My guess would be that the terminal emulator settings are different on the two systems you are using to run these commands; one is wrapping output onto multiple display lines and one is showing you the last screen-width characters on each line without wrapping (and each of your lines has hundreds of spaces at the ends of the lines).
To confirm this, show us the output from the command:
where file2 is the output file from any of the commands you showed us in post #19 that you say are producing blank lines.
I am facing some strange problem.
I know, there is only one record in a file 'test.txt' which starts with 'X'
I ensure that with following command,
awk /^X/ test.txt | wc -l
This gives me output = '1'.
Now I take out this record out of the file, as follows :
awk /^X/ test.txt >... (1 Reply)
I have a script with a find command using xargs to copy the files found to another directory. The find command is finding the appropriate file, but it's not copying. I've checked permissions, and those are all O.K., so I'm not sure what I'm missing. Any help is greatly appreciated.
This is... (2 Replies)
I've been trying to figure this out since last night, and I'm just stumped. The last time I did any shell scripting was 8 years ago on a Unix box, and it was never my strong suit. I'm on a Mac running Leopard now. Here's my dilemma - hopefully someone can point me in the right direction.
I'm... (10 Replies)
Hi!
Been working on a script and I've been having a problem. I've finally narrowed it down to this variable I'm setting:
servername=$(awk -v FS=\/ '{ print $7 } blah.txt | sed 's\/./-/g' | awk -v FS=\- '{print $1}')"
This will essentially pare down a line like this:
... (7 Replies)
I was trying to write a simple script which will read a text file and count the number of vowels in the file. My code is given below -
#!/bin/bash
file=$1
v=0
if
then
echo "$0 filename"
exit 1
fi
if
then
echo "$file not a file"
exit 2
fi
while read -n... (14 Replies)
Dear all,
I had script which used to work, but recently it is not working as expected.
I have command line in my shell script to choose the following format from the output_elog and perform some task afterwards on
As you see, I want all numbers in foramt following RED mark except for... (12 Replies)
Hi, I'm having trouble with a simple copy command in a script on HPUX.
I am trying to copy a file and append date & time.
The echo command prints out what I am expecting..
echo "Backing up $file to $file.$DATE.$FIXNUM" | tee -a $LOGFILE
+ echo 'Backing up... (4 Replies)
Hi Experts,
Need your kind help with gsub awk.
Below is my pattern:"exec=1_host_cnt=100_dup=4_NameTag=targetSrv_500.csv","'20171122112948"," 100"," 1"," 1"," 4","400","","",
" aac sample exec ""hostname=XXXXX commandline='timeout 10 openssl speed -multi 2 ; exit 0'"" ","-1","-1","1","... (6 Replies)
This is my ubuntu version:
$ lsb_release -a
No LSB modules are available.
Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Description: Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS
Release: 16.04
Codename: xenial
$ /bin/awk -V | head -n1
bash: /bin/awk: No such file or directory
I have gotten a script that helps me to parse,... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: delbroooks
14 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
diff
DIFF(1) General Commands Manual DIFF(1)NAME
diff - differential file comparator
SYNOPSIS
diff [ -efbh ] file1 file2
DESCRIPTION
Diff tells what lines must be changed in two files to bring them into agreement. If file1 (file2) is `-', the standard input is used. If
file1 (file2) is a directory, then a file in that directory whose file-name is the same as the file-name of file2 (file1) is used. The
normal output contains lines of these forms:
n1 a n3,n4
n1,n2 d n3
n1,n2 c n3,n4
These lines resemble ed commands to convert file1 into file2. The numbers after the letters pertain to file2. In fact, by exchanging `a'
for `d' and reading backward one may ascertain equally how to convert file2 into file1. As in ed, identical pairs where n1 = n2 or n3 = n4
are abbreviated as a single number.
Following each of these lines come all the lines that are affected in the first file flagged by `<', then all the lines that are affected
in the second file flagged by `>'.
The -b option causes trailing blanks (spaces and tabs) to be ignored and other strings of blanks to compare equal.
The -e option produces a script of a, c and d commands for the editor ed, which will recreate file2 from file1. The -f option produces a
similar script, not useful with ed, in the opposite order. In connection with -e, the following shell program may help maintain multiple
versions of a file. Only an ancestral file ($1) and a chain of version-to-version ed scripts ($2,$3,...) made by diff need be on hand. A
`latest version' appears on the standard output.
(shift; cat $*; echo '1,$p') | ed - $1
Except in rare circumstances, diff finds a smallest sufficient set of file differences.
Option -h does a fast, half-hearted job. It works only when changed stretches are short and well separated, but does work on files of
unlimited length. Options -e and -f are unavailable with -h.
FILES
/tmp/d?????
/usr/lib/diffh for -h
SEE ALSO cmp(1), comm(1), ed(1)DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is 0 for no differences, 1 for some, 2 for trouble.
BUGS
Editing scripts produced under the -e or -f option are naive about creating lines consisting of a single `.'.
DIFF(1)