Why does this AWK script cause a syntax error?
Basically, I am creating an XML file by taking the values from a column of a table. I am starting an AWK script from a shell script (ksh if it matters) like this:
SQL_RESULT=`sqlplus -s ${CONNECT_STRING} << EOF
${SQLPLUS_SETTINGS}
select customer_id from GD9_GENTH_CUST_SUBSCR;
exit;
EOF`
FILE_LIST=`echo $SQL_RESULT|sed -e 's/\n/''/g'`
echo $FILE_LIST|awk -f awk.file
The AWK script, awl.file, contains:
BEGIN {
print "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?><GenTransactionHandler xmlns:xsi=\"http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance\"><EntityToPublish>\n<Entity type=\"C\" typeDesc=\"Customer level\"><TargetApplCode>UHUNLD</TargetApplCode><TrxName>GET_CUST_DATA</TrxName>"
}
{
开发者_运维知识库 print "<value>"$1"</value>"
}
END
{
print "</Entity>\n</EntityToPublish></GenTransactionHandler>"
}
When I run the script it gives me an AWK error.
What is the problem with this?
If you are getting an error similar to this:
awk: syntax error at source line 9 source file xml.awk
context is
END >>>
<<< {
awk: bailing out at source line 12
Fix your code by moving the open bracket to the same line as END:
END {
...
This line:
FILE_LIST=`echo "$SQL_RESULT"|sed -e 's/\n/''/g'`
could just as easily be:
FILE_LIST=`echo "$SQL_RESULT"|sed -e 's/\n//g'`
but neither one does anything. If your intention is to replace all the newlines with a null string then do this:
FILE_LIST=$( echo "$SQL_RESULT" | tr -d "\n" )
or with a space:
FILE_LIST=$( echo "$SQL_RESULT" | tr "\n" " " )
If you actually want to replace all the newlines with a pair of single quotes, that's a little more complicated:
FILE_LIST=$( echo "$SQL_RESULT" | sed -e '1{h};${x;s/\n/'\'\''/g;p};H;d' )
since you are using awk already, it is not necessary to use sed or other tools like tr to replace newlines with nul.
@OP, problem may be in your quoting..but that's just a guess. show your sql output for further analysis
SQL_RESULT=`sqlplus -s ${CONNECT_STRING} << EOF
${SQLPLUS_SETTINGS}
select customer_id from GD9_GENTH_CUST_SUBSCR;
exit;
EOF` | awk 'BEGIN{
q="\042"
print "<?xml version="q"1.0"q" encoding="q"UTF-8"q"?><GenTransactionHandler xmlns:xsi="q"http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"q"><EntityToPublish>\n<Entity type="q"C"q" typeDesc="q"Customer level"q"><TargetApplCode>UHUNLD</TargetApplCode><TrxName>GET_CUST_DATA</TrxName>"
}
{
gsub("\n","") # this is the same as your sed command...but also depends on SQL output
print "<value>"$1"</value>"
}
END
{
print "</Entity>\n</EntityToPublish></GenTransactionHandler>"
}
}
'
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