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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Extract lines if string found from last 30 min only Post 303030513 by RudiC on Tuesday 12th of February 2019 08:31:01 AM
Old 02-12-2019
Welcome to the forum.


We like and probably are able to provide help to further you from and beyond the point(s) where you're stuck. So please show us the "various awk and sed option"s you tried, and also indicate where and how they failed. Be aware that the date format of the lines you target is way more difficult to track than the one of the lines you want avoided. Does your scan need to cross midnight? Are the log entries ascending in time? Are the to-be-avoided lines interspersed regularly? By the minute?
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GREP(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   GREP(1)

NAME
grep - search a file for a pattern SYNOPSIS
grep [ option ... ] pattern [ file ... ] DESCRIPTION
Grep searches the input files (standard input default) for lines (with newlines excluded) that match the pattern, a regular expression as defined in regexp(6). Normally, each line matching the pattern is `selected', and each selected line is copied to the standard output. The options are -c Print only a count of matching lines. -h Do not print file name tags (headers) with output lines. -i Ignore alphabetic case distinctions. The implementation folds into lower case all letters in the pattern and input before interpre- tation. Matched lines are printed in their original form. -l (ell) Print the names of files with selected lines; don't print the lines. -L Print the names of files with no selected lines; the converse of -l. -n Mark each printed line with its line number counted in its file. -s Produce no output, but return status. -v Reverse: print lines that do not match the pattern. Output lines are tagged by file name when there is more than one input file. (To force this tagging, include /dev/null as a file name argument.) Care should be taken when using the shell metacharacters $*[^|()= and newline in pattern; it is safest to enclose the entire expression in single quotes '...'. SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/grep.c SEE ALSO
ed(1), awk(1), sed(1), sam(1), regexp(6) DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is null if any lines are selected, or non-null when no lines are selected or an error occurs. GREP(1)
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