Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Removing sections from listener.ora Post 302958678 by RudiC on Sunday 25th of October 2015 08:32:01 AM
Old 10-25-2015
Any attempt from your side?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Removing sections and leaving separators intact

I have an awk script like below function abs(val) { return val > 0 ? val : -val } # 1. Main input loop, executed for each line of input BEGIN { RS = ORS = ">" } { if ( NF > 2 ) { if ( abs( $1 - $(NF-2) ) < 40 ) { print } } } The input file is something like... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kristinu
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Removing sections

I have a file like this %( PHASES P %) %( SOURCES (10,0.0) (13,0.0) (16,0.0) (19,0.0) (22,0.0) (25,0.0) (28,0.0) (31,0.0) (34,0.0) (37,0.0) (40,0.0) (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kristinu
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to know the location of the listener?

Hi, I have an unknown listener of of one of my port. How would I know the location of that specific listener? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: fif14344
4 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Listener port

Hi All, I'm installation a server we have client -server architecture I need to configure a port for client to communicate with the server and server to communicate with the clients Pls let me know how to configure in linux (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gwrm
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk removing sections of a file

I have a file that looks liek this (see below). can somebody provide me with and awk or sed command that can take a piece of the file starting from the time to the blank line and put in into another file. For example: How would I get the data from 10:56:11 to the blank line. Two things: ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: BeefStu
5 Replies

6. Solaris

maxuprc and maxusers - ORA-27300, ORA-27301, ORA-27302

Hi all, Am intermittently getting the following errors on one of my databases. Errors in file /oracle/HRD/saptrace/background/hrd_psp0_13943.trc: ORA-27300: OS system dependent operation:fork failed with status: 12 ORA-27301: OS failure message: Not enough space ORA-27302:... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
1 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

grep all ORA errors except one ORA error

Hi - I am trying to grep all "ORA" errors in a log files.I have to grep all ORA errors except one error for example ORA-01653.How can exclude that error in "grep" command? In following "grep" command I want to exclude "ORA-01653" error grep -i ORA alert.log >>/tmp/ora_errors.txt ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mansoor8810
7 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Parsing Listener.ora

Anymore have any code to easily parse the listener.ora to update the ORACLE_HOME for a specific sid? thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nugent
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Removing section from tnsnames.ora

Hi, I am trying to write a script or command to remove a section from tnsnames.ora file in the following example I would like to remove tns_alias2 section $ cat tnsnames.ora tns_alias1 = (DESCRIPTION = (ADDRESS_LIST = (ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = host1 )(PORT = 1521)) ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ynixon
3 Replies

10. Red Hat

Ora-27603:ora-27626:

Hi, User claim that job is running slow from their end. I DBA found in database the below errors in alert log file. ORA-27603: Cell storage I/O error, I/O failed on disk o/192.168.10.3/RECO_DM01_CD_01_drm01 at offset 13335789568 for data length 1048576 ORA-27626: Exadata error: 2201 (IO... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Maddy123
2 Replies
sdiff(1)						      General Commands Manual							  sdiff(1)

NAME
sdiff - Compares two files and displays the differences in a side-by-side format SYNOPSIS
sdiff [-l | -s] [-w number] [-o output_file] file1 file2 The sdiff command reads file1 and file2, uses diff to compare them, and writes the results to standard output in a side-by-side format. OPTIONS
Displays only the left side when lines are identical. Creates a third file, output_file, by a controlled interactive line-by-line merging of file1 and file2. The following subcommands govern the creation of this file: Adds the left side to output_file. Adds the right side to output_file. Stops displaying identical lines. Begins displaying identical lines. Enters ed with the left side, the right side, both sides, or an empty file, respectively. Each time you exit from ed, sdiff writes the resulting edited file to the end of output_file. If you fail to save the changes before exiting, sdiff writes the initial input to output_file. Exits the interactive session. Suppresses display of identical lines. Sets the width of the output line to number (130 characters by default). DESCRIPTION
The sdiff command displays each line of the two files with a series of spaces between them if the lines are identical, a < (left angle bracket) in the field of spaces if the line only exists in file1, a > (right angle bracket) if the line only exists in file2, and a | (ver- tical bar) for lines that are different. When you specify the -o option, sdiff produces a third file by merging file1 and file2 according to your instructions. Note that the sdiff command invokes the diff -b command to compare two input files. The -b option causes the diff command to ignore trail- ing spaces, tab characters, and consider other strings of spaces as equal. EXAMPLES
To print a comparison of two files, enter: sdiff chap1.bak chap1 This displays a side-by-side listing that compares each line of chap1.bak and chap1. To display only the lines that differ, enter: sdiff -s -w 80 chap1.bak chap1 This displays the differences at the tty. The -w 80 sets page width to 80 columns. The -s option tells sdiff not to display lines that are identical in both files. To selectively combine parts of two files, enter: sdiff -s -w 80 -o chap1.combo chap1.bak chap1 This combines chap1.bak and chap1 into a new file called chap1.combo. For each group of differing lines, sdiff asks you which group to keep or whether you want to edit them using ed. SEE ALSO
Commands: diff(1), ed(1) sdiff(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:01 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy