Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: continue example
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting continue example Post 302121788 by Shell_Life on Monday 18th of June 2007 11:00:29 AM
Old 06-18-2007
Xramm,
According to what you said, you are looking for:
1) Search for a pattern into a file name.
2) At the end, display the total size of all files with pattern in their name.
Based on your specification, here is one solution not having to read the
entire file to find how many characters it has -- very useful for large files.
Code:
typeset -i mSize
typeset -i mTotal=0
mPattern='core'
for mFile in `find . -type f -name "*${mPattern}*"`
do
  mSize=`ls -l $mFile | tr -s ' ' | cut -d' ' -f5`
  mTotal=${mTotal}+${mSize}
done
echo 'Total size of '$pattern' is '${mTotal}

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

continue the suspended jobs

Guys, Any idea how to continue suspended job in background ? ihave tried to use the bg% command <root> but it doesnt work. unix> jobs +suspended du > usage -suspended (sleep 60; date) unix> bg %2 (sleep 60; date) But my suspended work doesnt seems to continue run in background.. Any... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: killerserv
6 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Continue an 'scp' tranfser?

I was in the middle of transferring a file over a slow link (768k) using 'scp'. The system on this end got rebooted by an overzealous co-worker... I've got 500+ megs of the file here and 725 megs to go. I'd really hate to start over. I fear that the answer to my question is that I will have to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: deckard
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk continue

I want to print entire row of file awk '{print $0}' inputfile but sometime before every row have space characters. Example: " HVLR is not in service on AP 54" How can i print entire row without space characters ? thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: anhtt
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no) need a way to pass in the value yes without

Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no) need a way to pass in the value yes without use the except command. I am creating a script to send down files to an application servers every time it reboots as it picks up the newest image. I do not want to manual connect to each server... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: 3junior
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Restart and then continue script

How can I get a script to complete a update, varifiy completion, resboot, and continue with script? Is it possbile to get script to add itself to the "startup application" list #!/bin/bash clear sudo apt-get update #Verify/test the update completed #Reboot #Start/comtinue... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: wolfgangcs
9 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Break vs Continue

Okay so I am having trouble understand what the computer will do with a code like this if ; then echo echo "Found the file" blah blah blah for i in `blah blah blah` ; do ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shade917
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Continue problem

Hey all. First-time poster, long-time reader I'm on Mac, and I've written a long script to open up a maximum of 20 Terminal windows and run a subscript with a different input in each of them. When each of these sub-scripts finishes, it changes the value of a variable ("$windows") by -1, which... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Diabadass
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

If else continue to check value until it it is right

i have script which get Input via READ value and compare it from file. when found do some stuff...if not found again ask for Input until you dont enter Right value. #!/bin/ksh echo "SID must be in oratab file" echo "Enter ORACLE_SID of Database:\c " read ORACLE_SID x=`cat /etc/oratab|... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tapia
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Continue the loop if the value is not found

Dear Help, Is it possible to continue the loop by going to the next available value, if the 'expected value' is not found. I have a list of values which might not get incremented by fixed value and hence the loop could break and the script could terminate. Any suggestion is appreciated. ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Indra2011
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Case statement - continue

I have a case statement. IS "continue" working in case? for file in ls dir/* case $file in a) do something continue ;; b) do something continue ;; esac It is a Bourne shell (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: digioleg54
13 Replies
glob(n) 						       Tcl Built-In Commands							   glob(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
glob - Return names of files that match patterns SYNOPSIS
glob ?switches? pattern ?pattern ...? _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
This command performs file name ``globbing'' in a fashion similar to the csh shell. It returns a list of the files whose names match any of the pattern arguments. If the initial arguments to glob start with - then they are treated as switches. The following switches are currently supported: | -directory directory | Search for files which match the given patterns starting in the given directory. This allows searching of directories whose name | contains glob-sensitive characters without the need to quote such characters explicitly. This option may not be used in conjunction | with -path. | -join | The remaining pattern arguments are treated as a single pattern obtained by joining the arguments with directory separators. -nocomplain Allows an empty list to be returned without error; without this switch an error is returned if the result list would be empty. | -path pathPrefix | Search for files with the given pathPrefix where the rest of the name matches the given patterns. This allows searching for files | with names similar to a given file even when the names contain glob-sensitive characters. This option may not be used in conjunc- | tion with -directory. | -types typeList | Only list files or directories which match typeList, where the items in the list have two forms. The first form is like the -type | option of the Unix find command: b (block special file), c (character special file), d (directory), f (plain file), l (symbolic | link), p (named pipe), or s (socket), where multiple types may be specified in the list. Glob will return all files which match at | least one of the types given. | The second form specifies types where all the types given must match. These are r, w, x as file permissions, and readonly, hidden | as special permission cases. On the Macintosh, MacOS types and creators are also supported, where any item which is four characters | long is assumed to be a MacOS type (e.g. TEXT). Items which are of the form {macintosh type XXXX} or {macintosh creator XXXX} will | match types or creators respectively. Unrecognised types, or specifications of multiple MacOS types/creators will signal an error. | The two forms may be mixed, so -types {d f r w} will find all regular files OR directories that have both read AND write permis- | sions. The following are equivalent: | glob -type d * | glob */ | except that the first case doesn't return the trailing ``/'' and is more platform independent. | -- Marks the end of switches. The argument following this one will be treated as a pattern even if it starts with a -. The pattern arguments may contain any of the following special characters: ? Matches any single character. * Matches any sequence of zero or more characters. [chars] Matches any single character in chars. If chars contains a sequence of the form a-b then any character between a and b (inclu- sive) will match. x Matches the character x. {a,b,...} Matches any of the strings a, b, etc. As with csh, a ``.'' at the beginning of a file's name or just after a ``/'' must be matched explicitly or with a {} construct. In addi- tion, all ``/'' characters must be matched explicitly. If the first character in a pattern is ``~'' then it refers to the home directory for the user whose name follows the ``~''. If the ``~'' is followed immediately by ``/'' then the value of the HOME environment variable is used. The glob command differs from csh globbing in two ways. First, it does not sort its result list (use the lsort command if you want the list sorted). Second, glob only returns the names of files that actually exist; in csh no check for existence is made unless a pattern contains a ?, *, or [] construct. PORTABILITY ISSUES
Unlike other Tcl commands that will accept both network and native style names (see the filename manual entry for details on how native and network names are specified), the glob command only accepts native names. Windows For Windows UNC names, the servername and sharename components of the path may not contain ?, *, or [] constructs. On Windows NT, if pattern is of the form ``~username@domain'' it refers to the home directory of the user whose account information resides on the specified NT domain server. Otherwise, user account information is obtained from the local computer. On Windows 95 and 98, glob accepts patterns like ``.../'' and ``..../'' for successively higher up parent directories. Macintosh When using the options, -dir, -join or -path, glob assumes the directory separator for the entire pattern is the standard ``:''. When not using these options, glob examines each pattern argument and uses ``/'' unless the pattern contains a ``:''. SEE ALSO
file(n) KEYWORDS
exist, file, glob, pattern Tcl 8.3 glob(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:33 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy