Looks like an old branch of gawk with non-POSIX extensions.
Probably a buggy and/or not so forgiving as gawk...
The BUGS section at the bottom of the man page might give some hints of what can be tweaked to make it run...
Stick with gawk if it's an option, or get a newer version of a native BSD version of awk.
P.S. I'm getting the following timing with gawk under Cygwin with the referenced file:
with the slightly modified awk code:
Dear Srs :-)
I'm looking for a shell script, that given a network in CIDR format it lists all IPs, for example:
Preferredly a shell script, but a Perl, Python, C, etc.. is also welcome :-)
I have been looking in sipcalc, ipcalc, etc.. options but this feature is not implemented :-(
... (10 Replies)
Hi,
Please anyone help to achive this using perl or unix scripting .
This is date in my table 20090224,based on the date need to check the files,If file exist for that date then increment by 1 for that date and check till max date 'i.e.20090301 and push those files .
files1_20090224... (2 Replies)
Hello everybody,
I'm coding a network program and i need it to "understand" ip ranges, but i don't know how to make to parse an IP CIDR range, let's say "172.16.10.0/24" to work with the specified IP range.
I've found a program which does it, but i don't understand the code. Here is the... (3 Replies)
I have a list of about 200,000 lines in a text file that look like this:
1 1 120
1 80 200
1 150 270
5 50 170
5 100 220
5 300 420
The first column is an identifier, the next 2 columns are a range (always 120 value range)
I'm trying fill in the values of those ranges, and remove... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have two files
file1 chr1_22450_22500
chr2_12300_12350
chr1_34500_34550
file2 11000_13000
15000_19000
33000_44000
If the file 1 ranges fall between file2 ranges then assign the value of file2 in column 2 to file1
output:
chr2_12300_12350 11000_13000
chr1_34500_34550 ... (7 Replies)
Looking for a simple way to convert ranges to a numerical sequence that would assign the original value of the range to the individual numbers that are on the range.
Thank you
given data
13196-13199 0
13200 4
13201 10
13202-13207 3
13208-13210 7
desired... (3 Replies)
Hi all, I would appreciate if someone could share how to convert CIDR notation to netmask and vice versa.
The value below is just an example. it could be different numbers/ip addresses.
Initial Output, let say file1.txt
Final Output, let say file2.txt (3 Replies)
Hi,
Recently I had to convert a 280K lines of ip ranges to the CIDR notation and generate a file to be used by ipset (netfilter) for ip filtering.
Input file:
000.000.000.000 - 000.255.255.255 , 000 , invalid ip
001.000.064.000 - 001.000.127.255 , 000 , XXXXX
001.000.245.123 -... (10 Replies)
Weary of seeing our load average go up to 50+, I just did a major block on these networks (stats over a less than 20 min interval):
https://www.unix.com/members/1-albums215-picture866.png (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
systemd.slice
SYSTEMD.SLICE(5) systemd.slice SYSTEMD.SLICE(5)NAME
systemd.slice - Slice unit configuration
SYNOPSIS
slice.slice
DESCRIPTION
A unit configuration file whose name ends in ".slice" encodes information about a slice unit. A slice unit is a concept for hierarchically
managing resources of a group of processes. This management is performed by creating a node in the Linux Control Group (cgroup) tree. Units
that manage processes (primarily scope and service units) may be assigned to a specific slice. For each slice, certain resource limits may
be set that apply to all processes of all units contained in that slice. Slices are organized hierarchically in a tree. The name of the
slice encodes the location in the tree. The name consists of a dash-separated series of names, which describes the path to the slice from
the root slice. The root slice is named -.slice. Example: foo-bar.slice is a slice that is located within foo.slice, which in turn is
located in the root slice -.slice.
Note that slice units cannot be templated, nor is possible to add multiple names to a slice unit by creating additional symlinks to its
unit file.
By default, service and scope units are placed in system.slice, virtual machines and containers registered with systemd-machined(1) are
found in machine.slice, and user sessions handled by systemd-logind(1) in user.slice. See systemd.special(5) for more information.
See systemd.unit(5) for the common options of all unit configuration files. The common configuration items are configured in the generic
[Unit] and [Install] sections. The slice specific configuration options are configured in the [Slice] section. Currently, only generic
resource control settings as described in systemd.resource-control(5) are allowed.
See the New Control Group Interfaces[1] for an introduction on how to make use of slice units from programs.
IMPLICIT DEPENDENCIES
The following dependencies are implicitly added:
o Slice units automatically gain dependencies of type After= and Requires= on their immediate parent slice unit.
DEFAULT DEPENDENCIES
The following dependencies are added unless DefaultDependencies=no is set:
o Slice units will automatically have dependencies of type Conflicts= and Before= on shutdown.target. These ensure that slice units are
removed prior to system shutdown. Only slice units involved with late system shutdown should disable DefaultDependencies= option.
SEE ALSO systemd(1), systemd.unit(5), systemd.resource-control(5), systemd.service(5), systemd.scope(5), systemd.special(7), systemd.directives(7)NOTES
1. New Control Group Interfaces
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/ControlGroupInterface/
systemd 237SYSTEMD.SLICE(5)