ksh / AIX - Differences between lists to a text file
This seems pretty simple, but I cant figure it out. I get stumped on the simple things.
I am running two commands
1) take a listing a directory of files, and filter out the doc_name (which is in a series of extracted files), and place it in a file.
2) I then have a list of expected files that should have been retrieved -
3) My desired output is a listing, something along the lines of -
I've tried using a variety of diff, sort, etc.. But I figure that there's a way to use sed/awk to do this, but of which I am a newbie with. Can someone point me in the right direction.
thanks in advance.
Hi,
I am running OpenBSD 3.7, my first attempt with this OS. I noticed that both /bin/sh and /bin/ksh are both really the pdksh. Yet each has its own manpage. I was wondering what are the differences b/w the two programs on OpenBSD. I.e., has the team configured pdksh to function one way if... (3 Replies)
Hi
I need to create multiple text files from onc text file on AIX. The data of text files is as below:
**********************************************
**********************************************
DBVERIFY: Release 10.2.0.4.0 - Production on Tue Nov 10 13:45:42 2009
Copyright (c) 1982,... (11 Replies)
Hi
i have gone through some sdiff command it shows the differences side by side and its really awesome
file 1:
this tool is for
checking the differ
merging with flower pots documentation
file 2:
this t ool is for
checking the differ
mergin g with flower pots documentation
... (27 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to create a script to catch a process which is consuming high CPU which I have pretty much done but it's just finding the correct place to pull the current CPU for that process.
When viewed in Topas it's consuming 99.*% cpu
But if I try using
ps avg or ps -eo pcpu
... (5 Replies)
Hello, I have a pretty simple question, but I am new to Python and am trying to write a simple program. Put simply, I want to take a text file that looks like this:
11111 22222
33333 44444
55555 66666
77777 88888
and produce two lists, one containing the contents of the left column, one the... (0 Replies)
I have started a new job which requires AIX admin skills, which I have, and RHEL skills. Does anyone have a cheat sheet that if I know how to solve the problem in AIX how would I do that in RHEL? I was an IBM pre-sales technical trying to keep sales guys honest - not possible. Any other links to... (5 Replies)
I have a list of files that should contain the following
Im trying to find the items of interest that are missing from each file and create a csv.
cat *.txt | while read file
do
grep 3500 file | tr '\012' ','
done
My problem is this possible output
one.txt ... (2 Replies)
Why does dot sourcing of ksh functions behave so differently between AIX, Solaris, and Linux? How can I make Linux behave the way I want in the test I show below?
I have a library of interdependent functions I have developed and use in ksh in AIX. They also run in Solaris. Now I am migrating... (9 Replies)
Not really sure how to accomplish this. If I have two lists with matching columns. Second column is different. I would like to show the differences plus/minus.
list1
device1 5
decive2 10
decive3 10
device4 10
device5 10
device6 20
list2
device1 10
... (1 Reply)
Greetings all, I have two output lists from a log that I am working with. Below are the examples. except, the lists are in the thousands.
list1.out
FEA1234
FEA4343
FEA3453
FEA3413
FEA34A3
FEA3433
....
list2.out
FEA1235 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jeffs42885
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
dh_missing
DH_MISSING(1) Debhelper DH_MISSING(1)NAME
dh_missing - check for missing files
SYNOPSIS
dh_missing [-Xitem] [--sourcedir=dir] [debhelperoptions]
DESCRIPTION
dh_missing compares the list of installed files with the files in the source directory. If any of the files (and symlinks) in the source
directory were not installed to somewhere, it will warn on stderr about that (--list-missing) or fail (--fail-missing). Please note that
without either of these options, dh_missing will silently do nothing.
This may be useful if you have a large package and want to make sure that you don't miss installing newly added files in new upstream
releases.
Remember to test different kinds of builds (dpkg-buildpackage -A/-B/...) as you may experience varying results when only a subset of the
packages are built.
FILES
debian/not-installed
List the files that are deliberately not installed in any binary package. Paths listed in this file are ignored by dh_missing.
However, it is not a method to exclude files from being installed by any of the debhelper tool. If you want a tool to not install a
given file, please use its --exclude option (where available).
dh_missing will expand wildcards in this file (since debhelper 11.1). Wildcards without matches will be ignored.
OPTIONS --list-missing
Warn on stderr about source files not installed to somewhere.
Note that files that are excluded from being moved via the -X option are not warned about.
This is the default in compat 12 and later.
--fail-missing
This option is like --list-missing, except if a file was missed, it will not only list the missing files, but also fail with a nonzero
exit code.
SEE ALSO debhelper(7)
This program is a part of debhelper.
AUTHOR
Michael Stapelberg <stapelberg@debian.org>
11.1.6ubuntu2 2018-05-10 DH_MISSING(1)