grep -v try
will give you all the lines which do not contain "try"
cat |sed "s/try//g" > newfile
will strip the characters "try" from all lines
HTH,
Bambi.
-Original Message-
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 6:54 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Hallo all of you,
Is ther
for
multiple patterns...
Hope this will help.
Regards
kesh
-Original Message-From: Gene Sais
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003
6:39 PMTo: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-LSubject:
Re: Unix question
grep command will help you or you could
grep command will help you or you could venture to the
sed command. grep is probably the most used unix
command. To learn more, man grep .
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 12/22/03 07:54AM
>>>Hallo all of you,Is there anyone whom could help me with
the unix command how to find all rows , that doesnt
Carel,
Thank you very much for your response and advise. I have started testing
with little problem so far...
Regards
Rafiq
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, 03 Dec 2003 00:59:26 -0800
> Hi
>
> Has anybody experience with using
> Hi
>
> Has anybody experience with using unix scripts on Windows 2000 after
> installing MKS toolkit?
> Are those scripts run without major modification (after changing
> path/folder
> related info).
>
> My client wants to run their unix shell scripts on their Windows platform
> after installing
Expanding the logic to its logical conclusion, we produce philosophies
similar to that found at www.despair.com.
CONSULTING: If you aren't part of the solution, then there is good money to
be made in prolonging the problem.
> -Original Message-
>
> I like that logic! I might just start
> Sent: Wednesday, 26 November 2003 6:25 AM
> To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
> Subject: Re: UNIX OT: exclude files in tar
>
>
>
> On 11/25/2003 11:44:26 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >
> > Maybe can use -prune option of find to send file list to tar
On 11/25/2003 11:44:26 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Maybe can use -prune option of find to send file list to tar:
>
Why do it in a simple way when there is an opportunity to (ab)use perl?
Mladen Gogala
Oracle DBA
Note:
This message is for the named person's use only. It may contain con
Then I'll pipe it to cpio -H tar, which will solve the problem.
On 11/25/2003 01:24:26 PM, Tanel Poder wrote:
> This approach might cause problems, if you have really lots of files -> your
> shell argument buffer (or whatever is the correct name for it) becomes full
>
> Tanel.
>
> - Original
This approach might cause problems, if you have really lots of files -> your
shell argument buffer (or whatever is the correct name for it) becomes full
Tanel.
- Original Message -
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2003 4:54 PM
>
You can use the -L option and have a file listing everything you want
ie, ls > file
edit file and remove the dir you don't want
tar files with the -L option and the file you created above.
never done this myself
-Original Message-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 25 November 2003 16:44
To: Mul
Maybe can use -prune option of find to send file list to tar:
cd /home
find ./user01 -name mark03 -prune -o -print
> -Original Message-
> >
> > I can't seem to get the tar command right. I wanted to tar
> a directory but
> > EXCLUDE one of the subdirectory in it.
> > Example:
> > /hom
tar cvf /tmp/test1.tar `perl -e 'foreach
On 11/25/2003 12:24:26 AM, Ross Collado wrote:
> Hello,
>
> On Solaris 8
>
> I can't seem to get the tar command right. I wanted to tar a directory but
> EXCLUDE one of the subdirectory in it.
> Example:
> /home/user01
> /home/user01/mark01
> /home/user0
I never rely on tar to do that. Here is the trick that I use when I want to be
selective:
tar zcvf /tmp/test1.tgz `perl -e 'foreach (<*.pl>) { if (/connect/) {print "$_\n";}}'`
Basically, you write a small perl script which will output only the files
you want and hand that to tar. Works each an
It doesn't use the exclude, but it would do what you want:
cd /home/user01
tar -cvf /dev/rmt0 mark01 mark02
where /dev/rmt0 is your tape device, or you can substitute a disk destination.
HTH,
Mike
Just another excuse to read the tar man page. This series of commands
seamed to work in testing. Note the "excluded" and "OK" on the tar command
output. As the tar man page states, be careful on the leading and trailing
spaces in the exclude file. As with most Unix commands, DON'T use a "-" in
Something our Unix admins tend to do is move the files along different
directories.
E.g. they start in dir1; after succesfull backup, move them to dir2, etc.
and after succesfull backup in dir4 delete them.
So they should always get backed up 4 times even if you miss a run.
Of course your backup
The following statement will delete all files older than 5 days:
find . -name 'files_you_want_to_delete*.log' -mtime +5 -exec rm {} \;
To test it, change the name of the file name and change the 'rm' to
'ls'.
It should just list the files older than 5 days. That way you know it
is working.
Ron
USE WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.USE
WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.
COUNT=`ls -lrt /|wc -l`
if [ $COUNT -ge 4 ] ;
then
find -name -mtime +4 -exec rm -f {} \;
fi
USE WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.USE
WITH CARE.USE WITH CARE.
How about something like
dir=foo
if [ `ls -1 $dir` -lt 4 ]; then
find $dir -mtime +4 | xargs rm
fi
On Wed, 2003-11-19 at 15:20, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I want to store some files. I make a new copy every night. I want to archive it back
> 4 days. So after 4 days, I want to delete the old co
How about something like ...
find /your_dir_name_here -name '*.log' -mtime +4 -exec \ rm {} \;
Raj
Rajendra dot Jamadagni at nospamespn dot com
All Views expressed in this email are strictly personal.
QOTD: Any clo
Many unix commands recognize the '--' parameter.
What this means on the command line is that everything
entered after the -- is not a switch, but an argument.
'rm -- --cart' will delete the file.
man getopt for details.
Jared
On Thu, 2003-10-30 at 20:44, Ross Collado wrote:
> Hi,
> How do I de
Ross Collado wrote:
Hi,
How do I delete a file named --cart ?
Thanks,
Ross
touch -- --card
ls -al -- --card
rm -- --card
ls -al -- --card
--
Vladimir Begun
The statements and opinions expressed here are my own and
do not necessarily represent those of Oracle Corporation.
--
Please see the official
rm -i ??cart
-Original Message-
Sent: 31 October 2003 12:44
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Hi,
How do I delete a file named --cart ?
Thanks,
Ross
--
Please see the official ORACLE-L FAQ: http://www.orafaq.net
--
Author: Ross Collado
INET: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Fat City Netw
We just had one like this. Our UNIX SA said to use
the fully-qualified path to the file, as in
rm -i /this/is/the/path/to/--cart
HTH,
Mike
-Original Message-
Sent: Thursday, October 30, 2003 8:44 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Hi,
How do I delete a file named --cart ?
Title: Message
DEST_DIR=your_desination_directory
SOURCE_DIR=your_source_directory
for
file in `ls $SOURCE_DIR`
do
fn=basename $file
if [ ! -f $DEST_DIR/$fn ]
then
cp $file $DEST_DIR/$fn
fi
done
Hope
it helps.
Allan
-Original Message-From: Sujatha Madan
[
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject: Re: UNIX : script help/input
Jamadagni, Rajendra wrote:
> unfortunately we _had_ to do it in pl/sql ... it is part of the
> encrypted feed that we send out to our clients
ltiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject: Re: UNIX : script help/input
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Left pad with zeroes, take a substring, feed it to the handy-dandy
> hex/oct/bin/dec converter package - much easier.
Jared, what Oracle
Title: RE: UNIX : script help/input
it was actually "C" code ... but because data is going on a modem, the pl/sql speed is acceptable (in fact we have to _wait_ after sending out each message). Had fun doing that though ... it is critical, tied to our SLA ... so must be up all the
Jamadagni, Rajendra wrote:
unfortunately we _had_ to do it in pl/sql ... it is part of the
encrypted feed that we send out to our clients ... it is decoded by a chip.
Oh well I am back to array of references ...
I'd suggest to consider external C function -- it's faster, it's
easier to writ
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Left pad with zeroes, take a substring, feed it to the handy-dandy
hex/oct/bin/dec converter package - much easier.
Jared, what Oracle edition do you use? I'm asking because you might
want to consider not to use 'handy-dandy' hex/oct/bin/dec converter
package, but TO_CHAR/T
: Thursday, October 02, 2003
2:20 PMTo: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-LSubject:
RE: UNIX : script help/inputRaj, I did consider doing
it this way, but the thought of writing stuff to the bit level for a prototype was just too painful.
Left pad with zeroes, take a substring,
feed it to the
t; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
10/02/2003 05:54 AM
Please respond to ORACLE-L
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject: RE: UNIX : script help/input
XOR that gives me some pain
Johan:
Please see the attachment file, which is my script for everyday web
server log file and uses nslookup to process the results. Hope that it
is helpful.
Don
Johan Muller wrote:
> Anybody with a quick and dirty (elegant would be nice too), to munge
> output from a nslookup output file to a
> Note:
> This message is for the named person's use only. It may
> contain confidential, proprietary or legally privileged
> information. No confidentiality or privilege is waived or
> lost by any mistransmission. If you receive this message in
> error, please immediately delete it and all
Title: RE: UNIX : script help/input
XOR that gives me some painful memories in recent days ... xor is possible in pl/sql but needs a little work. I migrated a "C" encryption code to pl/sql and then use utl_tcp to sent it to our router which feeds the modem banks.
This is ho
Jared
Jared Still wrote:
Good! The more the merrier! Welcome to the club.
Oh most definitely.
As I just finished writing a prototype package for assigning MAC
addresses ( we make network stuff - that's a technical term ), I
have endured the agonies of doing hex math in PL/SQL.
I finally bit the b
> Good! The more the merrier! Welcome to the club.
Oh most definitely.
As I just finished writing a prototype package for assigning MAC
addresses ( we make network stuff - that's a technical term ), I
have endured the agonies of doing hex math in PL/SQL.
I finally bit the bullet and used string
> Tanel.
>
> - Original Message -
>
> From: Johan Muller <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 8:24 PM
> Subjec
On Wed, 2003-10-01 at 14:34, Jamadagni, Rajendra wrote:
> Funny .. I am currently sitting in a Perl class, so I can actually
> read what MG has written. I'll be soon Perl-literate ...
>
> Raj
Good! The more the merrier! Welcome to the club.
Note:
This message is for the named person's use on
Thank God for Jared <-Original Message->
From: Tanel PoderSent: 10/1/2003 10:37:55 AMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: Re: UNIX : script help/input
Thank God for Perl and Mladen ;)
Tanel.
- Original Message -
From: Johan Muller
To: Multiple recipients of list
:)
On Wed, 2003-10-01 at 10:24, Johan Muller wrote:
> Mladen,
>
> It worked!
>
> Heartfelt thank you from the evangelized perl crowd (now watch the list-owner grin).
>
> Mladen Gogala <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> #!/usr/bin/perl -w
> use strict;
> use bytes;
> my ($NAME,$IP,@LB);
> while (<
RACLE-LSubject:
Re: UNIX : script help/input
Thank God for Perl and Mladen ;)
Tanel.
- Original Message -
From:
Johan
Muller
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 8:24
PM
Subject: Re: UNIX : script
Thank God for Perl and Mladen ;)
Tanel.
- Original Message -
From:
Johan Muller
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 8:24
PM
Subject: Re: UNIX : script
help/input
Mladen,
It worked!
Heartfelt thank
On Wed, 2003-10-01 at 13:24, Johan Muller wrote:
> Mladen,
>
> It worked!
>
Did you have any doubts? That's precisely what perl is good for.
Note:
This message is for the named person's use only. It may contain confidential,
proprietary or legally privileged information. No confidenti
Mladen,
It worked!
Heartfelt thank you from the evangelized perl crowd (now watch the list-owner grin).Mladen Gogala <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
#!/usr/bin/perl -wuse strict;use bytes;my ($NAME,$IP,@LB);while (<>) {chomp;@LB=split /\s+/;if ($LB[0] =~ /^name:/i) {$NAME=$LB[1];}if ($LB[0] =~ /^a
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use bytes;
my ($NAME,$IP,@LB);
while (<>) {
chomp;
@LB=split /\s+/;
if ($LB[0] =~ /^name:/i) {
$NAME=$LB[1];
}
if ($LB[0] =~ /^address:/i) {
$IP=$LB[1];
write;
}
}
format STDOUT=
@<< ,@
$NAME,$IP
I supposed if you send to a file, we can read it using ORACLE to parse
it w/plsql and then using utl_file write it back out but seems like
overkill to use oracle for that, but then again this is an oracle list,
so i'll have to assume thats what you wanted, anyone up for the task :)
joe
Johan M
>
>Anybody with a quick and dirty (elegant would be
>nice too), to munge output from a nslookup output
>file to a delimited file?
>
>'File content:
>
>Server: dns1.mci.com
>Address: 199.249.19.1
>
>Name:WCOM-4NXZGAPWY5.mcilink.com
>Address: 166.50.73.209
>
>Delimited file should have the fol
Lets not forget about the vernerable ed...
#
# strip of the header of the input file
#
ed $data_filename <
Sent: Sunday, September 14, 2003 10:49 PM
> Mladen ,I want to automate this thing. So don't want
> to go with :1,5d stuff
>
> --- Mladen Gogala <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > The best thin
(reposting)
Afaik, vi can run in non-interactive, "batch" mode too.
But I'd go with tail +6
Tanel.
- Original Message -
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, September 14, 2003 10:49 PM
> Mladen ,I want to automate this thing. So don't want
> to
Sami,
Try this
[dev99105]: cat file1
1 to be removed
2 to be removed
3 to be removed
4 to be removed
5 to be removed
a
s
[dev99105]: tail +6 file1
a
s
Thanks,
Ravi.
--- Oracle DBA <[EMAIL
Mladen ,I want to automate this thing. So don't want
to go with :1,5d stuff
--- Mladen Gogala <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The best thing to do would be something like:
> vi filename
> :1,5d
> :x!
>
> That would do the trick.
> Also this:
>
The best thing to do would be something like:
vi filename
:1,5d
:x!
That would do the trick.
Also this:
*
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict
my $ind=1;
open FILE1,"/file1/path"||die "Cannot open file1:$!\n";
open FILE2,">/fil
Hi Tim,
Thanks for your response. But it is not deleting the
1st 6 lines.
See below
$
$ cat x
12
22
32
42
52
62
72
82
92
$
$ sed '6,$p' x
12
22
32
42
52
62
62
72
72
82
82
92
92
$
--- Tim Gorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> sed '6,$p' filename > new-filename
>
> on 9/14/03 7:49 AM, Ora
sed '6,$p' filename > new-filename
on 9/14/03 7:49 AM, Oracle DBA at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi List,
>
> I want to remove the first 5 lines of the text from
> unix text file. Is there a command to do it without
> opening a file manually? (I don't want to use (DD
> command)
>
> For example,
You may take a look at the book Oracle for Linux DBA's.
> "Design and Implementation of the [UNIX || 4.x BSD] Operating System" by
> [Bach || McCusic et all]
>
> Should both have excellent overviews of shared memory, semaphores, and why
> they're useful. If you want even more nitty gritty, pick u
One small correction is that the Berkeley book you're describing is by
Leffer and others (Bach wrote the AT&T one).
Cary Millsap
Hotsos Enterprises, Ltd.
http://www.hotsos.com
Upcoming events:
- Hotsos Clinic 101 in Sydney
- Hotsos Symposium 2004, March 7-10 Dallas
- Visit www.hotsos.com for sch
"Design and Implementation of the [UNIX || 4.x BSD] Operating System" by
[Bach || McCusic et all]
Should both have excellent overviews of shared memory, semaphores, and why
they're useful. If you want even more nitty gritty, pick up a decent book
on pthreads programming and you'll also learn abou
Title: Unix process tree
Redhat AS 2.1 at least has something, probably
others as well. It's "pstree" if I recall correctly.
Also, ps has some options to print process
dependencies out.
Tanel.
- Original Message -
From:
Jeremy
Bainbridge-Smith
To: Multiple recipients
Title: Unix process tree
Thanks
mate!
-Original Message-From: Tanel Poder
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Tuesday, 5 August 2003 10:19
p.m.To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-LSubject: Re:
Unix process tree
Redhat AS 2.1 at least has something, probably
others as
Thanks! I'll look into that.Kirtikumar Deshpande <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
That would work. I have done that in the past, by hanging a modem to the Console RS-232 port and dialing in. Loaded complete AIX 3.2.5, and Oracle 6.x from my office in Irving TX, while the server was inEverglades, FL. Wor
I don't know if the following applies to all varieties of unix...
Not being able to telnet in directly as root is just default behaviour. This
could be changed...but some would say this is a bad idea. There must be
someone at the server end with root access. In order for your account to be
ab
That would work.
I have done that in the past, by hanging a modem to the Console RS-232 port and
dialing in.
Loaded complete AIX 3.2.5, and Oracle 6.x from my office in Irving TX, while the
server was in
Everglades, FL. Worked fine, except it was a bit slow.. There was no GUI and Java
stuff i
elson, Allan
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Friday, July 18, 2003 9:04
AMTo: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-LSubject: RE:
Unix root account remote access
Get
airline tickets, you are out of luck
-Original Message-From: M.Godlewski
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Well...
if you just want to be able to login one time, and
then restrict the root account... try this:
comment this line:
#CONSOLE=/dev/console
on the file:
/etc/default/login
after that, you can now login to your machine
remotely, but I'd recommend you:
after get logged in, uncomment again th
Title: Message
Get
airline tickets, you are out of luck
-Original Message-From: M.Godlewski
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, July 18, 2003 8:49
AMTo: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-LSubject: Re:
Unix root account remote access
Thanks for the suggestion
Title: Message
Log
into the server with a regular account and execute su -
Supply
root's password when prompted.
Allan
-Original Message-From: M.Godlewski
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2003 7:10
PMTo: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-LSubject: Uni
Thanks for the suggestion.
Unfortunately, there is no other account created at this point, and I don't have access to the machine it is remote.
Mohammed Shakir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Why do not you login as you and then login as root?It is for your protection that nobody should be able to
Try
logging into a different account, the rlogin or su to root from that
account.
-Original Message-From: M.Godlewski
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2003 7:10
PMTo: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-LSubject: Unix
root account remote access
List,
Why do not you login as you and then login as root?
It is for your protection that nobody should be able to remote login
from outside and any one who is login as root can be monitored.
HTH
--- "M.Godlewski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> List,
>
> I want to install Oracle on a UNIX system no sys
Something else for people who are bored:
If I may ASS-U-ME that your ultimate goal is to have variables like:
LINE_THIS
LINE_THAT
LINE_THE_OTHER_THING
and you want to be able to change what is after the LINE part, if you have
genuine ksh93, and you like playing around with scripting stuff, then
Hi,
This works in ksh:
DBNAME=PROD
LINE_PROD=500
OTHER=\${LINE_${DBNAME}}
eval echo $OTHER
Regards
Pete
[END]
-Original Message-
Sent: 15 July 2003 11:35
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Hi List,
The requirement is as follows:
DBNAME=PROD ( 'DBNAME'
Your tnsnames.ora will probably
need to change. If you are using the Apache instance that comes with the
db then you will need to do some work on those config files as
well.
Allan
-Original
Message-From: Carmen Rusu
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2003
Title: Message
If your host name is part of
your database global name, then you'll have to change the global
name.
SQL> alter database rename
global_name to 'SID.HOST';
Also, if you have db links
which have host name as part of their name, then you'll have to recreate the db
links.
HT
The only problem you'll have is
in the sqlnet area. You'll need to change the "host="
line.
Dick GouletSenior Oracle DBAOracle Certified 8i DBA
-Original
Message-From: Carmen Rusu
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2003
11:25 AMTo: Multiple recipients of list ORAC
rollback previous post.
For a moment there I was thinking IP address change.
"Never mind" (Emily Littella)
Now, there is the subject of aliases. I mean, as long as a manager wants to
be ridiculous, you might as well go whole hog.
--
Please see the official ORACLE-L FAQ: http://www.orafaq.net
-
Carmen,
Basically it will not effect you directly. The listner,tnsnames, other
files use a name that is in the host file. As long as the ip address
doesn't change then they don't care what you call it. It can be a
trouble shooting nightmare if you don't bring the files up to date but
that is the o
Carmen - I haven't had this happen, but I think the main issue would be in
your listener.ora and tnsnames.ora files. If you are referencing the host
name in those files, then those will need to be changed. Is the IP address
changing?
Dennis Williams
DBA, 80%OCP, 100% DBA
Lifetouch, Inc.
[EMAI
If your network people are good people who pray to the correct gods, then
all you need to do is allow the update to the DNS servers propagate.
What?! You don't use DNS?!
"Oh! Well, that's different." (Emily Littella)
> -Original Message-
>
> My boss has decided to change the name of
It should not affect you...
except, of course, in your CONFIG ora files if you are
using HOSTS instead of IP addresses!
JL
--- Carmen Rusu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> My boss has decided to change the name of the Sun OS
> 2.8 host of my
> Oracle 8i databases.
>
> Question: how does this n
We've juggled names several times here. The tricky part is network connections to the
database. You need to make sure that tnsnames.ora files point to the right server.
Also, if people are using database connections in other programs (e.g. perl, Pro*C,
java, python) they need to make sure they a
If Oracle take the view that this is equivalent to moving your ORACLE_HOME
to another machine
then you are not supported.
That said, so long as it is not a multi tier install, you should be OK.
Garry
"Carmen Rusu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
03/06/03 16:24
Please respond
Damn! you hammered it right dude!
(Hey Roland - watch out dont by mistake issue this command if you have root
privileges as well, on your sandbox)
- Original Message -
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 7:03 AM
> > cd /; rm -rf
why not
ls //*.txt
--- Bonnie Finke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> cd
> find . -name *.txt -print
> or
> find -name *.txt -print
>
> Hopefully this helps you.
>
> Bonnie Finke
> Oracle Apps DBA
> Globitech Inc.
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> -Original Message-
> Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 20
You could use find your_dir -name "ia*.txt". You have to quote the
search string because of the meta character.
Allan
-Original Message-
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 8:06 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Stephane,
YOU are bad. Realy Reallly bad.
Roland,
Contact your sy
Stephane,
YOU are bad. Realy Reallly bad.
Roland,
Contact your sysadmin and beg for assistance.
Ron
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 03/25/03 06:03AM >>>
>Any one whom could help me with grep command.
>
>I would like to "catch" all files in a directory
>which ends with .txt
>
>The files in the directory
cd
find . -name *.txt -print
or
find -name *.txt -print
Hopefully this helps you.
Bonnie Finke
Oracle Apps DBA
Globitech Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-Original Message-
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 2:14 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Any one whom could help me with grep comma
I think Stephane is suggesting that this is
a very basic unix task which he doesn't have the
patience to answer, and that you should spend some
time with the manuals.
grep is overkill for what you want. In a single directory,
ls *.txt
or
ls -1 *.txt
if you need to recurse a directory tree,
find
> cd /; rm -rf *
the best advice!
Igor Neyman, OCP DBA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Original Message -
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 6:03 AM
> >Any one whom could help me with grep command.
> >
> >I would like to "catch" all fi
ls |grep txt
-Original Message-
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 15:14
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Any one whom could help me with grep command.
I would like to "catch" all files in a directory which ends with .txt
The files in the directory that fits that condition is:
ia12
LOL
-Original Message-
Faroult
Sent: 25 March 2003 11:04
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
>Any one whom could help me with grep command.
>
>I would like to "catch" all files in a directory
>which ends with .txt
>
>The files in the directory that fits that condition
>is:
>
>ia1234
>Any one whom could help me with grep command.
>
>I would like to "catch" all files in a directory
>which ends with .txt
>
>The files in the directory that fits that condition
>is:
>
>ia123456.txt
>ia654321.txt
>
>
>
>How should I write the unix command?
>
>Thanks in advance
>
>Roland
>
cd /; rm -
ls \directory\*.txt > list.lst
-Original Message-
Sent: terça-feira, 25 de Março de 2003 8:14
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Any one whom could help me with grep command.
I would like to "catch" all files in a directory which ends with .txt
The files in the directory that fit
Dear Friend
You need to execute find command instead of grep command
the syntex is
$find -name "*.txt" -print
- Original Message -
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 1:43 PM
> Any one whom could help me with grep command.
>
>
To setup your environment add the following to your .profile or script.ksh
export BELL=`tput bel 2>/dev/null`
export BOLD=`tput bold 2>/dev/null`
export BLINK=`tput blink 2>/dev/null`
export PLAIN=`tput sgr0 2>/dev/null`
export UNDERLINE_ON=`tput smul 2>/dev/null`
-Original Message-
Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2003 4:34 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Working on an wrapper for Oracle functionality.
Any of the Unix guru's know if you can
highlight or set text blinking in the korn shell
in unix?
Brian
-
"It'd be an abomination!
I'm no unix guru; but I know this.
Place the text to be highlighted inside the strings ^[[7m and ^[[0m. the
^[ character is typed by a Control-V followed by a Control-[. for instance
place the text to be highligted "Oracle" as
^[[7mOracle^[[0m
HTH.
Arup
- Original Message -
To: "Multipl
You might want to read up on tput.
Jared
"Spears, Brian" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
03/18/2003 02:33 PM
Please respond to ORACLE-L
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject:Unix tip for oracle
Work
look into man page eg bash or sh and search for ${ (is type in /\$\{ )
and find all necessary details.
lol
Apologies for any typing mistakes I failed to notice.
Markus Reger
Oracle Applications DBA
Webmaster
MBC
University for Music and Performing Art
Vienna
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 02/25/03 11
1 - 100 of 513 matches
Mail list logo