Does anyone know how to display the time with seconds
of when a file was last modified. I can get hour & minutes but
would also like seconds. --Running AIX (1 Reply)
I have a requirement to find the time difference in second between 2 given time stamps. An example scenario is shown below:
30 Oct 11:42:29:992 DEBUG org.apache.commons.digester.Digester - New match='form-validation/global/validator' (IID=, TID=)
30 Oct 11:42:29:993 DEBUG... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
I have two files (given below) each exists under different paths. I want to compare the modification time stamp of file1.txt is lessthan the modification time of file2.txt.
month1=`ls -l file1.txt | awk '{ print $6}'`
date1=`ls -file1.txt | awk '{ print $7}'`
time1=`ls... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a directory made up of many symbolic links to folders multiple file systems.
I want to return folders modified within the last 50 days, but find is using the link time rather than the target time.
find . -type d -mtime -50
Is there a way to either:
a) Make a symbolic link... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I need the modification time of a file on a particular day say 3 days before.
I just don't want the last modification time. I need all the modification times on a particualar day.
Is there anyway to do it? Kindly help. Could anyone tell me where the modification time is stored?... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I need to list the files based modification time of the files from a directory, I cannot use "ls -t" as there are lot of files, which "ls" command cannot handle. New files will land there daily. So iam looking for an alternative through "find"command.
All suggestions are welcomed.
... (6 Replies)
First, oh great Unix gurus, forgive if this is a stupid question.
Unix/Linux is not my main thing but I have been programming in C/C++ for many years. I will do my best to be specific.
I have a program in C/C++ that needs to modify the time of a given file. Currently I do this using utime()... (5 Replies)
I have to list the files of particular directory using file filter like find -name abc* something and if multiple file exist I also want time of each file up to seconds.
Currently we are getting time up to minutes in AIX is there any way I can get file last modification time up to seconds. (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I would like some help with a sendmail problem:
We have a new system comprising of 4 T7-1 servers, each hosting 5 LDOMs, all domains running Solaris 11.3
All emails sent from every one of these domains (including the control domains) sit in the queue for 3 mins 11 secs (sometime 3m 12s,... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mysturji
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
find
FIND(1) General Commands Manual FIND(1)NAME
find - find files meeting a given condition
SYNOPSIS
find directory expression
EXAMPLES
find / -name a.out -print
# Print all a.out paths
find /usr/ast ! -newer f -ok rm {} ;
# Ask before removing
find /usr -size +20 -exec mv {} /big ;
# move files > 20 blks
find / -name a.out -o -name '*.o' -exec rm {};
# 2 conds
DESCRIPTION
Find descends the file tree starting at the given directory checking each file in that directory and its subdirectories against a predi-
cate. If the predicate is true, an action is taken. The predicates may be connected by -a (Boolean and), -o (Boolean or) and ! (Boolean
negation). Each predicate is true under the conditions specified below. The integer n may also be +n to mean any value greater than n, -n
to mean any value less than n, or just n for exactly n.
-name s true if current filename is s (include shell wild cards)
-size n true if file size is n blocks
-inum n true if the current file's i-node number is n
-mtime ntrue if modification time relative to today (in days) is n
-links ntrue if the number of links to the file is n
-newer ftrue if the file is newer than f
-perm n true if the file's permission bits = n (n is in octal)
-user u true if the uid = u (a numerical value, not a login name)
-group gtrue if the gid = g (a numerical value, not a group name)
-type x where x is bcdfug (block, char, dir, regular file, setuid, setgid)
-xdev do not cross devices to search mounted file systems
Following the expression can be one of the following, telling what to do when a file is found:
-print print the file name on standard output
-exec execute a MINIX command, {} stands for the file name
-ok prompts before executing the command
SEE ALSO test(1), xargs(1).
FIND(1)