I was hoping to get some assistance with this C program I am working on. The goal is to find the largest file in the current directory and then display this filename along with the filesize. What I have so far will display all the files in the current directory. But, how do I deal with "grabbing"... (1 Reply)
I need to find the largest files in a directory & it's subdirectories.
I'm not sure what options on ls -l will work to give me this. or is there another way to do this?
Thanks,
igidttam (6 Replies)
Hi,
1)I have XX directory and have lot of files ,I want to find largest file in that
directory
2)how calculate the size of file in MB.
Thanks,
Mohan (15 Replies)
Hello,
How to find the list of 5 largest(size wise) file in current directory?i tried using
ls -l | sort -t " " -r +5 -6 -n | head -5
but this is not giving correct output as ls -l command gives 1 extra line of output that is how many total files are there!so by running the above... (4 Replies)
Hello,
i am on linux 2.6.13-1.1526_FC4smp , and i would be very greatfull
if someone could help to find the largest files on that server.
I know i can find files with find command or list them with ls ,
but is there a way that i could list let's say 10 biggest files on server ?
:o (11 Replies)
What is the best way to find the largest files in a directory? I used du -k|sort -rn |less.
I got a results for this. But if I used the following command , I got another result...a different order in the same directory. Why is that?
ls -la |awk '{print $5," ",$9}' sort -rn|less. I saw that... (6 Replies)
Hi Experts,
1. In unix how to list the largest file in given directory.
The answer will in single line statement.
2. I have Sun solaris live CD .I try to compile sample c program using "CC compiler".But its shows "cc command not found".
Please help on this.
Thanks in advance.... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kkl
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
find
FIND(1) General Commands Manual FIND(1)NAME
find - find files meeting a given condition
SYNOPSIS
find directory expression
EXAMPLES
find / -name a.out -print
# Print all a.out paths
find /usr/ast ! -newer f -ok rm {} ;
# Ask before removing
find /usr -size +20 -exec mv {} /big ;
# move files > 20 blks
find / -name a.out -o -name '*.o' -exec rm {};
# 2 conds
DESCRIPTION
Find descends the file tree starting at the given directory checking each file in that directory and its subdirectories against a predi-
cate. If the predicate is true, an action is taken. The predicates may be connected by -a (Boolean and), -o (Boolean or) and ! (Boolean
negation). Each predicate is true under the conditions specified below. The integer n may also be +n to mean any value greater than n, -n
to mean any value less than n, or just n for exactly n.
-name s true if current filename is s (include shell wild cards)
-size n true if file size is n blocks
-inum n true if the current file's i-node number is n
-mtime ntrue if modification time relative to today (in days) is n
-links ntrue if the number of links to the file is n
-newer ftrue if the file is newer than f
-perm n true if the file's permission bits = n (n is in octal)
-user u true if the uid = u (a numerical value, not a login name)
-group gtrue if the gid = g (a numerical value, not a group name)
-type x where x is bcdfug (block, char, dir, regular file, setuid, setgid)
-xdev do not cross devices to search mounted file systems
Following the expression can be one of the following, telling what to do when a file is found:
-print print the file name on standard output
-exec execute a MINIX command, {} stands for the file name
-ok prompts before executing the command
SEE ALSO test(1), xargs(1).
FIND(1)