I have a file (as one often does) with dates in *nix time as seconds from the Epoch, followed by a message and a final "thread" field I am wanting to select. All separated with a '|' as exported from a sqlite DB...
e.g
1306003700|SENT|21
1277237887|SENT|119
1274345263|SENT|115
1261168663|RECV|21
1306832459|SENT|80
1306835346|RECV|80
Basically, I can use sed easily enough to select and print lines that match the "thread" field and print the respective times with messages, thus:
> cat file | sed -n "s/^\([0-9]*\)\|\(.*\)\|80$/\1 : \2/p"
1306832459 : SENT
1306835346 : RECV
But what I really want to do is also pass the time field through the unix date command, so:
> cat file | sed -n "s/^\([0-9]*\)\|\(.*\)\|80$/`date -r \1` : \2/p"
But this doesn't seem to work - even though it seems to accept it. It just prints out the same (start of Epoch) date:
Thu 1 Jan 1970 01:00:01 BST : SENT
Thu 1 Jan 1970 01:00:01 BST : RECV
How/can I evaluate/interpolate the back reference \1 to the date command?
Maybe sed isn't the way to match these lines (and format the output in one go)...