Hi,
I want to find the total size of some directory trees in my solaris 9 machine.
Is there a command or utility I can use to do it. Please let me know if there is
any way.
Thanks
Akheel (1 Reply)
As I'm a newbie to UNIX, very newbie in fact, could anyone humour me and tell me how I'd find just the file size in bytes for a specific file?
Or at least just the specific line from the ls -a for the file - call it file1
I know this sounds bad but I don't seem to be getting very far at this... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I'm newbie to Unix. I'd like to count the total size of those files in my directory by date. For example, files on this period 05/01/08 - 05/31/08. If possible can we count by byte instead of kb.
if I use $ du - ks , it will add up all files in the dir.
thanks,
Helen (5 Replies)
Friends,
I have an 80 GB HDD, but I wish to know if there is a direct command in Solaris 10 to find out the size of my hard disk (similar to fdisk -l in Linux).
Thank you
saagar (3 Replies)
Hi All...
is the below command be modified in sucha way that i can get the file size along with the name and path of the file
the below command only gives me the file location which are more than 100000k...but I want the exact size of the file also..
find / -name "*.*" -size +100000k
... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am writing a script in which i need find the total size of all the directories that are present in a directory which are owned by a particular user.
I will explain in details
i have a dir DIR1 in which i have 5 dir's DIRA DIRB DIRC DIRD DIRE.
DIRA DIRC DIRE are owned by "eswar" i... (2 Replies)
Hello :
I need some help in writing a ksh script which will find a particular directory in all the file systems in a server and finally report the total size of the direcotry in all the file systems.
Some thing like this..
find /u*/app/oracle -type d -name "product" -prune
and then... (1 Reply)
:mad:i need command to know the total size of project in my system by Giga bit
i try
#du -s /*/projectname
but i need total size for this project by G.B
can you help me (6 Replies)
If I have a number of files in a directory, for example,
test.1
test.2
test.3
abc.1
abc.2
abc.3
and I need to find the total file size of all of the test.* files, I can use du -bc test.* in Linux.
However, in Solaris, du does not have the -c option. What can I do in Solaris to get... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: learnix
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
whereis
whereis(1B) SunOS/BSD Compatibility Package Commands whereis(1B)NAME
whereis - locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a command
SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/whereis [-bmsu] [ -BMS directory... -f] filename...
DESCRIPTION
The whereis utility locates source/binary and manuals sections for specified files. The supplied names are first stripped of leading path-
name components and any (single) trailing extension of the form .ext, for example, .c. Prefixes of s. resulting from use of source code
control are also dealt with. whereis then attempts to locate the desired program in a list of standard places:
etc
/sbin
/usr/bin
/usr/ccs/bin
/usr/ccs/lib
/usr/lang
/usr/lbin
/usr/lib
/usr/sbin
/usr/ucb
/usr/ucblib
/usr/ucbinclude
/usr/games
/usr/local
/usr/local/bin
/usr/new
/usr/old
/usr/hosts
/usr/include
/usr/etc
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-b Searches only for binaries.
-B Changes or otherwise limits the places where whereis searches for binaries.
-f Terminates the last directory list and signals the start of file names, and must be used when any of the -B, -M, or -S options are
used.
-m Searches only for manual sections.
-M Changes or otherwise limits the places where whereis searches for manual sections.
-s Searches only for sources.
-S Changes or otherwise limit the places where whereis searches for sources.
-u Searches for unusual entries. A file is said to be unusual if it does not have one entry of each requested type. Thus
`whereis -m-u *' asks for those files in the current directory which have no documentation.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Finding files
Find all files in /usr/bin which are not documented in /usr/share/man/man1 with source in /usr/src/cmd:
example% cd /usr/ucb
example% whereis -u -M /usr/share/man/man1 -S /usr/src/cmd -f *
FILES
/usr/src/*
/usr/{doc,man}/*
/etc, /usr/{lib,bin,ucb,old,new,local}
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWscpu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO chdir(2), attributes(5)BUGS
Since whereis uses chdir(2) to run faster, pathnames given with the -M, -S, or -B must be full; that is, they must begin with a `/'.
SunOS 5.10 10 Jan 2000 whereis(1B)