Hi I have to grep for 2000 strings in a file one after the other.Say the file name is Snxx.out which has these strings.
I have to search for all the strings in the file Snxx.out one after the other.
What is the fastest way to do it ??
Note:The current grep process is taking lot of time per... (7 Replies)
Morning guys. Another day another question. :rolleyes:
I am knocking up a script to pull some data from a file. The problem is the file is very big (up to 1 gig in size), so this solution:
for results in `grep "^\
... works, but takes ages (we're talking minutes) to run. The data is held... (8 Replies)
Hello,
i have a very big file that has more then 80 MBytes (100MBytes). So with my CVS Application I cannot commit this file (too Big) because it must have < 80 MBytes.
How can I split this file into two others files, i think the AIX Unix command :
split -b can do that, buit how is the right... (2 Replies)
Hi experts,
I just want to know if there is a better solution to my nested while read loops below:
while read line; do
while read line2; do
while read line3; do
echo "$line $line2 $line3"
done < file3.txt
done < file2.txt
done < file1.txt >... (4 Replies)
Hello!
Is there a way i can read a file with n records as one big string using linux shell script? I have a file in the below format -
REC1
REC2
REC3
.
.
.
REC4
Record length is 3000 bytes per record and with a newline char at the end. What i need to do is
- read this file as one... (5 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I have two big files. I need to compare the different. currently, I am using
sort file1 > file1_temp;
sort file2 > file2_tmp
diff file1_tmp file2_tmp
I can use command
grep -v -f file1 file2
just wondering which way is fast to compare two big files.
Thanks... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I am new to this forum and this is my first post.
My requirement is like to optimize the time taken to grep the file with 40000 lines.
There are two files FILEA(40000 lines) FILEB(40000 lines).
The requirement is like this, both the file will be in the format below... (11 Replies)
I have a simple script that reads in data from fileA.txt and searches line by line for that data in multiple files (*multfiles.txt). It only prints the data when there is more than 1 instance of it. The problem is that its really slow (3+ hours) to complete the entire process. There are nearly 1500... (10 Replies)
ok guys.
this isnt homework or anything.
i have been using grep -f all my life but i am trying this for a huge file and it doesnt work.
can someone give me a replacement for grep -f pattern file for big files?
thanks (6 Replies)
Gents
Actually I have question and i need your support.
I have this NAS file system mounted as /coresys has size of 7 TB
I need to Split this file system into several file systems as mount points I mean how to can I Split it professionally to different NAS mount points how to can I decide... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: AbuAliiiiiiiiii
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
merge
merge(1) General Commands Manual merge(1)NAME
merge - three-way file merge
SYNOPSIS
file1 file2 file3
DESCRIPTION
combines two files that are revisions of a single original file. The original file is file2, and the revised files are file1 and file3.
identifies all changes that lead from file2 to file3 and from file2 to file1, then deposits the merged text into file1. If the option is
used, the result goes to standard output instead of file1.
An overlap occurs if both file1 and file3 have changes in the same place. prints how many overlaps occurred, and includes both alterna-
tives in the result. The alternatives are delimited as follows:
lines in file1
lines in file3
If there are overlaps, edit the result in file1 and delete one of the alternatives.
This command is particularly useful for revision control, especially if file1 and file3 are the ends of two branches that have file2 as a
common ancestor.
EXAMPLES
A typical use for is as follows:
1. To merge an RCS branch into the trunk, first check out the three different versions from RCS (see co(1)) and rename them for
their revision numbers: 5.2, 5.11, and 5.2.3.3. File 5.2.3.3 is the end of an RCS branch that split off the trunk at file 5.2.
2. For this example, assume file 5.11 is the latest version on the trunk, and is also a revision of the "original" file, 5.2.
Merge the branch into the trunk with the command:
3. File 5.11 now contains all changes made on the branch and the trunk, and has markings in the file to show all overlapping
changes.
4. Edit file 5.11 to correct the overlaps, then use the command to check the file back in (see ci(1)).
WARNINGS
uses the ed(1) system editor. Therefore, the file size limits of ed(1) apply to
AUTHOR
was developed by Walter F. Tichy.
SEE ALSO diff3(1), diff(1), rcsmerge(1), co(1).
merge(1)