I have below shell script which produce output as desired.
RuleNum=$1
cat input.txt |awk -v var=$RuleNum '$1==var {out=$1; for(i=NF;i >=0;i--)if($i~/bps/){sub("bps","",$i);out=out" "$i} print out;out=""}'
./downup.sh 20
20 BW-IN:2560000 BW-OUT:2048000
i want output as below
./downup.sh 20
256000 2048000
./downup.sh 36
2560000 2048000
below is the input.txt
20 name:abc addr:203.45.247.247/255.255.255.255 WDW-THRESH:12 BW-OUT:10000000bps BW-IN:15000000bps STATSDEVICE:test247 STATS:Enabled (4447794/0) <IN OUT>
25 name:xyz160 addr:203.45.233.160/255.255.255.224 STATSDEVICE:test160 STATS:Enabled priority:pass-thru (1223803328/0) <IN OUT>
37 name:testgrp2 <B> WDW-THRESH:8 BW-BOTH:192000bps STATSDEVICE:econetgrp2 STATS:Enabled (0/0) <Group> START:NNNNNNN-255-0 STOP:NNNNNNN-255-0
62 name:blahblahl54 addr:203.45.225.54/255.255.255.255 WDW-THRESH:5 BWLINK:cbb256 BW-BOTH:256000bps STATSDEVICE:hellol54 STATS:Enabled (346918/77) <IN OUT>
Add sub("BW.*:", "", $i) after the existing sub().
And cat isn't necessary. Just put the filename at the end of the line:
awk ... input.txt
To eliminate the rule number from the output, remove out = $1;.
Here is the result with an addition to avoid printing a space at the beginning of each line:
awk -v var=$RuleNum '$1==var {for(i = NF; i >= 0; i--) if ($i ~ /bps/) {sub("bps","",$i); sub("BW.*:", "", $i); out = out delim $i; delim = OFS} print out; out = delim = ""}'
Related
I have 2 files with 2 million lines.
I need to compare 2 columns in 2 different files and I want to print the lines of the 2 files where there are equal items.
this awk code works, but it does not print lines from the 2 files:
awk 'NR == FNR {a[$3]; next}$3 in a' file1.txt file2.txt
file1.txt
0001 00000001 084010800001080
0001 00000010 041140000100004
file2.txt
2451 00000009 401208008004000
2451 00000010 084010800001080
desired output:
file1[$1]-file2[$1] file1[$2]-file2[$2] $3 ( same on both files )
0001-2451 00000001-00000010 084010800001080
how to do this in awk or perl?
Assuming your $3 values are unique within each input file as shown in your sample input/output:
$ cat tst.awk
NR==FNR {
foos[$3] = $1
bars[$3] = $2
next
}
$3 in foos {
print foos[$3] "-" $1, bars[$3] "-" $2, $3
}
$ awk -f tst.awk file1.txt file2.txt
0001-2451 00000001-00000010 084010800001080
I named the arrays foos[] and bars[] as I don't know what the first 2 columns of your input actually represent - choose a more meaningful name.
With your shown samples, please try following awk code. Fair warning
I haven't tested it yet with millions of lines.
awk '
FNR == NR{
arr1[$3]=$0
next
}
($3 in arr1){
split(arr1[$3],arr2)
print (arr2[1]"-"$1,arr2[2]"-"$2,$3)
delete arr2
}
' file1.txt file2.txt
Explanation: Adding detailed explanation for above.
awk ' ##Starting awk program from here.
FNR == NR{ ##checking condition which will be TRUE when first Input_file is being read.
arr1[$3]=$0 ##Creating arr1 array with value of $1 OFS $2 and $3
next ##next will skip all further statements from here.
}
($3 in arr1){ ##checking if $3 is present in arr1 then do following.
split(arr1[$3],arr2) ##Splitting value of arr1 into arr2.
print (arr2[1]"-"$1,arr2[2]"-"$2,$3) ##printing values as per requirement of OP.
delete arr2 ##Deleting arr2 array here.
}
' file1.txt file2.txt ##Mentioning Input_file names here.
If you have two massive files, you may want to use sort, join and awk to produce your output without having to have the first file mostly in memory.
Based on your example, this pipe would do that:
join -1 3 -2 3 <(sort -k3 -n file1) <(sort -k3 -n file2) | awk '{printf("%s-%s %s-%s %s\n",$2,$4,$3,$5,$1)}'
Prints:
0001-2451 00000001-00000010 084010800001080
If your files are that big, you might want to avoid storing the data in memory. It's a whole lot of comparisons, 2 million lines times 2 million lines = 4 * 1012 comparisons.
use strict;
use warnings;
use feature 'say';
my $file1 = shift;
my $file2 = shift;
open my $fh1, "<", $file1 or die "Cannot open '$file1': $!";
while (<$fh1>) {
my #F = split;
open my $fh2, "<", $file2 or die "Cannot open '$file2': $!";
# for each line of file1 file2 is reopened and read again
while (my $cmp = <$fh2>) {
my #C = split ' ', $cmp;
if ($F[2] eq $C[2]) { # check string equality
say "$F[0]-$C[0] $F[1]-$C[1] $F[2]";
}
}
}
With your rather limited test set, I get the following output:
0001-2451 00000001-00000010 084010800001080
Python: tested with 2.000.000 rows each file
d = {}
with open('1.txt', 'r') as f1, open('2.txt', 'r') as f2:
for line in f1:
if not line: break
c0,c1,c2 = line.split()
d[(c2)] = (c0,c1)
for line in f2:
if not line: break
c0,c1,c2 = line.split()
if (c2) in d: print("{}-{} {}-{} {}".format(d[(c2)][0], c0, d[(c2)][1], c1, c2))
$ time python3 comapre.py
1001-2001 10000001-20000001 224010800001084
1042-2013 10000042-20000013 224010800001096
real 0m3.555s
user 0m3.234s
sys 0m0.321s
Good morning
I got 2 files and I want to join them.
I am using awk but I can use other command in bash.
the problem is that when I try to awk some records that are not in both files do not appear in the final file.
file1
supply_DBReplication, 27336
test_after_upgrade, 0
test_describe_topic, 0
teste2e_funcional, 0
test_latency, 0
test_replication, 0
ticket_dl, 90010356798
ticket_dl.replica_cloudera, 0
traza_auditoria_eventos, 0
Ezequiel1,473789563
Ezequiel2,526210437
Ezequiel3,1000000000
file2
Domimio2,supply_bdsupply-stock-valorado-sherpa
Domimio8,supply_DBReplication
Domimio9,test_after_upgrade
Domimio7,test_describe_topic
Domimio3,teste2e_funcional
,test_latency
,test_replication
,ticket_dl
,ticket_dl.replica_cloudera
,traza_auditoria_eventos
And I wish:
file3
Domimio2,0
Domimio8,27336
Domimio9,0
Domimio7,0
Domimio3,0
NoDomain,0
NoDomain,0
NoDomain,90010356798
NoDomain,0
NoDomain,0
NoDomain,473789563
NoDomain,526210437
NoDomain,1000000000
I am executing this
awk 'NR==FNR {T[$1]=FS $2; next} {print $1 T[$2]}' FS="," file1 file2
But i got:
Domimio2, 0
Domimio8, 27336
Domimio9, 0
Domimio7, 0
Domimio3, 0
, 0
, 0
, 90010356798
, 0
, 23034
, 0
How can i do it?
Thank you
Assumptions:
join criteria: file1.field#1 == file2.field#2
output format: file2.field#1 , file1,field#2
file2 - if field#1 is blank then replace with NoDomain
file2.field#2 - if no match in file1.field#1 then output file2.field#1 + 0
file1.field#1 - if no match in file2.field#2 then output NoDomain + file1.field#2 (sorted by field#2 values)
One GNU awk idea:
awk '
BEGIN { FS=OFS="," }
NR==FNR { gsub(" ","",$2) # strip blanks from field #2
a[$1]=$2
next
}
{ $1 = ($1 == "") ? "NoDomain" : $1 # if file2.field#1 is missing then set to "NoDomain"
print $1,a[$2]+0
delete a[$2] # delete file1 entry so we do not print again in the END{} block
}
END { PROCINFO["sorted_in"]="#val_num_asc" # any entries leftover from file1 (ie, no matches) then sort by value and ...
for (i in a)
print "NoDomain",a[i] # print to stdout
}
' file1 file2
NOTE: GNU awk is required for the use of PROCINFO["sorted_in"]; if sorting of the file1 leftovers is not required then PROCINFO["sorted_in"]="#val_num_asc" can be removed from the code
This generates:
Domimio2,0
Domimio8,27336
Domimio9,0
Domimio7,0
Domimio3,0
NoDomain,0
NoDomain,0
NoDomain,90010356798
NoDomain,0
NoDomain,0
NoDomain,473789563
NoDomain,526210437
NoDomain,1000000000
I want to concatenate a array into a string in gawk
have the array a [ ABC, DEF, GHI ]
and want a string like "ABC DEF GHI"
here I simplified the pipe feeding with 'echo' for demonstration purpouses:
test... working OK (no concatenation, only output)
#(echo ABC & echo DEF & echo GHI) | gawk '{a[$0]++} END { for( f in a ) print f; }'
now try to concatenate
#(echo ABC & echo DEF & echo GHI) | gawk '{a[$0]++} END { for( f in a ) b=(b f); print b; }'
just returns the 1st string in the array 'a'...
?any ideas on how to do this...
If you're trying to print the concatenated values of a Unix shell array such as created by:
$ a=(ABC DEF GHI)
then just do:
$ echo "${a[*]}"
ABC DEF GHI
If you want to concatenate multiple input lines as produced by:
$ printf '%s\n' "${a[#]}"
ABC
DEF
GHI
with awk for some reason then there's several options including:
$ printf '%s\n' "${a[#]}" | awk '{printf "%s%s", (NR>1 ? OFS : ""), $0} END{print ""}'
ABC DEF GHI
$ printf '%s\n' "${a[#]}" | awk '{b=(NR>1 ? b OFS : "") $0} END{print b}'
ABC DEF GHI
$ printf '%s\n' "${a[#]}" | awk '{a[NR]=$0} END{for (i=1; i<=NR; i++) b=(i>1 ? b OFS : "") a[i]; print b}'
ABC DEF GHI
$ printf '%s\n' "${a[#]}" | awk '{a[NR]=$0} END{for (i=1; i<=NR; i++) printf "%s%s", (i>1 ? OFS : ""), a[i]; print ""}'
ABC DEF GHI
If none of that is what you're trying to do then please edit your question to clarify your requirements.
I have this input text file:
Pedro Paulo da Silva
22 years old
Brazil
Bruce Mackenzie
30 years old
United States of America
Lee Dong In
26 years old
South Korea
The name of the person is always the first line of the file (and the first line after the empty line /n).
I have to do this output (ignoring everything except the names in the first lines):
PedroPdS
BruceM
LeeDI
Don't know how to do that with awk. I just know that awk 'print {$number}' will grab the column $number and that's how I'm supposed to grab their names.
I've searched here and found this: sed -e 's/$/ /' -e 's/\([^ ]\)[^ ]* /\1/g' -e 's/^ *//'
But I have to use awk.
Would you please try the following:
awk -v RS="" -F '\n' ' # records are separated on blank lines by setting RS to null
{
n = split($1, b, " ") # split the name on spaces
init = b[1] # the first name
for (i = 2; i <= n; i++) # loop over the remaining
init = init substr(b[i], 1, 1) # append the initial
print init
}' input.txt
Output:
PedroPdS
BruceM
LeeDI
With your shown samples, please try following once.
awk '
!NF{
count=0
next
}
++count==1{
printf("%s%s",$1,NF==1?ORS:"")
for(i=2;i<=NF;i++){
printf("%s%s",substr($i,1,1),i==NF?ORS:"")
}
}' Input_file
Explanation: Adding detailed explanation for above.
awk ' ##Starting awk program from here.
!NF{ ##Checking if line is empty then do following.
count=0 ##Setting count to 0 here.
next ##next will skip all further statements from here.
}
++count==1{ ##Checking condition if count is 1 then do following.
printf("%s%s",$1,NF==1?ORS:"") ##Using printf to print $1 followed by new line OR nothing.
for(i=2;i<=NF;i++){ ##Starting a for loop here.
printf("%s%s",substr($i,1,1),i==NF?ORS:"") ##Using printf to print sub string of current line from field 2 to last field of line and printing only 1st character of line.
}
}' Input_file ##Mentioning Input_file name here.
I would use GNU AWK for this task following way, let file.txt content be
Pedro Paulo da Silva
22 years old
Brazil
Bruce Mackenzie
30 years old
United States of America
Lee Dong In
26 years old
South Korea
then
awk '{if(prevline==""){print gensub(/ ([[:alpha:]])[[:alpha:]]+/, "\\1", "g")};prevline=$0}' file.txt
output
PedroPdS
BruceM
LeeDI
Explanation: there are two things to do, first select which lines to print, then change their content into initials. For first I check if previous line (prevline) is empty string, GNU AWK if variable was not set earlier treat it as empty string for comparison with another string, so condition is meet for first line, then after processing each line I set prevline to line content ($0) so in next turn it does hold previous line. For conversion into initials I harness gensub function - I instruct AWK to replace space-letter-letters using letter and print such changed line.
(tested in gawk 4.2.1)
$ cat input
Pedro Paulo da Silva
22 years old
Brazil
Bruce Mackenzie
30 years old
United States of America
Lee Dong In
26 years old
South Korea
$ awk '!a{ printf "%s", $1;
for( i = 2; i <= NF; i++ ) printf("%c", $i);
printf "\n"; a=1}
/^$/{a=0}' input
PedroPdS
BruceM
LeeDI
You can try this:
awk -F ' ' 'BEGIN {X = 1} NR == X{print $1 substr($2, 1, 1) substr($3, 1, 1) substr($4, 1, 1); X += 4}'
Another potential option is:
awk '/[0-9]/{print p} {p=$1 substr($2, 1, 1) substr($3, 1, 1) substr($4, 1, 1) substr($5, 1, 1)}' file
Another variation with a mix from the existing answers.
awk '{
if (!x) { # Variable x is empty at the start or set to empty line
res=$1 # Set res to field 1
for(i=2; i<=NF;i++) { # Loop the rest of the fields starting at field 2
res = res substr($i, 1, 1) # Concat the first char from each field with res
}
print res
}
x=$0 # Set x variable to the value of the current line
}
' file
Output
PedroPdS
BruceM
LeeDI
With GNU awk in paragraph mode and using gensub() function you can get it:
awk 'BEGIN {RS = ""; FS = "\n"} {print gensub(/([[:space:]])([[:alpha:]]{1})([^[:space:]+])+/,"\\2","g",$1)}' file
PedroPdS
BruceM
LeeDI
Yet another. It turned out a bit like #WilliamPursell's, though (++):
$ awk '!p{for(i=1;i<=NF;i++)printf (i==1?"%s%s":"%c%s"),$i,(i==NF?ORS:"")}{p=NF}' file
Output:
PedroPdS
BruceM
LeeDI
"Explained":
$ awk '
!p { # if previous record empty
for(i=1;i<=NF;i++) # process record for ...
printf (i==1?"%s%s":"%c%s"),$i,(i==NF?ORS:"") # ... output
}
{ p=NF }' file # store field count
I have 2 .po files and some word in there has 2 different meanings
and want to use awk to turn it into some kind of translator
For example
in .po file 1
msgid "example"
msgstr "something"
in .po file 2
msgid "example"
msgstr "somethingelse"
I came up with this
awk -F'"' 'match($2, /^example$/) {printf "%s", $2": ";getline; printf "%s", $2}' file1.po file2.po
The output will be
example:something example:somethinelse
How do I make it into this kind of format
example : something, somethingelse.
Reformatting
example:something example:somethinelse
into
example : something, somethingelse
can be done with this one-liner:
awk -F":| " -v OFS="," '{printf "%s:", $1; for (i=1;i<=NF;i++) if (i % 2 == 0)printf("%s%s%s", ((i==2)?"":OFS), $i, ((i==NF)?"\n":""))}'
Testing:
$ echo "example:something example:somethinelse example:something3 example:something4" | \
awk -F":| " -v OFS="," '{ \
printf "%s:", $1; \
for (i=1;i<=NF;i++) \
if (i % 2 == 0) \
printf("%s%s%s", ((i==2)?"":OFS), $i, ((i==NF)?"\n":""))}'
example:something,somethinelse,something3,something4
Explanation:
$ cat tst.awk
BEGIN{FS=":| ";OFS=","} # define field sep and output field sep
{ printf "%s:", $1 # print header line "example:"
for (i=1;i<=NF;i++) # loop over all fields
if (i % 2 == 0) # we're only interested in all "even" fields
printf("%s%s%s", ((i==2)?"":OFS), $i, ((i==NF)?"\n":""))
}
But you could have done the whole thing in one go with something like this:
$ cat tst.awk
BEGIN{OFS=","} # set output field sep to ","
NF{ # if NF (i.e. number of fields) > 0
# - to skip empty lines -
if (match($0,/msgid "(.*)"/,a)) id=a[1] # if line matches 'msgid "something",
# set "id" to "something"
if (match($0,/msgstr "(.*)"/,b)) str=b[1] # same here for 'msgstr'
if (id && str){ # if both "id" and "str" are set
r[id]=(id in r)?r[id] OFS str:str # save "str" in array r with index "id".
# if index "id" already exists,
# add "str" preceded by OFS (i.e. "," here)
id=str=0 # after printing, reset "id" and "str"
}
}
END { for (i in r) printf "%s : %s\n", i, r[i] } # print array "r"
and call this like:
awk -f tst.awk *.po
$ awk -F'"' 'NR%2{k=$2; next} NR==FNR{a[k]=$2; next} {print k" : "a[k]", "$2}' file1 file2
example : something, somethingelse