assume your read the filename from table as column fname
If you were to execute the host command hundreds of times it would be VERY slow.
Write to a file instead, then run all the commands afterwards, plus this lets you check
your commands for errors before they mess up.
Last edited by rbatte1; 08-18-2016 at 06:37 AM..
Reason: Added missing /ICODE tag
Hi,
Does anyone know of a Unix command that would give me the most recent file from a list of files with the same names except for the date/time stamp, i.e. kah_en_20070103T2234307Z.zip (with an actual date/time stamp of 1/3/07 4:41 pm), kah_en_20070104T054732Z.zip (with an actual date/time stamp... (6 Replies)
hey......
i hav the follwing scripts needs to run parallel, so i made it as follows,
$HPath/start_script.sh 20 &
$HPath/start_script.sh 03 &
$HPath/start_script.sh 01 &
$HPath/start_script.sh 12 &
then once all these above got completed successfully i have to run
... (3 Replies)
I am an Awk newbie and cannot wrap my brain around my problem:
Given multi-line records of varying lengths separated by a blank line I need to skip the first two lines
of every record and extract every-other line in each record unless the first line of the record has the word "(CONT)" in the... (10 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file that contains some records that I would like to process
each line that I am interested in. My goal is to create a new file that contains only the rest_of_line for each line that matches.
It has the following File Format
command, platform, rest_of_line"
I am searching the... (2 Replies)
Can someone help me coding a loop (like for loop in C)? I mean what is the syntax....?
My requirement is, i have to send every successive string searched using awk to a csv file till the end of the file..Please help. (1 Reply)
I have a file has following records
policy glb id 1233 name Permit ping from "One" to "Second" "Address1" "Any" "ICMP-ANY" permit
policy id 999251
service "snmp-udp"
exit
policy glb id 1234 name Permit telnet from "One" to "Second" "Address2" "Any" "TCP-ANY" permit
policy id 1234... (3 Replies)
I've read the man page of singal(3) but I still can't quite understand what is the difference between SIGINT, SIGALRM and SIGTERM.
Can someone tell me what is the behavioral difference among these 3 signals in kill command?
Thanks! (2 Replies)
So I made my own unix shell, but i want to make a background process when using the & appended to the end, so far most of the commands seem to work (except cd, but thats another story)
right now here is what I have got.
Im thinking maybe I shouldn't be using switch and maybe switch it to... (27 Replies)
Hello Gurus ,
Could you help me with my below requirement
In my script I will start a process ,it takes some time to complete the process.After completion it will create a file
after that I have to restart the process again
The number of time it will be done will vary but that count we... (4 Replies)
Greetings!
I have a text file that I am trying to process to get the desired output but looks like I will need the community help.
Input File:
a|x|london|consumer|consumer1|country||D|consumer|consumer1|country||1
a|x|paris|consumer|consumer2|country||D|consumer1|consumer2|country||2... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bikerboy
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
acctprc
acctprc(8) System Manager's Manual acctprc(8)NAME
acctprc1, acctprc2, accton - Perform process-accounting procedures
SYNOPSIS
acctprc1 [InFile]
acctprc2
accton [OutFile]
DESCRIPTION
The three acctprc commands, acctprc1, acctprc2, and accton, are used in the runacct shell procedure to produce process-accounting reports.
acctprc1 [InFile]
The acctprc1 command is used to read records from standard input that are in a format defined by the acct structure in the
/usr/include/sys/acct.h header file. This process adds the login names that correspond to user IDs, and then writes corresponding ASCII
records to standard output. For each process, the record format includes the following seven unheaded columns: The user ID column includes
both traditional and assigned user identification numbers listed in the /etc/passwd file. The login name is the one used for the user ID
in the /etc/passwd file. The number of seconds the process consumed when executed during prime-time hours. Prime-time and nonprime-time
hours are defined in the /usr/sbin/acct/holidays file. The number of seconds the process consumed when executed during nonprime-time
hours. Total number of characters transferred. Total number of blocks read and written. Mean memory size (in kilobyte units).
When specified, InFile contains a list of login sessions in a format defined by the utmp structure in the /usr/include/utmp.h header file.
The login session records are sorted according to user ID and login name. When InFile is not specified, acctprc1 gets login names from the
password file /etc/passwd. The information in InFile is used to distinguish different login names that share the same user ID.
acctprc2
The acctprc2 command reads, from standard input, the records written by acctprc1, summarizes them according to user ID and name, and writes
sorted summaries to standard output as total accounting records in the tacct format (see the acctmerg command).
accton [OutFile]
When no parameters are specified with the accton command, account processing is turned off. When you specify an existing OutFile file,
process accounting is turned on, and the kernel adds records to that file. You must specify an Outfile to start process accounting. Many
shell script procedures expect the file name /var/adm/pacct, the standard process-accounting file.
EXAMPLES
To add a user name to each process-accounting record in a binary file and then write these modified binary-file records to an ASCII file
named out.file, enter the following line to an accounting shell script:
/usr/sbin/acct/acctprc1 < /var/adm/pacct >out.file
A user name is added to each record. The raw data in the pacct file is converted to ASCII and added to file out.file. To produce a
total binary accounting record of the ASCII output file out.file produced in example 1, enter the following line to an accounting
shell script:
/usr/sbin/acct/acctprc2 < out.file > /var/adm/acct/nite/daytacct
The resulting binary total accounting file, written in the acct format, contains records sorted by user ID. This sorted user ID
file, is usually merged with other total accounting records when an acctmerg command is processed to produce a daily summary
accounting record called /var/adm/acct/sum/daytacct. To turn on process accounting, enter:
/usr/sbin/acct/accton /var/adm/pacct To turn off process accounting, enter:
/usr/sbin/acct/accton
FILES
Specifies the command path. Specifies the command path. Specifies the command path.
RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: acct(8), acctcms(8), acctmerg(8), runacct(8)
Functions: acct(2) delim off
acctprc(8)