Hello guys it's me again, I need some help. What I'm doing is listing all the file and directories Recusively and using it a a master file. Then I need to do the same the nest day to make sure nothing was deleted or modified. What happen is file in one of out major directories was deleted without... (2 Replies)
Hi All I have two scripts which i used to try and list all the directories one using 'function', which only lists the first directory and does not show directories within directories.
function ListDir ()
{
for arg in $(ls $HOME)
do
if
then
echo $arg
... (2 Replies)
I have a large list of filenames from an Excel sheet, which I then translate into a simple text file. I'd like to use this list, which contains various file extensions , to archive these files and then remove them recursively through multiple directories and subdirectories. So far, it looks like... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm trying to get a bash script working for a program (bowtie) which takes a list of input files (*.fastq) and assembles them to an output file (outfile.sam). All the .fastq files are in one folder in my home directory (~/infiles).
The problem is that the 'bowtie' requires that... (7 Replies)
Hello,
I'm trying to figure out how best to approach this script, and I have very little experience, so I could use all the help I can get. :wall:
I regularly need to delete files from many directories.
A file with the same name may exist any number of times in different subdirectories.... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a command in my bash script, searchDirectoryName.sh:
DIR_NAME=$(find . -type d)
echo "${DIR_NAME}"
.
./Dir1
./Dir1/1.0.2.1
./Dir2
./Dir2/1.1
./Dir3
./Dir3/2.2.1
How can I select only following directory names with second subdirectoies and without first ./ in the... (3 Replies)
Hello :)
I need little help i have following cmd:
this only able to delete files but not folder which contain that file
find /home/test/* -name "*.testfile" -type f -exec rm -i {} \;
how to delete whole directory if file called somethingblahblah.testfile is there?
Thanks you :) (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have a SAS code that predominantly has comments line and the real code like below and i want to remove ONLY THE COMMENTS from the code in the single line or spanned across multiple lines.
/********************************************************************
*** This Is a Comment... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: arooonatr
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
uudemon
uudemon(4) Kernel Interfaces Manual uudemon(4)NAME
uudemon.admin, uudemon.cleanu, uudemon.hour, uudemon.poll - Administrative shell scripts for polling remote systems, cleaning up spool
directories, reporting status to the system administrator, and routine invocations of the uuxqt and uusched daemons
SYNOPSIS
These shell scripts reside in the following directory:
/usr/lib/uucp
DESCRIPTION
All the scripts can be run from the command line or can be run automatically by the cron daemon. To automatically run the scripts, remove
the comment character (#) from the beginning of the relevant line in the /var/spool/cron/crontabs/uucp file.
This script reports status to the system administrator. It issues the uustat command to find out the status of uucp jobs. It mails the
results to the uucp login ID. The script may be modified to send mail to any login ID such as the uucp administrative login ID (uucpa) or
root. This script cleans up the /var/spool/uucp and /var/spool/uucppublic directories by running the uucleanup command. The uucleanup com-
mand is run with the following parameters: -C7, -D7, X2, -o2, -W1. This script runs the uusched and uuxqt daemons in the background. This
script polls the systems listed in the /usr/lib/uucp/Poll file. The uudemon.poll script should be scheduled before the uudemon.hour
script. This allows uudemon.poll to create any command files before cron runs the uudemon.hour script.
FILES
Contains the uudemon.admin, uudemon.cleanu, uudemon.hour and uudemon.poll files. Contains the uucp file.
RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: cron(8), uucleanup(8), uusched(8), uuxqt(1)
Files: /usr/lib/uucp delim off
uudemon(4)