04-10-2019
Thanks for your help. I will try this out and see how it goes.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Guys,
I need to script the renaming of files as followins:
files:
firstjd
secondjo
thirdjv
My script needs to insert the date/time infront of the last 2 characters of the filenames above, any ideas greatly received :)
the letters before the last 2 characters could change, I'm only... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: cooperman
7 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi, i have a filename CRED20102009.txt in a server
20102009 is the date of the file ddmmaaaa format
the complete route is
/dprod/informatica/Fuentes/CRED20102009.csv
i want to extract the date to create a new file named Parameters.txt
I need to create Parameters.txt with this... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: angel1001
6 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi experts,
my requirement is like this i need to develop a shell script to update date part with new incremental date time in file some 'X' which is kept at some server location incrementing every two hours.as i am new to this scripting i need support from u people,thanx in advance (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: amanmro
1 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have lots of files in this format:
dvgrab-2003.06.29_15-30-24.mpg
The numbers represents the date and time (YYYY.MM.DD_HH-MM-SS)
How can I extract the dates from the filenames, and use the dates in the file timestamp?
I guess this can be done by using "find", "sed" and "touch"?
Can... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: qwerty1234
6 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
There are similar kind of posts, but none seems like working for me. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
I need append/rename file abc.txt with file processed date and time like abc_systemdatetimestamp.txt
and move it to different folder.
for example I have
/source/data/abc.txt
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: amsn08
1 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All,
Thanks in Advance
I am working on a shell script. I need some assistance.
My Requirement:
1) There are some set of files in a directory like given below
OTP_UFSC_20120530000000_acc.csv
OTP_UFSC_20120530000000_faf.csv
OTP_UFSC_20120530000000_prom.csv... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: aealexanderraj
0 Replies
7. Programming
Hi All,
Thanks in Advance
I am working on a shell script. I need some assistance.
My code:
if
then
set "subscriber" "promplan" "mapping" "dedicatedaccount" "faflistSub" "faflistAcc" "accumulator"\
"pam_account";
for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8;... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: aealexanderraj
0 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
Thanks in Advance
Shell Script or Perl Script
I am working on a shell script. I need some assistance.
My Requirement:
1) There are some set of files in a directory like given below
OTP_UFSC_20120530000000_acc.csv
OTP_UFSC_20120530000000_faf.csv... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: aealexanderraj
7 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All,
I have incoming source files abcmmyy.txt I need to extract the mmyy part from the filename and pass that to a variable . I really appreciate your quick response on this.
Thanks
raj (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: rajeevm
7 Replies
10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
Hi,
I'm totally new in sell script and working with a shell code. I want to extract the date and time from the filenames. The filenames are different but all of them begins with WI_ SCOPE_:
WI_SCOPE_DATA_CHANGE_2017-09-12_15-30-40.txt
WI_SCOPE_BACK_COMPLETE_QUEUE_2017-09-12_15-31-40.txt... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Home
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
nomarch
nomarch(1) Archive Extraction nomarch(1)
NAME
nomarch - extract `.arc' archives
SYNOPSIS
nomarch [-hlptUv] [archive.arc] [match1 [match2 ... ]]
DESCRIPTION
nomarch lists, extracts, or tests `.arc' archives. (An alternate extension sometimes used was `.ark'; these work too.) This is a very out-
dated file format which should certainly not be used for anything new, but you may still need an extraction utility, and here it is. :-)
The default action is to extract all files in the specified archive; see OPTIONS below for how to do other things instead.
OPTIONS
-h give terse usage help.
-l list files in archive. If verbose listings are enabled, it shows the filename, compression method, compressed/uncompressed size,
date/time, and CRC; but by default, it just shows the filename, uncompressed size, and date/time.
-p extract to standard output, rather than to separate files.
-t test files in archive (more precisely, check file CRCs).
-U use uppercase filenames; more precisely, preserve original case from archive.
-v give verbose output (when used with `-l').
archive.arc
the archive to operate on.
match1 etc.
optionally specify which archive members to list/extract/test. Those which match any of these filenames/wildcards are processed.
Wildcard operators supported are shell-like `*' and `?', but don't forget to quote arguments which use these (e.g. `nomarch foo.arc
'*.bar'').
EXTRACTING MULTIPLE ARCHIVES
nomarch follows the `unzip'-like practice of working on only one archive per run, with further `filenames' given on the command-line actu-
ally specifying files to extract (or whatever). The easiest way to work on multiple files with nomarch is simply to run it multiple times
using for; for example:
for i in *.arc; do nomarch $i; done
The above would extract all archives in the current directory.
USING THE PROGRAM FROM EMACS
Emacs's arc-mode facility lets you work with various kinds of archive file directly from the editor. Making it use nomarch for extracting
`.arc' files isn't too hard. Just add the following to your ~/.emacs file:
(setq archive-arc-extract '("nomarch" "-U"))
BUGS
The CRC used by the format is only 16-bit, so `-t' is a less-than-perfect test.
One compression method, obsolete even by `.arc' standards :-), isn't supported yet. This is partly because I've yet to find a single file
which uses it, despite testing an awful lot of files.
Subdirectories in Spark archives are extracted as the `.arc'-format files they really are, which may not be terribly convenient.
SEE ALSO
tar(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), lbrate(1)
AUTHOR
Russell Marks (rus@svgalib.org).
Version 1.4 18th June, 2006 nomarch(1)