Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users deleting files after the creation of a tar archive Post 302106717 by tayyabq8 on Monday 12th of February 2007 06:56:29 AM
Old 02-12-2007
Try this:
Code:
tar -cvf logswitch.tar `find *.log* -mtime +5` && find *.log* -mtime +5 -exec rm {} \;

 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Deleting files automatically, the condition in the month of creation

Hi all, I'm newby in this great forum. I'm working as an Intelligent Networks Administrator for a Fixed telephony company. I want to write a script shell that helps me in my daily/weekly tasks. A voice switch sends every hour a statistic file to a log directory. By now, i've got more than 5000... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: FabioALex
4 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

tar archive with .Z files

Hello, I have a tar archive full of compressed .Z (compressed with the compress command) files. I have restored the tar to a disk but am looking for a way to uncompress every file in every sub-directory. Under normal circumstances, I would just change directories and "uncompress *" but with 1600... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kun2112
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

tar archive with including specific patern files

Hi, I need to create recursive tar archive, while I put there only files of type a*.txt. Without file filtering the command is: tar cfzf test.tar.gz test_tar/ How I include the switch for including only files with pattern a*.txt ? Thanks a lot! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: john.gelburg
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Deleting the files comparing the creation dates

Hi Gurus, I am new to unix. I have a requirement where i need to delete some files in a folder twice a week. Suppose i have a folder AAA. In that i have files from 01/04/2008 to 10/04/2008 I want to remove all the files except last 3 days i.e., 10,9th & 8th. Every week twice we want to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pssandeep
2 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Count number of compressed files in a tar.gz archive

Hi Folks, I have a tar.gz compressed file with me, and I want to know the number of files in the archive without uncompressing it. Please let me know how I can achieve it. Regards RK Veluvali (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: vrk1219
5 Replies

6. Linux

tar archive

I have made tar archive of my system.. How can I make that tar archive to be bootable.. simply to install new linux from the archived tar file.. thanks in advance (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vit0_Corleone
8 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Remove files from tar archive which are more than 1000 days old.

I am not able to extract/remove files older than 1000 days from a tar archive in linux system. #!/usr/bin/perl @file_list = `find /home/x/tmp/ -name *xxMsg* -ctime +7`; $file_name = '/home/x/tmp/new_archive.tar'; for... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: DannyV
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help with number of files in a tar archive

I cant seem to work out how to count the number of executable files in a particular tar archive? Only in a directory as a whole. I also cant work out how to count number of certain file types in a tar archive. Only the directory, pretty stuck :( (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Razor147
9 Replies

9. Solaris

Solaris 10 luupgrade flash archive file system creation failed

Hey guys, I'm attempting to migrate us to a new box. First problem I had was the change in architecture going from sun4u to sun4v, we have a Sun M5000 and are moving to a Fujitsu M10-4. I figured out how to make the flash archive work between architectures. Now I appear to be running into an... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kaledragule
2 Replies
tar(5)								File Formats Manual							    tar(5)

Name
       tar, mdtar - tape archive file format

Description
       The tape archive command dumps several files, including special files, into one, in a medium suitable for transportation.

       A  tape or file is a series of blocks.  Each block is of size TBLOCK.  A file on the tape is represented by a header block, which describes
       the file, followed by zero or more blocks, which give the contents of the file.	At the end of the tape are two blocks filled  with  binary
       zeros, as an end-of-file indicator.

       The  blocks  are  grouped  for  physical I/O operations.  Each group of n blocks (where n is set by the option on the command line, and the
       default is 20 blocks) is written with a single system call; on 9-track tapes, the result of this write is a single tape record.	 The  last
       group  is  always  written at the full size, so blocks after the two zero blocks contain random data.  On reading, the specified or default
       group size is used for the first read, but if that read returns less than a full tape block, the reduced block size  is	used  for  further
       reads.

       The following is an example of a header block:
       #define TBLOCK  512
       #define NAMSIZ  100

       union hblock {
	       char dummy[TBLOCK];
	       struct header {
		       char name[NAMSIZ];
		       char mode[8];
		       char uid[8];
		       char gid[8];
		       char size[12];
		       char mtime[12];
		       char chksum[8];
		       char linkflag;
		       char linkname[NAMSIZ];
		       char rdev[6]
	       } dbuf;
       };

       The  name  field  is  a	null-terminated string.  The other fields are 0-filled octal numbers in ASCII.	Each field (of width w) contains w
       minus 2 digits, a space, and a null, except size and mtime , which do not contain the trailing null.  The name field specifies the name	of
       the  file,  as  specified  on  the command line.  Files dumped because they were in a directory that was named in the command line have the
       directory name as prefix and /filename as suffix.  The field specifies the file mode, with the top bit masked off.  The uid and gid  fields
       specify	the  user  and group numbers that own the file.  The size field specifies the size of the file in bytes.  Links and symbolic links
       are dumped with this field specified as zero.  The mtime field specifies the modification time of the file at the time it was dumped.   The
       chksum  field  is a decimal ASCII value, which represents the sum of all the bytes in the header block.	When calculating the checksum, the
       chksum field is treated as if it were all blanks.  The linkflag field is ASCII 0 if the file is normal or a special file and ASCII 1 if	it
       is  a  hard  link,  and	ASCII  2  if it is a symbolic link.  The name to which it is linked, if any, is in linkname, with a trailing null.
       Unused fields of the header are binary zeros and are included in the checksum.  The rdev field encodes the ASCII representation of a device
       special file's major and minor device numbers.

       The  first  time  a given i-node number is dumped, it is dumped as a regular file.  The second and subsequent times, it is dumped as a link
       instead.  Upon retrieval, if a link entry is retrieved, but not the file it was linked to, an error message is printed and the tape must be
       manually rescanned to retrieve the linked file.

       The encoding of the header is designed to be portable across machines.

Restrictions
       Names or link names longer than NAMSIZ produce error reports and cannot be dumped.

See Also
       tar(1)

																	    tar(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:11 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy