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Homework and Emergencies Homework & Coursework Questions How to use xargs to repeat as a loop to grab date string? Post 302926932 by scopiop on Friday 28th of November 2014 03:54:47 PM
Old 11-28-2014
I have tried the approach to grep the date of the last line and cut out the Date field and I have problem of getting rid of the square bracket.

Code:
$cat /etc/httpd/logs/access_log | cut -d' ' -f4 
> [25/Nov/2014:12:00:01

How do I remove the square bracket from most left? I have tried to use grep but
Unsuccessful to get rid of the bracket. After removed the bracket I think I can use
date "14 days ago" to set a stop point where I can count for all requests between those
date. I hope I got the right approach from here.

Thank you for your help,
Scopiop

Last edited by scopiop; 11-28-2014 at 05:40 PM..
 

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WILDMAT(3)						     Library Functions Manual							WILDMAT(3)

NAME
wildmat - perform shell-style wildcard matching SYNOPSIS
int wildmat(text, pattern) char *text; char *pattern; DESCRIPTION
Wildmat is part of libinn(3). Wildmat compares the text against the pattern and returns non-zero if the pattern matches the text. The pattern is interpreted according to rules similar to shell filename wildcards, and not as a full regular expression such as those handled by the grep(1) family of programs or the regex(3) or regexp(3) set of routines. The pattern is interpreted as follows: x Turns off the special meaning of x and matches it directly; this is used mostly before a question mark or asterisk, and is not spe- cial inside square brackets. ? Matches any single character. * Matches any sequence of zero or more characters. [x...y] Matches any single character specified by the set x...y. A minus sign may be used to indicate a range of characters. That is, [0-5abc] is a shorthand for [012345abc]. More than one range may appear inside a character set; [0-9a-zA-Z._] matches almost all of the legal characters for a host name. The close bracket, ], may be used if it is the first character in the set. The minus sign, -, may be used if it is either the first or last character in the set. [^x...y] This matches any character not in the set x...y, which is interpreted as described above. For example, [^]-] matches any character other than a close bracket or minus sign. HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> in 1986, and posted to Usenet several times since then, most notably in comp.sources.misc in March, 1991. Lars Mathiesen <thorinn@diku.dk> enhanced the multi-asterisk failure mode in early 1991. Rich and Lars increased the efficiency of star patterns and reposted it to comp.sources.misc in April, 1991. Robert Elz <kre@munnari.oz.au> added minus sign and close bracket handling in June, 1991. This is revision 1.2.6.1, dated 2000/08/17. SEE ALSO
grep(1), regex(3), regexp(3). WILDMAT(3)
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