Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Consolidating multiple outputs in one file Post 303013442 by mirwasim on Wednesday 21st of February 2018 11:58:16 AM
Old 02-21-2018
Consolidating multiple outputs in one file

Dears,
i am stuck here
i have 3 scripts running at one time and all the three scripts finish at different time and each script generate 1 file with different name. so i will have three files.

i dnt know which script finish first
i want to have a script which check if all the there files are created and process is over then join the files and make 1 file.

please help me to archive this
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Consolidating Pipes

This is something I've given a lot of thought to and come up with no answer. Say you have a data stream passing from a file, through process A, into process B. Process A only modifies a few bytes of the stream, then prints the rest of the stream unmodified. Is there any way to stream the file... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Corona688
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

problems with a script that outputs data to a file

First of all, im a total newbie to the point that i do not know what are the terms to search for my problem. I did however spend the rest of the day today trying to figure out what is wrong with my bash script. ive always thought that the best way to learn is to tackle a problem heads on. but at... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: joeribut
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to store multiple outputs from an awk command?

x=`echo $line | awk -F "|" '{print $1;print NR}'` How will I get the 2 return values ($1 and NR) from awk to variables? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: tene
4 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Multiple Substring Outputs

Hello, I am reading a file with millions of lines in it. Each line is big line containing several xml tags. I need to Output just the value of two tags in a seperate flat file. For eg- I need to output whats present in <ComponentName> something </ComponentName> and another tag is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunnybehl
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

create outputs from other command outputs

hi friends, The code: i=1 while do filename=`/usr/bin/ls -l| awk '{ print $9}'` echo $filename>>summary.csv #Gives the name of the file stored at column 9 count=`wc -l $filename | awk '{print $1}'` echo $count>>summary.csv #Gives just the count of lines of file "filename" i=`expr... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rajsharma
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

multiple variables assignement (stdout/stderr outputs)

Hi all, I've been looking around for this for a while and can't seem to find a satifactory way to do what I want: I would like to assign the output of stdout to a variable and that of stderr to another one, and this without using temporary files/named pipes. In other words be able to assign... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: anthalamus
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

simple join for multiple files and produce 3 outputs

sh script file1 filea fileb filec ................filez. >>output1 & output2 &output3 file1 z10 1873 1920 z_number1_E59 z10 2042 2090 z_number2_E59 Z22 2476 2560 z_number3_E59 Z22 2838 2915 z_number4_E59 z1 1873 1920 z_number1_E60 z1 ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: stateperl
9 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Array in awk outputs multiple values

Disclaimer: OP is 100% Awk beginner. I use this code on ASCII files I need to report against. awk 'BEGIN { tokens = 0 tokens = 0 tokens = 0 } { for (token in tokens) { if ($1 == token){print $0; tokens++;}}} END {for (token in tokens){ if( tokens ==... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: alan
1 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Writing multiple outputs in to separate cells of CSV file

Hi I am writing a script which has multiple awk statements and each statement gives me a numeric count as an output. I want those output to be stored in different cells of a csv file. say 12 awk statements give 12 output and i want them in diffrenet cells of csv file. Thank you guys..!! (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: prabhat.diwaker
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Returning multiple outputs of a single line based on previous repeated lines

Hello, I am trying to return a time multiple times from a file that has varying output just before the time instance, i.e. cat jumped cat jumped cat jumped time = 1.1 cat jumped cat jumped time = 1.2 cat jumped cat jumped time = 1.3 In this case i would like to output a time.txt... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ryddner
6 Replies
DH_INSTALLINIT(1)						     Debhelper							 DH_INSTALLINIT(1)

NAME
dh_installinit - install init scripts and/or upstart jobs into package build directories SYNOPSIS
dh_installinit [debhelperoptions] [--name=name] [-n] [-R] [-r] [-d] [--params] DESCRIPTION
dh_installinit is a debhelper program that is responsible for installing init scripts with associated defaults files, as well as upstart job files into package build directories. It also automatically generates the postinst and postrm and prerm commands needed to set up the symlinks in /etc/rc*.d/ to start and stop the init scripts. FILES
debian/package.init If this exists, it is installed into etc/init.d/package in the package build directory. debian/package.default If this exists, it is installed into etc/default/package in the package build directory. debian/package.upstart If this exists, it is installed into etc/init/package.conf in the package build directory. OPTIONS
-n, --noscripts Do not modify postinst/postrm/prerm scripts. -o, --onlyscripts Only modify postinst/postrm/prerm scripts, do not actually install any init script, default files, or upstart job. May be useful if the init script or upstart job is shipped and/or installed by upstream in a way that doesn't make it easy to let dh_installinit find it. -R, --restart-after-upgrade Do not stop the init script until after the package upgrade has been completed. This is different than the default behavior, which stops the script in the prerm, and starts it again in the postinst. This can be useful for daemons that should not have a possibly long downtime during upgrade. But you should make sure that the daemon will not get confused by the package being upgraded while it's running before using this option. -r, --no-restart-on-upgrade Do not stop init script on upgrade. --no-start Do not start the init script on install or upgrade, or stop it on removal. Only call update-rc.d. Useful for rcS scripts. -d, --remove-d Remove trailing d from the name of the package, and use the result for the filename the upstart job file is installed as in etc/init/ , and for the filename the init script is installed as in etc/init.d and the default file is installed as in etc/default/ . This may be useful for daemons with names ending in d. (Note: this takes precedence over the --init-script parameter described below.) -uparams --update-rcd-params=params -- params Pass params to update-rc.d(8). If not specified, defaults will be passed to update-rc.d(8). --name=name Install the init script (and default file) as well as upstart job file using the filename name instead of the default filename, which is the package name. When this parameter is used, dh_installinit looks for and installs files named debian/package.name.init, debian/package.name.default and debian/package.name.upstart instead of the usual debian/package.init, debian/package.default and debian/package.upstart. --init-script=scriptname Use scriptname as the filename the init script is installed as in etc/init.d/ (and also use it as the filename for the defaults file, if it is installed). If you use this parameter, dh_installinit will look to see if a file in the debian/ directory exists that looks like package.scriptname and if so will install it as the init script in preference to the files it normally installs. This parameter is deprecated, use the --name parameter instead. This parameter is incompatible with the use of upstart jobs. --error-handler=function Call the named shell function if running the init script fails. The function should be provided in the prerm and postinst scripts, before the #DEBHELPER# token. NOTES
Note that this command is not idempotent. dh_prep(1) should be called between invocations of this command. Otherwise, it may cause multiple instances of the same text to be added to maintainer scripts. SEE ALSO
debhelper(7) This program is a part of debhelper. AUTHORS
Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org> Steve Langasek <steve.langasek@canonical.com> 9.20120909 2012-04-10 DH_INSTALLINIT(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:18 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy