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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Using find with -prune to skip a specific pathname using Solaris Post 302290647 by rubin on Tuesday 24th of February 2009 12:08:33 AM
Old 02-24-2009
Not the best solution, but one alternative would be filtering out the lines that you don't need using an external command, something like ...

Code:
find . -print | egrep -v '/dir1/temp/*'

AFAIK -wholename option is GNU specific.
 

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BOOTCHART(1)						      General Commands Manual						      BOOTCHART(1)

NAME
bootchart - render a chart from the statistical data recorded with bootchartd SYNOPSIS
bootchart [-f|--format FORMAT] [-n|--no-prune] [-o|--output-dir DIR] files ... DESCRIPTION
bootchart is used to process the log file created by bootchartd(1) (/var/log/bootchart.tgz by default). bootchart builds the process tree and renders a performance chart in different formats. The chart may then be analyzed to examine process dependency and overall resource utilization. OPTIONS
-f,--format FORMAT Sets the format of the image. Possible values are: png, eps, svg (default) -h, --help Display brief usage message. -n, --no-prune Do not prune the process tree. To make the resulting process tree more comprehensible, bootchart will prune the tree using various techniques (removing short-lived processes, merging processes, etc.). This option disables such behavior. -o, --output-dir DIR Sets the output directory for the resulting image. (default: .) -v, --version Show program version. FILES
/var/log/bootchart.tgz the default log file to parse (unless otherwise specified). SEE ALSO
bootchartd(1) AUTHOR
bootchart was written by Ziga Mahkovec <ziga.mahkovec@klika.si>. This manual page was written by Jorg Sommer <joerg@alea.gnuu.de>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others). 2006-03-05 BOOTCHART(1)
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