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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Simplifying awk/sed short pipeline Post 303007673 by RudiC on Monday 20th of November 2017 05:41:50 AM
Old 11-20-2017
Probability is high that ALL your code can be combined into one single awk script. Unfortunately your min works only if the first line in output.txt has non-null value, so with your sample data the rest of the algorithm (which I don't really understand) doesn't work out, always printing the input line followed by a zero.
Any corrections to the algorithm?
 

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PWHASH(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 PWHASH(1)

NAME
pwhash -- hashes passwords from the command line or standard input SYNOPSIS
pwhash [-km] [-b rounds] [-S rounds] [-s salt] [-p | string] DESCRIPTION
pwhash prints the encrypted form of string to the standard output. This is mostly useful for encrypting passwords from within scripts. The options are as follows: -b rounds Encrypt the string using Blowfish hashing with the specified rounds. -k Run in makekey(8) compatible mode. A single combined key (eight chars) and salt (two chars) with no intermediate space are read from standard input and the DES encrypted result is written to standard output without a terminating newline. -m Encrypt the string using MD5. -p Prompt for a single string with echo turned off. -S rounds Encrypt the salt with HMAC-SHA1 using the password as key and the specified rounds as a hint for the number of iterations. -s salt Encrypt the string using DES, with the specified salt. If no string is specified, pwhash reads one string per line from standard input, encrypting each one with the chosen algorithm from above. In the event that no specific algorithm is given as a command line option, the algorithm specified in the default class in /etc/passwd.conf will be used. For MD5 and Blowfish a new random salt is automatically generated for each password. Specifying the string on the command line should be discouraged; using the standard input is more secure. FILES
/etc/passwd.conf SEE ALSO
crypt(3), passwd.conf(5) BSD
October 16, 2009 BSD
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