Found while doing forensics on some rediscovered loose flash drives.

  • Doc Avid Mornington
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    611 months ago

    first grepping some output to get the line you want and then removing the leading and trailing garbage on that line manually

    That’s not what we do, though. Give me a more concrete example, and I’ll let you know how I would expect to do it in a nix environment. I’d be curious to compare. Since I have zero experience with powershell, I am not really sure what to expect. The couple times I’ve glanced at a powershell script it looked awful, but I could be falling into Paul Graham’s blub paradox there. OK, I don’t think so, but maybe.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      For instance: Get the temperature of the “Composite” sensor from this output:

      $ sensors
      k10temp-pci-00c3
      Adapter: PCI adapter
      Tctl:         +37.1°C  
      
      BAT1-acpi-0
      Adapter: ACPI interface
      in0:          16.07 V  
      curr1:         1.80 A  
      
      amdgpu-pci-0500
      Adapter: PCI adapter
      vddgfx:        1.46 V  
      vddnb:       918.00 mV 
      edge:         +35.0°C  
      slowPPT:     1000.00 uW 
      
      nvme-pci-0200
      Adapter: PCI adapter
      Composite:    +28.9°C  (low  =  -5.2°C, high = +79.8°C)
                             (crit = +84.8°C)
      
      acpitz-acpi-0
      Adapter: ACPI interface
      temp1:        +37.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C)
      

      Without a cryptic awk incantation that only wizards can understand, that would be:

      sensors | grep Composite | grep -Po 'Composite:.*?C' | grep -Eo '[[:digit:]]{1,2}\.[[:digit:]]'

      • Doc Avid Mornington
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        211 months ago

        I think I misunderstood you, when you said “manually”, to mean as a human intervention in the process. What you’re showing here is an extra processing step, but I wouldn’t call that manual. Just want to clear that up, but I’m still down to play.

        Instead of three greps, you could use one sed or awk. I don’t think there’s anything particularly wizardly about awk, and it would be a lot less cryptic, to me, than this chain of greps.

        But a much better idea would be to use sensors -j to get json output, intended for machine reading, and pass that to jq. Since I don’t have the same sensors output as you, I’m not sure exactly what that would be, but I am guessing probably something like:

        sensors -j | jq '."nvme-pci-0200".Composite.composite_input'
        

        I look forward to seeing how you would do this in PS. As I said previously, I don’t know it at all, so I’m not sure what you’re comparing this to.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          What you’re showing here is an extra processing step, but I wouldn’t call that manual.

          Yes, it’s not manual by the dictionary definition, but it is an extra step. This is another meaning of manual in my particular bubble [Edit: that I didn’t think to specify].

          But a much better idea would be to use sensors -j to get json output, intended for machine reading, and pass that to jq.

          This is my initial point, exactly. Dealing with objects is way easier than using the ‘default’ line-wise processing. Only Powershell made that the default, while in Linux you need to hope that utilities have an option to toggle it on – and then also have jq installed to process the objects.

          I look forward to seeing how you would do this in PS. As I said previously, I don’t know it at all, so I’m not sure what you’re comparing this to.

          [Edit, since I forgot to answer your main point:] I don’t program in PS. I don’t like the verbosity. But I do think MS has a point in pushing objects as the prime unit in processing instead of lines.