I am trying to get a list of top level directories below the search path but I don't want to descend subdirectories. The find command listed below returns me the list I want but it also returns subdirectories. I can't seem to get the -prune option to work the way I want. How would I modify the... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I'm using the following command to get a list of files on the system.
find /releases -type f -exec ls -l > /home/sebarry/list.txt '{}' \;
however, its searching a directory I don't want it to search so I know I have to use prune but I don't seem to be able to get prune and exec to work... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I'm using the following command to get a list of files on the system.
find /releases -type f -exec ls -l > /home/sebarry/list.txt '{}' \;
however, its searching a directory I don't want it to search so I know I have to use prune but I don't seem to be able to get prune and exec to work... (2 Replies)
I have a directory named https-abcd
Under that I have some directories, files and links.
One of those directories is with name logs and the logs directory has lot of files in it.
I need to tar the whole https-abcd directory excluding the logs directory only, I should get all the links, files and... (2 Replies)
I've run into a brick wall using the -prune command to avoid walking sub-directories. Does any one have any suggestions on how I avoid walking the sub-directories when finding files in the following example?
I want to find all files older than 30 days in the dir1 directory and only the dir1... (7 Replies)
Can anyone interpret and tell me the way the below command works?
find * -name "*${msgType}" -mtime +${archiveDays} -prune -type f -print 2>/dev/null | xargs rm -f 2> /dev/null
Please tell me the usage of prune and xargs in the above command?
Looking forward your reply.
Thanks in... (1 Reply)
Hi , Kindly help me out .:)
i want to find only the file t4 in directory t3. i am in dir t . the tree is as follows.
if i give,
find .
o/p is
.
./t4
./t1
./t1/t2
./t1/t2/t3
./t1/t2/t3/t4
./t1/t2/t4
./t1/t4
directories are like t/t1/t2/t3 and each directory has file t4.
my... (7 Replies)
Hi
I have a directory say mydir and inside it there are many files and subdirectories and also a directory called lost+found owned by root user
I want to print all files directories and subdirectorres from my directory using find command except lost+found
If i do
find . \( -name... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to find some files in a directory and then remove/list them if they are 30 days old. I also have 2 directories in that directory which I need to skip. Can someone please tell me what is the correct syntax?
find /developer/. -name "lost+found" "projects" -prune -o -type f... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tkhan9
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
snarf
snarf(1) General Commands Manual snarf(1)NAME
snarf - Simple Non-interactive All-purpose Resource Fetcher
SYNOPSIS
snarf [-avqprzm] URL [outfile] ...
DESCRIPTION
Retrieves data from a variety of protocols, namely http, ftp, and gopher.
USAGE
snarf is invoked with any number of URLs and outfiles. If an outfile is not specified, snarf preserves the remote file name when saving.
For example, snarf http://foo.bar.com/images/face.gif will retrieve the file ``face.gif'' to the local system. In the event that there is
no filename (the url ends in a slash), the data is retrieved and stored in the file index.html for http URLs, ftpindex.txt for ftp URLs, or
gopherindex.txt for gopher URLs.
Using a dash, "-", as the outfile causes snarf to send its output to stdout rather than a file.
To log in to an ftp server or website that requires a username and password, use the syntax http://username:password@site.com/. If you omit
the password, you will be prompted for it.
Snarf has a built-in option to download the latest version of itself; simply run snarf LATEST.
OPTIONS
-a Causes snarf to use "active" ftp. By default, snarf uses passive ftp, and, if the server does not support it, falls back to active
ftp. Using the -a option will avoid the initial passive attempt.
-r Resumes an interrupted ftp or http transfer by checking if there is a local file with the same name as the remote file, and starting
the transfer at the end of the local file and continuing until finished. This option only works with HTTP servers that understand
HTTP/1.1 and ftp servers that support the REST command. snarf uses this option automatically if the outfile already exists.
-n Don't resume; ignore the outfile if it exists and re-transfer it in its entirety.
-q Don't print progress bars.
-p Forces printing of progress bars. Snarf has a compile-time option for whether progress bars print by default or not. The -p option
overrides the -q option. In addition, if progress bars are enabled by default, snarf suppresses them when standard output is not a
terminal. Using -p will override this behavior.
-v Prints all messages that come from the server to stderr.
-z Send a user-agent string similar to what Netscape Navigator 4.0 uses.
-m Send a user-agent string similar to what Microsoft Internet Explorer uses.
Each option only affects the URL that immediately follows it. To have an option affect all URLs that follow it, use an uppercase letter for
the option, e.g. -Q instead of -q.
ENVIRONMENT
Snarf checks several environment variables when deciding what to use for a proxy. It checks a service-specific variable first, then
SNARF_PROXY, then PROXY.
The service-specific variables are HTTP_PROXY, FTP_PROXY, and GOPHER_PROXY.
Snarf also checks the SNARF_HTTP_USER_AGENT environment variable and will use it when reporting its user-agent string to an HTTP server. In
the same spirit, it also uses the SNARF_HTTP_REFERER environment variable to spoof a Referer to the web server.
BUGS
Bugs? What bugs? If you find 'em, report 'em.
AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 2000 Zachary Beane (xach@xach.com)
17 Jun 2000 snarf(1)