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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers strange problem in finf with mtime Post 302153222 by arunkumar_mca on Monday 24th of December 2007 01:52:13 AM
Old 12-24-2007
sorry to post again ....

I am having the one more question .

I am using find with mtime and deleting a file . I am running the find with delete in a directory . This directory containd one more directory in it . My scheduled find with delete finds the filesin the sub directory and deletes the file . But it id not doing the the same in the present directory . It is not deleting rather it is listing the files in the current directory .

-rwxrwxrwx 1 scot cusr 1006258 Sep 19 15:33 s7041012
-rwxrwxrwx 1 scot cusr 72928579 May 1 2007 sp.gz

i cannot delete these file by find with delete . But the below files were deleted . But these files are in the subdirectory.

-rw-r--r-- 1 p13 datps 3462975 Dec 13 12:14 t52
-rw-r--r-- 1 p13 datps 3506325 Dec 20 13:34 t01
-rw-r----- 1 cftp cusr 49981106 Dec 12 09:41 p112

Can any one please let me know the reason ..

If that is permission problem . like that the file created by scot cannot be deleted . the even though rwxrwxrwx is set for s7041012 why it is not deleting . How can it be done ?..

Thanks,
Arun
 

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MKDIR(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  MKDIR(1)

NAME
mkdir -- make directories SYNOPSIS
mkdir [-p] [-m mode] directory_name ... DESCRIPTION
mkdir creates the directories named as operands, in the order specified, using mode rwxrwxrwx (0777) as modified by the current umask(2). The options are as follows: -m Set the file permission bits of the final created directory to the specified mode. The mode argument can be in any of the formats specified to the chmod(1) utility. If a symbolic mode is specified, the operation characters ``+'' and ``-'' are interpreted rela- tive to an initial mode of ``a=rwx''. -p Create intermediate directories as required. If this option is not specified, the full path prefix of each operand must already exist. Intermediate directories are created with permission bits of rwxrwxrwx (0777) as modified by the current umask, plus write and search permission for the owner. Do not consider it an error if the argument directory already exists. The user must have write permission in the parent directory. EXIT STATUS
mkdir exits 0 if successful, and >0 if an error occurred. SEE ALSO
chmod(1), rmdir(1), mkdir(2), umask(2) STANDARDS
The mkdir utility is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible. BSD
January 25, 1994 BSD
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