Hello,
I am newbie in awk. I have just started learning it.
1) I have input file which looks like:
{4812 4009 1602 2756 306} {4814 4010 1603 2757 309} {8116 9362 10779 }
{10779 10121 9193 10963 10908} {1602 2756 306 957 1025} {1603 2757 307}
and so on.....
2) In output:
a)... (10 Replies)
The question is not as simple as the title... I have a file, it looks like this
<string name="string1">RZ-LED</string>
<string name="string2">2.0</string>
<string name="string2">Version 2.0</string>
<string name="string3">BP</string>
I would like to check for duplicate entries of... (11 Replies)
I need to extract strings from a file.
The file contains data like:
Plan ABCD
IN-+-172BB---118C2C---GGN_342-+-MM77_23--+-LAS24_3|GGK_774
| | \-LAS24_2|GGN_774
| +-AA_800_1-+-BAS_000|GGK_362
| | \-BAS_001|GGK_360
| \-DD_000T1---DAM_001|STEEL_0
Plan SHELL_1... (3 Replies)
I have the following lines in a log file. It would be great if some one can help me to create a new file with the just entries in the below format.
66.150.161.195 HPSAC=Z05
66.150.161.196 HPSAC=A05
That is just extract the IP address and the string DPSAC=its value
66.150.161.195 -... (1 Reply)
Hi ,
I am writing a shell script to check pvsizes in linux box.
# for i in `cat vgs1`
> do
> echo "########### $i ###########"
> pvs|grep -i $i|awk '{print $2,$1,$5}'>pvs_$i
> pvs|grep -i $i|awk '{print $1}'|while read a
> do
> fdisk -l $a|head -2|tail -1|awk '{print $2,$3}'>pvs_$i1
>... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I wasn't quite sure how to title this one! Here goes:
I have some already partially parsed log files, which I now need to extract info from. Because of the way they are originally and the fact they have been partially processed already, I can't make any assumptions on the number of... (8 Replies)
So I was given a file,and I want to count how many occurrences happen with a specific string. I have two, that could have up to 3 different outcomes.
Now my trouble I believe starts with this string, "news.cais.net"
but why?
as of now my output is this...
accepted rejected ... (3 Replies)
The awk below is supposed to count all the matching $5 strings and count how many $7 values is less than 20. I don't think I need the portion in bold as I do not need any decimal point or format, but can not seem to get the correct counts. Thank you :).
file
chr5 77316500 77316628 ... (6 Replies)
Hello Everyone ,
Iam a newbie to shell programming and iam reaching out if anyone can help in this :-
I have two files
1) Insert.txt
2) partition_list.txt
insert.txt looks like this :-
insert into emp1 partition (partition_name)
(a1,
b2,
c4,
s6,
d8)
select
a1,
b2,
c4, (2 Replies)
I cannot seem to get what should be a simple awk one-liner to work correctly and cannot figure out why. I would like to use patterns from a specific field in one file as regex to search for matching strings in the entire line ($0) of another file.
I would like to output the lines of File2 which... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jvoot
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
ed
ED(1) General Commands Manual ED(1)NAME
ed - editor
SYNOPSIS
ed file
OPTIONS
- Suppress line/byte count messages (for in scripts)
EXAMPLES
ed prog.c # Edit prog.c
echo '1,$p' | ed - file
# Odd way to write 'cat file'
DESCRIPTION
Ed is functionally equivalent to the standard V7 editor, ed. It supports the following commands:
(.) a: append
(.,.)c: change
(.,.)d: delete
e: edit new file"
f: print name of edited file"
(1,$)g: global command
(.) i: insert
(.,.+1)j: join lines together
(.) k: mark
(.) l: print with special characters in octal
(.,.)m: move
(.,.)p: print
q: quit editor"
(.) r: read in new file
(.,.)s: substitute
(1,$)v: like g, except select lines that do not match
(1,$)w: write out edited file
Many of the commands can take one or two addresses, as indicated above. The defaults are shown in parentheses. Thus a appends to the cur-
rent line, and g works on the whole file as default. The dot refers to the current line. Below is a sample editing session with comments
given following the # symbol.
ed prog.c # Edit prog.c
3,20p # Print lines 3 through 20
/whole/ # Find next occurence of whole
s/whole/while/ # Replace whole by while
g/Buf/s//BUF/g # Replace Buf by BUF everywhere
w # Write the file back
q # Exit the editor
Ed is provided for its sentimental value. If you want a line-oriented editor, try ex. If you want a good editor, use elle, elvis, or
mined.
SEE ALSO elvis(1), elle(9), mined(9).
ED(1)