2012/8/21 Victor Buciuc <[email protected]> > Poti folosi sed: > > [vibu@lola:/nfs/usr/vibu]$ cat > gigel > ana > are > mere > [vibu@lola:/nfs/usr/vibu]$ cat gigel | sed -e '/ana/w gigel.1 \ > /mere/w gigel.2' > ana > are > mere > [vibu@lola:/nfs/usr/vibu]$ cat gigel.1 > ana > [vibu@lola:/nfs/usr/vibu]$ cat gigel.2 > mere >
Dar ceva de genul for q in `cat patterns`; do cat logmare | sed -e '/$q/w q.log' done o merge ? > > > Victor Buciuc > > > 2012/8/21 Dumitru Ciobarcianu <[email protected]> > > > > > > grep -E "string1|string2" > > > > On 21-Aug-12 5:02 PM, Alexandru Balan wrote: > > > Ello, > > > > > > Se da un log (txt) de cativa G din care trebuie sa extrag cam 10 > tipuri de date si, evident, nu as vrea sa-l parsez de 10 ori. String-urile > pe care le caut sunt grupari de X caractere simple (fara spatii, cratime > sau alte chestii care sa trebuiasca sa fie escapate). Fiecare "grep" (daca > grep e scula de folosit) trebuie dumpat in fisierul lui de log . > > > > > > Altfel spus: logmare.log trebuie spart in > > > log-string1.log > > > log-sting2.log > > > s.a.m.d. fara sa-l parsez de zece ori. > > > > > > Ce si cum sa folosec ? Spoonfeeding encouraged ;) > > > > _______________________________________________ > > RLUG mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://lists.lug.ro/mailman/listinfo/rlug > _______________________________________________ > RLUG mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.lug.ro/mailman/listinfo/rlug > _______________________________________________ RLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.lug.ro/mailman/listinfo/rlug
