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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting awk Pattern Matching for PING tests Post 303013976 by RudiC on Friday 2nd of March 2018 07:22:42 PM
Old 03-02-2018
If you always want to print the double line, you should "embrace" both print statements. And, the double check on a might be overkill:

Code:
awk '/packet loss/ && !/, 0% packet loss/{if (a) {print a; print}} {a=$0}' log_ping.txt

or
Code:
awk '/packet loss/ && !/, 0% packet loss/ && a {print a; print} {a=$0}' log_ping.txt

 

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Net::SIP::Packet(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     Net::SIP::Packet(3pm)

NAME
Net::SIP::Packet - handling of SIP packets SYNOPSIS
use Net::SIP::Packet; my $pkt = eval { Net::SIP::Packet->new( $sip_string ) } or die "invalid SIP packet"; $pkt->get_header( 'call-id' ) || die "no call-id"; $pkt->set_header( via => @via ); print $pkt->as_string; DESCRIPTION
This module implements the parsing, manipulation and creation of SIP packets according to RFC3261. NET::SIP::Packet's objects can be created by parsing a string containing the SIP packet or by constructing it from parts, e.g. header keys and values, body, method+URI (requests) or code+text (responses). All parts can be manipulated and finally the string representation of the manipulated packet can be (re)created. For dealing with requests and responses directly usually the subclasses Net::SIP::Request or Net::SIP::Response will be used instead. EXAMPLES
# create packet from string my $invite = Net::SIP::Packet->new( <<'EOS' ); INVITE sip:you@example.com SIP/2.0 From: <sip:me@example.com> To: <sip:you@example.com> ... EOS # show and manipulate some header print "callid=".$invite->get_header( 'call-id' )." "; print "route=".join( ",", $invite->get_header( 'route' ))." "; $invite->set_header( 'via' => [ $via1,$via2,.. ] ); # get resulting string representation print $invite->as_string; # create packet from parts my $resp = Net::SIP::Packet->new( 200, 'Ok', { to => '<sip:you@example.com>', from => '<sip:me@example.com>',.. } Net::SIP::SDP->new(...) ); # and get the packet as string print $resp->as_string; CONSTRUCTOR
new ( STRING | @PARTS ) This is the default constructor. Depending on the number of arguments branches into new_from_string or new_from_parts. new_from_string ( STRING ) Interprets STRING as a SIP request or response and creates Net::SIP::Request or Net::SIP::Response object accordingly. Will die() if it cannot parse the string as a SIP packet. new_from_parts ( CODE|METHOD, TEXT|URI, \%HEADER|@HEADER, [ BODY ] ) If CODE|METHOD is numeric a Net::SIP::Response object will be created with the response code CODE and the text TEXT. Otherwise a Net::SIP::Request object will be created with the method METHOD and the uri URI. Header data can be given as a hash %HEADER or array @HEADER reference. In case of a hash the key is the SIP field name and the value as either a string or a @list of strings. The fields on the resulting SIP packet will be sorted by name of the fields and fields with multiple values will be created as seperat lines. If the header is given as an array the elements of the array are "[ key => value ]" pairs where the keys are the field names and the values are strings or @list of strings. Each pair will result in a single line in the SIP header. If the value was a list reference the values in the list will be concatened by ','. The order of the fields in the resulting SIP packet will be the same as in the array. The BODY is optional and can be given either as a string or as an reference to an object which has a method as_string, like Net::SIP::SDP. If the BODY is an object which has a method content_type it will set the "content-type" header of the SIP object based on the result of "BODY->content_type" unless a "content-type" header was explicitly given. METHODS
is_request Returns TRUE if the SIP packet is a request, otherwise FALSE. is_response Returns TRUE if the SIP packet is a response, otherwise FALSE. tid Returns a transaction ID created from the sequence number in the "CSeq" header and the "Call-Id" header. All packets with the same tid belong to the same transaction. cseq Returns "CSeq" header. Short for "$self->get_header( 'cseq' )". callid Returns "Call-Id" header. Short for "$self->get_header( 'call-id' )". get_header ( [ NAME ] ) If NAME is given it returns the SIP header for NAME. If no header exists returns (). If there is only one value for the header returns this value. In case of multiple values it returns a @list of all values, but if "wantarray" says, that the caller expects only a single value it will "croak()". If no NAME is given it will return a reference to a hash wich contains all fields and has the format described in new_from_parts. add_header ( NAME, VAL ) Adds the header at the end of the SIP header. VAL can be a string or a reference to a list of strings. insert_header ( NAME, VAL ) Like add_header, but the lines will be added on top of the header. del_header ( NAME ) Delete all lines from header where the field name is NAME. set_header ( NAME, VAL ) Replaces an existing header, like del_header followed by add_header. set_body ( VAL ) Sets body to VAL, which can be string or object. The handling for body objects see new_from_parts. as_string Returns string representation of SIP packet. dump ( [ LEVEL ] ) Returns dump of packet as string for debugging. The higher LEVEL is the more details one gets. At the moment a LEVEL of 0 gets a one- line summary and the rest the result from as_string. as_parts Returns Array with CODE|METHOD, TEXT|URI, @HEADER and BODY like used in new_from_parts. sdp_body Returns body as Net::SIP::SDP object if there is a body and the content-type is 'application/sdp' or empty. If body contains invalid SDP it raises an exception (e.g. die()). UNDOCUMENTED METHODS get_header_hashval ( [ NAME ] ) scan_header ( @ARG ) clone perl v5.14.2 2011-08-26 Net::SIP::Packet(3pm)
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