Hi,
Suppose I have a file as below and I just want the field Invoice Number from this file , How can I do it.
/home/arbor>cat PH0034090202314800030IM-001
0Yp825XMilperra NSW 1891 189110H14V1Sp2871Yp300X Customer Service : 0000-368-81118H6.5V0Sp3130Yp50X ... (7 Replies)
I just had a filesystem / file corruption issue on my HSP's server due to disk capacity limits and fileswapping. I discovered that certain files got corrupted when fileswapping was not successful and they ended up with a string of control characters, or what I believe to be nulls, in them.
Does... (4 Replies)
i have a ksh script :
#!/bin/ksh
TZ=`date +%Z`+24 ;a=`date +%Y-%m-%d`
b=`date +"%H:%M:%S"`
cd /ednadtu3/u01/pipe/logs
for i in Archiver1.log
do
cat $i | grep $a | grep $b >> /ednadtu3/u01/pipe/naveed/Insert_Date.txt
done... (4 Replies)
Hi Friends,
Urgently required to know this :
I have a file which has several stanzas like below :
CuDv:
name = "hdisk3"
status = 1
chgstatus = 2
ddins = "scdisk"
location = "03-08-01-11,0"
parent = "scsi1"
connwhere =... (3 Replies)
I have this line
BTSRTRGRP-448-1-1 10.162.141.118/255.255.255.254 -
I need to print only the IPADDRESS and not the subnet mask. If i use cut -c30-43 I get the ipaddress, where as in some cases if the last octet is of single digit (10.162.141.8/255.255.255.254) it... (2 Replies)
I know you could use the grep "something" -A200 flag to get all the lines past your pattern. Is there a way to get all the lines in between two patterns? The -a flag will not work since all lines in between the two patterns don't have a constant number. (4 Replies)
Hi,
i have to find a string in a file and positin of the string in the file would come in some particular interval.
let's say file is 1-1000 lines and string is in from 200-300line.
could any one suggest me how to get make the grep search for the string in that particular portion of the... (4 Replies)
Hi
When I run this command:
lsuser -a auditclasses ALL
I got:
user1 auditclasses=general,objects,cron,files,rbac,audit,lvm,aixpert
user2 auditclasses=general,objects,cron,files,rbac,audit,lvm,aixpert
user3 auditclasses=general,objects,cron,files,rbac,audit,lvm,aixpert
user4... (7 Replies)
I'm trying to take a users input, and then such a text file to see if it contains it.
I get an error when running it:
"./Login.sh: Line 8:
echo Username
read username
if ; then
echo Login successful.
else
echo Failed to login.
fi
If someone could give me some input to where I'm... (4 Replies)
i want to grab lines from a file that are between two patterns (including the lines that contain the pattern).
here's what im currently doing:
data.txt
aaa
bbb
cccc
ddd
eee
ffff
ddd
code:
awk '/bbb/,/fff/ && $0 !~ /ddd/' cdsnmp.sh
I want to grab lines between and including bbb... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
filterdiff
FILTERDIFF(1)FILTERDIFF(1)NAME
filterdiff - extract or exclude diffs from a diff file
SYNOPSIS
filterdiff [-i PATTERN] [-p n] [--strip=n] [--addprefix=PREFIX]
[-x PATTERN] [--verbose] [-v] [-z] [-# RANGE | --hunks=RANGE]
[--lines=RANGE] [--annotate] [--format=FORMAT] [--as-numbered-lines=WHEN]
[file...]
filterdiff {--help | --version | --list | --grep ...}
DESCRIPTION
You can use filterdiff to obtain a patch that applies to files matching the shell wildcard PATTERN from a larger collection of patches. For
example, to see the patches in patch-2.4.3.gz that apply to all files called lp.c:
filterdiff -z -i '*/lp.c' patch-2.4.3.gz
If neither -i nor -x options are given, -i '*' is assumed. To remove lines from a file that are not part of a patch, you might do this:
filterdiff message > patch
Note that the interpretation of the shell wildcard pattern does not count slash characters or periods as special (in other words, no flags
are given to fnmatch). This is so that ``*/basename''-type patterns can be given without limiting the number of pathname components.
You can use both unified and context format diffs with this program.
OPTIONS -i PATTERN
Include only files matching PATTERN. All other lines in the input are suppressed.
-x PATTERN
Exclude files matching PATTERN. All other lines in the input are displayed.
-p n When matching, ignore the first n components of the pathname.
-# RANGE | --hunks=RANGE
Only include 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 include 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 indi-
cate no limit in that direction.
--annotate
Annotate each hunk with the filename and hunk number.
--format=unified|context
Use specified output format.
--strip=n
Remove the first n components of pathnames in the output.
--addprefix=PREFIX
Prefix pathnames in the output by PREFIX.
--as-numbered-lines=before|after
Instead of a patch fragment, display the lines of the selected hunks with the line number of the file before (or after) the patch is
applied, followed by a TAB character and a colon, at the beginning of each line. Each hunk except the first will have a line con-
sisting of ``...'' before it.
-v, --verbose
Always show non-diff lines in the output. By default, non-diff lines are only shown when excluding a filename pattern.
-z Decompress files with extensions .gz and .bz2.
--help Display a short usage message.
--version
Display the version number of filterdiff.
--list Behave like lsdiff(1) instead.
--grep Behave like grepdiff(1) instead.
EXAMPLES
To see all patch hunks that affect the first five lines of a C file:
filterdiff -i '*.c' --lines=-5 < patch
To see the first hunk of each file patch, use:
filterdiff -#1 patchfile
To see patches modifying a ChangeLog file in a subdirectory, use:
filterdiff -p1 Changelog
To see the complete patches for each patch that modifies line 1 of the original file, use:
filterdiff --lines=1 patchfile | lsdiff |
xargs -rn1 filterdiff patchfile -i
To see all but the first hunk of a particular patch, you might use:
filterdiff -p1 -i file.c -#2- foo-patch
If you have a very specific list of hunks in a patch that you want to see, list them:
filterdiff -#1,2,5-8,10,12,27-
To see the lines of the files that would be patched as they will appear after the patch is applied, use:
filterdiff --as-numbered-lines=after patch.file
You can see the same context before the patch is applied with:
filterdiff --as-numbered-lines=before
patch.file
Filterdiff can also be used to convert between unified and context format diffs:
filterdiff -v --format=unified context.diff
SEE ALSO lsdiff(1), grepdiff(1)AUTHOR
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>.
patchutils 23 Aug 2002 FILTERDIFF(1)