cs3423 Pgm#2 SED This assignment has two parts p2a and p2b. Problem A: sed and g
ID: 3888522 • Letter: C
Question
cs3423 Pgm#2 SED
This assignment has two parts p2a and p2b.
Problem A: sed and grep -f
We need a new mechanism to identify accounts that haven't been used in a while so that we can remove the accounts. We will use the lastlog tool to get information of the last time someone logged in; however, it just handles one server. For consistent results (and ease of grading), we have copied the output of lastlog for fox01 and fox02 to
/usr/local/courses/clark/cs3423/2017Fa/Proj2/lastlog1.out
/usr/local/courses/clark/cs3423/2017Fa /Proj2/lastlog2.out
Please note that lastlog returns a result similar to this:
ums562 **Never logged in**
xyz222 pts/3 173.227.72.99 Sun Aug 7 11:39:56 -0500 2015
fernandez pts/11 n0000d193.cs.uts Wed Jan 13 11:13:49 -0600 2016
rslavin pts/2 104.218.77.194 Tue Aug 15 10:11:37 -0500 2017
clark pts/8 172.24.141.44 Fri Aug 18 13:07:29 -0500 2017
ytang **Never logged in**
Copy those two lastlog?.out files to your code directory.
Find anyone who has either not logged in or hasn't logged in during 2017 for each of those lastlog files. In the example above, the following users meet the criteria: ums562, xyz222, fernandez, and ytang. The result file should only contain user IDs.
The intersection of those result files gives us the people who didn't log into both of those servers during the desired time.
Matching on 2017.
Where is the 2017 we want to match which indicates that the user logged in during 2017? If we just match "2017", it could match actual login IDs that contain 2017 who haven't logged in during 2017.
Intersection.
Use grep -f to help with getting the intersection. Unfortunately, some login IDs like "lp" could match an id like "lpt913". There are several ways to avoid this problem. Consider having two different sed scripts (one for each of the lastlog?.out files). One of the scripts could produce output which tell the pattern to match to the end of the line:
ytang$
lp$
The other sed script produces user IDs without the "$". Now the pattern lp$ doesn't match lpt913.
Problem B: sed, cat, sort, and uniq -c
For this problem, we will want to get the same result, but with a different approach. Using one of the sed scripts from problem A, we can produce two files of user IDs that either have not logged in or haven't logged in during 2017 (i.e., we won't have a pattern like "lp$" in our files).
Suppose we cat those files together and sort them.
We can use uniq -c to get a count of each unique value
We can then use sed to include only user IDs with a count of 2 and also remove the count.
Although not required, you probably should diff the outputs of the two solutions. Note that you may have to sort the output of problem A before doing the diff.
Explanation / Answer
command | uniq
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