Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2005 20:50:10 -0700 (PDT) From: Philip Hallstrom <freebsd@philip.pjkh.com> To: Peter Matulis <petermatulis@yahoo.ca> Cc: freebsd-questions <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: help with shell script Message-ID: <20051012204909.J78693@wolf.pjkh.com> In-Reply-To: <20051013031521.5468.qmail@web60021.mail.yahoo.com> References: <20051013031521.5468.qmail@web60021.mail.yahoo.com>
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> Hi. I am writing up a doc for the fbsd community that covers usage of > ports. I have two commands that allow me to assertain the amount of > disk space being utilized by currently installed ports. I would like to > make a shell script (bourne or bash) out of them but I am not sure how. > > 1. This gives me the amount of space (kB) taken up by the 10 largest ports: > > $ pkg_info -as | grep ^[0-9] | sort -gr | head -10 | cut -c 1-6 > > 2. Using one figure from above list I produce the details of the corresponding port: > > $ pkg_info -as | grep -B3 240695 > > Output: > ------------------------------------------------------ > Information for linux_base-8-8.0_6: > > Package Size: > 240695 (1K-blocks) > ------------------------------------------------------ > > I would like the output of the script to be the above but for all ten ports (~40 lines; insert > a blank line between each?). I know I need some sort of iteration but I am rusty on scripting. > Can anyone help? This should get you close... if you want only the top 10 just add more pipes to the end with sort and head... ---------------------------------------------------- #!/bin/sh newline='\ ' pkg_info -as | \ tr '\n' ' ' | \ sed -e 's/Package Size://g' \ -e "s/(1K-blocks)/$newline/g" |\ sed -e 's/^ *Information for //' ----------------------------------------------------
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