way to look.
Thanks! (4 Replies)
hi,
I have a basic question,,
i am in a directory called
/intas/OCU_3.9.1/sbin
ocuut1@france>mv itsa_tcs itsa_tcs_old
mv: itsa_tcs_old: rename: Permission denied
i am logging as the owner of the file.
when i am doing this i am getting the above error of permission denied.
I know... (3 Replies)
i'm doing this in one terminal:
nc -lu 7402
and it appears to start listening properly, then in another i do this:
echo "hello" | nc -u localhost 7402
and nothing happens on the listening terminal - what am i doing wrong?
thanks. (7 Replies)
I think I am doing this correctly, but it is responding very quickly with no results so I am not sure. I need to do a case insensitive grep of all files in my current directory
grep -i <keyword> /my/directory
is that correct? (1 Reply)
I am trying to grep a section of .txt file...but once I grep the certain area of the file I would like to display all lines below it as well....how do I have to go about doing this...
example
grep "Sidney Crosby" hockey.txt
result
Sidney Crosby
Age
Goals
Assist
Can this be done... (8 Replies)
Shell : Bash shell (Fedora 26)
In the below text file (output.txt), I need to find all lines starting with the pattern pc. As you can see, only one line matches this condition (pc hello world).
But, my below 3 attempts return wrong output. How do I use the grep command correctly here ?
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kraljic
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
processcsv.py
PROCESSCSV.PY(1) Virtualization Support PROCESSCSV.PY(1)NAME
processcsv.py - process virt-top CSV files
SUMMARY
virt-top --csv data.csv
processcsv.py < data.csv
DESCRIPTION
virt-top is a top(1)-like utility for showing stats of virtualized domains.
processcsv.py is a simple Python script that post-processes the output of "virt-top --csv".
It is used like this:
virt-top --csv data.csv
processcsv.py < data.csv
The second command will overwrite the following files in the current directory:
"global.csv"
This contains the global (host) statistics columns from the CSV file.
"domainNN.csv" (multiple files)
For each libvirt domain ID NN, a file is created containing the per-domain statistics from the CSV file.
SEE ALSO virt-top(1)AUTHORS
Richard W.M. Jones <rjones @ redhat . com>
COPYRIGHT
(C) Copyright 2007-2012 Red Hat Inc., Richard W.M. Jones http://libvirt.org/
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
virt-top-1.0.8 2013-12-29 PROCESSCSV.PY(1)