Hello. Well no because I am new to shell scripting and doesn't know how to compare and make such logic. Any input would be highly appreciable.
I know I shouldn't be doing this and should make you work it out yourself, but I'll bend the rules a bit IF you go though the code yourself try to understand it yourself with the minimum of guidance... awk -f xtreme.awk check.txt output.txt where xtreme.awk is:
produces:
if $1 = "123x456", how can I test for the non-numeric character 'x' in that string. I've tried expr with "" but it did not find the x. Any ideas? Can this perhaps be done with sed?
Thanks. (2 Replies)
Variations of multiple renames seems to come up a lot but i can't find the answer to this situation.
Tidying up a directory where people rename files to .working, .bob, .attempt1 & so on.
what i am trying to do is: list the file type, & rename from ".whatever" to .fixed.
As the ".whatever" is... (5 Replies)
Hi
I am very new to linux and scripting.
I need to replace numbers abc with number xyz inputting from a reference file.
I used the following command -
sed "s/$grd/$lab/" , where $grd and $lab comes from reference file.
The problem is the above line doesnt take care of space..... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I would like to convert my below csh script to Perl.
Can any expert help ?
# To check for numeric input
set tested1 = `echo "$tested"| awk '/^+$/'`;
# To remove un-neccessary zeros
set tested2 = `echo "$tested"|awk '{print $0+0}'`; (3 Replies)
During a file-system cleanup I noticed a strange behavior of awk (HP-UX 11iv3 / IA64). When summing up the size of files in one directory it gives different numbers when using print as opposed to printf:
find . -type f -name '*.dmp.Z' -mtime +35 -exec ls -l {} \+ | \
awk 'BEGIN{ OFMT="%f" } {... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I'm trying to implement a linear congruential pseudorandom number generator (<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_congruential_generator>), since $RANDOM and /dev/random aren't standardized. I'm referring to the Shell & Utilities volume of POSIX.1-2008, but I'm running into some odd... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am new here but I have a scripting question that I can't seem to figure out with the "find" cmd.
What I am trying to do is to only have to run a single find cmd parsing the directories and output the different file types to induvidual files and I have been running into problems.... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I want to grep multiple patterns from multiple files and save to multiple outputs. As of now its outputting all to the same file when I use this command.
Input : 108 files to check for 390 patterns to check for. output I need to 108 files with the searched patterns.
Xargs -I {} grep... (3 Replies)
I'm trying to find a way to search a range of similar words in a file. I tried using sed but can't get it right:sed 's/\(ca01\)*//'It only removes "ca01" but leaves the rest of the word. I still want the rest of the information on the lines just not these specific words listed below. Any... (3 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have a text file named file1.txt that is formatted like this:
001 , ID , 20000
002 , Name , Brandon
003 , Phone_Number , 616-234-1999
004 , SSNumber , 234-23-234
005 , Model , Toyota
007 , Engine ,V8
008 , GPS , OFF
and I have file2.txt formatted like this:
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: An0mander
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
httpindex
httpindex(1) General Commands Manual httpindex(1)NAME
httpindex - HTTP front-end for SWISH++ indexer
SYNOPSIS
wget [ options ] URL... 2>&1 | httpindex [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
httpindex is a front-end for index++(1) to index files copied from remote servers using wget(1). The files (in a copy of the remote direc-
tory structure) can be kept, deleted, or replaced with their descriptions after indexing.
OPTIONS
wget Options
The wget(1) options that are required are: -A, -nv, -r, and -x; the ones that are highly recommended are: -l, -nh, -t, and -w. (See the
EXAMPLE.)
httpindex Options
httpindex accepts the same short options as index++(1) except for -H, -I, -l, -r, -S, and -V.
The following options are unique to httpindex:
-d Replace the text of local copies of retrieved files with their descriptions after they have been indexed. This is useful to display
file descriptions in search results without having to have complete copies of the remote files thus saving filesystem space. (See
the extract_description() function in WWW(3) for details about how descriptions are extracted.)
-D Delete the local copies of retrieved files after they have been indexed. This prevents your local filesystem from filling up with
copies of remote files.
EXAMPLE
To index all HTML and text files on a remote web server keeping descriptions locally:
wget -A html,txt -linf -t2 -rxnv -nh -w2 http://www.foo.com 2>&1 |
httpindex -d -e'html:*.html,text:*.txt'
Note that you need to redirect wget(1)'s output from standard error to standard output in order to pipe it to httpindex.
EXIT STATUS
Exits with a value of zero only if indexing completed sucessfully; non-zero otherwise.
CAVEATS
In addition to those for index++(1), httpindex does not correctly handle the use of multiple -e, -E, -m, or -M options (because the Perl
script uses the standard GetOpt::Std package for processing command-line options that doesn't). The last of any of those options ``wins.''
The work-around is to use multiple values for those options seperated by commas to a single one of those options. For example, if you want
to do:
httpindex -e'html:*.html' -e'text:*.txt'
do this instead:
httpindex -e'html:*.html,text:*.txt'
SEE ALSO
index++(1), wget(1), WWW(3)AUTHOR
Paul J. Lucas <pauljlucas@mac.com>
SWISH++ August 2, 2005 httpindex(1)