Hello,
How can I take the following output:
outputa
outputb
outputc
and turn it into single line ouput, with a single space between each field like below:
outputa outputb outputc (7 Replies)
hey gents,
I'm working on something that will use snmpwalk to query the devices on my network and retreive the device name, device IP, device model and device serial. I'm using Nmap for the enumeration and sed to clean up the results for use by snmpwalk. Once i get all the data organized I'm... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I want to make sed write a part of fileA (first 7 lines) to file1 and the rest of fileA to file2 in a single call and single line in sed. If I do the following:
sed '1,7w file1; 8,$w file2' fileA
I get only one file named file1 plus all the characters following file1. If I try to use curly... (1 Reply)
Hello
I did do a search and the past threads doesn't really solve my issue. (using various awk commands)
I need to combine the output from java -version into 1 line, but I am having difficulties.
When you exec java -version, you get:
java version "1.5.0_06"
Java(TM) 2 Runtime... (5 Replies)
Hi There,
I have a cronjob that executes a small script (few lines) that I am certain can be achieved in a single line.
The functional objective is actually really simple;
cmd var1
The '1' in 'var1' is actually derived from date (day of month) but the snag is when working with 1-9 I... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to shell scripting and have a question. I would like to redirect the output of multple commands to single file, From what I read from the bash manpage and from some searching it seems it cannot be done within the shell except setting up a loop. Is it?
I am running all clearcase... (1 Reply)
Hi,
My Oracle query is returing below o/p
----------------------------------------------------------
Ins trnas value
a lkp1 x
a lkp1 y
b lkp1 a
b lkp2 x
b lkp2 y ... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a single line output like below
echo $ips
10.26.208.28 10.26.208.26 10.26.208.27
want to convert above single line output as below format. Pls advice how to do ?
10.26.208.28
10.26.208.26
10.26.208.27
Regards
Kannan (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I have 4 big files which contains one big line containing formatted character records, I need to format each file in such way that each File will have 95 Characters per line. Last line of each file will have newline character at end.
Before:-
File Name:- File1.dat
102 121340560... (10 Replies)
example of problem:
when I echo "$e" >> /home/cogiz/file.txt
result prints to file as:AA
BB
CC
I need it to save to file as this:AA BB CC
I know it's probably something really simple but any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thank You.
Cogiz (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: cogiz
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
sc_attach
SC_ATTACH(1) BSD General Commands Manual SC_ATTACH(1)NAME
sc_attach -- simple scamper driver.
SYNOPSIS
sc_attach [-?v] [-i infile] [-o outfile] [-p port]
DESCRIPTION
The sc_attach utility provides the ability to connect to a running scamper(1) instance, have a set of commands defined in a file be executed,
and the output be written into a single file, in warts format. The options are as follows:
-? prints a list of command line options and a synopsis of each.
-i infile
specifies the name of the input file which consists of a sequence of scamper(1) commands, one per line. If '-' is specified, com-
mands are read from stdin.
-o outfile
specifies the name of the output file to be written. The output file will use the warts format. If '-' is specified, output will be
sent to stdout.
-p port
specifies the port on the local host where scamper(1) is accepting control socket connections.
-v prints the current revision of sc_attach and exits.
EXAMPLE
Given a set of commands in a file named infile.txt:
tbit -M 1280 -u 'http://www.example.com/' 2620:0:2d0:200::10
trace -P udp-paris -M 192.0.2.1
ping -P icmp-echo 192.0.32.10
and a scamper(1) daemon listening on port 31337, then these commands can be executed using
sc_attach -i infile.txt -o outfile.warts -p 31337
SEE ALSO scamper(1), sc_wartsdump(1), sc_warts2text(1)AUTHORS
sc_attach is written by Matthew Luckie <mjl@luckie.org.nz>.
BSD October 15, 2010 BSD