Can't reproduce your problem:
but neither can produce your required output as no e.g. 2020-01-05 020012 is in your input data.
With strange problems like this, I usually presume non-printing control characters in file, like the DOS line terminator <CR> (\r = ^M = 0x0D).
Hi,
Let's say that I have a file called table, I know that if I need to see a the second column for exampls I use:
awk ' {print $2}' table.txt
Is there anyway to use awk to actually cut a column and put it somewhere else in the table?:confused: (8 Replies)
Hello,
I am trying to solve for a couple of hours now the following problem:
I have n files and would like to add the third column of each file to a new file:
temp1.txt
1 2 3
1 2 3
1 2 3
temp2.txt
1 2 4
1 2 4
1 2 4
1 2 4
temp3.txt (2 Replies)
I have this text file with a very large number of columns (10,000+) and I want to move the first column to the position of the six column so that the text file looks like this:
Before cutting and pasting
ID Family Mother Father Trait Phenotype
aaa bbb ... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I have two sets of files.
One set with extension .txt This set has file names with numbers like these. 1.txt, 2.txt, 3.txt until extactly 100.txt.
The .txt files look like these:
0.38701788 93750
0.38622013 94456
0.38350296 94440
0.38282126 94057
0.38282126 94439
0.35847232... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I already have a code which replaces column 14 of NPBR.XTR.tmp with column 8 of NPBR3G.XTR.final
awk -F'\|' 'FNR==NR{a= $2"^"$8;next;}a{split(a,b,"^");$8=b;$14=b;}1' OFS="|" ${SHTEMP}NPBR3G.XTR.final ${SHTEMP}NPBR.XTR.tmp > ${SHTEMP}NPBR.XTR.final
I also need to replace column 15... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I've multiple files. In this case 5. Space separated columns. Each file has 12 columns. Each file has 300-400K lines.
I want to get the output such that if a value in column 2 is present in all the files then get all the columns of that value and print it side by side.
Desired output... (15 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to copy and paste the sixth column from a bunch of files into a single file having each column pasted in separate columns (and not one after each other in just one column.)
I tried this code but works only partially because it copied and pasted 50 rows of each column... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Frastra
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
grid-cert-info
GRID-CERT-INFO(1) Globus Commands GRID-CERT-INFO(1)NAME
grid-cert-info - Display information about a certificate
SYNOPSIS
grid-cert-info [-help] [-usage] [-version] [-versions]
grid-cert-info [-file CERTIFICATE-FILE] [-rfc2253] [-all]
[-subject] | [-s]
[-issuer] | [-i]
[-issuerhash] | [-ih]
[-startdate] | [-sd]
[-endate] | [-ed]
DESCRIPTION
The grid-cert-info program displays information contained within a certificate file. By default it shows a text representation of the
entire certificate. Specific facts about the certificate can be shown instead by using command-line options. If any of those options are
used, then the default display is suppressed. This can be added to the output by using the -all command-line option.
If multiple display options are included on the command-line, the facts related to those will be displayed on separate lines in the order
that they occur. If an option is specified multiple time, that fact will be displayed multiple times.
The full set of command-line options to grid-cert-info are:
-help, -usage
Display the command-line options to grid-cert-info and exit.
-version, -versions
Display the version number of the grid-cert-info command. The second form includes more details.
-file CERTIFICATE-FILE
Display information about the first certificate contained in the file named by CERTIFICATE-FILE instead of the default user
certificate.
-rfc2253
Display X.509 distinguished names using the string representation defined in RFC 2253 instead of the default OpenSSL oneline format.
-all
Display the text representation of the entire certificate in addition to any other facts requested by command-line options. This is the
default if no fact-specific command-line options are used.
-subject, -s
Display the subject name of the X.509 certificate.
-issuer, -i
Display the issuer name of the X.509 certificate.
-issuerhash, -ih
Display the default hash of the issuer name of the X.509 certificate. This can be used to locate which CA certificate in the trusted
certificate directory issued the certifcate being inspected.
-startdate, -sd
Display a string representation of the date and time when the certificate is valid from. This is displayed in the format used by the
OpenSSL x509 command.
-enddate, -dd
Display a string representation of the date and time when the certificate is valid until. This is displayed in the format used by the
OpenSSL x509 command.
EXAMPLES
Display the validity times for the default certificate
% grid-cert-info -sd -ed
Aug 31 12:33:47 2009 GMT
Aug 31 12:33:47 2010 GMT
Display the same information about a different certificate specified on the command-line
% grid-cert-info -sd -ed -f /etc/grid-security/hostcert.pem
Jan 21 12:24:48 2003 GMT
Jul 15 11:30:57 2020 GMT
Display the subject of a certificate in both the default and the RFC 2253 forms.
% grid-cert-info -subject
/DC=org/DC=example/DC=grid/CN=Joe User
% grid-cert-info -subject -rfc2253
CN=Joe User,DC=grid,DC=example,DC=org
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables affect the execution of grid-cert-info:
X509_USER_CERT
Path to the default certificate file to inspect.
AUTHOR
University of Chicago
Globus Toolkit 5.0.1 03/22/2010 GRID-CERT-INFO(1)