I have a file with a set of insert statements some of which have a single column value that crosses multiple lines causing the statement to fail in sql*plue. Can someone help me with a sed script to replace the new lines with chr(10)?
here is an example:
insert into mytable(id, field1, field2)... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Please find my piece of code below. I am trying to grep the word SUCCESS from $LOGFILE and storing in the grepvar variable. And i am placing that variable in a file. Now if i open the file, i can see the four lines but not in seperate four line s but in a paragraph. If am mailing that log... (8 Replies)
Hi all
I've been working on a bash script parsing through debug/trace files and extracting all lines that relate to some search string. So far, it works pretty well. However, I am challenged by one requirement that is still open.
What I want to do:
1) parse through a file and identify all... (3 Replies)
below is the output xml string from some other command and i will be parsing it using awk
cat /tmp/alerts.xml
<Alert id="10102" name="APP-DS-ds_ha-140018-componentFailure-S" alertDefinitionId="13982" resourceId="11427" ctime="1359453507621" fixed="false" reason="If Event/Log Level(ANY) and... (2 Replies)
I need to print a specific string from an html file that's always occurring between two other known strings. Example: from the text below, I would like to print the bolded part:
<this is a lot of text before the string I want
to print> fullpath: abc/def/ghi/example.xlf -cfver. <sample text... (15 Replies)
Hi all,
i need help to extract each first line from multiple lines occurrences based on different patterns (name) starting from the fourth lines like follows:-
// header 1 header 2 header 3
// no acc name score rank
//... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a file looks like:
rst:singh:99.0.20-X86 2 rst:ACSI_SIN_SERVICES
rst:singh:99.0.20-X86 2 rst:ACSI_BISI want to wrap 3rd col in one line and add variable value at start and ending of line and I wrote command:
cat file | awk '{print $3}' | xargs > command.txt
sed -e... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I need to print some lines as explained below,
TXT example
1111
2222
3333
4444
5555
6666
7777
8888
6666
9999
1111
2222
3333
4444
5555 (8 Replies)
Need to parse XML like strings from a file.
Using `egrep -A 1 "Panel Temp" "$2" | tail -2` I get the following string:
<parameter name="Panel Temp" unit="0.1 C"> <value size="1" starttime="06-08-2017 09:36:56.968">95</value>
I want to output:
{"Panel Temp" 9.5 C}
The 9.5 C is the value... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: harleyvrodred
16 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
amplot
AMPLOT(8) System Administration Commands AMPLOT(8)NAME
amplot - visualize the behavior of Amanda
SYNOPSIS
amplot [-b] [-c] [-e] [-g] [-l] [-p] [-t T] amdump_files
DESCRIPTION
Amplot reads an amdump output file that Amanda generates each run (e.g. amdump.1) and translates the information into a picture format
that may be used to determine how your installation is doing and if any parameters need to be changed. Amplot also prints out amdump lines
that it either does not understand or knows to be warning or error lines and a summary of the start, end and total time for each backup
image.
Amplot is a shell script that executes an awk program (amplot.awk) to scan the amdump output file. It then executes a gnuplot program
(amplot.g) to generate the graph. The awk program is written in an enhanced version of awk, such as GNU awk (gawk(1) version 2.15 or later)
or nawk(1).
During execution, amplot generates a few temporary files that gnuplot uses. These files are deleted at the end of execution.
See the amanda(8) man page for more details about Amanda.
OPTIONS -b
Generate b/w postscript file (need -p).
-c
Compress amdump_files after plotting.
-e
Extend the X (time) axis if needed.
-g
Direct gnuplot output directly to the X11 display (default).
-p
Direct postscript output to file YYYYMMDD.ps (opposite of -g).
-l
Generate landscape oriented output (needs -p).
-t T
Set the right edge of the plot to be T hours.
The amdump_files may be in various compressed formats (compress, gzip, pact, compact).
INTERPRETATION
The figure is divided into a number of regions. There are titles on the top that show important statistical information about the
configuration and from this execution of amdump. In the figure, the X axis is time, with 0 being the moment amdump was started. The Y axis
is divided into 5 regions:
QUEUES: How many backups have not been started, how many are waiting on space in the holding disk and how many have been transferred
successfully to tape.
%BANDWIDTH: Percentage of allowed network bandwidth in use.
HOLDING DISK: The higher line depicts space allocated on the holding disk to backups in progress and completed backups waiting to be
written to tape. The lower line depicts the fraction of the holding disk containing completed backups waiting to be written to tape
including the file currently being written to tape. The scale is percentage of the holding disk.
TAPE: Tape drive usage.
%DUMPERS: Percentage of active dumpers.
The idle period at the left of the graph is time amdump is asking the machines how much data they are going to dump. This process can take
a while if hosts are down or it takes them a long time to generate estimates.
BUGS
Reports lines it does not recognize, mainly error cases but some are legitimate lines the program needs to be taught about.
SEE ALSO amanda(8), amdump(8), gnuplot(1), compress(1), gzip(1)
The Amanda Wiki: : http://wiki.zmanda.com/
AUTHORS
Olafur Gudmundsson <ogud@tis.com>
Trusted Information Systems
Stefan G. Weichinger <sgw@amanda.org>
Amanda 3.3.3 01/10/2013 AMPLOT(8)