I think your current concern is about overlong lines.
The | divider is an egrep thing.
In grep and fgrep you can have a newline.
But you should also be concerned about exactness.
The fgrep takes a dot as is, while in grep and egrep a dot means "any character". So fgrep is more exact here.
Still each search item can be a part of the whole, for example fgrep "10.168.1.13" can find "10.168.1.13" and "110.168.1.13" and "10.168.1.136".
I am new to UNIX and Linux. I have some experiences with Windows server. I am thinking to start with those OS (Unix/Linux) and more specifically with the OS for the server. however, i have no idea which one would i start first, unix or linux? Because i also dont know how they are different.
... (3 Replies)
Hi I've been searching google and have not found what egrep -c means. Does anyone know where I can get a cheat sheet or what that -c means?
thanks,
Linda (2 Replies)
My intention is to set up a mysql on unix.
Could you provide some info, please, useful for realization of the plan (other than "read the documentation" that will be done anyway)?
vaguely yours`
sehrguey (2 Replies)
Hi Guys,
we have a shell script which basically query the Database which retrieves huge data and use the data with "egrep" .
Now there is some data which contains characters like "abc)" and the same is used like below :
"egrep (.+\|GDPRAB16\|GDPR/11702 96 abc)\|$ temp.txt"
now while... (7 Replies)
Hello all,
I have a question, and would like some advice please. I am a windows guy by trade....5 years in the Marines is where I learnt a lot of what i know. I took a junior level sys admin job...learned a bit more...and now I do IT security. All of this happened in the last 8 years. So I'm 27... (2 Replies)
Hi everyone
I need help i want to learn Unix and do some certification on Unix Hp the reason why i choose Hp is because the company that i work for uses HP and interested in knowing a lt more
about what i do i montor the unix server (disk space CPU usage memory utilization,proceeses job... (5 Replies)
Hello to all board members!!
I have a problem on a HP-UX system. I should write a script. Therefore I need to search after IP addresses in the output of a command.
On Debian this works: ifconfig | egrep -o "{1,3}\.{1,3}\.{1,3}\.{1,3}"
The script where i need this is not ifconfig, but... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I work on sun Solaris. Am hosting few web services on my server which are accessed over the internet. Now to check whether the web service is responding or not, i first have to log in to the web service URL. If it doesn't respond there, i come back to my server box and restart the service... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I don't have tree on the Solaris server and our SA don't want to install it. I found this example from One Line Linux Command to Print Out Directory Tree Listing | systemBash that more or less does what I am mainly looking for.
Example run is as below:
$: find ./ | sed -e... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
rlm_ippool_tool
RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8) System Manager's Manual RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)NAME
rlm_ippool_tool - dump the contents of the FreeRadius ippool database files
SYNOPSIS
If an ipaddress is specified then that address is used to limit the actions or output.
rlm_ippool_tool [-a] [-c] [-o] [-v] session-db index-db [ipaddress]
Mark the entry nasIP/nasPort as having ipaddress
rlm_ippool_tool -n session-db index-db ipaddress nasIP nasPort
Update old format database to new.
rlm_ippool_tool -u session-db new-session-db
DESCRIPTION
rlm_ippool_tool dumps the contents of the FreeRADIUS ippool databases for analyses or for removal of active (stuck?) entries.
Or with the -n argument adds a usage entry to the FreeRADIUS ippool databases.
OPTIONS -a Print all active entries.
-c Report number of active entries.
-r Remove active entries.
-v Verbose report of all entries.
-o Assume old database format (nas/port pair, not md5 output).
-n Mark the entry nasIP/nasPort as having ipaddress.
-u Update old format database to new.
EXAMPLES
Given the syntax in the FreeRadius radiusd.conf:
ippool myippool {
range-start = 192.168.1.0
range-stop = 192.168.1.255
[...]
session-db = ${raddbdir}/ip-pool.db
ip-index = ${raddbdir}/ip-index.db
}
To see the number of active entries in this pool, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -c ip-pool.db ip-index.db
13
To see all active entries in this pool, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -a ip-pool.db ip-index.db
192.168.1.5
192.168.1.82
192.168.1.244
192.168.1.57
192.168.1.120
192.168.1.27
[...]
To see all information about the active entries in the use, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -av ip-pool.db ip-index.db
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x2e8 - ipaddr:192.168.1.5 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x17c - ipaddr:192.168.1.82 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x106 - ipaddr:192.168.1.244 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x157 - ipaddr:192.168.1.57 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x2d8 - ipaddr:192.168.1.120 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x162 - ipaddr:192.168.1.27 active:1 cli:0 num:1
[...]
To see only information of one entry, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -v ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.168.1.1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x90 - ipaddr:192.168.1.1 active:0 cli:0 num:0
To add an IP address usage entry, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -n ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.168.1.1 172.16.1.1 0x90
rlm_ippool_tool: Allocating ip to nas/port: 172.16.1.1/144
rlm_ippool_tool: num: 1
rlm_ippool_tool: Allocated ip 192.168.1.1 to client on nas 172.16.1.1,port 144
SEE ALSO radiusd(8)AUTHORS
Currently part of the FreeRADIUS Project (http://www.freeradius.org) Originally by Edwin Groothuis, edwin@mavetju.org
(http://www.mavetju.org)
Mailing list details are at http://www.freeradius.org/
RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)