Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting how to find the exact pattern from a file? Post 91733 by surjyap on Monday 5th of December 2005 07:55:13 AM
Old 12-05-2005
yes you are right but why it gives 0 when I try to execute it through shell script. Let say the script is
dir1=/backup/surjya/mdbase
stgcnt=`grep -c $dir1 surya.txt `
echo $stgcnt

The value of stgcnt is 5.
Just modify the script like

dir1=/backup/surjya/mdbase
stgcnt=`grep -c \"$dir1"\>"\" surya.txt `
echo $stgcnt

The value of stgcnt is 0
I hope my question is clear.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find Exact word in file

Hi ALL, I want to search one string “20 “ i.e 20 with space. But my file where I am searching this “20 “ contain some data like 120 before image file truncated 220 Reports section succeeded 20 Transaction database .prd stopped 220 Reports section completed. When I search for the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jeevan Salunke
5 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to find exact text in file ?

I have file named shortlist , and it contains this: 2233|charles harris |g.m. |sales |12/12/52| 90000 9876|bill johnson |director |production|03/12/50|130000 5678|robert dylan |d.g.m. |marketing |04/19/43| 85000 2365|john woodcock |director |personnel... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Cecko
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find file with exact access date

Hi I have to write command that find the files/dirs in the directory with access date equal to timestamp. ie or to be more precise I need to find files which are not equal to given timestamp drwxr-xr-x 2 oracle oinstall 4096 May 31 2007 tmp so need to have something like find . *... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zam
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Want to grep exact pattern from file

Contents of my file is: DI DI DIR PHI I want to extract only DI. I am using below command grep -w DI <file> but it is also extracting DI. Can i use any other command to extract exact pattern where '[' does not have special meaning (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nehashine
4 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Find exact path of a file/directory

Hello Folks, A wrapper takes an argument of file or directory name. I want to allow paths that reside within the current directory only. Can simply discard the paths like "/A" & "../" as they go outside the current by looking at the path beginning. How to validate this one: A/../../../b... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: vibhor_agarwali
4 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to find a file if we dont know exact location of file ?

Hi I want know "How to find a file if we dont know exact location of file ?" Thanks, Tushar Joshi:) (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: tusharjoshi
9 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

QUESTION1: grep only exact string. QUESTION2: find and replace only exact value with sed

QUESTION1: How do you grep only an exact string. I am using Solaris10 and do not have any GNU products installed. Contents of car.txt CAR1_KEY0 CAR1_KEY1 CAR2_KEY0 CAR2_KEY1 CAR1_KEY10 CURRENT COMMAND LINE: WHERE VARIABLE CAR_NUMBER=1 AND KEY_NUMBER=1 grep... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: thibodc
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

echo exact xml tag from an exact file

Im stumped on this one. Id like to echo into a .txt file all names for an xml feed in a huge folder. Can that be done?? Id need to echo <name>This name</name> in client.xml files. $path="/mnt/windows/path" echo 'recording names' cd "$path" for names in $path than Im stuck on... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: graphicsman
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

To find the exact pattern

My Input : Hi editor this is the exact pattern which we looking for the previous patternmatch My code: awk '/pattern/ { print a } { a = $0 }' Current output : exact previous (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Roozo
3 Replies
DirCompare(3pm) 					User Contributed Perl Documentation					   DirCompare(3pm)

NAME
File::DirCompare - Perl module to compare two directories using callbacks. SYNOPSIS
use File::DirCompare; # Simple diff -r --brief replacement use File::Basename; File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, sub { my ($a, $b) = @_; if (! $b) { printf "Only in %s: %s ", dirname($a), basename($a); } elsif (! $a) { printf "Only in %s: %s ", dirname($b), basename($b); } else { print "Files $a and $b differ "; } }); # Version-control like Deleted/Added/Modified listing my (@listing, @modified); # use closure to collect results File::DirCompare->compare('old_tree', 'new_tree', sub { my ($a, $b) = @_; if (! $b) { push @listing, "D $a"; } elsif (! $a) { push @listing, "A $b"; } else { if (-f $a && -f $b) { push @listing, "M $b"; push @modified, $b; } else { # One file, one directory - treat as delete + add push @listing, "D $a"; push @listing, "A $b"; } } }); DESCRIPTION
File::DirCompare is a perl module to compare two directories using a callback, invoked for all files that are 'different' between the two directories, and for any files that exist only in one or other directory ('unique' files). File::DirCompare has a single public compare() method, with the following signature: File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, $opts); The first three arguments are required - $dir1 and $dir2 are paths to the two directories to be compared, and $sub is the subroutine reference called for all unique or different files. $opts is an optional hashref of options - see OPTIONS below. The provided subroutine is called for all unique files, and for every pair of 'different' files encountered, with the following signature: $sub->($file1, $file2) where $file1 and $file2 are the paths to the two files. For 'unique' files i.e. where a file exists in only one directory, the subroutine is called with the other argument 'undef' i.e. for: $sub->($file1, undef) $sub->(undef, $file2) the first indicates $file1 exists only in the first directory given ($dir1), and the second indicates $file2 exists only in the second directory given ($dir2). OPTIONS The following optional arguments are supported, passed in using a hash reference after the three required arguments to compare() e.g. File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, { cmp => $cmp_sub, ignore_unique => 1, }); cmp By default, two files are regarded as different if their contents do not match (tested with File::Compare::compare). That default behaviour can be overridden by providing a 'cmp' subroutine to do the file comparison, returning zero if the two files are equal, and non-zero if not. E.g. to compare using modification times instead of file contents: File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, { cmp => sub { -M $_[0] <=> -M $_[1] }, }); ignore_cmp If you want to see all corresponding files, not just 'different' ones, set the 'ignore_cmp' flag to tell File::DirCompare to skip its file comparison checks i.e. File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, { ignore_cmp => 1 }); ignore_unique If you want to ignore files that only exist in one of the two directories, set the 'ignore_unique' flag i.e. File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, { ignore_unique => 1 }); SEE ALSO
File::Dircmp, which provides similar functionality (and whose directory walking code I've adapted for this module), but a simpler reporting-only interface, something like the first example in the SYNOPSIS above. AUTHOR AND CREDITS
Gavin Carr <gavin@openfusion.com.au> Thanks to Robin Barker for a bug report and fix for glob problems with whitespace. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2006-2007 by Gavin Carr. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2010-03-02 DirCompare(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:20 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy