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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Single grep to multiple strings with separate output per string Post 303003477 by nms on Thursday 14th of September 2017 08:58:44 AM
Old 09-14-2017
I am running on Solaris 11, hence grep -o does not work.

What you provided me works but I'm looking for a command that works the same as 'grep -o' which works on Solaris.

Basically I have a log file and each line contains a timestamp. Therefore when performing uniq command, each line which contains that particular grep, is displayed separately.

To give you a better idea:

These are lines from the log file:
Code:
 1 Sep 14 11:00:01 ccsWalletExpiry: [ID 848595 user.crit] ccsWalletExpiry(28635) CRITICAL: ABORTING: Cannot connect to O                                                                     racle as '/'
   1 Sep 14 11:00:06  ccsPeriodicCharge: [ID 848595 user.crit] ccsPeriodicCharge(28632) CRITICAL: Error: failed to initiali                                                                     se database connection, cannot continue.
   1 Sep 14 11:10:00  ccsWalletExpiry: [ID 848595 user.crit] ccsWalletExpiry(12949) CRITICAL: ABORTING: Cannot connect to O                                                                     racle as '/'

I need to grep specifically for CRITICAL only and the output should be the string I'm trying to grep and the number of occurrences this string was matched

Code:
CRITICAL 3


Last edited by Scrutinizer; 09-14-2017 at 11:16 AM.. Reason: code tags
 

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Nagios::Plugin(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       Nagios::Plugin(3pm)

NAME
Nagios::Plugin - A family of perl modules to streamline writing Nagios plugins SYNOPSIS
# Constants OK, WARNING, CRITICAL, and UNKNOWN are exported by default # See also Nagios::Plugin::Functions for a functional interface use Nagios::Plugin; # Constructor $np = Nagios::Plugin->new; # OR $np = Nagios::Plugin->new( shortname => "PAGESIZE" ); # OR # use Nagios::Plugin::Getopt to process the @ARGV command line options: # --verbose, --help, --usage, --timeout and --host are defined automatically. $np = Nagios::Plugin->new( usage => "Usage: %s [ -v|--verbose ] [-H <host>] [-t <timeout>] " . "[ -c|--critical=<threshold> ] [ -w|--warning=<threshold> ]", ); # add valid command line options and build them into your usage/help documentation. $np->add_arg( spec => 'warning|w=s', help => '-w, --warning=INTEGER:INTEGER . See ' . 'http://nagiosplug.sourceforge.net/developer-guidelines.html#THRESHOLDFORMAT ' . 'for the threshold format. ', ); # Parse @ARGV and process standard arguments (e.g. usage, help, version) $np->getopts; # Exit/return value methods - nagios_exit( CODE, MESSAGE ), # nagios_die( MESSAGE, [CODE]) $page = retrieve_page($page1) or $np->nagios_exit( UNKNOWN, "Could not retrieve page" ); # Return code: 3; # output: PAGESIZE UNKNOWN - Could not retrieve page test_page($page) or $np->nagios_exit( CRITICAL, "Bad page found" ); # nagios_die() is just like nagios_exit(), but return code defaults # to UNKNOWN $page = retrieve_page($page2) or $np->nagios_die( "Could not retrieve page" ); # Return code: 3; # output: PAGESIZE UNKNOWN - Could not retrieve page # Threshold methods $code = $np->check_threshold( check => $value, warning => $warning_threshold, critical => $critical_threshold, ); $np->nagios_exit( $code, "Threshold check failed" ) if $code != OK; # Message methods (EXPERIMENTAL AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE) - # add_message( CODE, $message ); check_messages() for (@collection) { if (m/Error/) { $np->add_message( CRITICAL, $_ ); } else { $np->add_message( OK, $_ ); } } ($code, $message) = $np->check_messages(); nagios_exit( $code, $message ); # If any items in collection matched m/Error/, returns CRITICAL and # the joined set of Error messages; otherwise returns OK and the # joined set of ok messages # Perfdata methods $np->add_perfdata( label => "size", value => $value, uom => "kB", threshold => $threshold, ); $np->add_perfdata( label => "time", ... ); $np->nagios_exit( OK, "page size at http://... was ${value}kB" ); # Return code: 0; # output: PAGESIZE OK - page size at http://... was 36kB # | size=36kB;10:25;25: time=... DESCRIPTION
Nagios::Plugin and its associated Nagios::Plugin::* modules are a family of perl modules to streamline writing Nagios plugins. The main end user modules are Nagios::Plugin, providing an object-oriented interface to the entire Nagios::Plugin::* collection, and Nagios::Plugin::Functions, providing a simpler functional interface to a useful subset of the available functionality. The purpose of the collection is to make it as simple as possible for developers to create plugins that conform the Nagios Plugin guidelines (http://nagiosplug.sourceforge.net/developer-guidelines.html). EXPORTS Nagios status code constants are exported by default: OK WARNING CRITICAL UNKNOWN DEPENDENT The following variables are also exported on request: %ERRORS A hash mapping error strings ("CRITICAL", "UNKNOWN", etc.) to the corresponding status code. %STATUS_TEXT A hash mapping status code constants (OK, WARNING, CRITICAL, etc.) to the corresponding error string ("OK", "WARNING, "CRITICAL", etc.) i.e. the reverse of %ERRORS. CONSTRUCTOR Nagios::Plugin->new; Nagios::Plugin->new( shortname => 'PAGESIZE' ); Nagios::Plugin->new( usage => "Usage: %s [ -v|--verbose ] [-H <host>] [-t <timeout>] [ -c|--critical=<critical threshold> ] [ -w|--warning=<warning threshold> ] ", version => $VERSION, blurb => $blurb, extra => $extra, url => $url, license => $license, plugin => basename $0, timeout => 15, ); Instantiates a new Nagios::Plugin object. Accepts the following named arguments: shortname The 'shortname' for this plugin, used as the first token in the plugin output by the various exit methods. Default: uc basename $0. usage ("Usage: %s --foo --bar") Passing a value for the usage() argument makes Nagios::Plugin instantiate its own "Nagios::Plugin::Getopt" object so you can start doing command line argument processing. See "CONSTRUCTOR" in Nagios::Plugin::Getopt for more about "usage" and the following options: version url blurb license extra plugin timeout OPTION HANDLING METHODS "Nagios::Plugin" provides these methods for accessing the functionality in "Nagios::Plugin::Getopt". add_arg Examples: # Define --hello argument (named parameters) $plugin->add_arg( spec => 'hello=s', help => "--hello Hello string", required => 1, ); # Define --hello argument (positional parameters) # Parameter order is 'spec', 'help', 'default', 'required?' $plugin->add_arg('hello=s', "--hello Hello string", undef, 1); See "ARGUMENTS" in Nagios::Plugin::Getopt for more details. getopts() Parses and processes the command line options you've defined, automatically doing the right thing with help/usage/version arguments. See "GETOPTS" in Nagios::Plugin::Getopt for more details. opts() Assuming you've instantiated it by passing 'usage' to new(), opts() returns the Nagios::Plugin object's "Nagios::Plugin::Getopt" object, with which you can do lots of great things. E.g. if ( $plugin->opts->verbose ) { print "yah yah YAH YAH YAH!!!"; } # start counting down to timeout alarm $plugin->opts->timeout; your_long_check_step_that_might_time_out(); # access any of your custom command line options, # assuming you've done these steps above: # $plugin->add_arg('my_argument=s', '--my_argument [STRING]'); # $plugin->getopts; print $plugin->opts->my_argument; Again, see Nagios::Plugin::Getopt. EXIT METHODS nagios_exit( <CODE>, $message ) Exit with return code CODE, and a standard nagios message of the form "SHORTNAME CODE - $message". nagios_die( $message, [<CODE>] ) Same as nagios_exit(), except that CODE is optional, defaulting to UNKNOWN. NOTE: exceptions are not raised by default to calling code. Set $_use_die flag if this functionality is required (see test code). die( $message, [<CODE>] ) Alias for nagios_die(). Deprecated. max_state, max_state_alt These are wrapper function for Nagios::Plugin::Functions::max_state and Nagios::Plugin::Functions::max_state_alt. THRESHOLD METHODS These provide a top level interface to the "Nagios::Plugin::Threshold" module; for more details, see Nagios::Plugin::Threshold and Nagios::Plugin::Range. check_threshold( $value ) check_threshold( check => $value, warning => $warn, critical => $crit ) Evaluates $value against the thresholds and returns OK, CRITICAL, or WARNING constant. The thresholds may be: 1. explicitly set by passing 'warning' and/or 'critical' parameters to "check_threshold()", or, 2. explicitly set by calling "set_thresholds()" before "check_threshold()", or, 3. implicitly set by command-line parameters -w, -c, --critical or --warning, if you have run "$plugin->getopts()". You can specify $value as an array of values and each will be checked against the thresholds. The return value is ready to pass to C <nagios_exit>, e . g ., $p->nagios_exit( return_code => $p->check_threshold($result), message => " sample result was $result" ); set_thresholds(warning => "10:25", critical => "~:25") Sets the acceptable ranges and creates the plugin's Nagios::Plugins::Threshold object. See http://nagiosplug.sourceforge.net/developer-guidelines.html#THRESHOLDFORMAT for details and examples of the threshold format. threshold() Returns the object's "Nagios::Plugin::Threshold" object, if it has been defined by calling set_thresholds(). You can pass a new Threshold object to it to replace the old one too, but you shouldn't need to do that from a plugin script. MESSAGE METHODS EXPERIMENTAL AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE add_messages and check_messages are higher-level convenience methods to add and then check a set of messages, returning an appropriate return code and/or result message. They are equivalent to maintaining a set of @critical, @warning, and and @ok message arrays (add_message), and then doing a final if test (check_messages) like this: if (@critical) { nagios_exit( CRITICAL, join(' ', @critical) ); } elsif (@warning) { nagios_exit( WARNING, join(' ', @warning) ); } else { nagios_exit( OK, join(' ', @ok) ); } add_message( <CODE>, $message ) Add a message with CODE status to the object. May be called multiple times. The messages added are checked by check_messages, following. Only CRITICAL, WARNING, and OK are accepted as valid codes. check_messages() Check the current set of messages and return an appropriate nagios return code and/or a result message. In scalar context, returns only a return code; in list context returns both a return code and an output message, suitable for passing directly to nagios_exit() e.g. $code = $np->check_messages; ($code, $message) = $np->check_messages; check_messages returns CRITICAL if any critical messages are found, WARNING if any warning messages are found, and OK otherwise. The message returned in list context defaults to the joined set of error messages; this may be customised using the arguments below. check_messages accepts the following named arguments (none are required): join => SCALAR A string used to join the relevant array to generate the message string returned in list context i.e. if the 'critical' array @crit is non-empty, check_messages would return: join( $join, @crit ) as the result message. Default: ' ' (space). join_all => SCALAR By default, only one set of messages are joined and returned in the result message i.e. if the result is CRITICAL, only the 'critical' messages are included in the result; if WARNING, only the 'warning' messages are included; if OK, the 'ok' messages are included (if supplied) i.e. the default is to return an 'errors-only' type message. If join_all is supplied, however, it will be used as a string to join the resultant critical, warning, and ok messages together i.e. all messages are joined and returned. critical => ARRAYREF Additional critical messages to supplement any passed in via add_message(). warning => ARRAYREF Additional warning messages to supplement any passed in via add_message(). ok => ARRAYREF | SCALAR Additional ok messages to supplement any passed in via add_message(). PERFORMANCE DATA METHODS add_perfdata( label => "size", value => $value, uom => "kB", threshold => $threshold ) Add a set of performance data to the object. May be called multiple times. The performance data is included in the standard plugin output messages by the various exit methods. See the Nagios::Plugin::Performance documentation for more information on performance data and the various field definitions, as well as the relevant section of the Nagios Plugin guidelines (http://nagiosplug.sourceforge.net/developer-guidelines.html#AEN202). EXAMPLES
"Enough talk! Show me some examples!" See the file 'check_stuff.pl' in the 't' directory included with the Nagios::Plugin distribution for a complete working example of a plugin script. VERSIONING
The Nagios::Plugin::* modules are currently experimental and so the interfaces may change up until Nagios::Plugin hits version 1.0, although every attempt will be made to keep them as backwards compatible as possible. SEE ALSO
See Nagios::Plugin::Functions for a simple functional interface to a subset of the available Nagios::Plugin functionality. See also Nagios::Plugin::Getopt, Nagios::Plugin::Range, Nagios::Plugin::Performance, Nagios::Plugin::Range, and Nagios::Plugin::Threshold. The Nagios Plugin project page is at http://nagiosplug.sourceforge.net. BUGS
Please report bugs in these modules to the Nagios Plugin development team: nagiosplug-devel@lists.sourceforge.net. AUTHOR
Maintained by the Nagios Plugin development team - http://nagiosplug.sourceforge.net. Originally by Ton Voon, <ton.voon@altinity.com>. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2006 by Nagios Plugin Development Team This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.4 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. perl v5.14.2 2011-12-23 Nagios::Plugin(3pm)
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