hello
im working on a bash script to calculate number of viruses found and log on log file.
ive paste some part of log file that are important for this script:
it has to search the file and find the number in front of the Viruses found phrase, and export sum of these numbers into temp file.
in this case, script pass number 15 into file.log
ive use regix to found but script exit after first result, it cant search all the files content
Sorry for the duplicate thread this one is similar to the one in
https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/88132-awk-sed-script-read-values-parameter-files.html#post302255121
Since there were no responses on the parent thread since it got resolved partially i thought to open the new... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file and I want to sum all the numbers in it.
Example of the file:
0.6714359
-3842.59553830551
I used your forum (https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/74293-how-get-sum-all-lines-file.html) and found a script, what worked for me:
awk '{a+=$0}END{print a}'... (8 Replies)
Hi,
So I'm kinda new to shell scripts and the like. I've picked up quite a bit of use from browsing the forums here but ran into a new one that I can't seem to find an answer for.
I'm looking to parse/find a string AND the next 15 or so charachters that follow the string within a text file... (1 Reply)
Hi friends,
This is sed & awk type question.
I have a text file which has numbers spread all over the file. I want to sum the series of numbers whenever i find it and produce an output file with the sum. For example
###start of input text file ####
abc
def
ghi
1
2
3
4
kjld
random... (3 Replies)
Hi friends,
This is sed & awk type question. It is slightly different from my previous question.
I have a text file which has numbers spread all over the file. I want to sum the series of numbers (but no more than 10 numbers in series) whenever i find it and produce an output file with the... (4 Replies)
Dear everyone,
I have a big file with many information in it, but I just want some lines.
I don't know exactly what the number of the line I want, I only know some part of these line. It all starts with the word 'F(tot :1 )'
I use grep command and find it. It looks like that on the screen:... (3 Replies)
I have a simple text file having payment amount value on each line. At the end of day 'n' number of payments created difference in amount that I need to match from this file.
I have information about how many payments created difference and difference amount. Please help me to build shell... (3 Replies)
I have a file where every line includes four expressions with a caret in the middle (plus some other "words" or fields, always separated by spaces). I would like to extract from this file, all those lines such that each of the four expressions containing a caret appears in at least four different... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: uncleMonty
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
scandeps
SCANDEPS(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation SCANDEPS(1p)NAME
scandeps - Scan file prerequisites
SYNOPSIS
% scandeps *.pm # Print PREREQ_PM section for *.pm
% scandeps -e 'STRING' # Scan an one-liner
% scandeps -B *.pm # Include core modules
% scandeps -V *.pm # Show autoload/shared/data files
% scandeps -R *.pm # Don't recurse
% scandeps -C CACHEFILE # use CACHEFILE to cache dependencies
DESCRIPTION
scandeps is a simple-minded utility that prints out the "PREREQ_PM" section needed by modules.
If you have CPANPLUS installed, modules that are part of an earlier module's distribution with be denoted with "S"; modules without a
distribution name on CPAN are marked with "?".
Also, if the "-B" option is specified, module belongs to a perl distribution on CPAN (and thus uninstallable by "CPAN.pm" or "CPANPLUS.pm")
are marked with "C".
Finally, modules that has loadable shared object files (usually needing a compiler to install) are marked with "X"; with the "-V" flag,
those files (and all other files found) will be listed before the main output. Additionally, all module files that the scanned code depends
on but were not found (and thus not scanned recursively) are listed. These may include genuinely missing modules or false positives. That
means, modules your code does not depend on (on this particular platform) but that were picked up by the heuristic anyway.
OPTIONS -e STRING
Scan STRING as a string containing perl code.
-c Compiles the code and inspects its %INC, in addition to static scanning.
-x Executes the code and inspects its %INC, in addition to static scanning.
-B Include core modules in the output and the recursive search list.
-R Only show dependencies found in the files listed and do not recurse.
-V Verbose mode: Output all files found during the process; show dependencies between modules and availability.
Additionally, warns of any missing dependencies. If you find missing dependencies that aren't really dependencies, you have probably
found false positives.
-C CACHEFILE
Use CACHEFILE to speed up the scanning process by caching dependencies. Creates CACHEFILE if it does not exist yet.
SEE ALSO
Module::ScanDeps, CPANPLUS::Backend, PAR
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Simon Cozens, for suggesting this script to be written.
AUTHORS
Audrey Tang <autrijus@autrijus.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 by Audrey Tang <autrijus@autrijus.org>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See <http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html>
perl v5.14.2 2012-02-24 SCANDEPS(1p)