Here below a GREP that provide you x lines before and y lines after. Simple and easy !

#!/bin/ksh
USAGE=”Usage: $0 [-b numlinesbef] [-a numlinesaft] word file”
WRONG=0
NOPT=0
LBEF=0
LAFT=0

while getopts :b:a: OPT
do
case $OPT in
b)
LBEF=$OPTARG
((NOPT = NOPT + 2))
;;
a)
LAFT=$OPTARG
((NOPT = NOPT + 2))
;;
\:\)
WRONG=1
echo “$OPTARG option requires an argument”
;;
\?)
WRONG=1
echo “$OPTARG is not a valid option.”
echo “$USAGE”
;;
esac
done

shift $NOPT
if [ $# -ne 2 ] || ((WRONG == 1)) ; then
echo “$USAGE”
exit 2
fi

TOKEN=$1
FILENAME=$2

if [ ! -e $2 ] ; then
echo “File [$2] does not exist !”
exit 2
fi
NOCCUR=0
for SLINE in grep -n $TOKEN $FILENAME | nawk -F : '{ print $1 }'
do
((TOPL = SLINE – LBEF))
((BOTL = SLINE + LAFT))

if (( $TOPL < 1 )) ; then TOPL=1 fi LINEC=wc -l $FILENAME | nawk ‘{ print $1 }’

if (( $BOTL > $LINEC )) ; then
BOTL=$LINEC
fi
sed -n “${TOPL},${BOTL}p” $FILENAME
((NOCCUR = NOCCUR + 1 ))
echo “—————————————————————–”
done
echo
echo “The word [${TOKEN}] was found ${NOCCUR} times in the file [${FILENAME}]”
echo
exit 0

Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.