Sup /g/, I'm wondering if anyone could help me with the findstr command (or anything else that could be used on Windows that would be on any Windows 7 machine, as much as I'd like to just do this in Cygwin, I can't) to remove an IP from a text file.
What I'm using now is...
findstr /C:%someip% /v output.txt >> tmpfile.txt
...and %someip% is defined earlier in the batch.
Lets say I set it to 1.1.1.1, it is successfully removing all lines with 1.1.1.1, but it's also removing things like 1.1.1.12, 13, 110, etc.
Is there a CR or CRLF character I can use to append to the variable?
The IP address is always going to be at the end of the line of text, so maybe I could search for 1.1.1.1[CRLF] which would not match 1.1.1.10[CRLF]
Install Gentoo
>>55556380
Can't, it's going to be used on already in place Win7 systems with no assumptions being made about their configuration, so I can't even assume powershell scripting is enabled.
findstr /v "%someip%$" output.txt >> tmpfile.txt
Nevermind, I read the findstr /?