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Full Discussion: System wide find and sort
Operating Systems Linux System wide find and sort Post 302306058 by mark54g on Friday 10th of April 2009 05:21:34 PM
Old 04-10-2009
I've not tested this, and it is rough, as I am not a shell expert, but would this help:


for i in `locate ldap.conf`
do
ll $i
done

then you have them by location and date stamp assuming noatime is not being used on the file system
 

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UD(1)							      General Commands Manual							     UD(1)

NAME
ud - interactive LDAP Directory Server query program SYNOPSIS
ud [-Dv] [-s server] [-d debug-mask] [-l ldap-debug-mask] [-f file] DESCRIPTION
ud is used to interogate a directory server via the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP). OPTIONS
-s server Used to specify the name of an LDAP server to which ud should connect. If this flag is omitted, the value specified in the ud configuration file is used. If no value is specified in the configuration file, or the configuration file does not exist, the name ldap is used. Of course, it is up to the system administrator to make sure that the name ldap can be resolved (presumably through the use of a CNAME or A record in the DNS and the appropriate search path specified in the resolver config file). -d debug-mask Sets the ud debug mask to the value specified. Values for the mask can be dumped by using the -D flag. -f file Sets the configuration file to the name specified. -l ldap-debug-mask Sets the LDAP debug mask to the value specified. -v Turns on verbose output. Also toggable via the ud verbose command. -D Prints out a list of valid ud debug masks. FILES
/etc/openldap/ud.conf The ud configuration file. SEE ALSO
ud.conf(5), ldap.conf(5), ldap(3) DIAGNOSTICS
ud will try to be nice about error conditions, and in most cases prints a warm and fuzzy error message when it encounters a problem. Some- times the error will be unexpected, and in these cases, ud uses the ldap_perror() routine to print an informative diagnostic. BUGS
Too numerous to mention. AUTHOR
Bryan Beecher, University of Michigan ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
OpenLDAP is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP Project (http://www.openldap.org/). OpenLDAP is derived from University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release. 4.3 Berkeley Distribution 20 August 2000 UD(1)
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