02-01-2016
@RudiC: Thank you for the reply. I am new to Unix.. So could you please give me the example of awk or perl for how to do it.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have to capture the creation date and time stamp for a file. The ls command doesn't list all the required information. I need year, month, day, hour, minute and second.
Any ideas... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Xenon
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I am trying to insert a line with a date stamp in a file that is used to monitor activity in one of our directories. By doing this, I want to grep that file each day and go to the last entry for each time a error occurred and pull all errors generated if any exist. If error exists I want that error... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: shephardfamily
3 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Looking for a shell script or a simple perl script . I am new to scripting and not very good at it .
I have 2 directories . One of them holds a text file with list of files in it and the second one is a daily log which shows the file completion time. I need to co-relate both and make a report.
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: breez_drew
0 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have searched several thread and not found my solution, so I am posting a new qustion.
I have a very simple script on an AIX server that FTPs 2 files to a MS FTP server. These 2 files are created on the AIX server every hour, with a static name.
I need to FTP the files to the MS server, but... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sknisely
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi
When i do ls -ltr <file1> then it shows me the date and time of the file
if - for whatever reason file has future date/time stamp then ls -ltr is not showing the time, it just shows only date part ... even if time is ahead by 2 hr than current time.
suppose a file was copied from INDIA... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: reldb
3 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I use "touch -t xxxxxxxx" command to set date/time stamp of a file. My requirement is to read the date/time stamp of a file and apply it to another file.
Is there anyway to do it simple instead of manually taking date/stamp of first file?
TIA
Prvn (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: prvnrk
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi!
Please see our current script:
#!/usr/bin/ksh
if (egrep "This string is found in the log" /a01/bpm.log)
then
mailx -s "Error from log" me@email.com, him@email.com </a01/bpm.log
fi
To the above existing script, we need to add the following change:
1) After finding the string,... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: atechcorp
7 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi,
i have a Archive directory in which files are archived or stored with date and time stamp to prevent over writing.
example:
there are 5 files
s1.txt
s2.txt
s3.txt
s4.txt
s5.txt
while moving these files to archive directory, date and time stamp is added.
of format `date... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Little
9 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Help with Perl script :
I have a web.xml file with a line
<display-name>some_text_here</display-name>
Need to append the current date and time stamp to the string and save the XML file
Something like
<display-name>some_text_here._01_23_2014_03_56_33</display-name>
-->Finally want... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gaurav99
5 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a file hello.txt which was created today (today's date timestamp)
I wish to change its date timestamp (access, modified, created) to 1 week old i.e one week from now.
uname -a
SunOS mymac 5.11 11.2 sun4v sparc sun4v
Can you please suggest a easy way to do that ? (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
12 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
svk::command::log
SVK::Command::Log(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation SVK::Command::Log(3)
NAME
SVK::Command::Log - Show log messages for revisions
SYNOPSIS
log DEPOTPATH
log PATH
log -r N[:M] [DEPOT]PATH
OPTIONS
-r [--revision] ARG : ARG (some commands also take ARG1:ARG2 range)
A revision argument can be one of:
"HEAD" latest in repository
{DATE} revision at start of the date
NUMBER revision number
NUMBER@ interpret as remote revision number
NUM1:NUM2 revision range
Unlike other commands, negative NUMBER has no
meaning.
-l [--limit] REV : stop after displaying REV revisions
-q [--quiet] : Don't display the actual log message itself
-x [--cross] : track revisions copied from elsewhere
-v [--verbose] : print extra information
--xml : display the log messages in XML format
--filter FILTER : select revisions based on FILTER
--output FILTER : display logs using the given FILTER
DESCRIPTION
Display the log messages and other meta-data associated with revisions.
SVK provides a flexible system allowing log messages and other revision properties to be displayed and processed in many ways. This
flexibility comes through the use of "log filters." Log filters are of two types: selection and output. Selection filters determine which
revisions are included in the output, while output filters determine how the information about those revisions is displayed. Here's a
simple example. These two invocations produce equivalent output:
svk log -l 5 //local/project
svk log --filter "head 5" --output std //local/project
The "head" filter chooses only the first revisions that it encounters, in this case, the first 5 revisions. The "std" filter displays the
revisions using SVK's default output format.
Selection filters can be connected together into pipelines. For example, to see the first 3 revisions with log messages containing the
string 'needle', we might do this
svk log --filter "grep needle | head 3" //local/project
That example introduced the "grep" filter. The argument for the grep filter is a valid Perl pattern (with any '|' characters as '|' and
'' as '\'). A revision is allowed to continue to the next stage of the pipeline if the revision's log message matches the pattern. If
we wanted to search only the first 10 revisions for 'needle' we could use either of the following commands
svk log --filter "head 10 | grep needle" //local/project
svk log -l 10 --filter "grep needle" //local/project
You may change SVK's default output filter by setting the SVKLOGOUTPUT environment. See svk help environment for details.
Standard Filters
The following log filters are included with the standard SVK distribution:
Selection : grep, head, author
Output : std, xml
For detailed documentation about any of these filters, try "perldoc SVK::Log::Filter::Name" where "Name" is "Grep", "Head", "XML", etc..
Other log filters are available from CPAN <http://search.cpan.org> by searching for "SVK::Log::Filter". For details on writing log
filters, see the documentation for the SVK::Log::Filter module.
perl v5.10.0 2008-08-04 SVK::Command::Log(3)