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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers delete compressed files from year 2005 Post 302111979 by awk on Friday 23rd of March 2007 04:30:56 PM
Old 03-23-2007
Bug

It is never quite that easy, are there any subdirectories to worry about (your command for the ls included the -R option?

for that possibility, the best option would be

find ./ -type f -name '*.Z' -exec ls -l {} \; | awk '$8 == 2005{print $NF}' | xargs rm -f

of course, you could use a system command in awk, but I prefer to do that outside the awk.

This assumes your system supports all these commands.

Basically, this says - for all Files in this directory and all subdirectories whose filename ends with a .Z, do a long listing of it, see if the year is 2005 and if so print only the file name (including directory), and for those passing through the awk, do a "rm -f" on them.

technically, it is possible to add the mtime to the find to choose only those for 2005, but I agree that it just as easy to use the awk as this filter. However, using the right mtime parameters, it could all be done in one command (without pipes) by doing

find ./ -type f -name '*.Z' -mtime +days -mtime -days -exec rm -f {} \;

but I am too lazy to calculate what the two days parameters would need to be.
 

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expand_dump(8)						      System Manager's Manual						    expand_dump(8)

NAME
expand_dump - Produces a non-compressed kernel crash dump file SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/expand_dump input-file output-file DESCRIPTION
By default, kernel crash dump files (vmzcore.#) are compressed during the crash dump. Compressed core files can be examined by the latest versions of debugging tools that have been recompiled to support compressed crash dump files. However, not all debugging tools may be upgraded on a given system, or you may want to examine a crash dump from a remote system using an older version of a tool. The expand_dump utility produces a file that can be read by tools that have not been upgraded to support compressed crash dump files. This non-compressed version can also be read by any upgraded tool. This utility can only be used with compressed crash dump files, and does not support any other form of compressed file. You cannot use other decompression tools such as compress, gzip, or zip on a compressed crash dump file. Note that the non-compressed file will require significantly more disk storage space as it is possible to achieve compression ratios of up to 60:1. Check the available disk space before running expand_dump and estimate the size of the non-compressed file as follows: Run tests by halting your system and forcing a crash as described in the Kernel Debugging manual. Use an upgraded debugger to determine the value of the variable dumpsize. Multiply this vale by the 8Kb page size to approximate the required disk space of the non-compressed crash-dump. Run expand_dump and pipe the output file to /dev/null, noting the size of the file that is printed when expand_dump completes its task. RETURN VALUES
Successful completion of the decompression. The user did not supply the correct number of command line arguments. The input file could not be read. The input file is not a compressed dump, or is corrupted. The output file could not be created or opened for writing and truncated. There was some problem writing to the output file (probably a full disk). The input file is not formated consistantly. It is probably corrupted. The input file could not be correctly decompressed. It is probably corrupted. EXAMPLES
expand_dump vmzcore.4 vmcore.4 SEE ALSO
Commands: dbx(1), kdbx(8), ladebug(1), savecore(8) Kernel Debugging System Administration expand_dump(8)
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