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
lsdiff
LSDIFF(1) Man pages LSDIFF(1)NAME
lsdiff - show which files are modified by a patch
SYNOPSIS
lsdiff [[-n] | [--line-number]] [[-p n] | [--strip-match=n]] [--strip=n] [--addprefix=PREFIX] [[-s] | [--status]] [[-E] |
[--empty-files-as-removed]] [[-i PATTERN] | [--include=PATTERN]] [[-x PATTERN] | [--exclude=PATTERN]] [[-z] | [--decompress]]
[[-# RANGE] | [--hunks=RANGE]] [--lines=RANGE] [--files=RANGE] [[-H] | [--with-filename]] [[-h] | [--no-filename]] [[-v] |
[--verbose]...] [file...]
lsdiff {[--help] | [--version] | [--filter ...] | [--grep ...]}
DESCRIPTION
List the files modified by a patch.
You can use both unified and context format diffs with this program.
OPTIONS -n, --line-number
Display the line number that each patch begins at. If verbose output is requested (using -nv), each hunk of each patch is listed as
well.
For each file that is modified, a line is generated containing the line number of the beginning of the patch, followed by a Tab
character, followed by the name of the file that is modified. If -v is given once, following each of these lines will be one line for
each hunk, consisting of a Tab character, the line number that the hunk begins at, another Tab character, the string "Hunk #", and the
hunk number (starting at 1).
If the -v is given twice in conjunction with -n (i.e. -nvv), the format is slightly different: hunk-level descriptive text is shown
after each hunk number, and the --number-files option is enabled.
--number-files
File numbers are listed, beginning at 1, before each filename.
-# RANGE, --hunks=RANGE
Only list hunks within the specified RANGE. Hunks are numbered from 1, and the range is a comma-separated list of numbers or
"first-last" spans; either the first or the last in the span may be omitted to indicate no limit in that direction.
--lines=RANGE
Only list hunks that contain lines from the original file that lie within the specified RANGE. Lines are numbered from 1, and the range
is a comma-separated list of numbers or "first-last" spans; either the first or the last in the span may be omitted to indicate no
limit in that direction.
--files=RANGE
Only list files indicated by the specified RANGE. Files are numbered from 1 in the order they appear in the patch input, and the range
is a comma-separated list of numbers or "first-last" spans; either the first or the last in the span may be omitted to indicate no
limit in that direction.
-p n, --strip-match=n
When matching, ignore the first n components of the pathname.
--strip=n
Remove the first n components of the pathname before displaying it.
--addprefix=PREFIX
Prefix the pathname with PREFIX before displaying it.
-s, --status
Show file additions, modifications and removals. A file addition is indicated by a "+", a removal by a "-", and a modification by a
"!".
-E, --empty-files-as-removed
Treat empty files as absent for the purpose of displaying file additions, modifications and removals.
-i PATTERN, --include=PATTERN
Include only files matching PATTERN.
-x PATTERN, --exclude=PATTERN
Exclude files matching PATTERN.
-z, --decompress
Decompress files with extensions .gz and .bz2.
-H, --with-filename
Print the name of the patch file containing each patch.
-h, --no-filename
Suppress the name of the patch file containing each patch.
-v, --verbose
Verbose output.
--help
Display a short usage message.
--version
Display the version number of lsdiff.
--filter
Behave like filterdiff(1) instead.
--grep
Behave like grepdiff(1) instead.
SEE ALSO filterdiff(1), grepdiff(1)EXAMPLES
To sort the order of touched files in a patch, you can use:
lsdiff patch | sort -u |
xargs -rn1 filterdiff patch -i
To show only added files in a patch:
lsdiff -s patch | grep '^+' |
cut -c2- | xargs -rn1 filterdiff patch -i
To show the headers of all file hunks:
lsdiff -n patch | (while read n file
do sed -ne "$n,$(($n+1))p" patch
done)
AUTHOR
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>
Package maintainer
patchutils 23 Jan 2009 LSDIFF(1)