From: Bill Z. (bgk@hotunix.com)
Date: Thu Jun 17 2004 - 11:00:57 EDT
About missing html closing tags, as long as you have </table> the result
should be fine with any resonably recent versions of browsers (because a
<td> or <tr> implies the closing of the previous <td> or <tr>).
And, I only used ONE command (note the blackslash), so it doesn't make
sense that the redirect "only applied to the LAST command".
Plus, you have THREE commands to run (in a script). :=)
-- What do you call a failed pentest? - VA. http://hotunix.com/tools/ On Tue, 15 Jun 2004, Eric Paynter wrote: > On Mon, June 14, 2004 11:22 am, Bill Z. said: > > This is a simple task - here's my quick and dirty way of converting the > > plain-text nmap output (e.g., nmap-out) into an Excel file with html tags: > > > > echo "<table>" ; grep "^[0-9*]" nmap-out | awk '{print "<tr><td>" $1 \ > > "<td>" $2 "<td>" $3}'; echo "</table>" > nmap-out.xls > > Although the </td> and </tr> tags are optional in the HTML spec, I've seen > some browsers do funny things without them. I prefer to include them just > to be safe. Also, with my shell, the redirect to nmap-out.xls only applied > to the last command. The following fixes both potential problems, making > the example more portable: > > echo "<table>" > nmap-out.xls > grep "^[0-9*]" nmap-out | awk '{print "<tr><td>" $1 \ > "</td><td>" $2 "</td><td>" $3 "</td></tr>"}' >> nmap-out.xls > echo "</table>" >> nmap-out.xls > > -Eric > > -- > arctic bears - affordable email and name services @yourdomain.com > http://www.arcticbears.com > >
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