Thanks Frank, that helped. I am getting it in around 16seconds.
Sorry for being too greedy, are there any other ideas to make this more quick? Since I may have to get this output for about 1000+ INODEs that are active in the runtime?
I have read quite a few threads here about the unix file creation date. I was interested in finding how to display it using a unix command. find did not help me so i looked at man inode. I found direction to htino.h which is described as the
structure of the inode for S51K (UNIX), HTFS, EAFS... (4 Replies)
How to get the filename of which has been deleted if I know the inode number.
i can use the command "istat" to get the inode number of the file.
# istat
/proc//fd/x
If this file has been deleted,but the process of this file has not been closed and handle has not been released ,so this... (3 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I am new here in www.unix.com, i found this site because I am looking for an answer to this problem of mine.
I need to know a UNIX command to display an inode's thread id and process id.
Hope someone can help me on this.
Thanks :D (8 Replies)
Hi All,
I am having a script which calculate checks the input feed and perform some function. When i am executing this script i am redirecting this to a output file. I want to know the redirected output file name inside my scripts. Is there is any way to get that .
like the same way we... (4 Replies)
Hello ,
I have to search for the file names which will either has ABC_DEF or NN in their filename
Please note that both cannot appear in the same file name
currently I am using
ls -lrt /zthetl/SrcFiles/*ABC_DEF*.xls| head -1 | nawk '{print $9}'
How to combine the NN in this code?... (4 Replies)
Hi All
How to answer the below interview question..
With a path and filename of "/mydir1/mydir2/mydir3/myfilenane.dat" write a UNIX script to display the filename (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shumail
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
filectime
FILECTIME(3) 1 FILECTIME(3)filectime - Gets inode change time of fileSYNOPSIS
int filectime (string $filename)
DESCRIPTION
Gets the inode change time of a file.
PARAMETERS
o $filename
- Path to the file.
RETURN VALUES
Returns the time the file was last changed, or FALSE on failure. The time is returned as a Unix timestamp.
EXAMPLES
Example #1
A filectime(3) example
<?php
// outputs e.g. somefile.txt was last changed: December 29 2002 22:16:23.
$filename = 'somefile.txt';
if (file_exists($filename)) {
echo "$filename was last changed: " . date("F d Y H:i:s.", filectime($filename));
}
?>
ERRORS /EXCEPTIONS
Upon failure, an E_WARNING is emitted.
NOTES
Note
Note: In most Unix filesystems, a file is considered changed when its inode data is changed; that is, when the permissions, owner,
group, or other metadata from the inode is updated. See also filemtime(3) (which is what you want to use when you want to create
"Last Modified" footers on web pages) and fileatime(3).
Note
Note also that in some Unix texts the ctime of a file is referred to as being the creation time of the file. This is wrong. There
is no creation time for Unix files in most Unix filesystems.
Note
Note that time resolution may differ from one file system to another.
Note
The results of this function are cached. See clearstatcache(3) for more details.
Tip
As of PHP 5.0.0, this function can also be used with some URL wrappers. Refer to "Supported Protocols and Wrappers" to determine
which wrappers support stat(3) family of functionality.
SEE ALSO filemtime(3).
PHP Documentation Group FILECTIME(3)