by Joe O’Halloran,* ComputerWeekly.comResearch commissioned by Progress*Software Corporation has revealed that 70% of UK businesses have no intention of analysing their data in real-time, but rather rely on retrospective business*intelligence (BI) for critical market information. The research revealed that UK organisations ranked behind their European counterparts, who expressed the intent to use real-time data, enabling [...]
Hi,
I have a log file that gets updated every second. Currently the size has grown to 20+ GB. I need to have a command/script, that will try to get the actual size of the file and will remove 50% of the data that are in the log file. I don't mind removing the data as the size has grown to huge... (8 Replies)
# date +%s -d "Mon Feb 11 02:26:04"
1360567564
# perl -e 'print scalar localtime(1360567564), "\n";'
Mon Feb 11 02:26:04 2013
the epoch conversion is working fine. but one of my application needs 13 digit epoch time as input
1359453135154
rather than 10 digit epoch time 1360567564... (3 Replies)
I would like to write a shell script that calculated the time difference bettween the log entries. If the time difference is higher as 200 sec. print the complette lines out.
My Problem is, i am unable to jump in the next line and calculate the time difference.
Thank you for your Help.
... (5 Replies)
Dear experts,
I have an epoch time input file such as : -
1302451209564
1302483698948
1302485231072
1302490805383
1302519244700
1302492787481
1302505299145
1302506557022
1302532112140
1302501033105
1302511536485
1302512669550
I need the epoch time above to be converted into real... (4 Replies)
When I run "/etc/myApp" I am presented with continuous output, just about once per second.
However when I try to get the information in Perl via a piped open, it waits till the end to give me anything... my code:
open (OUTPUT,"/etc/myApp |");
while (<OUTPUT>){
print $_;
}... (2 Replies)
ISGREATER(3) BSD Library Functions Manual ISGREATER(3)NAME
isgreater, isgreaterequal, isless, islessequal, islessgreater, isunordered -- compare two floating-point numbers
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <math.h>
int
isgreater(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
isgreaterequal(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
isless(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
islessequal(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
islessgreater(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
isunordered(real-floating x, real-floating y);
DESCRIPTION
Each of the macros isgreater(), isgreaterequal(), isless(), islessequal(), and islessgreater() takes arguments x and y and returns a non-zero
value if and only if its nominal relation on x and y is true. These macros always return zero if either argument is not a number (NaN), but
unlike the corresponding C operators, they never raise a floating point exception.
The isunordered() macro takes arguments x and y, returning non-zero if either x or y is NaN. For any pair of floating-point values, one of
the relationships (less, greater, equal, unordered) holds.
SEE ALSO fpclassify(3), math(3), signbit(3)STANDARDS
The isgreater(), isgreaterequal(), isless(), islessequal(), islessgreater(), and isunordered() macros conform to ISO/IEC 9899:1999
(``ISO C99'').
BSD December 1, 2008 BSD