Alexander Dalloz wrote:
Chris Bradford schrieb:
Unfortunately in my environment I still have a few windows (yes i
know!) servers, and on one of them I am trying to make a script that
will interpret a text file called 'disc.txt' that looks like this:
jo tynan 15 Disc
wdica KIML 1
Disc wdica
sararyan 6 Disc rdpwd *There ARE
spaces at the beginning of each line for some reason.*
The file is generated every hour by the command:
qwinsta /SERVER:servername | find "Disc" > disc.txt
I wouldn't have expected "find" in this command. Wouldn't that be "grep"?
Is there a way that I can pick out just the number, which is a
session number, on each line and remove the text? Maybe remove all
other characters? Or just pick out them number on each line for use
in a later command.
Then, I would like a command to be run for every number in the text
file, I assume something like this would work:
for "i" in textfilename run a_script_name
The command that needs to be run for each session number is:
rwinsta /SERVER:servername number_from_above_file
> -Chris
while read line
do rwinsta /SERVER:servername $(echo $line | awk '{print $3}')
done < disc.txt
Not sure you want to have the "disc.txt" file any pupose. If not you
could do both steps (qwinsta and rwinsta) in one step.
Alexander
> Alexander,
Firstly thanks for your reply,
I do not need to have the disc.txt file, how would I remove this step?
I thought this was necessary..
Many thanks,
-Chris
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