When I type a command at the command line it supplies one result and the exact same command in a script
egrep '^01|^02|^03|^04' file > fileout
count = 29353
same count in the script yields a count of 23492
is there any reason this could be happening. (1 Reply)
On our one HP-UX 11i box, we have some very long paths defined. When I want to check on our user processes running, the resulting paths are chopped off. /xyz/abc/123/......./server/b is really a process running in the ..../server/bin directory. Is this a terminal problem or buffer length... (1 Reply)
hi!
how do i make ps results to only shows what's owned by users current job/background process only
currently when users issuing ps:
I just wanted the result when the user is issuing ps aux is same as when they're doing ps x like this:
(which shows result on user's current background... (13 Replies)
I want to display "no results found" if a grep search of a name that the user inputs is not found anywhere in a certain file,
Right now I have this, but doesn't seem to work. Im not sure what to change.
read name
results=grep -c $name file
if ;
then echo "No results found."
exit... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a log file without date/time, and I want that everytime tail|grep find something it displays the date/time and the line. I have tried something like this command but without any luck to display the date/time:
tail -F catalina.out | sed "s/^/`date `/" | egrep ... (6 Replies)
I'm using the command grep -l XYZ to get a list of files containing the string XYZ. Then I using the comand ls -l ABC to get the create date timestamp of the each file. I've tried combining the comands using the pipe command, grep -l XYZ | ls -l, but its not working. What am I doing wrong? (3 Replies)
Can I modify the grep command to show only a process name?
Currently I run ps -efa | grep chk_web to get the following:
mousr 3395 1 0 09:36:06 pts/10 0:00 sh /var/opt/scripts/chk_web.sh
Can this be changed in any way to get only:
/var/opt/scripts/chk_web.sh or chk_web.sh.
I... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am currently reading a tar file and searching for a particular word using grep e.g. Plane. At the moment, if a sentence is found with the word "Plane" the sentence itself is piped to another file.
Here is the code i am using;
for jar in 'cat jar_file.tar'; do
tar -tvf... (3 Replies)
Hello Guys,
I have created function which is as follow:
tail -f filename |grep "Key word"
output from this command
19-11-2011 21:09:15,234 - INFO Numbement - error number:result = :11
19-11-2011 21:09:15,286 - INFO Numbement - error number:result = :11
19-11-2011 21:09:15,523 - INFO... (5 Replies)
Hi,
i have a file hello.log which as several line that look like the below
2015-12-07 09:46:56 0:339 120.111.12.12 POST /helloWorld
2015-12-07 09:46:57 0:439 122.111.12.12 POST /helloWorld
....
when i grep expecting to see results like the below.
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
show-installed
show-installed(1)show-installed(1)NAME
show-installed - show installed RPM packages and descriptions
SYNOPSIS
show-installed [options]
DESCRIPTION
show-installed gives a compact description of the packages installed (or given) making use of the comps groups found in the repositories.
OPTIONS -h, --help
show this help message and exit
-f FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
yum, kickstart or human; yum gives the result as a yum command line; kickstart the content of a %packages section; "human" readable
is default.
-i INPUT, --input=INPUT
File to read the package list from instead of using the rpmdb. - for stdin. The file must contain package names only separated by
white space (including newlines). rpm -qa --qf='%{name}
' produces proper output.
-o OUTPUT, --output=OUTPUT
File to write the result to. Stdout is used if option is omitted.
-q, --quiet
Do not show warnings.
-e, --no-excludes
Only show groups that are installed completely. Do not use exclude lines.
--global-excludes
Print exclude lines at the end and not after the groups requiring them.
--global-addons
Print package names at the end and not after the groups offering them as addon.
--addons-by-group
Also show groups not selected to sort packages contained by them. Those groups are commented out with a "# " at the begin of the
line.
-m, --allow-mandatories
Check if just installing the mandatory packages gives better results. Uses "." to mark those groups.
-a, --allow-all
Check if installing all packages in the groups gives better results. Uses "*" to mark those groups.
--ignore-missing
Ignore packages missing in the repos.
--ignore-missing-excludes
Do not produce exclude lines for packages not in the repository.
Florian Festi 21 October 2010 show-installed(1)