Hi,
I have a file which is a result of a script running every two minutes. What I wanted to do is to grep a specific date and time (hour and minute) from the file and then count the occurance of 201. I need to get the result of occurance of 201 every 5 minutes. What should I include in my... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to accomplish the following and would like some suggestions or possible bash script examples that may work
I have a directory that has a list of log files that's periodically dumped from a script that is crontab that are rotated 4 generations. There will be a time stamp that is... (4 Replies)
I've seen several examples of grep showing the filename the string was found in, but what I really need is grep to show the file details in long format (like ls -l would).
scenario is:
grep mobile_number todays_files
This will show me the string I'm after & which files they turn up in, but... (2 Replies)
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)
Hi All,
Need a small help. I have a log file which keeps updating for every Minute with multiple number of lines. I just want to grep few properties which has latest Date and Time to it. How do i do it?
I wanted to grep a property by name "Reloading cache with a maximum of" from the... (4 Replies)
how can i grep a range?
i have a text file with the following text:
result.log.00:2012/01/02 12:00:07.422 LOG STARTED HERE
N6Kashya29MemoryShieldScheduler_AO_IMPLE, pid=8662/8658,
config=(alertThreshold=10,alertLevel=0,killThreshold=7200,coreThreshold=0,full=1),
deltaTime=0,... (1 Reply)
Hi guys,
This is probably very easy but I've no idea how to pull this out.
Basically, I need to find errors into a very large logfile. When you grep the ID, the output is like this:
+- Type: 799911 Code: Ret: 22728954 Mand: X Def: Des: UserDes: SeqNo: 2
+- Type: 799911 Code: Ret:... (5 Replies)
I've got a job that finds and removes trace files based upon an access time of more than seven days (I've also tried a modify date).
find TABC* -atime +7 -exec rm +
find TABC* -mtime +7 -exec rm +
Whether I use -atime or -mtime, the process seems to work sporadically. Sometimes it removes... (6 Replies)
I am using grep as follows
grep --include \*.org -ir "sunspot" -C 3 ./astron_aphys/solarsy/sun/helioseism/localhs/fhankel/
This gives me the filename for each matched line. How can I change the command to print the file name only once rather than having the same file name repeated at... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have many files included time information, some of them included time range by 30 minutes;
2007-12-27T110000.txt
2007-12-27T120000.txt
2007-12-27T130000.txt
2007-12-27T150000.txt
2007-12-27T153000.txt
2007-12-28T000000.txt
2007-12-28T003000.txt
I only want to echo that... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: jeo_fb
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
dglob
DGLOB(1) Debian-goodies documentation DGLOB(1)NAME
dglob - Expand package names or files matching a pattern
SYNOPSIS
dglob [-a] pattern
dglob [-0] -f pattern
DESCRIPTION
dglob lists packages names matching a pattern. It can also list all the files they contain. By default dglob only searches installed
packages; the -a switch widens the search (see "OPTIONS"). The list is written to stdout, one name per line.
grep-dctrl(1) and grep-aptavail(1) are used to search the list of packages, so you should refer to its documentation for information on how
patterns are matched. By default, all packages whose name contains the given string will be matched, but several options are available to
modify this behavior (see "OPTIONS").
If you use dglob with the -f option, all files in the matched packages are listed instead of their names. If you do not use de -a switch,
only existing, plain (i.e. no symlinks, directories or other special ones) files are listed. If the -a switch is use then all files will be
listed both for installed and non-installed packages. The filenames are written to stdout, one file per line. You can use the -0 option to
get the filenames separated by '