Hi,
I have this following script below. Its searching a log file for 2 string and if found then write the strings to success.txt and If not found write strings to failed.txt . if one found and not other...then write found to success.txt and not found to failed.txt.
I want to optimize this... (3 Replies)
Hi All ,
I am just a new bie in Unix/Linux .
With help of tips from 'here and there' , I just created a simple script to
1. declare one array and some global variables
2. read the schema names from user (user input) and want2proceed flag
3. if user want to proceed , keep reading user... (8 Replies)
I've a script to do some snapshots but the time it does so is very different...
once i got a snapshot under 1 sec, on the other hand it took 3 sec, but nothing else changed, i didnt even move the cursor or something.
I put the script on a ramdisk and its faster, but still swing from under 1... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
There is a script (test.sh) which is taking more CPU usage. I am attaching the script in this thread.
Could anybody please help me out to optimize the script in a better way.
Thanks,
Gobinath (6 Replies)
Dear Forum experts
I have the below script which I made to run under bash shell, it runs perfectly for low records number, let us say like 100000. when I put all records (3,000,000), it's takes hours
can you please suggest anything to optimize or to run in different way :-|
{OFS="|";... (6 Replies)
Here is my code. What it does is it reads an input file (input.txt which contains roughly 2,000 search phrases) and searches a directory for files that contains the search phrase. The directory contains roughly 1900 files and 84 subdirectories. The output is a file (output.txt) that shows only the... (23 Replies)
Hi,
I need a shell script to determine if a no. is either even, greater than 4, less than 8
SHELL : ksh
OS : RHEL 6
this is the if block of the script
mod=`expr $num % 2`
if || ||
then
echo "No. is either even or greater than 4 or less than 8"
fi
this code works... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have the following input - the unique row key is 1st column
cat file.txt
A response
C request
C response
D request
C request
C response
E request
The desired output should be
C request (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I have written a new script to check for DB space and size of dump log file before it can be imported into a Oracle DB.
I'm relatively new to shell scripting.
Please help me optimize this script further. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: narayanv
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
colorreset
COLORS(3) libbash colors Library Manual COLORS(3)NAME
colors -- libbash library for setting tty colors.
SYNOPSIS
colorSet <color>
colorReset
colorPrint [<indent>] <color> <text>
colorPrintN [<indent>] <color> <text>
DESCRIPTION
General
colors is a collection of functions that make it very easy to put colored text on tty.
The function list:
colorSet Sets the color of the prints to the tty to COLOR
colorReset Resets current tty color back to normal
colorPrint Prints TEXT in the color COLOR indented by INDENT (without adding a newline)
colorPrintN The same as colorPrint, but trailing newline is added
Detailed interface description follows.
Available colors:
Green
Red
Yellow
White
The color parameter is non-case-sensitive (i.e. RED, red, ReD, and all the other forms are valid and are the same as Red).
FUNCTIONS DESCRIPTIONS
colorSet <color>
Sets the current printing color to color.
colorReset
Resets current tty color back to normal.
colorPrint [<indent>] <color>
Prints text using the color color indented by indent (without adding a newline).
Parameters:
<indent>
The column to move to before start printing. This parameter is optional. If ommitted - start output from current cursor position.
<color>
The color to use.
<color>
The text to print.
colorPrintN [<indent>] <color>
The same as colorPrint, except a trailing newline is added.
EXAMPLES
Printing a green 'Hello World' with a newline:
Using colorSet:
$ colorSet green
$ echo 'Hello World'
$ colorReset
Using colorPrint:
$ colorPrint 'Hello World'; echo
Using colorPrintN:
$ colorPrintN 'Hello World'
AUTHORS
Hai Zaar <haizaar@haizaar.com>
Gil Ran <gil@ran4.net>
SEE ALSO ldbash(1), libbash(1)Linux Epoch Linux