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Full Discussion: Advanced LS?
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Advanced LS? Post 302120938 by bostonrobot on Sunday 10th of June 2007 03:01:42 PM
Old 06-10-2007
Advanced LS?

My goal is simply to output a listing of all files in a directory and all subdirectories, one per line, ****with their full path****.

The *** part is what I can't figure out. I can get one on a line and I like having the extra info, so I'm using ls -Rl right now.

But what I get is just the file name and not its location. Yes, the directories are listed as ls enters them, but that doesn't help me much without a extra scripting which i don't know how to do yet.

My larger goal is to use the listing to ID duplicate files using uniq and then delete them. So the ls gets piped into sort and then uniq. If you know of a better way of doing that - that'd also solve my troubles.
 

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MKCFM(1)						      General Commands Manual							  MKCFM(1)

NAME
mkcfm - create summaries of font metric files in CID font directories SYNOPSIS
mkcfm [CID-font-directory-name] DESCRIPTION
There is usually only one CID font directory on the X font path. It is usually called /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/CID. If you do not specify an argument, mkcfm will try to go through the subdirectories of that directory, and create one summary of font metric files for each CID- Font (character descriptions) file and each CMap (Character Maps) file it finds. The summaries of font metric files are put in the existing CFM subdirectory. The CFM subdirectories are created when CID-keyed fonts are installed. If you specify a CID font directory as an argument, mkcfm will try to go through the subdirectories of that directory, and create one sum- mary of font metric files for each CIDFont file and each CMap file it finds. mkcfm will calculate the summaries of the font metric files stored in AFM subdirectories of the CID font directory. Those summaries are needed by the rasterizer of CID-keyed fonts to speed up the response to X font calls. If those files do not exist, CID rasterizer will have to go through usually large font metric files, and calculate the summaries itself each time the font is called. You will notice a substantial wait on a call to a large CID-keyed font. FILES
.afm files Each CID-keyed font file is supposed to have a font metric file (.afm file). mkcfm creates summary files (.cfm files) of those font metric files. mkcfm should be run whenever a change is made to the files stored in the subdirectories of the CID font directory. For example, it should be run when new CID fonts are installed. .cfm files Summaries of font metric (.afm) files created by mkcfm. SEE ALSO
The rasterizer for CID-keyed fonts in the directory xc/lib/font/Type1. CID Fonts Version 1.0 Release 1.0 MKCFM(1)
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