I need to know how to record the hostname, date/time and all of the process and send it all to one file. I know that the commands I need are hostname, date and ps but I don't know how to do them all and send them all to the same file. Please help! (1 Reply)
Hi,
Could anyone help me in changing a tabular format output to comma seperated file pls in K-sh. Its very urgent.
E.g : username empid
------------------------
sri 123
to
username,empid
sri,123
Thanks,
Hema:confused: (2 Replies)
Hi.
I wrote a very simple script and it doesn't work :(
It is supposed to go to a certain directory, execute some command and append the output to the file "expo.dat"
what it does is that it writes to the file only one entery. I dont know if Im using the write synthax for "append". Here is... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I would like to know if it's possible to append data into a variable, rather than into a file. Although I can write information into a temporary file in /tmp, I'd rather if possible write into a variable, as I don't like the idea that should my script fail, I'll be polluting the server with... (5 Replies)
I have on file abc.txt
abc.txt:
20090807
Now I want to delete empty lines which has tap/whit spaces from abc.txt .and store the date value in the file into variable.some processs will update the this file with some date . if the process updtes thiis file with empty string , write the... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to truncate word after comma in a file ONLY if there are already 2 words BEFORE comma. If there is one word or 3 or more words BEFORE comma, then I have to leave the data AS IS. See below for example.
Input File :
John Smith, Manager
Smith, John Frank
J F K... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm trying to get a bash script working for a program (bowtie) which takes a list of input files (*.fastq) and assembles them to an output file (outfile.sam). All the .fastq files are in one folder in my home directory (~/infiles).
The problem is that the 'bowtie' requires that... (7 Replies)
I am familiar with scripting, but I am trying to see if there is an easy way to append files from similar files into one file. For example, if there is file1_20121201, file1_20121202, file1_20121203,
file2_20121201, file2_20121202, file2_20121203
I want to be able to combine all the data from... (3 Replies)
Hi everyone,
i have a file that I had grep'd from something else lets call it file1.txt which consists variable files and lines due to different scenarios/inputs
1782
9182
fe35
ac67
how can I print this in this manner?
1782,9182,fe35,ac67
also if i had piped the new output... (2 Replies)
Hi
I have a file called text.txt contains
x
y
z
when i run a command i will get output like below
x 20
z 30
i want to insert x, z value in text.txt file and should be like this
x 20
y 0
z 30
can anyone help me please? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: siva kumar
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
yaml::node
YAML::Node(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation YAML::Node(3)NAME
YAML::Node - A generic data node that encapsulates YAML information
SYNOPSIS
use YAML;
use YAML::Node;
my $ynode = YAML::Node->new({}, 'ingerson.com/fruit');
%$ynode = qw(orange orange apple red grape green);
print Dump $ynode;
yields:
--- !ingerson.com/fruit
orange: orange
apple: red
grape: green
DESCRIPTION
A generic node in YAML is similar to a plain hash, array, or scalar node in Perl except that it must also keep track of its type. The type
is a URI called the YAML type tag.
YAML::Node is a class for generating and manipulating these containers. A YAML node (or ynode) is a tied hash, array or scalar. In most
ways it behaves just like the plain thing. But you can assign and retrieve and YAML type tag URI to it. For the hash flavor, you can also
assign the order that the keys will be retrieved in. By default a ynode will offer its keys in the same order that they were assigned.
YAML::Node has a class method call new() that will return a ynode. You pass it a regular node and an optional type tag. After that you can
use it like a normal Perl node, but when you YAML::Dump it, the magical properties will be honored.
This is how you can control the sort order of hash keys during a YAML serialization. By default, YAML sorts keys alphabetically. But notice
in the above example that the keys were Dumped in the same order they were assigned.
YAML::Node exports a function called ynode(). This function returns the tied object so that you can call special methods on it like
->keys().
keys() works like this:
use YAML;
use YAML::Node;
%$node = qw(orange orange apple red grape green);
$ynode = YAML::Node->new($node);
ynode($ynode)->keys(['grape', 'apple']);
print Dump $ynode;
produces:
---
grape: green
apple: red
It tells the ynode which keys and what order to use.
ynodes will play a very important role in how programs use YAML. They are the foundation of how a Perl class can marshall the Loading and
Dumping of its objects.
The upcoming versions of YAML.pm will have much more information on this.
AUTHOR
Ingy dA~Xt Net <ingy@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2006. Ingy dA~Xt Net. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2002. Brian Ingerson. All rights reserved.
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 v5.12.1 2010-01-03 YAML::Node(3)