I am trying to cat a file and then grep that file for a number. I can do it fine on other files but this particular file will not do anything. I tried running it on an older file from the same device but it is just not working. The file is nothing more than a flat file on a unix box. Here is just a... (3 Replies)
Hi,
This is what I am trying to do.
1) connect to 3 remote servers from my local machine
serverA serverB serverC
2) read error file from each server
cat /var/lib/mysql/mydb.err
3) grep for lines displaying "yesterday" date
grep "`date +%y%m%d' '-d\"1 day ago\"`"
4) Append those lines to a... (7 Replies)
Hi,
Im a pretty large noob to linux/perl etc and im trying to use mysql slurp to take a delimited file and import it into mysql using stdin (in the hope its faster)
mysqlslurp - slurp <STDIN> into a MySQL table - search.cpan.org
Christopher Brown / MySQL-Slurp - search.cpan.org
Using... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I'd like to do this
cat /etc/passwd
and grep -v on the /etc/shells list
I'd like to find all shell that doesn't exist on the /etc/passwd.
Is there an easy way without doing a egrep -v "/bin/sh|/bin/bash................"?
How do I use a file /etc/shells as my list for... (4 Replies)
I am not sure if using cat -n is the most efficient way to split a file into multiple files, one file per line in the source file.
I thought using cat -n would make it easy to process the file because it produces an output that numbers each line that I could then grep for with the regex "^ *$i".... (3 Replies)
Is there a way using grep or cat a file to create a new file based on whether the first 9 positions of each record is less than 399999999?
This is a fixed file format. (3 Replies)
not sure how to do it. wan't to delete it using cut and grep ince i would use it in the shell.
but how must the command be?
grep "64.233.181.103 wwwGoogle.com" /etc/hosts | cut -d
the delimeter is just a space. can you help meplease. :D (1 Reply)
Hello,
i need to search one word (snp1) from many files and copy the content of the columns of this word in new file.
example:
file 1:
SNP BP CHR P
snp1 1 3 0.01
snp2 2 2 0.05
.
.
file 2:
SNP BP CHR P
snp1 1 3 0.06
snp2 2 2 0.3
output... (6 Replies)
Hello
someone told me to use
OS=`awk '{print int($3)}' < /etc/redhat-release`
instead of
OS=cat /etc/redhat-release | `awk '{print int($3)}'`
any idea for the reason ? (5 Replies)
Hi Guys
This is my first post so I am not sure how things go here. I'm sorry if I'm breaking the rule or something. Feel free to correct me about that :)
So as I was saying...
I'd been trying to grep this folder containing 900,000 txt files but seems no luck. I get either "No such file... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nexeu
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
px_get_record2
PX_GET_RECORD2(3) Library Functions Manual PX_GET_RECORD2(3)NAME
PX_get_record2 -- Returns record in Paradox file
SYNOPSIS
#include <paradox.h>
int PX_get_record2(pxdoc_t *pxdoc, int recno, char *data, int *deleted, pxdatablockinfo_t *pxdbinfo)
DESCRIPTION
This function is similar to PX_get_record(3) but takes two extra parameters. If *deleted is set to 1 the function will consider any record
in the database, even those which are deleted. If *pxdbinfo is not NULL, the function will return some information about the data block
where the record has been read from. You will have to allocate memory for pxdbinfo before calling PX_get_record2.
On return *deleted will be set to 1 if the requested record is deleted or 0 if it is not deleted. The struct pxdatablockinfo_t has the fol-
lowing fields:
blockpos (long)
File positon where the block starts. The first six bytes of the block contain the header, followed by the record data.
recordpos (long)
File position where the requested record starts.
size (int)
Size of the data block without the six bytes for the header.
recno (int)
Record number within the data block. The first record in the block has number 0.
numrecords (int)
The number of records in this block.
number (int)
The number of the data block.
This function may return records with invalid data, because records are not explizitly marked as deleted, but rather the size of a valid
data block is modified. A data block is a fixed size area in the file which holds a certain number of records. If for some reason a data
block has newer been completely filled with records, the algorithmn anticipates deleted records in this data block, which are not there.
This often happens with the last data block in a file, which is likely to not being fully filled with records.
If you accessing several records, do it in ascending order, because this is the most efficient way.
Note:
This function is deprecated. Use PX_retrieve_record(3) instead
RETURN VALUE
Returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.
SEE ALSO PX_get_field(3), PX_get_record(3)AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Uwe Steinmann uwe@steinmann.cx.
PX_GET_RECORD2(3)