This awk command replaces the grep and tail commands while also extracting the text of interest:
$ awk -F'[:/]' '/Tracking URL/{n=$4;} END{print n;}' output/tpcds_query_1a_71_mr.out
group-3-vm1
How it works
-F'[:/]'
This sets the field separator to either a colon or a slash.
/Tracking URL/{n=$4;}
This looks for lines containing Tracking URL and saves the fourth field in variable n.
END{print n;}
After we have reached the end of the file, this prints the last n that we found.
Example
Here is a sample test file and output:
$ cat output/tpcds_query_1a_71_mr.out
Starting Job = job_1442587212068_0126, Tracking URL = http://group-1-vm1:8088/proxy/application_1442587212068_0126/
Starting Job = job_1442587212068_0126, Tracking URL = http://group-2-vm1:8088/proxy/application_1442587212068_0126/
Starting Job = job_1442587212068_0126, Tracking URL = http://group-3-vm1:8088/proxy/application_1442587212068_0126/
Starting Job = job_1442587212068_0126, No Track URL = http://group-4-vm1:8088/proxy/application_1442587212068_0126/
$ awk -F'[:/]' '/Tracking URL/{n=$4;} END{print n;}' output/tpcds_query_1a_71_mr.out
group-3-vm1
cutorawk? – thebjorn Sep 21 '15 at 21:41