[ale] Shell Script Question

Jim Kinney jim.kinney at gmail.com
Thu Aug 11 20:35:10 EDT 2011


Oops. Change  .\* to. \+
On Aug 11, 2011 8:01 PM, "David Tomaschik" <david at systemoverlord.com> wrote:
> On 08/11/2011 07:51 PM, Scott Steele wrote:
>> I haven't been able to try this code yet since I cannot connect to the
>> server, but would it return with just "1" value after if finishes with
>> a script? say 1 or -1? That would be what I would be looking for
>> SiteScope to understand.
>>
>> On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 6:22 PM, Jim Kinney <jim.kinney at gmail.com
>> <mailto:jim.kinney at gmail.com>> wrote:
>>
>> | sed -e 's/statereachable.\*/1/' -e 's/stateunreachable.\*/-1/'
>>
>> On Aug 11, 2011 6:16 PM, "Scott Steele" <roninazure at gmail.com
>> <mailto:roninazure at gmail.com>> wrote:
>> > I am relatively a little rusty with the shell scripting and was
>> wondering if
>> > someone could help me with my dilemma. I use IBM WebSphere and
>> the command I
>> > use is:
>> >
>> > xsadmin.sh -p 11111 -bp 11111 -ch servername123 -routetable
>> >
>> > The output is an example of this:
>> >
>> > P: partition:83 - state:reachable - ipaddress:servername100 -
>> zone:ZoneB
>> >> R: partition:83 - state:reachable - ipaddress:servername101-
>> zone:ZoneA
>> > P: partition:84 - state:reachable - ipaddress:servername102 -
>> zone:ZoneB
>> >> R: partition:84 - state:reachable - ipaddress:servername103 -
>> zone:ZoneA
>> > P: partition:85 - state:reachable - ipaddress:servername104 -
>> zone:ZoneA
>> >> R: partition:85 - state:reachable - ipaddress:servername105 -
>> zone:ZoneB
>> >
>> > And so on.
>> >
>> > I need to condense the output of this file to send to SiteScope
>> as a file
>> > with only values of either <0 or >0. Meaning, if the
>> state:reachable it
>> > needs to appear as >0. if state:unreachable than the value needs
>> to appear
>> > as <0. I basically need to find a way to remove all erroneous
>> info and
>> > substitute the words state:reachable or state:unreachable with
>> either <0 or
>> >>0. I have tried many different methods, awk, sed and grep but
>> seem to come
>> > up short. Any help would be most appreciative and would be a
>> great learning
>> > tool.
>> >
>> > Thanks!
>>
>
> Are you looking for return value or output? For output, Jim's sed
> commands should work, but you might need a ".*" at the beginning of each
> pattern.
>
> Providing sample output with the sample input would probably help
> everyone understand.
>
> David
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