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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Advise to print lines before and after patterh match and checking and removing duplicate files Post 303046173 by newbie_01 on Sunday 26th of April 2020 10:58:51 PM
Old 04-26-2020
Hi Jim,


The grep works in Linux but not in Solaris. Sorry, forgot to mention, OS is SunOS <hostname> 5.11 11.3 sun4v sparc sun4v


Yeah, the code below works and files.tmp did has the list of files with their checksum, I only need to retain one of the files. Trying to work out how to sort the output AND retain just the lowest numbered file.



Code:
cd /path/to/logs

grep -l "CORRUPTION DETECTED" *.log  |
while read fname
do
   cksum $fname
done | sort -n -k1 > files.tmp
# files.tmp has a sorted list of files - by checksum




Code:
$: cat files.tmp
1237008222      10664   log.10
1237008222      10664   log.12
1237008222      10664   log.14
1237008222      10664   log.16
1237008222      10664   log.18
1237008222      10664   log.2
1237008222      10664   log.4
1237008222      10664   log.6
1237008222      10664   log.8
2296620157      10696   log.1
2296620157      10696   log.11
2296620157      10696   log.13
2296620157      10696   log.15
2296620157      10696   log.17
2296620157      10696   log.3
2296620157      10696   log.5
2296620157      10696   log.7
2296620157      10696   log.9


So from the list above, I will only want to retain log.1 and log.2, so kinda like group the output list above by checksum and retain the lowest number named file. Googling at the moment if there is an easier of deleting from the files.tmp list besides how am doing it below:


Code:
#!/bin/ksh
#

awk '{ print $1 }' files.tmp | sort | uniq > tmp.00

while read checksum
do
   grep "^$checksum" files.tmp | sort | sort -n -t. -k2 | awk 'NR>1 { print $3 }' | xargs rm
done < tmp.00


BTW, what is the code here below. I think there is something missing here, is oldfile supposedly the script that does the checksum and then I run the code below?



Code:
oldsum=0
oldfile
ls logfile* | 
while read sum size name
do
   if [  "$sum" -eq $oldsum ] ; then
      echo "$oldname and $name are duplicates"
      # put a rm command here after you see this work correctly for you
      # assuming you delete the second file name
      continue
   fi
   oldname=$name
   oldsum=$sum
done

 

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UNBUFFER(1)                                                   General Commands Manual                                                  UNBUFFER(1)

NAME
unbuffer - unbuffer output SYNOPSIS
unbuffer program [ args ] INTRODUCTION
unbuffer disables the output buffering that occurs when program output is redirected from non-interactive programs. For example, suppose you are watching the output from a fifo by running it through od and then more. od -c /tmp/fifo | more You will not see anything until a full page of output has been produced. You can disable this automatic buffering as follows: unbuffer od -c /tmp/fifo | more Normally, unbuffer does not read from stdin. This simplifies use of unbuffer in some situations. To use unbuffer in a pipeline, use the -p flag. Example: process1 | unbuffer -p process2 | process3 CAVEATS
unbuffer -p may appear to work incorrectly if a process feeding input to unbuffer exits. Consider: process1 | unbuffer -p process2 | process3 If process1 exits, process2 may not yet have finished. It is impossible for unbuffer to know long to wait for process2 and process2 may not ever finish, for example, if it is a filter. For expediency, unbuffer simply exits when it encounters an EOF from either its input or process2. In order to have a version of unbuffer that worked in all situations, an oracle would be necessary. If you want an application-specific solution, workarounds or hand-coded Expect may be more suitable. For example, the following example shows how to allow grep to finish pro- cessing when the cat before it finishes first. Using cat to feed grep would never require unbuffer in real life. It is merely a place- holder for some imaginary process that may or may not finish. Similarly, the final cat at the end of the pipeline is also a placeholder for another process. $ cat /tmp/abcdef.log | grep abc | cat abcdef xxxabc defxxx $ cat /tmp/abcdef.log | unbuffer grep abc | cat $ (cat /tmp/abcdef.log ; sleep 1) | unbuffer grep abc | cat abcdef xxxabc defxxx $ BUGS
The man page is longer than the program. SEE ALSO
"Exploring Expect: A Tcl-Based Toolkit for Automating Interactive Programs" by Don Libes, O'Reilly and Associates, January 1995. AUTHOR
Don Libes, National Institute of Standards and Technology 1 June 1994 UNBUFFER(1)
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