Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: File Inventory Scan
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting File Inventory Scan Post 302173337 by jim mcnamara on Thursday 6th of March 2008 11:39:33 AM
Old 03-06-2008
I did a quick reformat to CSV on this - you get to play with it if it doesn't meet your needs.

Code:
#!/bin/ksh

export string=""
filetime()
{
    perl  -e '
          use POSIX qw(strftime);
          $fmt="%Y-%m-%d:%H:%M:%S ";
          @arr  = stat $ARGV[0];
          print strftime "$fmt", localtime($arr[9]); 
          print strftime "$fmt", localtime($arr[10]);
          print strftime "$fmt", localtime($arr[8]);
          print "$arr[7] $arr[4] $arr[5]\n";         
          
         ' $1
}
cd $1
cwd="$1"
print "files in $(pwd), mtime, ctime, atime, size, uid, gid, filetype"  > file.csv
find . -type f | \
while read filename
do
    export string=""
	filetime $filename | read mtime ctime atime size uid gid
	file $filename | read dummy filetype
    print "$filename, $mtime, $ctime, $atime, $size, $uid, $gid, $filetype"
done >> file.csv

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to scan only new lines added in file?

Hi, I am planning to implement a scheduled script that will go against my log files (every hour), search for a set of key words (errors, exceptions, faults etc). The script must be intelligent enough to scan only the new lines added to the log file since it last ran. I can use grep for... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: redlotus72
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

File Scan

Hi everyone , i m working on Sun solaris and i have a file "smsapp.cur" which has information like this paragraph given below , there are millions of such paragraphs From:923212802736 To:923222326807 logMessage: 07-04-08 17:34:29 Getting message topup from code page default in language English... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dastard
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to scan a file for literal, return 0 or 1 if found?

How can i scan a file in a UNIX script and look for a particular keyword? For example if i wanted to scan the file "lpcmp165.out" and see if it contains the term "error" or "ERROR" and then return a 0 or 1 or some indicator as such? Detail example: sqlplus -s xx/yyyyyyy#@zzz <<EOF >... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: bobk544
11 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to scan a sequential file to fetch some of the records?

Hi I am working on a script which needs to scan a sequential file and fetch the row where 2nd column = 'HUB' Can any one help me with this... Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: manmeet
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Scan a log file

hi guys, i am very new to scripting & lookin for a shell script/perl script which would scan another file with the keyword "no change" & take a count of the same. Let me know if any further details are required. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nhanda
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Log File Scan

I need to read the last line of a log file and save it, sleep for X minutes and read the last line again. If the line is the same, exit 1, otherwise sleep for X minutes until the last line contains 'Status: Process completed'. Can anyone offer advice here? Thanks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mode09
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Scan log file for errors

Hi everyone. I am still new to UNIX, and am having trouble figuring out how to create a script to scan a log file to look for errors based on a string. We run AIX 5.3, and would like the ability to report all the instances of WebSphere Broker Execution groups crashing. This script would... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimbojames
8 Replies

8. Red Hat

Scan for new LUN and create a new file system

Hi Please I dont have a lot of redhat skills, but I need some help on creating a file system. I need to rescan for this new LUN, so I try to check existing LUNs: fdisk -l Disk /dev/sda: 299.4 GB, 299439751168 bytes 255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 36404 cylinders Units = cylinders of... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: fretagi
8 Replies

9. Ubuntu

Scan and create file systems in new LUNs

Hi I have a system running uname -a Linux cmoveldb02 3.2.0-29-generic #46-Ubuntu SMP Fri Jul 27 17:03:23 UTC 2012 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux and I was told by the NetApp Admin that he has provided 5 LUNs of 1Tb, 200Gb and remaining 3 of 300Gb, but I am not able to see the new LUNs. I have... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: fretagi
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Scan and remove if file infected using bash

The below bash runs clamav on all files in DIR and produces virus-scan.log. My question is the portion in bold is supposed to move the infected files, lines not OK, to /home/cmccabe/quarantine. Does the bash look correct? Thank you :). virus-scan.log Mon Jan 16 14:39:05 CST 2017... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
5 Replies
install::TempContent::Objects::mod_perl-2.0.9::docs::apiUserRContributed Peinstall::TempContent::Objects::mod_perl-2.0.9::docs::api::APR::Finfo(3)

NAME
APR::Finfo - Perl API for APR fileinfo structure Synopsis use APR::Finfo (); use APR::Const -compile => qw(FINFO_NORM); my $finfo = APR::Finfo::stat("/tmp/test", APR::Const::FINFO_NORM, $pool); $device = $finfo->device; # (stat $file)[0] $inode = $finfo->inode; # (stat $file)[1] # stat returns an octal number while protection is hex $prot = $finfo->protection; # (stat $file)[2] $nlink = $finfo->nlink; # (stat $file)[3] $gid = $finfo->group; # (stat $file)[4] $uid = $finfo->user; # (stat $file)[5] $size = $finfo->size; # (stat $file)[7] $atime = $finfo->atime; # (stat $file)[8] $mtime = $finfo->mtime; # (stat $file)[9] $ctime = $finfo->ctime; # (stat $file)[10] $csize = $finfo->csize; # consumed size: not portable! $filetype = $finfo->filetype; # file/dir/socket/etc $fname = $finfo->fname; $name = $finfo->name; # in filesystem case: # valid fields that can be queried $valid = $finfo->valid; Description APR fileinfo structure provides somewhat similar information to Perl's "stat()" call, but you will want to use this module's API to query an already "stat()'ed" filehandle to avoid an extra system call or to query attributes specific to APR file handles. During the HTTP request handlers coming after "PerlMapToStorageHandler", "$r->finfo" already contains the cached values from the apr's "stat()" call. So you don't want to perform it again, but instead get the "ARP::Finfo" object via: my $finfo = $r->finfo; API
"APR::Finfo" provides the following functions and/or methods: "atime" Get the time the file was last accessed: $atime = $finfo->atime; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $atime ( integer ) Last access time in seconds since the epoch since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[8] Note that this method may not be reliable on all platforms, most notably Win32 -- FAT32 filesystems appear to work properly, but NTFS filesystems do not. "csize" Get the storage size consumed by the file $csize = $finfo->csize; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $csize ( integer ) since: 2.0.00 Chances are that you don't want to use this method, since its functionality is not supported on most platforms (in which case it always returns 0). "ctime" Get the time the file was last changed $ctime = $finfo->ctime; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $ctime ( integer ) Inode change time in seconds since the epoch since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[10] The ctime field is non-portable. In particular, you cannot expect it to be a "creation time", see "Files and Filesystems" in the perlport manpage for details. "device" Get the id of the device the file is on. $device = $finfo->device; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $device ( integer ) since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[0] Note that this method is non-portable. It doesn't work on all platforms, most notably Win32. "filetype" Get the type of file. $filetype = $finfo->filetype; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $filetype ( ":filetype constant" ) since: 2.0.00 For example: use APR::Pool; use APR::Finfo; use APR::Const -compile => qw(FILETYPE_DIR FILETYPE_REG FINFO_NORM); my $pool = APR::Pool->new(); my $finfo = APR::Finfo::stat("/tmp", APR::Const::FINFO_NORM, $pool); my $finfo = $finfo->filetype; if ($finfo == APR::Const::FILETYPE_REG) { print "regular file"; } elsif ($finfo == APR::Const::FILETYPE_REG) { print "directory"; } else { print "other file"; } Since /tmp is a directory, this will print: directory "fname" Get the pathname of the file (possibly unrooted) $fname = $finfo->fname; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $filetype ( string ) since: 2.0.00 "group" Get the group id that owns the file: $gid = $finfo->group; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $gid ( number ) since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[5] Note that this method may not be meaningful on all platforms, most notably Win32. Incorrect results have also been reported on some versions of OSX. "inode" Get the inode of the file. $inode = $finfo->inode; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $inode ( integer ) since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[1] Note that this method may not be meaningful on all platforms, most notably Win32. "mtime" The time the file was last modified $mtime = $finfo->mtime; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $mtime ( integer ) Last modify time in seconds since the epoch since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[9] "name" Get the file's name (no path) in filesystem case: $name = $finfo->name; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $device ( string ) since: 2.0.00 "nlink" Get the number of hard links to the file. $nlink = $finfo->nlink; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $nlink ( integer ) since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[3] "protection" Get the access permissions of the file. Mimics Unix access rights. $prot = $finfo->protection; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $prot ( ":fprot constant" ) since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[2] Note: Perl's stat returns an octal number while mod_perl's "protection" returns a hex number. See perldoc -f stat and APR's file_io for more information on each. "size" Get the size of the file $size = $finfo->size; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $size ( integer ) Total size of file, in bytes since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[7] "stat" Get the specified file's stats. $finfo = APR::Finfo::stat($fname, $wanted_fields, $p); arg1: $fname ( string ) The path to the file to "stat()". arg2: $wanted_fields ( ":finfo constant" ) The desired fields, as a bitmask flag of "APR::FINFO_*" constants. Notice that you can also use the constants that already combine several elements in one. For example "APR::Const::FINFO_PROT" asks for all protection bits, "APR::Const::FINFO_MIN" asks for the following fields: type, mtime, ctime, atime, size and "APR::Const::FINFO_NORM" asks for all atomic unix "apr_stat()" fields (similar to perl's "stat()"). arg3: $p ( "APR::Pool object" ) the pool to use to allocate the file stat structure. ret: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) since: 2.0.00 For example, here is how to get most of the "stat" fields: use APR::Pool (); use APR::Finfo (); use APR::Const -compile => qw(FINFO_NORM); my $pool = APR::Pool->new(); my $finfo = APR::Finfo::stat("/tmp/test", APR::Const::FINFO_NORM, $pool); "user" Get the user id that owns the file: $uid = $finfo->user; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) return: $uid ( number ) since: 2.0.00 This method returns the same value as Perl's: (stat $filename)[4] Note that this method may not be meaningful on all platforms, most notably Win32. "valid" The bitmask describing valid fields of this apr_finfo_t structure including all available 'wanted' fields and potentially more $valid = $finfo->valid; obj: $finfo ( "APR::Finfo object" ) arg1: $valid ( bitmask ) This bitmask flag should be bit-OR'ed against ":finfo constant" constants. since: 2.0.00 See Also mod_perl 2.0 documentation. Copyright mod_perl 2.0 and its core modules are copyrighted under The Apache Software License, Version 2.0. Authors The mod_perl development team and numerous contributors. perl v5.18.2 2015-06install::TempContent::Objects::mod_perl-2.0.9::docs::api::APR::Finfo(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:32 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy