2

If anyone knows how this can be easily done, please tell me.I have out like this:

mac: 24:A4:3C:74:C0:49 name : SomeSome1 lastip : 192.168.1.178 txpower : 56 quality : 97 capacity : 95
mac: DC:9F:DB:62:10:BF name : SomeSome2 lastip : 192.168.1.58 txpower : 56 quality : 97 capacity : 11
mac: DC:9F:DB:3E:25:D8 name : SomeSome3 lastip : 192.168.1.48 txpower : 56 quality : 74 capacity : 10
mac: DC:9F:DB:3E:25:D8 name : SomeSome3 lastip : 192.168.1.48 txpower : 56 quality : 74 capacity : 8

Each line that contains the value capacity <= 10 I need to insert the side tags

I need like this:

mac: 24:A4:3C:74:C0:49 name : SomeSome1 lastip : 192.168.1.178 txpower : 56 quality : 97 capacity : 95
mac: DC:9F:DB:62:10:BF name : SomeSome2 lastip : 192.168.1.58 txpower : 56 quality : 97 capacity : 11
<div style=' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'>mac: DC:9F:DB:3E:25:D8 name : SomeSome3 lastip : 192.168.1.48 txpower : 56 quality : 74 capacity : 10</div>
<div style=' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'>mac: DC:9F:DB:3E:25:D8 name : SomeSome3 lastip : 192.168.1.48 txpower : 56 quality : 74 capacity : 8</div>

The system on which I plan to run:

BusyBox v1.11.2 (2012-10-12 17:12:28 EEST) multi-call binary

If anyone knows how this can be easily done, please tell me.

2 Answers 2

1

I don't have Busybox handy to test it but you can try something like:

awk '$NF<=10{print "<div style='"'"' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'"'"'>"$0"</div>";next}1' file

Output:

$ awk '$NF<=10{print "<div style='"'"' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'"'"'>"$0"</div>";next}1' file
mac: 24:A4:3C:74:C0:49 name : SomeSome1 lastip : 192.168.1.178 txpower : 56 quality : 97 capacity : 95
mac: DC:9F:DB:62:10:BF name : SomeSome2 lastip : 192.168.1.58 txpower : 56 quality : 97 capacity : 11
<div style=' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'>mac: DC:9F:DB:3E:25:D8 name : SomeSome3 lastip : 192.168.1.48 txpower : 56 quality : 74 capacity : 10</div>
<div style=' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'>mac: DC:9F:DB:3E:25:D8 name : SomeSome3 lastip : 192.168.1.48 txpower : 56 quality : 74 capacity : 8</div>
5
  • If the value of capacity is <= 10, tags should be added.
    – Aman
    Mar 7, 2014 at 5:47
  • @axiom Sorry, I am not able to follow. Isn't the value of capacity the last field, so $NF usage seems to be correct? I just didnt follow how OP got an extra line for capacity of 8 which was not in his sample input. Mar 7, 2014 at 5:52
  • Sorry I missed the fact that OP has missed a line in the input. I was addressing not sure how did you get the last line in your sample output part of your answer.
    – Aman
    Mar 7, 2014 at 5:55
  • 1
    @axiom Oh ok, the answer I posted would work if there exist a capacity of <=10. It just wont create one that doesn't exist. ;). Mar 7, 2014 at 5:56
  • I'm going to use this code in php, I do not understand what special characters still need to hide: awk '$NF<=10{print \"<div style='\"'\"' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'\"'\"'>\"$0\"</div>\";next}1' file Mar 8, 2014 at 17:00
1

As horrible as it looks, the following will work :

sed "s/\(^.*capacity : 10\)/<div style=' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'>\1<\/div>/g;s/\(^.*capacity : [0-9]$\)/<div style=' width: 50%; background-color: red; color: white'>\1<\/div>/g" t

Where t is the input file.

I first make the substitution for 10, and then add tags where value is < 10.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.