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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Parsing a log file to cut off some parts Post 302989433 by Chrismcq on Thursday 12th of January 2017 11:34:37 AM
Old 01-12-2017
Wrench

Hi - I may be missing the point here, but if it is only the first update line that you are interested in, you could simply do the following :-

grep "Update completed" MyLogFile | head -1
Is this any good to you.
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SVK::Command::Update(3) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   SVK::Command::Update(3)

NAME
SVK::Command::Update - Bring changes from repository to checkout copies SYNOPSIS
update [PATH...] OPTIONS
-r [--revision] REV : act on revision REV instead of the head revision -N [--non-recursive] : do not descend recursively -C [--check-only] : try operation but make no changes -s [--sync] : synchronize mirrored sources before update -m [--merge] : smerge from copied sources before update -q [--quiet] : print as little as possible DESCRIPTION
Synchronize checkout copies to revision given by -r or to HEAD revision by default. For each updated item a line will start with a character reporting the action taken. These characters have the following meaning: A Added D Deleted U Updated C Conflict G Merged g Merged without actual change A character in the first column signifies an update to the actual file, while updates to the file's props are shown in the second column. If both "--sync" and "--merge" are specified, like in "svk up -sm", it will first synchronize the mirrored copy source path, and then smerge from it. perl v5.10.0 2008-08-04 SVK::Command::Update(3)
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