Hi Jean
I require your help in writing a shell script. Iam zero in Unix programming. I have a large file about 400 MB of data, which contains about 50000 XML messages seperated by a Tab, I think. I need to extract only 4 values from each XML message and write it onto a new file. Please help me... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm trying to extract the values for the 'src' and 'alt' tags within an xml file. In the files that I'm searching, the tags are always enclosed within an 'img' tag. Typically:
<img src="diwiz01.gif" width="576" height="254" alt="Out-of-process and In-process COM Objects"><bookmark... (3 Replies)
Greetings,
I am very new to the UNIX shell scripting and would like to learn. However, I am currently stuck on how to process the below sample of code from an XML file using UNIX comands:
<ATTRIBUTE NAME="Memory" VALUE="512MB"/>
<ATTRIBUTE NAME="CPU Speed" VALUE="3.0GHz"/>
<ATTRIBUTE... (5 Replies)
We have 2 XML file 1. ORIGINAL.xml file and 2. ATTRIBUTE.xml files, In the ORIGINAL.xml we need some modification as <resourceCode>431048</resourceCode>under <item type="Manufactured"> tag - we need to grab the 431048 value from tag and pass it to database table in unix shell script to find the... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
Please help me out in resolving this..
<secondTag enabled='true' processName='test1' pidFile='/tmp/test1.pid' />
From the above tag, I'm trying to retrieve the value of enabled and pidFile attributes by means of processName attribute.
Would be thankful in resolving this..... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
Find the following code:
<Universal>D38x82j1JJ
</Universal>
I want to retrieve the value of <Universal> tag as below:
Please help me. (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm stuck with adding multiple lines(irrespective of line number) to a file before a particular xml tag. Please help me.
<A>testing_Location</A>
<value>LA</value>
<zone>US</zone>
<B>Region</B>
<value>Russia</value>
<zone>Washington</zone>
<C>Country</C>... (0 Replies)
I want to basically do the below thing. Suppose there is a tag called object1. I want to display an output for all similar tag values under heading of Object 1 and the count of the xmls. Please help
File:
<xml><object1>house</object1><object2>child</object2>... (9 Replies)
Hi Forum.
I have an XML file with the following requirement to move the <AdditionalAccountHolders> tag and its content right after the <accountHolderName> tag within the same file but I'm not sure how to accomplish this through a Unix script.
Any feedback will be greatly appreciated.
... (19 Replies)
I want to write a one line script that outputs the result of multiple xml tags from a XML file. For example I have a XML file which has below XML tags in the file:
<EMAIL>***</EMAIL>
<CUSTOMER_ID>****</CUSTOMER_ID>
<BRANDID>***</BRANDID>
Now I want to grep the values of all these specified... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shubh752
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
ctags
CTAGS(1) General Commands Manual CTAGS(1)NAME
ctags - Generates "tags" and (optionally) "refs" files
SYNOPSIS
ctags [-stvra] filesnames...
DESCRIPTION
ctags generates the "tags" and "refs" files from a group of C source files. The "tags" file is used by Elvis' ":tag" command, control-]
command, and -t option. The "refs" file is sometimes used by the ref(1) program.
Each C source file is scanned for #define statements and global function definitions. The name of the macro or function becomes the name
of a tag. For each tag, a line is added to the "tags" file which contains:
- the name of the tag
- a tab character
- the name of the file containing the tag
- a tab character
- a way to find the particular line within the file.
The filenames list will typically be the names of all C source files in the current directory, like this:
$ ctags -stv *.[ch]
OPTIONS -t Include typedefs. A tag will be generated for each user-defined type. Also tags will be generated for struct and enum names.
Types are considered to be global if they are defined in a header file, and static if they are defined in a C source file.
-v Include variable declarations. A tag will be generated for each variable, except for those that are declared inside the body of a
function.
-s Include static tags. Ctags will normally put global tags in the "tags" file, and silently ignore the static tags. This flag causes
both global and static tags to be added. The name of a static tag is generated by prefixing the name of the declared item with the
name of the file where it is defined, with a colon in between. For example, "static foo(){}" in "bar.c" results in a tag named
"bar.c:foo".
-r This causes ctags to generate both "tags" and "refs". Without -r, it would only generate "tags".
-a Append to "tags", and maybe "refs". Normally, ctags overwrites these files each time it is invoked. This flag is useful when you
have to many files in the current directory for you to list them on a single command-line; it allows you to split the arguments
among several invocations.
FILES
tags A cross-reference that lists each tag name, the name of the source file that contains it, and a way to locate a particular line in
the source file.
refs The "refs" file contains the definitions for each tag in the "tags" file, and very little else. This file can be useful, for exam-
ple, when licensing restrictions prevent you from making the source code to the standard C library readable by everybody, but you
still everybody to know what arguments the library functions need.
BUGS
ctags is sensitive to indenting and line breaks. Consequently, it might not discover all of the tags in a file that is formatted in an
unusual way.
SEE ALSO elvis(1), refs(1)AUTHOR
Steve Kirkendall
kirkenda@cs.pdx.edu
CTAGS(1)