I also had to use
in vi to show hidden characters. In my case it only showed the end line character which we know is in place anyway. I cut and pasted back into my script and that is what is took in addition to correcting my typo. Including the $ end line character should not be necessary but that is what it took to make this run.
trying to use sed in finding a matching pattern in a file then deleting
the next line only .. pattern --> <ad-content>
I tried this but it results are not what I wish
sed '/<ad-content>/{N;d;}' akv.xml > akv5.xml
ex,
<Celebrant2First>Mickey</Celebrant2First>
<ad-content>
Minnie... (2 Replies)
I have some files that appear to have no inode numbers. To complicate the matter, the filenames have UTF8 (I think) characters.
I am trying to delete them. In fact, and this might make things easier, I'm trying to delete their parent directory.
I don't know what to try next, please help.
... (5 Replies)
Hi,
Tried to look for solution, and found something similar but could not adapt the solution for my needs..
I'm trying to match a pattern (in this case "ProcessType")in a logfile, then delete that line and the 4 following lines.
The logfile looks as follows:
ProcessType: PROCESS_A... (5 Replies)
I have a text file, a sample of which is as follows:
r/- * 0: WINDOWS/Microsoft.NET/Framework/v2.0.50727/ASP.NETWebAdminFiles/Images/headerGRADIENT_Tall.gif
r/- * 0: WINDOWS/SoftwareDistribution/Download/cf8ec753e88561d2ddb53e183dc05c3e/backoff.jpg
r/- * 0: ... (2 Replies)
I have a script that if it crashes I want it to start again where it stopped.
The way to identify the tasklist is using a find command that list all the files that need the process performed on them
TASKLIST=`find /path/to/directory -iname *.dummy | sort`
The way to identify the... (6 Replies)
Hello,
I'm trying to figure out how to use sed or awk to delete single lines in a file. By single, I mean lines that are not touching any other lines (just one line with white space above and below).
Example:
one
two
three
four
five
six
seven
eight
I want it to look like: (6 Replies)
Sample file:
This is line one,
this is another line,
this is the PRIMARY INDEX line
l ;
This is another line
The command should find the line with “PRIMARY INDEX” and remove the last character from the line preceding it (in this case , comma) and remove the first character from the line... (5 Replies)
I have a very large file (over 700 million lines) that has some lines that I need to delete. An example of 5 lines of the file:
HS4_80:8:2303:19153:193032 153 k80:138891
HS4_80:8:2105:5544:43174 89 k88:81949
165 k88:81949 323 0 * = 323 0 ... (6 Replies)
Hello,
I want to test a hour variable with an expression regular
The format is 00 01 02 03.......19 20 21 22 23
what follows in red doesn't work, it's clear 19 for example can't work.
Can you help me the right regular expression ?
case "$3" in
()
# Nothing, OK !
;;
(*)
echo... (4 Replies)
I wish to search and delete all lines in /app/Jenkins/deploy.txt having this filename string /app/Jenkins/file2.mrt as entry:
I'm using : colon as delimiter in sed command as I'm dealing with file paths.
Below is the command I was expecting to work.
sed -i ":/app/Jenkins/file2.mrt:d"... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
wrjpgcom
WRJPGCOM(1) General Commands Manual WRJPGCOM(1)NAME
wrjpgcom - insert text comments into a JPEG file
SYNOPSIS
wrjpgcom [ -replace ] [ -comment text ] [ -cfile name ] [ filename ]
DESCRIPTION
wrjpgcom reads the named JPEG/JFIF file, or the standard input if no file is named, and generates a new JPEG/JFIF file on standard output.
A comment block is added to the file.
The JPEG standard allows "comment" (COM) blocks to occur within a JPEG file. Although the standard doesn't actually define what COM blocks
are for, they are widely used to hold user-supplied text strings. This lets you add annotations, titles, index terms, etc to your JPEG
files, and later retrieve them as text. COM blocks do not interfere with the image stored in the JPEG file. The maximum size of a COM
block is 64K, but you can have as many of them as you like in one JPEG file.
wrjpgcom adds a COM block, containing text you provide, to a JPEG file. Ordinarily, the COM block is added after any existing COM blocks;
but you can delete the old COM blocks if you wish.
OPTIONS
Switch names may be abbreviated, and are not case sensitive.
-replace
Delete any existing COM blocks from the file.
-comment text
Supply text for new COM block on command line.
-cfile name
Read text for new COM block from named file.
If you have only one line of comment text to add, you can provide it on the command line with -comment. The comment text must be sur-
rounded with quotes so that it is treated as a single argument. Longer comments can be read from a text file.
If you give neither -comment nor -cfile, then wrjpgcom will read the comment text from standard input. (In this case an input image file
name MUST be supplied, so that the source JPEG file comes from somewhere else.) You can enter multiple lines, up to 64KB worth. Type an
end-of-file indicator (usually control-D) to terminate the comment text entry.
wrjpgcom will not add a COM block if the provided comment string is empty. Therefore -replace -comment "" can be used to delete all COM
blocks from a file.
EXAMPLES
Add a short comment to in.jpg, producing out.jpg:
wrjpgcom -c "View of my back yard" in.jpg > out.jpg
Attach a long comment previously stored in comment.txt:
wrjpgcom in.jpg < comment.txt > out.jpg
or equivalently
wrjpgcom -cfile comment.txt < in.jpg > out.jpg
SEE ALSO cjpeg(1), djpeg(1), jpegtran(1), rdjpgcom(1)AUTHOR
Independent JPEG Group
15 June 1995 WRJPGCOM(1)