On 29 December 2010 c. 04:12:34 Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
tail -r
tail(1) saves all data in memory. So if you want to reverse very big file
(say, some sort of log) you'll have to construct monsters with help of
awk/perl/etc.
--
Best wishes,
Vadim Zhukov
A: Because it messes up the order in
On Wed, Dec 29, 2010 at 11:03:22AM +0300, Vadim Zhukov wrote:
| On 29 December 2010 c. 04:12:34 Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
| tail -r
|
| tail(1) saves all data in memory. So if you want to reverse very big file
| (say, some sort of log) you'll have to construct monsters with help of
| awk/perl/etc.
On 29 December 2010 c. 13:12:21 Paul de Weerd wrote:
On Wed, Dec 29, 2010 at 11:03:22AM +0300, Vadim Zhukov wrote:
| On 29 December 2010 c. 04:12:34 Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
| tail -r
|
| tail(1) saves all data in memory. So if you want to reverse very big
| file (say, some sort of log) you'll
tail -r