OK. So we're finally coming close to a definition of how to determine the 1st Saturday in a calendar quarter and, hopefully, the last Saturday in a calendar quarter.
You seem to have now confirmed that the 1st Saturday in a calendar quarter is the 1st Saturday before the 2nd day of the first full month of that quarter (as I asked in post #12 in this thread. And I presume (although you have never defined it) that the last Saturday of a calendar quarter is the Saturday before the 1st Saturday of the next calendar quarter. For CY 2017, this would mean that:
Are all of these correct?
Hi Don -
Thank you for the follow up. Yes those are correct- Thank you!!
Hey Guys.I am a newbie on Bash Shell Scripting and Perl.And I have a question about file parsing.
I have a log file which contains reports about a communication device.I need to take some of the reports from the log file.Its hard to explain the issue.but shortly I can say that, the reports has a... (2 Replies)
Any ideas?
1)loop through text file
2)extract everything between SOL and EOL
3)output files, for example: 123.txt and 124.txt for the file below
So far I have: sed -n "/SOL/,/EOL/{p;/EOL/q;}" file
Here is an example of my text file.
SOL-123.go
something goes here
something goes... (0 Replies)
I was trying to parse the text file, which will looks like this
###XYZABC####
############
int = 4
char = 1
float = 1
.
.
############
like this my text file will contains lots of entries and I need to store these entries in the map eg. map.first = int and map.second = 4 same way I... (5 Replies)
I'm totally stumped with how to handle this huge text file I'm trying to deal with. I really need some help!
Here is what is looks like:
ab1ba67c331a3d731396322fad8dd71a3b627f89359827697645c806091c40b9
0.2
812a3c3684310045f1cb3157bf5eebc4379804e98c82b56f3944564e7bf5dab5
0.6
0.6... (3 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I am back for the second round today - :D
My input text file is this way
Home
friends
friendship meter
Tools
Mirrors
Downloads
My Data
About Us
Help
My own results
BLAT Search Results
ACTIONS QUERY SCORE START END QSIZE IDENTITY CHRO STRAND ... (7 Replies)
I have a text file with records of the form:
A X1 Y1 X2 Y2 X3 Y3
where A is character length 10, Xi is character length 4 and Yi is numeric length 10.
I want to parse the line, and output records like:
A X1 Y1
A X2 Y2
A X3 Y3
etc
Can anyone please give me an idea of how to do this. ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: wvdeijk
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
kmem
mem(7D) Devices mem(7D)NAME
mem, kmem, allkmem - physical or virtual memory access
SYNOPSIS
/dev/mem
/dev/kmem
/dev/allkmem
DESCRIPTION
The file /dev/mem is a special file that provides access to the physical memory of the computer.
The file /dev/kmem is a special file that provides access to the virtual address space of the operating system kernel, excluding memory
that is associated with an I/O device.
The file /dev/allkmem is a special file that provides access to the virtual address space of the operating system kernel, including memory
that is associated with an I/O device. You can use any of these devices to examine and modify the system.
Byte addresses in /dev/mem are interpreted as physical memory addresses. Byte addresses in /dev/kmem and /dev/allkmem are interpreted as
kernel virtual memory addresses. A reference to a non-existent location returns an error. See ERRORS for more information.
The file /dev/mem accesses physical memory; the size of the file is equal to the amount of physical memory in the computer. This size may
be larger than 4GB on a system running the 32-bit operating environment. In this case, you can access memory beyond 4GB using a series of
read(2) and write(2) calls, a pread64() or pwrite64() call, or a combination of llseek(2) and read(2) or write(2).
ERRORS
EFAULT Occurs when trying to write(2) a read-only location (allkmem), read(2) a write-only location (allkmem), or read(2) or write(2) a
non-existent or unimplemented location (mem, kmem, allkmem).
EIO Occurs when trying to read(2) or write(2) a memory location that is associated with an I/O device using the /dev/kmem special
file.
ENXIO Results from attempting to mmap(2) a non-existent physical (mem) or virtual (kmem, allkmem) memory address.
FILES
/dev/mem Provides access to the computer's physical memory.
/dev/kmem Provides access to the virtual address space of the operating system kernel, excluding memory that is associated with an
I/O device.
/dev/allkmem Provides access to the virtual address space of the operating system kernel, including memory that is associated with an
I/O device.
SEE ALSO llseek(2), mmap(2), read(2), write(2)WARNINGS
Using these devices to modify (that is, write to) the address space of a live running operating system or to modify the state of a
hardware device is extremely dangerous and may result in a system panic if kernel data structures are damaged or if device state is
changed.
SunOS 5.11 18 Feb 2002 mem(7D)