Mails from Sendmail are ignoring line endings, when I try to send email with attachment. I have tried to specify the font in the html but line endings are still ignored. I also tried unix2dos, still no luck.
I can send with monospace font and all lines ending preserved using this (without attachment):
i have a file called Cleaner1.log . This files have some blank lines also.My requirement is that it should ignore the blank lines and give me the lines that contain some data.
I m using this logic in a script:
below the contents of file :
Maximum Time Taken for Processing(Failed) RR... (4 Replies)
Hi,
sumdays before i had posted a query with same subject.
i got sum great help from great ppl which solved my problem then.
But now there is a small problem with the code that i need the experts help upon.
for parsing a text
like this
where $ had been the delimiter between... (3 Replies)
Hello
I have created the following script, which is designed to manipulate a text document:
#!/bin/sh
# Get 3 lines, (last of which is "Quantity"); adjust order; put all three on one line with tabs.
FILENAME=~/Desktop/email.txt
LIST=$(grep -B2 "Quantity" ${FILENAME} |awk 'BEGIN { FS = "\n"; RS... (6 Replies)
I was reading these 2 articles. Why does the wikia one think :e ++ff=dos? Or am I just misunderstanding it?
:e ++ff=unix
:e ++ff=dos
File format - Vim Tips Wiki
Managing/Munging Line-Endings with Vi/Vim | Jeet Sukumaran (1 Reply)
When you are dealing with ASCII files it easy to check on line endings type. You can just use the file command. You are not always lucky enough to be dealing with ASCII files. So in the cases that you don't have ASCII files how can you check what type of line endings you have? Please list all... (5 Replies)
Hello all. Hope you can help. I am looking for a complete command to search for a file named HOSPCHK. The file could be listed with numbers after it like it could be listed with letters after it or a combination of both or just by it self. The other catch is the file that I want to look for... (27 Replies)
I was reading this and thought I could put this in my vimrc and it would convert the line endings to unix. Am I doing something wrong or am I missing something?
set ff=unixManaging/Munging Line-Endings with Vi/Vim | Jeet Sukumaran
I used this command and it confirms that my global option is... (2 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I am running sendmail 8.14 on rhel6. I have 2 mail servers as serv1.home.com and test.home.com. Currently test.home.com is pointing as MX for home.com domain. So what I am trying to do is to route emails arriving at test.home.com server to serv1.home.com using mailertable. I have... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am giving below command script and getting below output. I tried using "sed" which is ignoring 4th line. Can you please help me to get the expected output like below
Code:
echo "dis clusqmgr(*) cluster(BT.CL.OFSSTAT4) conname qmtype deftype"| runmqsc -e $QMGR|egrep... (7 Replies)
Hi,
At the moment, using Notepad++ to do a search and replace, manually section by section which is real painful. Yeah, so copying each section of the line of text and putting into a file and then search and replace, need at least 3-operations in Notepad++.
Here's hoping I will be able to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
perlio::eol5.18
eol(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation eol(3)NAME
PerlIO::eol - PerlIO layer for normalizing line endings
VERSION
This document describes version 0.14 of PerlIO::eol, released December 18, 2006.
SYNOPSIS
binmode STDIN, ":raw:eol(LF)";
binmode STDOUT, ":raw:eol(CRLF)";
open FH, "+<:raw:eol(LF-Native)", "file";
binmode STDOUT, ":raw:eol(CRLF?)"; # warns on mixed newlines
binmode STDOUT, ":raw:eol(CRLF!)"; # dies on mixed newlines
use PerlIO::eol qw( eol_is_mixed );
my $pos = eol_is_mixed( "mixed
string
" );
DESCRIPTION
This layer normalizes any of "CR", "LF", "CRLF" and "Native" into the designated line ending. It works for both input and output handles.
If you specify two different line endings joined by a "-", it will use the first one for reading and the second one for writing. For
example, the "LF-CRLF" encoding means that all input should be normalized to "LF", and all output should be normalized to "CRLF".
By default, data with mixed newlines are normalized silently. Append a "!" to the line ending will raise a fatal exception when mixed
newlines are spotted. Append a "?" will raise a warning instead.
It is advised to pop any potential ":crlf" or encoding layers before this layer; this is usually done using a ":raw" prefix.
This module also optionally exports a "eol_is_mixed" function; it takes a string and returns the position of the first inconsistent line
ending found in that string, or 0 if the line endings are consistent.
The "CR", "LF", "CRLF" and "NATIVE" constants are also exported at request.
AUTHORS
Audrey Tang <autrijus@autrijus.org>.
Janitorial help by Gaal Yahas <gaal@forum2.org>.
Inspired by PerlIO::nline by Ben Morrow, <PerlIO-eol@morrow.me.uk>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2004-2006 by Audrey Tang <audreyt@audreyt.org>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See <http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html>
perl v5.18.2 2006-12-15 eol(3)