Sponsored Content
Homework and Emergencies Homework & Coursework Questions How to use xargs to repeat as a loop to grab date string? Post 302926473 by scopiop on Monday 24th of November 2014 03:51:47 PM
Old 11-24-2014
How to use xargs to repeat as a loop to grab date string?

Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted!

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
My goal to find how many requests in 14 days from weblog server. I know to cat a weblog file to wc -l to find the total of all requests have send to server. From there on, I can use a loop of 14 days to go through each line and do comparison with Date String until the string are different I would increment the date until it reach 14th date. I was thinking to seq 14 and xargs commands to go through 14 days cycle.
I would like to know how to do a string compare between date?

Thanks in advance,

Scopiop

2. Relevant commands, code, scripts, algorithms:
Code:
192.192.1.1 - - [10/June/2013...]
192.192.1.2 - - [10/June/2013...]
192.192.1.3 - - [11/June/2013..]
192.192.1.4 - - [12/June/2013..]
........

output
Code:
The last 14 day's requests are: 100


3. The attempts at a solution (include all code and scripts):

4. Complete Name of School (University), City (State), Country, Name of Professor, and Course Number (Link to Course):
City College/Aaron Brick/160B

Note: Without school/professor/course information, you will be banned if you post here! You must complete the entire template (not just parts of it).
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

String substitution on find results inside exec/xargs

What I'm trying to do is perform a copy, well a ditto actually, on the results of a find command, but some inline string substitution needs to happen. So if I run this code find ./ -name "*.tif" I get back these results. .//1234567.tif .//abcdefg.tif Now the action from exec or xargs I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: myndcraft
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

case loop... repeat on bad input?

I'm trying to get a case statement to start over if an undefined option is selected... But I am ata loss on how to actually do it. Here is a quick example of what I have. Echo "1) do this/n 2) Do that/n 3) Quit/n Make a selection/n" Read answer Case answer in 1) Dothid;; 2) Dothat;;... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: trey85stang
3 Replies

3. Homework & Coursework Questions

Date comparison with 'string date having slashes and time zone' in Bash only

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data: I have standard web server log file. It contains different columns (like IP address, request result code, request type etc) including a date column with the format . I have developed a log analysis command line utility that displays... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: TariqYousaf
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Grab first or second line after a search string

In a shell script, I need to grab the first or second line after a search string in a file. For example: File.out: Random Info Manufacturer: XYZPDQ System Info Manufacturer: Hewlett-Packard Product Name: ProLiant I search for the word FILE, I want to be able to grab the line... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jwk1230
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Matching 2 chars of a string that repeat

Hello Unix gurus, I have a gzipped file where each line contains 2 street addresses in the US. What I want to do is get a count for each state that does not match. What I have so far is: $ gzcat matched_10_09.txt.gz |cut -c 106-107,184-185 | head -5 CTCT CTNY CTCT CTFL CTMA This cuts... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sitney
5 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Repeat using for loop

I have a file like this 2011-10-10 10:46:00,1-1-13-1-1,151510,ALCLA0A84D2C 2011-10-10 10:46:00,1-1-13-1-1,151520,65537 2011-10-10 10:46:00,1-1-13-1-1,151515,46932 2011-10-10 10:46:00,1-1-13-1-1,151521,32769 2011-10-10 10:46:00,1-1-13-1-1,151522,32769 2011-10-10... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: LavanyaP
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Replace string, grab files, rename and move

Hello there! I'm having a lot of trouble writing a script. The script is supposed to: 1) Find all files with the name "Object.mtl" within each folder in the directory: /Users/username/Desktop/convert/Objects 2) Search and replace the string ".bmp" with ".tif" (without the quotations) 3)... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Blue Solo
1 Replies

8. Homework & Coursework Questions

How to use loop to repeat task?

Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted! 1. How can i use loop to repeat task. 2.shirt=15 black=13.50 echo "how many shirt you want" read num echo echo "Please enter a choice" echo "1 ---> normal... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tauatioti
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Single parse to grab two chunks of string

Hi all, I'm struggling with this task and have done alot of googling but not found the solution or atleast not found a way to combine them, i'm hoping someone here can help me out. I have a file that contains many line of config "below is two lines for an example" 323 => 1111,Terry berry... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: 3sparky
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl to adjust coordinates based on repeat string

In the file below I am trying to count the given repeats of A,T,C,G in each string of letters. Each sequence is below the > and it is possible for a string of repeats to wrap from the line above. For example, in the first line the last letter is a T and the next lines has 3 more. I think the below... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
10 Replies
xargs(1)						      General Commands Manual							  xargs(1)

Name
       xargs - construct argument list and execute command

Syntax
       xargs [flags] [ command [initial-arguments] ]

Description
       The command combines fixed initial-arguments with arguments read from standard input to execute a specified command one or more times.  The
       number of arguments read when a command is invoked and how they are combined is determined by the options specified.

       The specified command, (which can be a Shell file) is searched for using ones' $PATH specification.  If command is not specified, /bin/echo
       is used.

       Arguments  read	from  standard	input  are defined as contiguous strings of characters delimited by one or more blanks, tabs, or newlines;
       empty lines are always discarded.  Blanks and tabs can be embedded as part of an argument if they contain an escape character  or  if  they
       are  quoted.   Characters enclosed in quotes (single or double) are taken literally, and the delimiting quotes are removed; a backslash ()
       escapes the next character.

Options
       Each argument list begins with the initial-arguments, followed by arguments read from standard input, with the exception of the -i  option.
       See the description of the -i option for more information.

       The  options -i, -l, and -n determine how arguments are selected when each command is invoked.  If none of these options are specified, the
       initial-arguments are followed by arguments read continuously from standard input until the internal buffer is full; then, command executes
       with  the accumulated arguments.  This process repeats until no arguments exist.  When conflicts arise, such as the -l option used with the
       -n, the last option has precedence. The options values are as follows:

       -lnumber
	     Execute command for each non-empty number lines of arguments from standard input.	When command is invoked for the final time, it has
	     fewer  lines  of  arguments if fewer than a specified number remain.  A line ends with the first newline unless the last character of
	     the line is a blank or a tab; a trailing blank or tab signals continuation through the next non-empty line.   If  number  is  is  not
	     specified, the value 1 is assumed.  The option -x is forced.

       -ireplstr (Insert mode)
	     Execute  command for each line from standard input, taking the entire line as a single argument and inserting it in initial-arguments
	     for each occurrence of replstr.  A maximum of five arguments specified in initial-arguments can contain one  or  more  occurrence	of
	     replstr.	Blanks and tabs at the beginning of each line are discarded.  A constructed arguments cannot exceed 255 characters and the
	     option -x is a forced.  A {|} is assumed for replstr if not specified.

       -nnumber
	     Execute command using as many standard input arguments as possible, up to the specified number arguments  maximum.   Fewer  arguments
	     are used if their total size is greater than size characters, and when the last command is invoked, fewer number of arguments remain.
	     If the option -x is also include, each specified number of arguments must fit in the size limitation, or else xargs terminates execu-
	     tion.

       -t (Trace mode)
	     Echo the command and each constructed argument list to file descriptor 2 prior to their execution.

       -p (Prompt mode)
	     Asks  the user whether or not command should be executed each time command is invoked. Trace mode (-t) is turned on to print the com-
	     mand instance to be executed, followed by a ?... prompt.  A reply of y executes the command; any other response does not invoke  that
	     particular command.

       -x    Causes  the  command xargs to terminate if an argument list is greater than the specified size of characters; the option -x is forced
	     by the options -i and -l.	When the options -i, -l, or -n are included, the total length of all arguments must be within  the  speci-
	     fied size limit.

       -ssize
	     The maximum size of each argument list is set to size characters; size must be a positive integer less than or equal to 470. If -s is
	     not included, 470 is the default.	Note that the character count for size includes one extra character  for  each	argument  and  the
	     count of characters in the command name.

       -eeofstr
	     The  option  eofstr  is  taken  as the logical end-of-file string.  Underscore (_) is assumed for the logical EOF string if -e is not
	     specified.  The value -e without eofstr specified turns off the logical EOF string capability; the  underscore  is  taken	literally.
	     The command xargs reads standard input until either end-of-file or the logical EOF string is encountered.

       The command xargs terminates if it receives a return code of -1 from command or if it cannot execute command.  When command is a Shell pro-
       gram, it should explicitly exit with an appropriate value to avoid returning with -1.  See for more information.

Examples
       The following example moves all files from directory $1 to directory $2 and echoes the move command prior to executing it:

       ls $1 | xargs -i -t mv $1/{} $2/{}

       The following example combines the output of the parenthesized commands onto one line, which is then echoed to the end of file log:

       (logname; date; echo $0 $*) | xargs >>log

       In the next example, the user is prompted to specify which files in the current directory are to be archived.  The first  example  archives
       the files one at a time; the second example archives groups of files:

	 ls | xargs -p -l ar r arch

	 ls | xargs -p -l | xargs ar r arch

       The following example executes diff(1) with successive pairs of arguments originally typed as Shell arguments:

       echo $* | xargs -n2 diff

See Also
       sh(1).

																	  xargs(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:59 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy