Hi All,
Very GM
I am searching for a specific filesystem on a serevr,
like df -k "/"
i am geting an output also...
but when i am checking for somthing like /oramnt (which is not mounted currently)
so i am geting an out like this
df -k "/oramnt"
output of root...!
so i tried... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a quary regarding grep command in linux.
I have a file which contains
56677
56677
+56677
+56677
56677
56677
56677
I want to extract total count of "56677"
When I hit the following command
#cat filename | grep -w -c '56677'
the result comes 7. Its counting... (3 Replies)
Guys,
i used egrep "pattern1|pattern2". But the whole word is searched. But i want the output if only the exact word is matched. i.e the output is got evenif a part of the pattern is matched.
I tried the -w opion but its showing usage error.
Please help me out on this one. please sent me... (2 Replies)
I have a file that has the words I want to find in other files (but lets say I just want to find my words in a single file). Those words are IDs, so if my word is ZZZ4, outputs like aaZZZ4, ZZZ4bb, aaZZZ4bb, ZZ4, ZZZ, ZyZ4, ZZZ4.8 (or anything like that) WON'T BE USEFUL.
I need the whole word... (6 Replies)
QUESTION1:
How do you grep only an exact string. I am using Solaris10 and do not have any GNU products installed.
Contents of car.txt
CAR1_KEY0
CAR1_KEY1
CAR2_KEY0
CAR2_KEY1
CAR1_KEY10
CURRENT COMMAND LINE: WHERE VARIABLE CAR_NUMBER=1 AND KEY_NUMBER=1
grep... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have a text / log file which contains strings like meta777, 77, meta, 777. Now I want to write a script which can detect a string 'meta#777' in a text file & number of occurence of 'meta', number of #, number 7, 77, 777.
I'm using grep -e '77' filename but no luck. It is returning... (5 Replies)
This may be stupid question but not able to solve it.
How to grep exact word and line along with it.
TEST:/u00/app/oracle/product/10.2.0/TEST:N
TEST2:/u00/app/oracle/product/10.2.0/ODS:N
TEST3:/u00/app/oracle/product/10.2.0/TEST:N
TEST4:/u00/app/oracle/product/10.2.0/ODS:N... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Need help to grep the following from a file x. I just want to grep exact match not lines and not partial word.
CONFSUCCESS
CONFFAIL
CONFPARTIALSUCCESS
>cat x
xczxczxczc zczczcxx CONFSUCCESS czczczcczc
czxxczxzxczcczc CONFFAIL xczxczcxcczczc
zczczczcz CONFPARTIALSUCCESS czczxcxzc
... (4 Replies)
How to search multiple word using grep command
for example i want to reserch
ANJ001
AA
Using ridiculous font, size, and color changes instead of normal space separated text and CODE tags obfuscates what you are trying to do and makes it difficult for volunteers who may want to help you solve... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
i want exact math to search to find it and i tried as like below it not working.
My Excepted out : should not get the output that mean exact word math.
echo "test.txt|123"|sed 's/|/ /g'|grep -w "test"
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bmk123
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
msggrep
MSGGREP(1) GNU MSGGREP(1)NAME
msggrep - pattern matching on message catalog
SYNOPSIS
msggrep [OPTION] [INPUTFILE]
DESCRIPTION
Extracts all messages of a translation catalog that match a given pattern or belong to some given source files.
Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
Input file location:
INPUTFILE
input PO file
-D, --directory=DIRECTORY
add DIRECTORY to list for input files search
If no input file is given or if it is -, standard input is read.
Output file location:
-o, --output-file=FILE
write output to specified file
The results are written to standard output if no output file is specified or if it is -.
Message selection:
[-N SOURCEFILE]... [-M DOMAINNAME]... [-K MSGID-PATTERN] [-T MSGSTR-PATTERN] [-C COMMENT-PATTERN]
A message is selected if it comes from one of the specified source files, or if it comes from one of the specified domains, or if -K is
given and its key (msgid or msgid_plural) matches MSGID-PATTERN, or if -T is given and its translation (msgstr) matches MSGSTR-PATTERN, or
if -C is given and the translator's comment matches COMMENT-PATTERN.
When more than one selection criterion is specified, the set of selected messages is the union of the selected messages of each criterion.
MSGID-PATTERN or MSGSTR-PATTERN syntax:
[-E | -F] [-e PATTERN | -f FILE]...
PATTERNs are basic regular expressions by default, or extended regular expressions if -E is given, or fixed strings if -F is given.
-N, --location=SOURCEFILE
select messages extracted from SOURCEFILE
-M, --domain=DOMAINNAME
select messages belonging to domain DOMAINNAME
-K, --msgid
start of patterns for the msgid
-T, --msgstr
start of patterns for the msgstr
-E, --extended-regexp
PATTERN is an extended regular expression
-F, --fixed-strings
PATTERN is a set of newline-separated strings
-e, --regexp=PATTERN
use PATTERN as a regular expression
-f, --file=FILE
obtain PATTERN from FILE
-i, --ignore-case
ignore case distinctions
Output details:
--no-escape
do not use C escapes in output (default)
--escape
use C escapes in output, no extended chars
--force-po
write PO file even if empty
--indent
indented output style
--no-location
suppress '#: filename:line' lines
--add-location
preserve '#: filename:line' lines (default)
--strict
strict Uniforum output style
-w, --width=NUMBER
set output page width
--no-wrap
do not break long message lines, longer than the output page width, into several lines
--sort-output
generate sorted output
--sort-by-file
sort output by file location
Informative output:
-h, --help
display this help and exit
-V, --version
output version information and exit
AUTHOR
Written by Bruno Haible.
REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <bug-gnu-gettext@gnu.org>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2001-2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU-
LAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO
The full documentation for msggrep is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info and msggrep programs are properly installed at your
site, the command
info msggrep
should give you access to the complete manual.
GNU gettext 0.11.4 July 2002 MSGGREP(1)