You're checking to see if 20 files named using the form, "BARE01_DLY_MKT_yyyymmdd" (where "MKT" is variable between all 20 files). How would passing one file name to the script help? Unless you mean to pass the date to the script so that it checks for that date? That is, today's date is 20060720, but you want to check for 20 files with the date 20060719...?
check20.sh 20060803:
Note that there is no error checking here. You can feed anything you want as the date.
I am trying to write a script that will look for a file in a directory, then remove it. I need it to loop until it has removed a certain number of files. Is it better to do a repeat or to list each file in a pattern? Files will be numbered like RAF.01.*, RAF.02.*, etc. Thanks, James (6 Replies)
Some simple questions from a simple man.
If i wanted to count the number of files contained within a directory, say /tmp would ls -l /tmp ¦ wc -l suffice and will it be accurate?
second one: How would i check the number of files with a certain string in the filename, in the same directory.
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have to copy a set of files abc* in /path/ to /path1/ as abc*_bkp.
The list of files appear as follows in /path/:
abc1
xyszd
abc2
re2345
abcx
..
.
abcxyz
I have to copy them (abc* files only) into /path1/ as:
abc1_bkp
abc2_bkp
abcx_bkp
..
. (6 Replies)
I have 10 appservers and each appserver has 4 jvms . Each of these logs is archived and stored on a nfs directory . For example the files are
/logs/200907/ap1-jvm1.server.log.20090715.gz
/logs/200907/ap2-jvm2.server.log.20090714.gz
/logs/200908/ap1-jvm1.server.log.20090812.gz
I want to... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
Need some help counting files... :)
I'm trying to count the number of files in a given directory (and subdirectories) which reportedly contains "thousands" of files.
I'm using this:
ls -R | wc -l
However it's been an hour and looks like it's still running; there is no output... (18 Replies)
I am trying to display the output of ls and also print the number of characters in EVERY file name. This is what I have so far:
#!/bin/sh
for x in `ls`; do
echo The number of characters in x | wc -m
done
Any help appreciated (1 Reply)
So I have a loop that stated if a directory exists or not. If it does it prints the number of files within that directory. I use this code...
result=`(ls -l . | egrep -c '^-')`
However, no matter which directory I input, it outputs the number "2"
What is wrong here? (4 Replies)
I have a file of 1.3 millions lines.
some are with the same word twice on the line, some line have two diffrent words.
each line has two words, one in brackets.
example:
foo (foo)
bar (bar)
thae (awvd)
beladf (vswvw)
I am sure this can be done with one line of... (6 Replies)
Im using the command below , but thats not the output that i want. it only prints the odd and even numbers.
awk '{if(NR%2){print $0 > "1"}else{print $0 > "2"}}'
Im hoping for something like this
file1:
Text hi this is just a test
text1 text2 text3 text4 text5 text6
Text hi... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need a ksh script to replace indirect directory references in an .ini file with a env variable using sed or awk.
The .ini file is for example as such:
A=..
B=../
C=../..
D=../../
E=../bin
F=../../bin
G=../../bin/xml
H=../../bin/xml/
Need to replace an instance of .. or... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: andyatit
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
rc.config
rc.config(4) Kernel Interfaces Manual rc.config(4)NAME
rc.config, rc.config.d - files containing system configuration information
SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION
The system configuration used at startup is contained in files within the directory The file sources all of the files within and and
exports their contents to the environment.
/etc/rc.config
The file is a script that sources all of the scripts, and also sources To read the configuration definitions, only this file need be
sourced. This file is sourced by whenever it is run, such as when the command is run to transition between run states. Each file that
exists in is sourced, without regard to which startup scripts are to be executed.
/etc/rc.config.d
The configuration information is structured as a directory of files, rather than as a single file containing the same information. This
allows developers to create and manage their own configuration files here, without the complications of shared ownership and access of a
common file.
/etc/rc.config.d/* Files
This is where files containing configuration variable assignments are located.
Configuration scripts must be written to be read by the POSIX shell, and not the Bourne shell, or In some cases, these files must also be
read and possibly modified by control scripts or the sam program. See sd(4) and sam(1M). For this reason, each variable definition must
appear on a separate line, with the syntax:
No trailing comments may appear on a variable definition line. Comment statements must be on separate lines, with the comment character in
column one. This example shows the required syntax for configuration files:
Configuration variables may be declared as array parameters when describing multiple instances of the variable configuration. For example,
a system may contain two network interfaces, each having a unique IP address and subnet mask (see ifconfig(1M)). An example of such a dec-
laration is as follows:
Note that there must be no requirements on the order of the files sourced. This means configuration files must not refer to variables
defined in other configuration files, since there is no guarantee that the variable being referenced is currently defined. There is no
protection against environment variable namespace collision in these configuration files. Programmers must take care to avoid such prob-
lems.
/etc/TIMEZONE
The file contains the definition of the environment variable. This file is required by POSIX. It is sourced by at the same time the files
are sourced.
SEE ALSO rc(1M).
rc.config(4)