I'm new to this and I have done a lot of research and am 99% done with my ksh script BUT I need help with. The script looks at Journal files and reports back on any that have not been updated for 15 min. Everything works but I wanted more detail (added -ls) and now I'm getting dups.
Original code:
returns :/jcap/EngineJournal/journal_09032013/From_Halfpenny_Hub_Order_09032013.dat Code with "-ls": Returns: 99585 460 -rw-r--r-- 1 jcap jcap 470202 Sep 3 16:40 /jcap/EngineJournal/journal_09032013/From_Halfpenny_Hub_Order_09032013.dat
/jcap/EngineJournal/journal_09032013/From_Halfpenny_Hub_Order_09032013.dat Is it possible to elim. the dup and keep the detail with this code? Thank you
I wanna show all files like...one minute old, one hour old, five hours old and so on...
in my OS (HP-UX) there's only the command ..
find -name "..." -mtime -n
but this is only for days, there isn't something like -mmin -n ...just don't know what to do. also the newer than option isn't... (3 Replies)
Hi Everyone,
I would like to know how to find a file which was created in the period of 20+ hours, in most common unix OS, the parameter -mmin is not supported (i.e, HP-UX, Solaris, LInux, AIX)
Could you help on this ?? (3 Replies)
hi
find command is not working with -mmin in Solaris Os.
Do we hav any alternative to find the modified file in any specified time span ( suppose in last 1- 2 hours)
Thanks (2 Replies)
I need to check if a file has been modified within the last x hours. My find command does not have the mmin option -- only the mtime option which is in 24 hour perriods (1 Reply)
I need to compare the time a file was last modified against current time and conditionally proceed.
At the command prompt I can do:
find MYFILE -mmin +1140
and it lists the file. But I need to test, and if true do something
I’ve tried things like:
if ; then
if ; then
etc. ... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I want to parameterise the argument for 'mmin' to find out files created/edited 'n' minutes ago.
For this i have written something as simple as the following:
n=10
m=-1
c=expr $n \* $m #value comes to -10 when echoed
find -mmin -10 #works
find -mmin $c #doesnt work ... (5 Replies)
Dear All,
We are having the script which is creating the folder on another server if it is not present using ssh. Using scp it copies copy all pdf files from local folder to server folder.
After all copy is done, Just to verify i was using the below find command
find... (3 Replies)
I need assistance with following requirement, I am new to Unix.
I want to do the following task but stuck with file creation date(sysdate)
Following is the requirement
I need to create a script that will read the abc/xyz/klm folder and look for *.err files for that day’s date and then send an... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Please tell me what the below command wil do, according to my understanding it finds files in the current and sub directories whose modification time is 5 hrs and it dont zip the already zipped files who's size is more than 4K.
Am I Correct?
find . -type f -mmin +300 ! -name... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nag_sathi
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
makepercentrelay
MAKEPERCENTRELAY(8) Double Precision, Inc. MAKEPERCENTRELAY(8)NAME
makepercentrelay - Build a list of %-relayed domains
SYNOPSIS
makepercentrelay
DESCRIPTION
makepercentrelay reads /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay.dir and creates /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay.dat which is a binary database file.
The files /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay and /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay.dat specify a list of "percent-hack" domains.
/etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay is a plain text file, containing one domain per line. The Courier mail server loads the contents of
/etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay into memory, so if you have a lot of domains, you will want to use the binary database file. The
makepercentrelay command reads /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay.dir, which can be either a plain text file itself, or a directory containing
plain text files. All files in the subdirectory are concatenated, and the binary database file is created from the result.
the Courier mail server can use both /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay and /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay.dat at the same time. Usually you
would put a couple of your most frequent domains in /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay, then put the rest in
/etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay.dir, and use makepercentrelay to turn it into a database file.
"percent-hack" domains are a list of domains for which the Courier mail server accepts mail via ESMTP addressed as
"local%percent.hack.domain@local.domain", where "percent.hack.domain" is a domain found in /etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay or
/etc/courier/esmtppercentrelay.dat, and "local.domain" is any domain found in /etc/courier/locals. The Courier mail server removes the
local domain, and rewrites the address as "local@percent.hack.domain", then attempts to deliver it.
The percent hack applies only to mail received via ESMTP. The Courier mail server does not check this list of domains if the message is
received via any other way (such as by running /usr/bin/sendmail directly from the command line). "percent.hack.domain" would likely to be
a domain that the Courier mail server knows how to handle via some other means. It might be an entry in /etc/courier/aliases, or an entry
in /etc/courier/esmtproutes.
SEE ALSO esmtpd(8)[1], makealiases(8)[2].
AUTHOR
Sam Varshavchik
Author
NOTES
1. esmtpd(8)
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/esmtpd.html
2. makealiases(8)
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/makealiases.html
Courier Mail Server 08/30/2011 MAKEPERCENTRELAY(8)