Ok here's what I'm trying to do. I need to get a listing of all the mountpoints on a system into a file, which is easy enough, just using something like "mount | awk '{print $1}'"
However, on a couple of systems, they have some mount points looking like this:
/stage
/stand
/usr
/MFPIS... (2 Replies)
OK, I have read several things on how to do this, but can't make it work. I am writing this to a vi file then calling it as an awk script.
So I need to search a file for duplicate lines, delete duplicate lines, then write the result to another file, say /home/accountant/files/docs/nodup
... (2 Replies)
Hi please help me how to remove duplicate lines in any file.
I have a file having huge number of lines.
i want to remove selected lines in it.
And also if there exists duplicate lines, I want to delete the rest & just keep one of them.
Please help me with any unix commands or even fortran... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
Below is my requirement. Whatever coming in between ' ', needs to delete.
Input File Contents:
==============
This is nice 'boy'
This 'is
bad
boy.' Got it
Expected Output
===========
This is nice
This
Got it (4 Replies)
Hey all, a relative bash/script newbie trying solve a problem.
I've got a text file with lots of lines that I've been able to clean up and format with awk/sed/cut, but now I'd like to remove the lines with duplicate usernames based on time stamp. Here's what the data looks like
2007-11-03... (3 Replies)
hi :)
I need to delete partial duplicate lines
I have this in a file
sihp8027,/opt/cf20,1980182
sihp8027,/opt/oracle/10gRelIIcd,155200016
sihp8027,/opt/oracle/10gRelIIcd,155200176
sihp8027,/var/opt/ERP,10376312
and need to leave it like this:
sihp8027,/opt/cf20,1980182... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a very huge file (4GB) which has duplicate lines. I want to delete duplicate lines leaving unique lines. Sort, uniq, awk '!x++' are not working as its running out of buffer space.
I dont know if this works : I want to read each line of the File in a For Loop, and want to... (16 Replies)
Hello sed gurus. I am using ksh on Sun and have a file created by concatenating several other files. All files contain header rows. I just need to keep the first occurrence and remove all other header rows.
header for file
1111
2222
3333
header for file
1111
2222
3333
header for file... (8 Replies)
Hi, I'm sorry I'm no coder so I came here, counting on your free time and good will to beg for spoonfeeding some good code. I'll try to be quick and concise!
Got file with 50k lines like this:
"Heh, heh. Those darn ninjas. They're _____."*wacky
The "canebrake", "timber" & "pygmy" are types... (7 Replies)
I have a file
Line 1 a
Line 22
Line 33
Line 1 b
Line 22
Line 1 c
Line 4
Line 5
I want to delete all lines before last occurrence of a line which contains something which is defined in a variable. Say a variable var contains 'Line 1', then I need the following in the output.
... (21 Replies)
Discussion started by: Soham
21 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
plan9-grep
GREP(1) General Commands Manual GREP(1)NAME
grep, g - search a file for a pattern
SYNOPSIS
grep [ option ... ] pattern [ file ... ]
g [ option ... ] pattern [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Grep searches the input files (standard input default) for lines that match the pattern, a regular expression as defined in regexp(7) with
the addition of a newline character as an alternative (substitute for |) with lowest precedence. Normally, each line matching the pattern
is `selected', and each selected line is copied to the standard output. The options are
-c Print only a count of matching lines.
-h Do not print file name tags (headers) with output lines.
-e The following argument is taken as a pattern. This option makes it easy to specify patterns that might confuse argument parsing,
such as -n.
-i Ignore alphabetic case distinctions. The implementation folds into lower case all letters in the pattern and input before interpre-
tation. Matched lines are printed in their original form.
-l (ell) Print the names of files with selected lines; don't print the lines.
-L Print the names of files with no selected lines; the converse of -l.
-n Mark each printed line with its line number counted in its file.
-s Produce no output, but return status.
-v Reverse: print lines that do not match the pattern.
-f The pattern argument is the name of a file containing regular expressions one per line.
-b Don't buffer the output: write each output line as soon as it is discovered.
Output lines are tagged by file name when there is more than one input file. (To force this tagging, include /dev/null as a file name
argument.)
Care should be taken when using the shell metacharacters $*[^|()= and newline in pattern; it is safest to enclose the entire expression in
single quotes '...'. An expression starting with '*' will treat the rest of the expression as literal characters.
G invokes grep with -n and forces tagging of output lines by file name. If no files are listed, it searches all files matching
*.C *.b *.c *.h *.m *.cc *.java *.cgi *.pl *.py *.tex *.ms
SOURCE
/src/cmd/grep
/bin/g
SEE ALSO ed(1), awk(1), sed(1), sam(1), regexp(7)DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is null if any lines are selected, or non-null when no lines are selected or an error occurs.
GREP(1)