Hi,
I want to know if you can input with sed but instead of specifing a line number like below I wan't to be able to insert based on a specific word or patttern.
10i\
Insert me after line 10
is this possible with sed or should I use AWK?
Thanks
Jack (2 Replies)
I am really need help with the regular expression in SED. From input file, I need to extract lines that have the port number (sport or dport) as defined. The input file is something like this
time=1209515280-1209515340 dst=192.168.133.202 src=208.70.8.23 bytes=2472 proto=6 sport=80 dport=1447... (6 Replies)
Hi,
If there exist multiple pattern in a file, how can I find the last record matching the pattern through perl.
The below script searches for the pattern everywhere in an input file.
#! /usr/bin/perl -s -wnl
BEGIN {
$pattern or
warn"Usage: $0 -pattern='RE' \n" and
exit 255;... (5 Replies)
I am working on a scraping project and I am stuck at this tiny grep pattern match.
Sample text :
FPA List. FPA List. FPA List. FPA List. FPA List. FPA List. FPA List. FPA List.
ABC Personal Planning
Catherine K. Wat
Cath Wat
Catherine K. Wat
Catherine K. Wat
IFRAME:... (8 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a text data file. My aim here is to find line called *FIELD* AV for every record and print lines after that till *FIELD* RF. But here I want first 3 to four lines for very record as well. FIELD AV is some where in between for very record. SO I am not sure how to retrieve lines in... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need some help on how to print the whole data for unmatched pattern. i have 2 different files that need to be checked and print out the unmatched patterns into a new file. My sample data as follows:-
File1.txt
Id Num Activity Class Type
309 1.1 ... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have script like below:
#!/usr/local/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
while (<DATA>) {
( my ($s_id) = /^\d+\|(\d+?)\|/ ) ;
if ( $s_id == 1 ){
s/^(.*\|)*.*ABC\.pi=(+|+)*.*ABC\.id=(\d+|+).*$/$1$2|$3/s;
print "$1$2|$3\n"; (2 Replies)
Hello Friends,
I need to print lines in between two string when a keyword existed in those lines (keywords like exception, error, failed, not started etc).
for example,
input:
..
Begin Edr
ab12
ac13
ad14
bc23
exception occured
bd24
cd34
dd44
ee55
ff66
End Edr (2 Replies)
Hi experts,
I have a file with regexes which is used for automatic searches on several files (40+ GB).
To do some postprocessing with the grep result I need the matching line as well as the match itself.
I know that the latter could be achieved with grep's -o option. But I'm not aware of a... (2 Replies)
Hi I want to print the line until pattern is matched.
I am using below code:
sed -n '1,/pattern / p' file
It is working fine for me , but its not working for exact match.
sed -n '1,/^LAC$/ p' file
Input:
LACC FEGHRA 0
LACC FACAF 0
LACC DARA 0
LACC TALAC 0
LAC ILACTC 0... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Abhisrajput
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
uumonitor
uumonitor(8) System Manager's Manual uumonitor(8)NAME
uumonitor - Monitors the UUCP system
SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/uucp/uumonitor
DESCRIPTION
The uumonitor command displays a synopsis in tabular format of the current UUCP status. The format of each line in the table is as follows:
system_name #C #X most_recent_status CNT:# time
Table entries are defined as follows: The remote system for which the entry applies. The number of C.files queued for the remote system.
The number of requests for remote execution from the remote system. The result of the most recent attempt to connect to the remote system.
The number of times that a failure to log in to the remote system has occurred. This does not include the number failed dial attempts.
The time of the last status entry was made for this system.
The uumonitor command is helpful for detecting systems that have backlogs, that have gone away for awhile, that have changed phone numbers,
and so forth. The CNT: field is useful for detecting a system whose login/passwd has changed. If the CNT: field gets larger than the maxi-
mum allowable failures (currently 20), no further attempts to connect to this system are made. If the number of C.files queued starts get-
ting unusually large (depending on the system anywhere from 100-1000), action should be taken to determine the cause of the backlog.
SEE ALSO
Commands: uucp(1)uumonitor(8)