Perl script to read string from file#1 and find/replace in file#2
Hello Forum.
I have a file called abc.sed with the following commands;
s/1/one/g
s/2/two/g
...
I also have a second file called abc.dat and would like to substitute all occurrences of "1 with one", "2 with two", etc and create a new file called abc_new.dat
For small files, this command works fine but for large files, it's very slow
I read that Perl might be faster in doing this kind of operation.
Can you please help me write the Perl code if you think it can work faster?
I am a newbie in Perl scripting.
Thanks and appreciate all the help you can provide.
I have korn shell script that genretaets 100 file based on template replacing the number.
The template file is as below:
$ cat template
file number: NUMBER
The shell script is as below:
$ cat gen.sh
#!/bin/ksh
i=1;
while ((i <= 100)); do
sed "s/NUMBER/$i/" template > file_${i}
((... (1 Reply)
Hi -
I am looking for a replacing a string in a in multiple *.sql files in directory with a new string without using a temporary file
Normally I can use sed command as below
for W in ls `FILE*.sql`
do
sed 's/OLD/NEW/g' $W > TEMPFILE.dat
mv TEMPFILE.dat $W
done
But Here in my... (9 Replies)
Hi Everyone,
I am new to this forum and new to sed/awk programming too !!
I need to find particular string in file1(text file) and replace it with a value from another text file(file2) the file2 has only one line and the value to be replaced with is in the second column.
file 1:
(assert (=... (21 Replies)
Dear all,
I need your help, I have file like this:
file1:23456
01910964830098775635
34567
01942809546554654323
67589
26546854368698023653
09778
58716868568576876878
08675
86178546154065406546
08573
54165843543054354305
.
.file2:
23456 25
34567 26
67589 27 (2 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a number of files and each file has two sections separated by a blank line. At the top section, I have lines which describes the values of the alphabetical characters,
# s #; 0.123
# p #; 12.3
# d #; -2.33
# f #; 5.68
<blank line>
sssssss
spfdffff
sdfffffff
Now I... (4 Replies)
Hi all, the value in the following file is just an example. It could be a different value/network addresses.
Here is my example of initial output in a file name net.txt
Initial Output, net.txt
The goal is to produce the following format which is to convert from CIDR to Netmask... (6 Replies)
I have two files
1. input.txt
2. keyword.txt
input.txt has contents like
.src_ref 0 "call.s" 24 first
0x000000 0x5a80 0x0060 BRA.l 0x60
.src_ref 0 "call.s" 30 first
0x000002 0x1bc5 RETI
.src_ref 0 "call.s" 31 first
0x000003 0x6840 ... (2 Replies)
Dear all,
I want to find all the "," in my text file and then replace the commas to a tab. I found a script online but I don't know how to modify the script for my case. Any one can help? Thank you.
@echo off &setlocal
set "search=%1"
set "replace=%2"
set "textfile=Input.txt"
set... (2 Replies)
I have two files blocks.txt and rules.txt. In blocks.txt i have the following entries
Linux1
Linux2
Linux3
.....
Linux10
In rules.txt i have the lines where a filename pattern starts like
'blk-name.*'
I want to replace 'blk-name' with the names read from blocks.txt file
I tried... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jag02
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
trace-cmd-restore
TRACE-CMD-RESTORE(1)TRACE-CMD-RESTORE(1)NAME
trace-cmd-restore - restore a failed trace record
SYNOPSIS
trace-cmd restore [OPTIONS] [command] cpu-file [cpu-file ...]
DESCRIPTION
The trace-cmd(1) restore command will restore a crashed trace-cmd-record(1) file. If for some reason a trace-cmd record fails, it will
leave a the per-cpu data files and not create the final trace.dat file. The trace-cmd restore will append the files to create a working
trace.dat file that can be read with trace-cmd-report(1).
When trace-cmd record runs, it spawns off a process per CPU and writes to a per cpu file usually called trace.dat.cpuX, where X represents
the CPU number that it is tracing. If the -o option was used in the trace-cmd record, then the CPU data files will have that name instead
of the trace.dat name. If a unexpected crash occurs before the tracing is finished, then the per CPU files will still exist but there will
not be any trace.dat file to read from. trace-cmd restore will allow you to create a trace.dat file with the existing data files.
OPTIONS -c
Create a partial trace.dat file from the machine, to be used with a full trace-cmd restore at another time. This option is useful for
embedded devices. If a server contains the cpu files of a crashed trace-cmd record (or trace-cmd listen), trace-cmd restore can be
executed on the embedded device with the -c option to get all the stored information of that embedded device. Then the file created
could be copied to the server to run the trace-cmd restore there with the cpu files.
If *-o* is not specified, then the file created will be called
'trace-partial.dat'. This is because the file is not a full version
of something that trace-cmd-report(1) could use.
-t tracing_dir
Used with -c, it overrides the location to read the events from. By default, tracing information is read from the debugfs/tracing
directory. -t will use that location instead. This can be useful if the trace.dat file to create is from another machine. Just tar
-cvf events.tar debugfs/tracing and copy and untar that file locally, and use that directory instead.
-k kallsyms
Used with -c, it overrides where to read the kallsyms file from. By default, /proc/kallsyms is used. -k will override the file to read
the kallsyms from. This can be useful if the trace.dat file to create is from another machine. Just copy the /proc/kallsyms file
locally, and use -k to point to that file.
-o output'
By default, trace-cmd restore will create a trace.dat file (or trace-partial.dat if -c is specified). You can specify a different file
to write to with the -o option.
-i input
By default, trace-cmd restore will read the information of the current system to create the initial data stored in the trace.dat file.
If the crash was on another machine, then that machine should have the trace-cmd restore run with the -c option to create the trace.dat
partial file. Then that file can be copied to the current machine where trace-cmd restore will use -i to load that file instead of
reading from the current system.
EXAMPLES
If a crash happened on another box, you could run:
$ trace-cmd restore -c -o box-partial.dat
Then on the server that has the cpu files:
$ trace-cmd restore -i box-partial.dat trace.dat.cpu0 trace.dat.cpu1
This would create a trace.dat file for the embedded box.
SEE ALSO trace-cmd(1), trace-cmd-record(1), trace-cmd-report(1), trace-cmd-start(1), trace-cmd-stop(1), trace-cmd-extract(1), trace-cmd-reset(1),
trace-cmd-split(1), trace-cmd-list(1), trace-cmd-listen(1)AUTHOR
Written by Steven Rostedt, <rostedt@goodmis.org[1]>
RESOURCES
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rostedt/trace-cmd.git
COPYING
Copyright (C) 2010 Red Hat, Inc. Free use of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU Public License (GPL).
NOTES
1. rostedt@goodmis.org
mailto:rostedt@goodmis.org
06/11/2014 TRACE-CMD-RESTORE(1)