Hi,
I have a file which contains records of data.
I need to split the file into multiple files depending upon the value of last field.
How do i read the last field of each record in the file???
Regards,
Chaitrali (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a requirement .I want to split a file and the split files should have certain names.
Currently when i use the split command
split -1000 testdata testdata_
Then the output is
testdata_aa
testdata_bb
testdata_cc
and so on.
But i want the output as
testdata1.snd... (3 Replies)
I have a file test1.html like below:
<dctm_topnav_en_US>
<html>
.....
</html>
<dctm_topnav_en_CA>
<html>
.....
</html>
<dctm_topnav_en_FR>
<html>
.....
</html>
I need to use awk to split this into three file names like en_US.html ,
en_CA.html, en_FR.html each having content between... (4 Replies)
Hi All;
I have input file like below
name char(3)
number number(3)
inputfile
namenumber
xyz123abc509kai330
aca203
ald390afa000als303
I wanted to split like below:-
output like this:-
xyz123
abc509
kai330
aca203
ald390 (6 Replies)
Arun kumar something somehting Enterting in to the line
.
.
.
.
Some text text Finshing the sentence
Some other text
.
.
.
.
Again something somehting Enterting in to the line
.
.
.
.
.
.
Again text text Finshing the sentence (6 Replies)
Hi
I have a large text file and I want to split its content into multiple flies.
this large file contains several blocks of codes separated by a comment line for each block.
this comment line represents a directory path
So, when separate these blocks each into a separate file, This output... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
When i use sort Test, here is the output:
$ sort Test
a
b
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
But the contents in the file remain unsorted, how to do that?
]$ cat Test
g
i (6 Replies)
Hi,
Right now there is a file called 'qm.ini' which is owned by mqm:mqm and I am trying to replace a line from this file with something else and save.
I am using the below perl command to replace and save within a shell script with a different user called 'mqadm' which is also part of mqm... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bdpl
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
queue-repair
queue-repair(8) System Manager's Manual queue-repair(8)NAME
queue-repair - deal with the qmail queue directory structure
SYNOPSIS
queue-repair [ -htrcbn ] [ -n split ] [ conf-qmail ]
DESCRIPTION
queue-repair deals with the qmail queue structure; it can create a new queue, move and properly rename a queue, dynamically change the
conf-split value, convert big-todo queues to non-big-todo and vice versa, and repair a corrupted queue.
conf-qmail defaults to /var/lib/qmail/ on Debian.
OPTIONS
-h|--help
Display usage information and built-in defaults, then exit.
-t|--test
Run in test-only mode. queue-repair will attempt to report all problems that it finds, without correcting them. This is the
default.
-r|--repair
Run in repair mode. queue-repair will attempt to correct all problems that it finds, except if the basic queue directories (queue,
queue/mess, queue/info, etc) are not found.
-c|--create
Run in create-and-repair mode. queue-repair will attempt to correct all problems that it finds, including creation of a new queue
structure from scratch.
-s|--split split
Specify split as the value of conf-split. This is the number of split subdirectories for those queue directories which are hashed.
The default for qmail is 23. Appropriate values depend on the volume of mail handled, OS filesystem efficiency, and other factors,
but this should always be a prime number.
If you do not specify conf-split, queue-repair will attempt to determine the current value from the existing queue. This option can
be used, however, to change the conf-split value of an existing queue (qmail will still have to be recompiled with the new value).
When creating a new queue, this option must always be specified.
-b|--bigtoto
Use big-todo. queue-repair should be able to automatically determine if you're using qmail patched with the big-todo patch. This
option can be used, however, to convert a non-big-todo queue to a big-todo queue (qmail will still have to be recompiled with the
big-todo patch).
If neither this option nor --no-bigtodo is used, queue-repair will attempt to determine this automatically. When creating a new
queue, either this option or --no-bigtodo must always be specified.
-n|--no-bigtodo
Do not use big-todo. queue-repair should be able to automatically determine if you're using qmail patched with the big-todo patch.
This option can be used, however, to convert a big-todo queue to a non big-todo queue (qmail will still have to be recompiled with-
out the big-todo patch).
If neither this option nor --bigtodo is used, queue-repair will attempt to determine this automatically. When creating a new queue,
either this option or --bigtodo must always be specified.
--i-want-a-broken-conf-split
Force the use of a non-prime value for conf-split.
SEE ALSO qmail(7)queue-repair(8)