I'm trying to write a script which prints out the users who are loged in.
Printing the output of the "users" command isn't the problem. What I want is to filter out my own username.
users | grep -v (username)
does not work because the whole line in which username exists is suppressed.
If... (5 Replies)
I have a Ques. Regarding awk
I have few strings in a file, like..
ABC
DEF_ABC
GHI_ABC
GHI
Now I want string which has only 'ABC', not the part of any other string as it is also present in 'DEF_ABC'
Output should be ABC
Please guide me asap !!
Thanks :b: (4 Replies)
I want to remove everything from a file but the word following the search word.
Example:
crap crap crap crap SearchWord WordToKeep crap crap crap
How would I do this with say awk or grep?
Thank you! (4 Replies)
Hi how can I filter the text using this one.
SAMPLE
servervmpool -listall|tail -11
================================================================================
pool number: 112
pool name: Net-Ora-1wk
description: Net-Ora-1wk
max partially full: 0... (12 Replies)
Still new to bash. Using debian lenny 5, bash version 3.2.39. I'm working on three scripts. I need help completing them.
One script that inputs a plain text file, echo then chop it up into separate whitespace-delimited strings as an output. Not sure how to do this...
for example, the... (4 Replies)
I have a log file that contains several reports with following format.
<Start of delimiter> Report1 header
Report1 header continue
Report1 header continue
Record1 header
Record1 header continue
Record1 header continue
field1 field2 field3 field4
------... (1 Reply)
Hello,
Is there a way to filerter data from a text file as shown below to a Column
e.g.
hostname nfsmount as two separate column. Currently I could get hostname and the mount is appearing below.. using this script
#! /bin/bash
for i in `cat fqdn.txt`
do
echo "$i ............ " >>... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Cy Pqa
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
size
size(1) User Commands size(1)NAME
size - print section sizes in bytes of object files
SYNOPSIS
size [-f] [-F] [-n] [-o] [-V] [-x] filename...
DESCRIPTION
The size command produces segment or section size information in bytes for each loaded section in ELF object files. size prints out the
size of the text, data, and bss (uninitialized data) segments (or sections) and their total.
size processes ELF object files entered on the command line. If an archive file is input to the size command, the information for each
object file in the archive is displayed.
When calculating segment information, the size command prints out the total file size of the non-writable segments, the total file size of
the writable segments, and the total memory size of the writable segments minus the total file size of the writable segments.
If it cannot calculate segment information, size calculates section information. When calculating section information, it prints out the
total size of sections that are allocatable, non-writable, and not NOBITS, the total size of the sections that are allocatable, writable,
and not NOBITS, and the total size of the writable sections of type NOBITS. NOBITS sections do not actually take up space in the filename.
If size cannot calculate either segment or section information, it prints an error message and stops processing the file.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-f Prints out the size of each allocatable section, the name of the section, and the total of the section sizes. If there is no sec-
tion data, size prints out an error message and stops processing the file.
-F Prints out the size of each loadable segment, the permission flags of the segment, then the total of the loadable segment sizes.
If there is no segment data, size prints an error message and stops processing the file.
-n Prints out non-loadable segment or non-allocatable section sizes. If segment data exists, size prints out the memory size of each
loadable segment or file size of each non-loadable segment, the permission flags, and the total size of the segments. If there is
no segment data, size prints out, for each allocatable and non-allocatable section, the memory size, the section name, and the
total size of the sections. If there is no segment or section data, size prints an error message and stops processing.
-o Prints numbers in octal, not decimal.
-V Prints the version information for the size command on the standard error output.
-x Prints numbers in hexadecimal, not decimal.
EXAMPLES
The examples below are typical size output.
Example 1: Producing size information
example% size filename
2724 + 88 + 0 = 2812
Example 2: Producing allocatable section size information
example% size -f filename
26(.text) + 5(.init) + 5(.fini) = 36
Example 3: Producing loadable segment size information
example% size -F filename
2724(r-x) + 88(rwx) + 0(rwx) = 2812 ... (If statically linked)
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWbtool |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO as(1), cc(1B), ld(1), ar.h(3HEAD), a.out(4), attributes(5)NOTES
Since the size of bss sections is not known until link-edit time, the size command will not give the true total size of pre-linked objects.
SunOS 5.10 16 Oct 1996 size(1)