Use a different delimiter, e.g. a character that definitely won't occur in your text. Good candidates are ASCII control characters. Why not a "carriage return" (<CR> = \r = ^M = 0x0D) which is of inferior significance in *nix texts. Like
Hi,
Can anyone plz share their experience with -
Building shell script to append the file with date in following format-
Filename_MMDDYYYY.txt
Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'm reading net-snmp site, using C language and unix environment, I have manager ( do get/set command), agent and server ... I'm trying to monitor cpu, memory and disk usage and get Ip address of server and send the value back to agent, stored in variable which enable manager to gets the... (1 Reply)
I have a ksh script that runs a sqlplus script. Every time I run the ksh script it generates a log file like it should and a file called shPID (sh47398.1) with the text of the sql script. Why is it doing this? It is the only ksh script that I have that does this.
thanks. (0 Replies)
Hello,
Can any one please assist how to scirpt it:
Every day a new log file is create and I want to process only the one generated yesterday and get the data of column 3 and 6.
For example today's date is 24 then I want to get the data of log file created on 23rd.
Log Files in... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
New to unix. Here is the problem. Running a script that extracts data from hyperion essbase and generates a file in unix. This script fails most of the times with a very low success rate. The data has increased a lot in the last few months resulting in the file being more than 2 gb.
... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have root directory on server 1 say A and having sub directory B now my application generates output files and put in sub directory B.
now i need to transfer these files from server1 to server2 by scp which is having same directory structure A and sub directory B
I have tried... (2 Replies)
Dear Guru's
I've a requirment to grep for a string in series of log files that are getting generated almost every minute.
I'm looking to schedule a script every 15 mountes,in order to check if the error string has been generated in any of the log files generated in last 15 minutes.
Please... (3 Replies)
hello,
can someone please suggest a script to rename a file that was generated today and filename that being generated daily starts with date, its a xml file.
here is example.
# find . -type f -mtime -1
./20130529_4995733057260357019.xml
#
this finename should be renamed to this format.... (6 Replies)
Heyas
At home i have 1 nas with 3 shares, of which i used to mount 2 of them using a script with hardcoded password and username in it.
EDIT: Turns out, its not the script, but 'how i access' the nas share.. (-o user=XY,password=... VS. -o credentials=...).
Figured about credential files,... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
I have created a unix script to mail the xls file.This is being done using mailx command
fdate=`tail -1 abc.xls | cut -c1-8`
SUBJECT="CARD GL Exceptions : ${ENV} for ${fdate}"
destname=CARD_GL_Exceptions_$fdate
sed 's/#BUSINESS/BUSINESS/1' abc.xls > abc2.xls
mv abc2.xls abc.xls... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthik adiga
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cw
CW(7) Miscellaneous Information Manual CW(7)NAME
CW - the international Morse code
DESCRIPTION
CW is an abbreviation for "continuous wave", the commonly used technical term for Morse code communication. A basic knowledge or under-
standing of Morse code is a requirement for Radio Amateurs and Marine Radio Operators in many parts of the world.
MORSE CODE TIMINGS
In Morse code, a dot or dash is referred to as an element. The basic timing unit is the dot period. This is the time taken to send a dot,
not including any space before or after the dot. The lengths of all other elements are then derived from this basic unit, using the fol-
lowing rules:
The duration of a dash is three dots.
The time between each element (dot or dash) is one dot length.
The space between characters is three dot lengths.
The space between words is seven dot lengths.
The following formula calculates the dot period in microseconds from the Morse code speed in words per minute:
dot period = ( 1200000 / speed )
This formula arises from the use of the word PARIS as a 'standard' word for calibrating Morse code speed. PARIS is 50 units long when sent
in Morse code. Analysis of English plain-text indicates that the average word is 50 units, including spaces.
MORSE CODE CHARACTERS
The following list shows the IS0 8859-1 (Latin-1) characters that have commonly understood representations in Morse code:
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789"$()+-./:;=?_@ and space
In addition, following ISO 8859-1 and ISO 8859-2 accented characters are also part of the generally accepted international Morse code:
UACOEEANS (S with cedilla), (Z with caron/hacek),
Finally, libcw adds the following ASCII characters as extensions to single character procedural signals:
<>!&^~
MORSE CODE CHARACTER TABLES
The following table shows the Morse code equivalents for the ISO 8859-1, accented ISO 8859-1, and accented ISO 8859-2 characters above.
The ASCII portion of this table is taken from the ARRL Handbook, and the accented extensions from various other sources:
Ch Code Ch Code Ch Code Ch Code
-------------------------------------------------------
A .- B -... C -.-. D -..
E . F ..-. G --. H ....
I .. J .--- K -.- L .-..
M -- N -. O --- P .--.
Q --.- R .-. S ... T -
U ..- V ...- W .-- X -..-
Y -.-- Z --..
0 ----- 1 .---- 2 ..--- 3 ...--
4 ....- 5 ..... 6 -.... 7 --...
8 ---.. 9 ----.
" .-..-. ' .----. $ ...-..- ( -.--.
) -.--.- + .-.-. , --..-- - -....-
. .-.-.- / -..-. : ---... ; -.-.-.
= -...- ? ..--.. _ ..--.-
Ch Code Ch Code
-------------------------------------------------
U ..-- A .-.-
C -.-.. O ---.
E ..-.. A .-..-
A .--.- N --.--
S (S+cedilla) ---- (Z+caron/hacek) --..-
In addition to the above standard characters, the following characters are conventionally used for punctuation and procedural signals as
follows:
Ch Code Ch Code Ch Code Ch Code
-------------------------------------------------------
" .-..-. ' .----. $ ...-..- ( -.--.
) -.--.- + .-.-. , --..-- - -....-
. .-.-.- / -..-. : ---... ; -.-.-.
= -...- ? ..--.. _ ..--.- @ .--.-.
and the following are non-conventional extensions implemented by libcw:
Ch Code Ch Code Ch Code Ch Code
-----------------------------------------------------
< ...-.- > -...-.- ! ...-. & .-...
^ -.-.- ~ .-.-..
An alternative view of punctuation and procedural signals is as combination Morse characters:
Ch Prosig Ch Prosig Ch Prosig Ch Prosig
---------------------------------------------------------
" [AF] ' [WG] $ [SX] ( [KN]
) [KK] + [AR] , [MIM] - [DU]
. [AAA] / [DN] : [OS] ; [KR]
= [BT] ? [IMI] _ [IQ] @ [AC]
< [VA],[SK] > [BK] ! [SN] & [AS]
^ [KA] ~ [AL]
NOTES
Despite the fact that this manual page constantly and consistently refers to Morse code elements as dots and dashes, DO NOT think in these
terms when trying to learn Morse code. Always think of them as 'dit's and 'dah's.
SEE ALSO
Man pages for libcw(3,LOCAL), cw(1,LOCAL), cwgen(1,LOCAL), cwcp(1,LOCAL), and xcwcp(1,LOCAL).
CW Tutor Package CW(7)