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On Monday, November 10, 2003, at 05:02 AM, Nick Lefebvre wrote:
> Hi,
> I am running the following command:
> # ./bpdbjobs =96report =96all_columns
> The output is messy.
>
> I was wondering whether anyone would have a script to turn this into=20=
> something that makes sense?
Yep:
This is the complete listing, main problem here is to know which kind of=20=
data you're wanting to see.... here's a quick skeleton:
<poner el script que usamos>
All depends on what you want to do with the output.... sending as a=20
report via mail, format it for adding into a database or simply, do a=20
large report to see it directly.
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On Monday, November 10, 2003, at 05:02 AM, Nick Lefebvre wrote:
=
<excerpt><fontfamily><param>Arial</param><smaller>Hi,</smaller></fontfamil=
y>
<fontfamily><param>Arial</param><smaller>I am running the following
command:</smaller></fontfamily>
<fontfamily><param>Arial</param><smaller># ./bpdbjobs =96report
=96all_columns</smaller></fontfamily>
<fontfamily><param>Arial</param><smaller>The output is =
messy.</smaller></fontfamily>
<fontfamily><param>Arial</param><smaller>I was wondering whether
anyone would have a script to turn this into something that makes
sense?</smaller></fontfamily>
</excerpt>
Yep:
This is the complete listing, main problem here is to know which kind
of data you're wanting to see.... here's a quick skeleton:
<<poner el script que usamos>
All depends on what you want to do with the output.... sending as a
report via mail, format it for adding into a database or simply, do a
large report to see it directly.
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