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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Collecting logs between two time stamps Post 302939868 by RudiC on Monday 30th of March 2015 01:52:16 PM
Old 03-30-2015
What has this
Code:
12:18:17,734 INFO  [xyzout] (ajp-/xx.xx.xx.xxx:1234-1) 2015-03-30 12:18:17,733:INFO . . . 
      [name_nname@email.domain.com.smb]: workingCreateQuotesFromabcdefData

to do with your problem resp. the sample given?

Code:
awk -F, '                                                               # run awk with field separator set to ","
function dform(v){                                                      # convert time string to binary representation
                    gsub(/[-:]/," ",v)                                  # replace "-" and ":" with " " in v
                    return mktime(v)                                    # do conversion
                 }
           NR==1 {                                                      # at start of file
                    start = dform(start)                                # convert start parameter
                     end  = dform(end)                                  # and end
                 }
    dform($1)!=-1{                                                      # if first field is a valid time string
                    f = dform($1)>=start && dform($1) <= end ? 1 : 0    # set "doprint" var "f" if $1 within boundaries   
                 }f                                                     # print line if "f"
        ' start="$from" end="$to" $log1 > /script/xyz.txt               # supply boundaries and log file; redirect

Be aware that mktime is not available in all awk versions.
You could use this snippet for your problem if you use [ ,] for the field separator and apply it to $10 instead of $1. It would not print the last line in your desired output, though.
 

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ATSADC(1)							       local								 ATSADC(1)

NAME
atsadc, atsa1, atsaftp, atsahttp -- counter-collection SYNOPSIS
atsadc [ t n ] [ ofile ] atsa1 [ t n ] atsaftp atsahttp DESCRIPTION
System activity-data can be gathered on special request of a user [see atsar(1) ] or automatically, on a routine basis, as described here. Usually the kernel maintains statistical counters that are incremented as various system actions occur. These include counters for CPU uti- lization, disk utilization, memory utilization and various network statistics. The program atsadc and the shell-script atsa1 are used to collect, save, and process these counters. The program atsadc (the data collector) samples system data n times with an interval of t seconds between samples, and writes in binary format to ofile or (default) to standard output. The sampling interval t should be greater than 1 second. If t and n are omitted, a special reset-record is written. This facility is used when booting to a multi-user state, to mark the time at which the counters restart from zero. For example, the reset-mark can be added to the daily data by the command: /usr/local/bin/atsadc /var/log/atsar/atsa`date +%d` Note that this entry is written to the /etc/rc.d/init.d/atsar file. The shell-script atsa1 is used to collect and store data in the binary file /var/log/atsar/atsadd where dd is the current day of the month. The arguments t and n cause records to be written n times at an interval of t seconds, or once if omitted. Furthermore this script takes care that log-files older than a week are removed once a day. A file containing following entries should be added to the /etc/cron.d directory to produce records every 20 minutes during working hours and hourly otherwise: 0 * * * 0-6 root /usr/local/bin/atsa1 20,40 8-17 * * 1-5 root /usr/local/bin/atsa1 See crontab(1) for details. The shell-script atsaftp counts the new transfers registered in the FTP-logfile(s) since the previous time this script was activated; the new counters are stored in the /var/log/atsar/ftpstat file in ASCII-format. The names of the FTP-logfiles to be watched are specified in the /etc/atsar.conf configuration-file. The shell-script atsahttp counts the new transfers registered in the HTTP-logfile(s) since the previous time this script was activated; the new counters are stored in the /var/log/atsar/httpstat file in ASCII-format. The names of the HTTP-logfiles to be watched are specified in the /etc/atsar.conf configuration-file. Both scripts must be activated just before the program atsadc is started, which also collects these counters. FILES
/var/log/atsar/atsadd Daily data file, where dd are digits representing the day of the month. SEE ALSO
atsar(1), crontab(1) AUTHOR
Gerlof Langeveld, AT Computing (gerlof@ATComputing.nl) AT Computing July 2004 ATSADC(1)
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