Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Using find to output list of files with specific strings Post 302992017 by Xterra on Monday 20th of February 2017 03:37:33 PM
Old 02-20-2017
Quote:
Why don't you add a test file to the real scenario to check for correct operation?
I did. That's why I know there is something wrong with the performance of the script. In reality, I wanted list all files where values between 0.019-0.011 were found -I just could not come up with a better solution.
As I said, it seem to work in a subset of files but failed miserably using real datasets SmilieSmilieSmilie
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find Strings in Files

experts, i am using solaris 9. there are serveral *.log files in a directory "/var/alllogs/". Among the files one or several files contain the string "0198634873". I want do- cat *.log | grep "0198634873"; And want to see which Files(file_name) contain that string. Plus output will go to a... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: thepurple
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

I need a script to find socials in files and output a list of those files

I am trying to find socail security numbers in files in (and under) a specific directory and output a list of the files where they are found... the format would be with no dashes just 9 numeric characters in a row. I have tried this: find /DirToLookIn -exec grep '\{9\}' /dev/null {} \; >>... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: NewSolarisAdmin
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script to find NOT common strings in two files

Hi all, I'd like you to help or give any advise about the following: I have two (2) files, file1 and file2, both files have information common to each other. The contents of file1 is a subset of the contents of file2: file1: errormsgadmin esdp esgservices esignipa iprice ipvpn irm... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: hnux
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

output strings to specific positions in a file

Been searching for about 3 hours for similar functionality that I can get examples of how to output text from variables into certain locations in a file. I would like to incorporate this into a script. I have not been able to find a command example that does it all in one method. I find part of... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bennu_500
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Find Multiple Strings from a list of *.gz files withour decompressing...

Hello Team, There is this situation where there are around 20 *.gz files and i want to search multiple words from all those files. Example as below : filea.gz fileb.gz filec.gz now i want to search words "hi" and "hello" from all these 3 files without... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: varun87
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Take a list if strings from a file and search them in a list of files and report them

I have a file 1.txt with the below contents. -----cat 1.txt----- 1234 5678 1256 1234 1247 ------------------- I have 3 more files in a folder -----ls -lrt------- A1.txt A2.txt A3.txt ------------------- The contents of those three files are similar format with different data values... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: realspirituals
8 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Getting specific strings from output

so i have the following string: ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl script to find process and exclude strings from the output

Hi team, I'm a newbie of Perl Script and looking to create a simple perl script that will run in the Linux system: 1) to find process, such as ps -ef | grep process name 2) to exclude strings from the output if it found, for instance if i see abc from usr process, then will exclude it from... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hoffman2503
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Exclude particular files from strings output

Hi everyone, Is it possible to have the command strings exclude particular files? Here is what I am currently writing: strings *20161212* It prints all files in the directory, which is good, but some file types do not need to be printed because they contain gibberish. I am trying the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: clippertm
5 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How to pass strings from a list of strings from another file and create multiple files?

Hello Everyone , Iam a newbie to shell programming and iam reaching out if anyone can help in this :- I have two files 1) Insert.txt 2) partition_list.txt insert.txt looks like this :- insert into emp1 partition (partition_name) (a1, b2, c4, s6, d8) select a1, b2, c4, (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nubie2linux
2 Replies
VERIFY_KRB5_CONF(8)					    BSD System Manager's Manual 				       VERIFY_KRB5_CONF(8)

NAME
verify_krb5_conf -- checks krb5.conf for obvious errors SYNOPSIS
verify_krb5_conf [config-file] DESCRIPTION
verify_krb5_conf reads the configuration file krb5.conf, or the file given on the command line, parses it, checking verifying that the syntax is not correctly wrong. If the file is syntactically correct, verify_krb5_conf tries to verify that the contents of the file is of relevant nature. ENVIRONMENT
KRB5_CONFIG points to the configuration file to read. FILES
/etc/krb5.conf Kerberos 5 configuration file DIAGNOSTICS
Possible output from verify_krb5_conf include: <path>: failed to parse <something> as size/time/number/boolean Usually means that <something> is misspelled, or that it contains weird characters. The parsing done by verify_krb5_conf is more strict than the one performed by libkrb5, so strings that work in real life might be reported as bad. <path>: host not found (<hostname>) Means that <path> is supposed to point to a host, but it can't be recognised as one. <path>: unknown or wrong type Means that <path> is either a string when it should be a list, vice versa, or just that verify_krb5_conf is confused. <path>: unknown entry Means that <string> is not known by verify_krb5_conf. SEE ALSO
krb5.conf(5) BUGS
Since each application can put almost anything in the config file, it's hard to come up with a watertight verification process. Most of the default settings are sanity checked, but this does not mean that every problem is discovered, or that everything that is reported as a possi- ble problem actually is one. This tool should thus be used with some care. It should warn about obsolete data, or bad practice, but currently doesn't. BSD
December 8, 2004 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:26 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy