10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
So basically I have a log file and each line in this log file starts with a timestamp:
MON DD HH:MM:SS
SEP 15 07:30:01
I need to grep all the lines between last hour timestamp and current timestamp. Then these lines will be moved to a tmp file from which I will grep for particular strings. ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nms
1 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello ,
I am working on AIX. I have to convert Unix timestamp to normal timestamp. Below is the file. The Unix timestamp will always be preceded by
EFFECTIVE_TIME as first field as shown and there could be multiple EFFECTIVE_TIME in the file : 3.txt
Contents of... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rahul2662
6 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Friends,
I have the following logfile. Currently time in india is 07/31/2014 12:33:34 and i have the following content in logfile. I want to display only those entries which contain string 'Exception' within last 3 hours. In this case, it would be the last line only
I can get the... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: srkmish
12 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Dear friend,
i have a script as below..
#!/bin/ksh
#set -vx
checkprocess () {
PROCESS_NUM=`ps -ef| grep test |wc -l`
# for degbuging...
if ;
then
# echo $PROCESS_NUM
echo "My job is started"
if ;
then
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jewel
2 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I need to be able to identify files with file timestamps greater than a given timestamp.
I am using the following solution, although it appears to compare files at the "seconds" granularity and I need it at the milliseconds. When I tested my solution, it missed files that had timestamps... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nkm0brm
3 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All,
I am new to unix programming. I am trying for a requirement and the requirement goes like this.....
I have a test folder. Which tracks log files. After certain time, the log file is getting overwritten by another file (randomly as the time interval is not periodic). I need to preserve... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mailsara
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I've a file in the following format
1999-APR-8 17:31:06 1500 3 45
1999-APR-8 17:31:15 1500 3 45
1999-APR-8 17:31:25 1500 3 45
1999-APR-8 17:31:30 1500 3 45
1999-APR-8 17:31:55 1500 3 45
1999-APR-8 17:32:06 1500 3 ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vaibhavkorde
1 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello all,
I have a problem with timestamps in perl.
Suppose we have the following timestamp:
Wed Oct 22 13:20:41 2008 This timestamp is produced with 'localtime' function.
How can i convert the above timestamp to the format:
081022132041
08=2008
10=Oct
Thank you... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: chriss_58
5 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hello to everyone,
I am having svn performace issue.
Whenever i am doing svn checkout it's slower on one machine than other Xen machine.
I will try to explain what is goin on here.
I have 3 machine and all three running linux (Centos 5)
Machine A is running Svn server.
Machine B... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: email-lalit
6 Replies
10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi All ,
I have a file which gets updated by a korn job daily . The file gets the latest timestamp on everyrun.
But of late i have observed that the file timestamp gets modified to a older date ( Oct 25 2006 ) at some point in time of the day. This change has nothing to do with the job which... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: siddaonline
5 Replies
SVNWRAP(1) General Commands Manual SVNWRAP(1)
NAME
svnwrap - Umask wrapper for subversion client commands
SYNOPSIS
svnwrap {program} [args...]
DESCRIPTION
svnwrap is a simple shell script to work around permission problems when sharing Subversion repositories between multiple local users.
svnwrap can be used either by specifying a particular subversion client command on the command line, or by invoking it by the same name as
the desired client command, via a symlink.
svnwrap sets the umask to 002, then launches the appropriate subversion client command. For complicated reasons, this is needed when using
the clients with BDB-format repositories, but not for FSFS-format ones.
EXAMPLES
To create a new BDB-format shared repository (note that FSFS-format shared repositories should also be created this way):
svnwrap svnadmin create --fs-type=bdb /path/to/repo
chgrp -R shared_group /path/to/repo
The following line in /etc/inetd.conf can be used to serve svn:// URLs:
svn stream tcp nowait my_svn_user /usr/bin/svnwrap svnserve svnserve -i -r /srv/svn
The following commands enable use of svnwrap for local file:/// and remote svn+ssh:// URLs:
ln -s /usr/bin/svnwrap /usr/local/bin/svn
ln -s /usr/bin/svnwrap /usr/local/bin/svnserve
svn is used for local file:/// URLs, and svnserve is invoked by remote users of svn+ssh:// URLs.
BUGS
If you symlink the svn binary to svnwrap, as shown in one of the examples, all local users' working copies will also use the new umask. Be
sure to warn your users about this, as security-related surprises are rarely pleasant.
SEE ALSO
svnserve(8), svn(1), svnlook(1).
AUTHOR
svnwrap and this manual were written by Peter Samuelson for the Debian Project (but may be used by others).
2006-04-21 SVNWRAP(1)