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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to replace multiple words together? Post 302953116 by Corona688 on Tuesday 25th of August 2015 11:41:02 AM
Old 08-25-2015
What does the text being replaced look like? If it's regular enough to do in a more intelligent way than a brute-force search that could help a lot. If not, perhaps not.

A brute force search in Perl won't be much faster than a brute force search in awk, the problem is the brute force search.

How big is new_word_list.txt ? Does the first column ever contain special characters? If you have GNU awk, it might be possible to build your own regex and play with a loop on match.
 

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IPSEC_BARF(8)							  [FIXME: manual]						     IPSEC_BARF(8)

NAME
ipsec_barf - spew out collected IPsec debugging information SYNOPSIS
ipsec barf [--short --maxlines <100>] DESCRIPTION
Barf outputs (on standard output) a collection of debugging information (contents of files, selections from logs, etc.) related to the IPsec encryption/authentication system. It is primarily a convenience for remote debugging, a single command which packages up (and labels) all information that might be relevant to diagnosing a problem in IPsec. The --short option limits the length of the log portion of barf's output, which can otherwise be extremely voluminous if debug logging is turned on. --maxlines <100> option sets the length of some bits of information, currently netstat -rn. Useful on boxes where the routing table is thousands of lines long. Default is 100. Barf censors its output, replacing keys and secrets with brief checksums to avoid revealing sensitive information. Beware that the output of both commands is aimed at humans, not programs, and the output format is subject to change without warning. Barf has to figure out which files in /var/log contain the IPsec log messages. It looks for KLIPS and general log messages first in messages and syslog, and for Pluto messages first in secure, auth.log, and debug. In both cases, if it does not find what it is looking for in one of those "likely" places, it will resort to a brute-force search of most (non-compressed) files in /var/log. FILES
/proc/net/* /var/log/* /etc/ipsec.conf /etc/ipsec.secrets HISTORY
Written for the Linux FreeS/WAN project <http://www.freeswan.org> by Henry Spencer. BUGS
Barf uses heuristics to try to pick relevant material out of the logs, and relevant messages which are not labelled with any of the tags that barf looks for will be lost. We think we've eliminated the last such case, but one never knows... Finding updown scripts (so they can be included in output) is, in general, difficult. Barf uses a very simple heuristic that is easily fooled. The brute-force search for the right log files can get expensive on systems with a lot of clutter in /var/log. [FIXME: source] 17 March 2002 IPSEC_BARF(8)
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