Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Linux rename with regular expression Post 303006776 by bobbygsk on Tuesday 7th of November 2017 02:17:02 PM
Old 11-07-2017
Thanks all for you time and your help.

I'm trying to get files from linux to Windows 7 using WinSCP application through batch script (MS-DOS batch script)

I have files with extension "*.gz" in linux.
I gunzip those files during sftp using winscp by exclamation - "! <linux commands>"
However, my logs shows that the filenames are read as
Code:
Orders_0024_20171103.csv_11-03-2017_20%3A01%3A05 
Instruments_20171004.csv_11-03-2017_20%3A01%3A06

instead of
Code:
Orders_0024_20171103.csv_11-03-2017_20:01:05 
Instruments_20171004.csv_11-03-2017_20:01:06

I'm looking something simpler just like Aia provided.
Aia's code works and I'm using his code.

If there is any simpler, I like to use that code.

Thanks all for your help and time.

---------- Post updated at 02:17 PM ---------- Previous update was at 02:12 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by drl
Hi, bobbygsk .

It's always useful to tell us your OS and shell. As Aia pointed out, there are differences in command rename depending on the distribution.
Already provided earlier. Except for servername and timestamp, I provided everything

Quote:
Linux <servername> 2.6.18-422.el5 #1 SMP <timestamp> x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Regular Expression + Aritmetical Expression

Is it possible to combine a regular expression with a aritmetical expression? For example, taking a 8-numbers caracter sequece and casting each output of a grep, comparing to a constant. THX! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Z0mby
2 Replies

2. Linux

Regular expression to extract "y" from "abc/x.y.z" .... i need regular expression

Regular expression to extract "y" from "abc/x.y.z" (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rag84dec
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Regular Expression Help

Hi there, I have a line in a coded text from which the formtat is DEF/AAA/AAA/AAA/AAA/AAA/AAA/AAA/AAA/AAA where A equals a letter but the fields after the DEF/ are optional. Which means the line could look like DEF/AAA or DEF/AAA/AAA etc etc I am trying to a find regular... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: sickboy
8 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

regular expression help

Hi, I have a small script which uses egrep and a set of regexes to validate an IP address, however, i want to make it so that if somebody puts a leading space in front of the IP address to be validated it will fail, so this is my script #!/bin/bash #function ip_checker() { result=$( echo... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hcclnoodles
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Integer expression expected: with regular expression

CA_RELEASE has a value of 6. I need to check if that this is a numeric value. if not error. source $CA_VERSION_DATA if * ] then echo "CA_RELESE $CA_RELEASE is invalid" exit -1 fi + source /etc/ncgl/ca_version_data ++ CA_PRODUCT_ID=samxts ++ CA_RELEASE=6 ++ CA_WEEK_NO=7 ++... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ketkee1985
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Regular Expression.

can someone let me know what this means in english. \(abcd\) \ is an escape key right? Thanks Also im getting confused with something like it does this mean any single character? and this would be 2 characters ? Just let me know if im on the right track. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: syco__
5 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Regular expression

I have a flat tab delimited file of the following format 1 A:23 A:45 A:789 2 A:2 A:47 3 A:78 A:345 A:9 A:10 4 A:34 A:98 I want to modify the file to the following format with insertions of "//" in between 1 A:23 // A:45 // A:789 2 A:2 // A:47 3 A:78 // A:345 // A:9 // A:10 4 A:34... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lucky Ali
7 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

help in regular expression

<ATTR name="ABCDEFGH" value=""/> <ATTR name="HJYR" value=""/> what would be the regular expression to match both the above strings... Always end with value=""/> always start with <ATTR name=" the ATTR name can be anything.. I need to use this with match() in awk. Thanks.. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shekhar2010us
1 Replies

9. Programming

Perl: How to read from a file, do regular expression and then replace the found regular expression

Hi all, How am I read a file, find the match regular expression and overwrite to the same files. open DESTINATION_FILE, "<tmptravl.dat" or die "tmptravl.dat"; open NEW_DESTINATION_FILE, ">new_tmptravl.dat" or die "new_tmptravl.dat"; while (<DESTINATION_FILE>) { # print... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jessy83
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

sed: -e expression #1, char 0: no previous regular expression

Hello All, I'm trying to extract the lines between two consecutive elements of an array from a file. My array looks like: problem_arr=(PRS111 PRS213 PRS234) j=0 while } ] do k=`expr $j + 1` sed -n "/${problem_arr}/,/${problem_arr}/p" problemid.txt ---some operation goes... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: InduInduIndu
11 Replies
File::GlobMapper(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       File::GlobMapper(3)

NAME
File::GlobMapper - Extend File Glob to Allow Input and Output Files SYNOPSIS
use File::GlobMapper qw( globmap ); my $aref = globmap $input => $output or die $File::GlobMapper::Error ; my $gm = new File::GlobMapper $input => $output or die $File::GlobMapper::Error ; DESCRIPTION
This module needs Perl5.005 or better. This module takes the existing "File::Glob" module as a starting point and extends it to allow new filenames to be derived from the files matched by "File::Glob". This can be useful when carrying out batch operations on multiple files that have both an input filename and output filename and the output file can be derived from the input filename. Examples of operations where this can be useful include, file renaming, file copying and file compression. Behind The Scenes To help explain what "File::GlobMapper" does, consider what code you would write if you wanted to rename all files in the current directory that ended in ".tar.gz" to ".tgz". So say these files are in the current directory alpha.tar.gz beta.tar.gz gamma.tar.gz and they need renamed to this alpha.tgz beta.tgz gamma.tgz Below is a possible implementation of a script to carry out the rename (error cases have been omitted) foreach my $old ( glob "*.tar.gz" ) { my $new = $old; $new =~ s#(.*).tar.gz$#$1.tgz# ; rename $old => $new or die "Cannot rename '$old' to '$new': $! ; } Notice that a file glob pattern "*.tar.gz" was used to match the ".tar.gz" files, then a fairly similar regular expression was used in the substitute to allow the new filename to be created. Given that the file glob is just a cut-down regular expression and that it has already done a lot of the hard work in pattern matching the filenames, wouldn't it be handy to be able to use the patterns in the fileglob to drive the new filename? Well, that's exactly what "File::GlobMapper" does. Here is same snippet of code rewritten using "globmap" for my $pair (globmap '<*.tar.gz>' => '<#1.tgz>' ) { my ($from, $to) = @$pair; rename $from => $to or die "Cannot rename '$old' to '$new': $! ; } So how does it work? Behind the scenes the "globmap" function does a combination of a file glob to match existing filenames followed by a substitute to create the new filenames. Notice how both parameters to "globmap" are strings that are delimited by <>. This is done to make them look more like file globs - it is just syntactic sugar, but it can be handy when you want the strings to be visually distinctive. The enclosing <> are optional, so you don't have to use them - in fact the first thing globmap will do is remove these delimiters if they are present. The first parameter to "globmap", "*.tar.gz", is an Input File Glob. Once the enclosing "< ... >" is removed, this is passed (more or less) unchanged to "File::Glob" to carry out a file match. Next the fileglob "*.tar.gz" is transformed behind the scenes into a full Perl regular expression, with the additional step of wrapping each transformed wildcard metacharacter sequence in parenthesis. In this case the input fileglob "*.tar.gz" will be transformed into this Perl regular expression ([^/]*).tar.gz Wrapping with parenthesis allows the wildcard parts of the Input File Glob to be referenced by the second parameter to "globmap", "#1.tgz", the Output File Glob. This parameter operates just like the replacement part of a substitute command. The difference is that the "#1" syntax is used to reference sub-patterns matched in the input fileglob, rather than the $1 syntax that is used with perl regular expressions. In this case "#1" is used to refer to the text matched by the "*" in the Input File Glob. This makes it easier to use this module where the parameters to "globmap" are typed at the command line. The final step involves passing each filename matched by the "*.tar.gz" file glob through the derived Perl regular expression in turn and expanding the output fileglob using it. The end result of all this is a list of pairs of filenames. By default that is what is returned by "globmap". In this example the data structure returned will look like this ( ['alpha.tar.gz' => 'alpha.tgz'], ['beta.tar.gz' => 'beta.tgz' ], ['gamma.tar.gz' => 'gamma.tgz'] ) Each pair is an array reference with two elements - namely the from filename, that "File::Glob" has matched, and a to filename that is derived from the from filename. Limitations "File::GlobMapper" has been kept simple deliberately, so it isn't intended to solve all filename mapping operations. Under the hood "File::Glob" (or for older versions of Perl, "File::BSDGlob") is used to match the files, so you will never have the flexibility of full Perl regular expression. Input File Glob The syntax for an Input FileGlob is identical to "File::Glob", except for the following 1. No nested {} 2. Whitespace does not delimit fileglobs. 3. The use of parenthesis can be used to capture parts of the input filename. 4. If an Input glob matches the same file more than once, only the first will be used. The syntax ~ ~user . Matches a literal '.'. Equivalent to the Perl regular expression . * Matches zero or more characters, except '/'. Equivalent to the Perl regular expression [^/]* ? Matches zero or one character, except '/'. Equivalent to the Perl regular expression [^/]? Backslash is used, as usual, to escape the next character. [] Character class. {,} Alternation () Capturing parenthesis that work just like perl Any other character it taken literally. Output File Glob The Output File Glob is a normal string, with 2 glob-like features. The first is the '*' metacharacter. This will be replaced by the complete filename matched by the input file glob. So *.c *.Z The second is Output FileGlobs take the "*" The "*" character will be replaced with the complete input filename. #1 Patterns of the form /#d/ will be replaced with the Returned Data EXAMPLES
A Rename script Below is a simple "rename" script that uses "globmap" to determine the source and destination filenames. use File::GlobMapper qw(globmap) ; use File::Copy; die "rename: Usage rename 'from' 'to' " unless @ARGV == 2 ; my $fromGlob = shift @ARGV; my $toGlob = shift @ARGV; my $pairs = globmap($fromGlob, $toGlob) or die $File::GlobMapper::Error; for my $pair (@$pairs) { my ($from, $to) = @$pair; move $from => $to ; } Here is an example that renames all c files to cpp. $ rename '*.c' '#1.cpp' A few example globmaps Below are a few examples of globmaps To copy all your .c file to a backup directory '</my/home/*.c>' '</my/backup/#1.c>' If you want to compress all '</my/home/*.[ch]>' '<*.gz>' To uncompress '</my/home/*.[ch].gz>' '</my/home/#1.#2>' SEE ALSO
File::Glob AUTHOR
The File::GlobMapper module was written by Paul Marquess, pmqs@cpan.org. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2005 Paul Marquess. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.16.3 2011-01-07 File::GlobMapper(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:41 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy