HI,
I have the following command that shows me the total size of folders and subfolders :
du -hs *| sort -n
result:
1.0M sandeep
1.4G sandy
1.4M important
1.6M files
but I will need to know the size of folders and its subfolders( not size of individual files though)... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I need a command to find a files under particular owner ?All the files in the system for the particular user id is the owner?
Please help me on this? (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have a problem, I need to find files in folder by owner, not using find command at all and ls -R parameter. Thanx a lot.
Best regarts (1 Reply)
i have written a script in which i have to go to a dir and search there for files belonging to owner pipe and then delete them
Can anyone tell me how to find files by owner pipe. below some of the files belonging to owner pipe
-rw------- 1 pipe pipe 163840 Mar 18 2008 ... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
We have some files are under 744 permissions and the the owner is say owner1 and group1.
Now we have another user owner2 of group2, owner2 can remove files of the owner1 and the permission of those files are 744, unix admin told us he did some config at his side so we can do that.
... (14 Replies)
Hi I need help. I need to use find (or grep I don't care) to recursively search for files who have any kind of executable permissions (group and/or owner and/or other). I am looking for *.c and *.h
This what I am using now:
find . -name *.h -perm -111 -print
but I don't want to retype that... (4 Replies)
Currently i have following syntax:
ldapsearch -D "CN=..,OU=..,OU=All Businesses,DC=..,DC=..,DC=.." -w .. -h .. -p .. -b "OU=All Businesses,DC=..,DC=..,DC=.." "managedObjects=$DL_NAME_CN" employeeNumber givenName sn -S employeeNumber -x
which gives me following info:
"requesting:... (0 Replies)
Hello
I have a file containing the list of different folders like this file_list.txt:
/s8/tests/test1
/s8/tests/tests/test2
/s8/tests/test2
/s8/tests/tests/test2/test5
I want a script to put the owner user of each folder in front of it in the text file.
So the reult would become... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Johanni
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
find
FIND(1) General Commands Manual FIND(1)NAME
find - find files
SYNOPSIS
find pathname-list expression
DESCRIPTION
Find recursively descends the directory hierarchy for each pathname in the pathname-list (i.e., one or more pathnames) seeking files that
match a boolean expression written in the primaries given below. In the descriptions, the argument n is used as a decimal integer where +n
means more than n, -n means less than n and n means exactly n.
-name filename
True if the filename argument matches the current file name. Normal Shell argument syntax may be used if escaped (watch out for
`[', `?' and `*').
-perm onum
True if the file permission flags exactly match the octal number onum (see chmod(1)). If onum is prefixed by a minus sign, more
flag bits (017777, see stat(2)) become significant and the flags are compared: (flags&onum)==onum.
-type c True if the type of the file is c, where c is b, c, d or f for block special file, character special file, directory or plain
file.
-links n True if the file has n links.
-user uname
True if the file belongs to the user uname (login name or numeric user ID).
-group gname
True if the file belongs to group gname (group name or numeric group ID).
-size n True if the file is n blocks long (512 bytes per block).
-inum n True if the file has inode number n.
-atime n True if the file has been accessed in n days.
-mtime n True if the file has been modified in n days.
-exec command
True if the executed command returns a zero value as exit status. The end of the command must be punctuated by an escaped semi-
colon. A command argument `{}' is replaced by the current pathname.
-ok command
Like -exec except that the generated command is written on the standard output, then the standard input is read and the command
executed only upon response y.
-print Always true; causes the current pathname to be printed.
-newer file
True if the current file has been modified more recently than the argument file.
The primaries may be combined using the following operators (in order of decreasing precedence):
1) A parenthesized group of primaries and operators (parentheses are special to the Shell and must be escaped).
2) The negation of a primary (`!' is the unary not operator).
3) Concatenation of primaries (the and operation is implied by the juxtaposition of two primaries).
4) Alternation of primaries (`-o' is the or operator).
EXAMPLE
To remove all files named `a.out' or `*.o' that have not been accessed for a week:
find / ( -name a.out -o -name '*.o' ) -atime +7 -exec rm {} ;
FILES
/etc/passwd
/etc/group
SEE ALSO sh(1), test(1), filsys(5)BUGS
The syntax is painful.
FIND(1)