Hi guys,
I have no idea on unix but suddenly, my cobol programs calls a unix script that i know nothing about.
can you guys interpret these lines for me?
i know its a print command but I want to actually know how many copies it prints.
qprt -da -P $1 -t '6' -i '6' -l '70' $2
qprt -da... (1 Reply)
Could you interpret the following sed and awk command for me?
command:
cat tempfile2 |sed "s/\(BUILD-3-.*-\.-\)\(.*\..*\..*\)/\2/" | awk '{printf "%-8.8s %-23.23s %-30.30s %-50.50s\n", $1,$2,$3,substr($0,index($0,$4))}' > outfile2 2>/dev/null
input:(data in tempfile2)... (1 Reply)
Hi,
So I am new to Unix, and I need to check the performance of some apps I am running. But I don't know how to interpret the output from TOP.
Could somebody please explain the difference between the different values. And also explain how I can have a process which has a %CPU > 100?
... (7 Replies)
hi
I have a text file abc.txt as below
a = 0
b = 1
c = 3
i want to interpret this file i.e. if number corresponding to 'a' is 0 i want to run a script script.bash .
How do do that? (4 Replies)
Was wondering if someone could interpret this for me -- I'm not sure what everything means. It's a shell script from my bash book:
cd ()
{
builtin cd "$@"
es=$?
echo "$OLDPWD ->$PWD"
return $es
}
what I don't quite understand is the "$@". I think, if I understand... (6 Replies)
I have collected data of Number of L2 cache misses using PAPI. I had run an MPI application with 4 threads (mpirun -np 4) and each thread reads the cache misses in L2. Each thread outputs data for every timestamp. eg:
Timestamp data
xxx530 thread# 0 2136
xxx531 thread# 0 ... (0 Replies)
I know $0 is the entire file's contents (at least I think that is what it is!), but what exactly is: $0!~
This was a snippet from a larger line
awk '$0!~/^$/ {print $0}'
This deletes blank lines, but I want to know specifically the $0!~ part... I am guessing /^$/ is regex for blank line...... (5 Replies)
Can anyone tell me how to interpret this:
listpage="ls |more" (the spaces are there in the example)
$listpage
It's from my bash book and I'm not sure what it means (3 Replies)
hi All,
i have never used sed in Unix environment, but i have one script which is using this following command:
cat audit_session_rpt_MSP_20140331.lst|sed -n '/Apr 14/!p'| sed -n '/Page/!p'| sed -n '/UserName/!p' |\
egrep -v '^-|^=|^\*'|sed '/^$/d'|sed -e '1,7d'... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: lovelysethii
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
locale::codes::langext
Locale::Codes::LangExt(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Locale::Codes::LangExt(3pm)NAME
Locale::Codes::LangExt - standard codes for language extension identification
SYNOPSIS
use Locale::Codes::LangExt;
$lext = code2langext('acm'); # $lext gets 'Mesopotamian Arabic'
$code = langext2code('Mesopotamian Arabic'); # $code gets 'acm'
@codes = all_langext_codes();
@names = all_langext_names();
DESCRIPTION
The "Locale::Codes::LangExt" module provides access to standard codes used for identifying language extensions, such as those as defined in
the IANA language registry.
Most of the routines take an optional additional argument which specifies the code set to use. If not specified, the default IANA language
registry codes will be used.
SUPPORTED CODE SETS
There are several different code sets you can use for identifying language extensions. A code set may be specified using either a name, or
a constant that is automatically exported by this module.
For example, the two are equivalent:
$lext = code2langext('acm','alpha');
$lext = code2langext('acm',LOCALE_LANGEXT_ALPHA);
The codesets currently supported are:
alpha
This is the set of three-letter (lowercase) codes from the IANA language registry, such as 'acm' for Mesopotamian Arabic.
This is the default code set.
ROUTINES
code2langext ( CODE [,CODESET] )
langext2code ( NAME [,CODESET] )
langext_code2code ( CODE ,CODESET ,CODESET2 )
all_langext_codes ( [CODESET] )
all_langext_names ( [CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::rename_langext ( CODE ,NEW_NAME [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::add_langext ( CODE ,NAME [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::delete_langext ( CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::add_langext_alias ( NAME ,NEW_NAME )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::delete_langext_alias ( NAME )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::rename_langext_code ( CODE ,NEW_CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::add_langext_code_alias ( CODE ,NEW_CODE [,CODESET] )
Locale::Codes::LangExt::delete_langext_code_alias ( CODE [,CODESET] )
These routines are all documented in the Locale::Codes::API man page.
SEE ALSO
Locale::Codes
The Locale-Codes distribution.
Locale::Codes::API
The list of functions supported by this module.
http://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry
The IANA language subtag registry.
AUTHOR
See Locale::Codes for full author history.
Currently maintained by Sullivan Beck (sbeck@cpan.org).
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2011-2013 Sullivan Beck
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.18.2 2013-11-04 Locale::Codes::LangExt(3pm)