Hi,
I need to find out a particular pattern from a directory, for example say X.
The X directory contains 10 c files, and it has subdirectory called Y, and Y has 20 c files within it.
Now I have to find out the pattern only from parent directory X not from sub directory Y.
I have... (4 Replies)
I have some patterns that I need to match with the content of several files and I'm having trouble to do it
Here is what I tried already :
ksh won't even execute this
#!/bin/ksh
path="/export/home/ipomwbas"
pattern=$path"/flags"
find . -name "*.properties" |\
while read file; do
... (7 Replies)
Hey, I have a question about using grep and find together to locate all C programs in a directory containing certain words and open the vi editor with each file. I'm not sure how to do this in one command (as in one line). I know find has a "-exec" option that can call vi, but how do you combine... (1 Reply)
HI
what is the difference between find and grep
if I want to find all the files from different directories which contain "ORA" error, and the line number in each file which has ORA error
should I use pipeline ?
thanks
James (3 Replies)
:wall:Hello, Im having trouble using the find and grep combined into one command. I have the following:
find filname* -mmin -60 grep "ERROR" filename
I want to find the "ERROR" text in any file created in the last hour in the current directory. I dont know how to end the command. If I leave... (3 Replies)
I have a file called 'test.txt' that contains alphanumeric charecters.
The file contains the word 'SBE' followed by other alphabets many times. For example, the file will contain: SBE334GH and also will have SBE77Y8I.
When i do grep 'SBE*' test.txt - it outputs the entire file.
Can you... (5 Replies)
Hi all ,
I'm new to unix
I have a checked project , there exists a file called xxx.config .
now my task is to find all the files in the checked out project which references to this xxx.config file.
how do i use grep or find command . (2 Replies)
How can I recursively find all files in a directory and print out the file and first line number of any text blocks that match the below cases?
This would seem to involve find, xargs, *grep, regex, etc.
In summary, I want to find so-called empty "try-catch blocks" that do not contain code... (0 Replies)
Is it possible with find and Grep to search files under a directory and display only files that have multiple occurrence of a string (In AIX)? Anybody has an example code? If not what are the other options?
Thanks in advance. (7 Replies)
Hi,
On AIX,
We have several moveplan.xml files in different folders.
I run:
find /u0/appl_top/ -name moveplan.xml -exec grep -i Passphrase {} \;
And it returns
<name>Custom Identity Keystore Passphrase File</name>
<name>Custom Trust Keystore Passphrase File</name>
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: big123456
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
synctree
SYNCTREE(1) General Commands Manual SYNCTREE(1)NAME
synctree - synchronize directory trees.
SYNOPSIS
synctree [-iuf] [[user1@]machine1:]dir1 [[user2@]machine2:]dir2
DESCRIPTION
Synctree synchronizes the directory tree rooted at dir2 with dir1. It walks recursively through both trees, and deletes and adds files in
dir2 to make it equal to dir1. Mode, owner and group are set for each file unless the -u flag is given. In its normal mode of operation,
synctree will ask if it may delete or add directories assuming that you don't want to. Non-directories are simply deleted or added, but
synctree will ask if it needs to update a normal file with a default answer of 'y'. Simply typing return will choose the default answer,
typing end-of-file is like typing return to this question and all other questions.
You can specify a hostname and user-id to be used to access dir1 or dir2. Synctree will use rsh(1) to run a copy of itself on the remote
machine. The call interface mimics that of rcp(1), but you can use more than one user@machine prefix if you want to make things really
interesting.
Hard links are enforced, an update is done by first deleting the old file so that links to unknown files are broken. Links to files within
dir2 will be restored.
If either directory contains the file .backup, then this file will be used as an alternate inode table. This allows one to make a backup
copy of a file tree full of special files and differing user-ids on a remote machine under an unpriviledged user-id.
OPTIONS -i Ask for permission (with default answer 'n') to delete or add any file or directory.
-u Only install newer files, i.e. merge the directory trees.
-f Don't ask, think 'yes' on any question.
SEE ALSO remsync(1), cpdir(1), rsh(1), rcp(1), perror(3).
DIAGNOSTICS
Messages may come from three different processes. One named "Slave" running in dir1, one named "Master" running in dir2, and synctree
itself in a mediator role. The mediator will also perform the task of either the master or the slave if one of them is running locally.
You need to know this to interpret the error messages coming from one of these processes. The messages are normally based on perror(3).
Failure to contact a remote machine will be reported by rsh. Synctree should have a zero exit status if no errors have been encountered.
BUGS
Directory dir2 will be created without asking.
The master and slave processes get their error output mixed up sometimes (nice puzzle).
The local and remote machine must use the same file type encoding.
The link replacement strategy may lead to lack of space on a small device. Let synctree run to completion and then rerun it to pick up the
pieces.
Letting the local process keep its "synctree" name may be a mistake.
It talks too much.
AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot, (kjb@cs.vu.nl)
SYNCTREE(1)