Hi,
I want to write bash script that will keep on looking for files in a directory and if any file exists, it processes them. I want it to be a background process, which keeps looking for files in a directory.
Is there any way to do that in bash script?
I can loop through all the files like... (4 Replies)
hello
i have a requirement where i have a direcotry in which i get files in the format
STOCKS.20080114.dat
STOCKS.20080115.dat
STOCKS.20080117.dat
STOCKS.20080118.dat
i need to loop through the directory and sort by create date descending order and i need to process the first file.
... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
Can somebody help me with this problem pls.
I need to extract one specific line from each files in a folder and put
the all lines extracted in a unique output file in the following format.
line extracted, respective name of file, date of file.
I´m, trying the part to extract... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to unix and shell scripting,can anybody help me in sctipting a requirement.
my requirement is to get the latest directory the name of the directory will be like CSB.monthdate_time stamp
like CSB.Sep29_11:16 and CSB.Oct01_16:21.
i need to pick the latest directory.
in the... (15 Replies)
I was looking to get some help with copying files in one directory to another using a for-in loop. My script file is called copyfile and here is what I have:
for file in $(ls -a $1)
do
cp $file ~/dir-2
done
When I run copyfile dir-1 this is what I get
cp: omitting directory `.'... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I would like to write a loop to change the names of files in a directory. The files are called data1.txt through data1000.txt. I'd like to change their names to a1.txt through a1000.txt. How do I go about doing that? Thanks! (2 Replies)
Hello
How do I loop through files in a specific directory ?
This script is not working!
#! /bin/bash
FILES=/usr/desktop/input/*
For f in $FILES;
do
awk '-v A="$a" -v B="$b" {$6=($1-64)/2 ;$7=((10^($6/10))/A)^(1/B) ; print}' OFS="\t" $f > /root/Desktop/output/$f.txt;
done
... (7 Replies)
I am trying to loop through files in a directory, and sort each file. No matter what changes I make to the code, I get the following errors:
'aunch.sh: line 4: syntax error near unexpected token `do
'aunch.sh: line 4: `for f in ${FILES}/*; do
#!/bin/bash
FILES=$(pwd)
for f in ${FILES}/*;... (1 Reply)
I am trying to loop through files in a directory, and sort each file. No matter what changes I make to the code, I get the following errors:
'aunch.sh: line 4: syntax error near unexpected token `do
'aunch.sh: line 4: `for f in ${FILES}/*; do
#!/bin/bash
FILES=$(pwd)
for f in ${FILES}/*;... (6 Replies)
I have one question.
On the directory I have many files start with
DB.DAILYxxxxxxx.YYYYMMDD.HHMMSS
and I have several files with other format, like
LET.20170310
daily.20170310
tba.20170310
How can I exclude from my loop DB.DAILY files?
I tried
ls *20170310* | while read... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: digioleg54
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
printwait
MESSAGES(3) libbash messages Library Manual MESSAGES(3)NAME
messages -- libbash library that implements a set of functions to print standard status messages
SYNOPSIS
printOK [indent]
printFAIL [indent]
printNA [indent]
printATTN [indent]
printWAIT [indent]
DESCRIPTION
General
messages is a collection of functions to print standard status messages - those [ OK ] and [FAIL] messages you see during Linux boot process.
The function list:
printOK Prints a standard [ OK ] message (green)
printFAIL Prints a standard [FAIL] message (red)
printNA Prints a standard [ N/A] message (yellow)
printATTN Prints a standard [ATTN] message (yellow)
printWAIT Prints a standard [WAIT] message (yellow)
Detailed interface description follows.
indent
Column to move to before printing.
Default indent is calculated as TTY_WIDTH-10. If current tty width can not be determined (for example, in case of serial console), it
defaults to 80, so default indent is 80-10=10
FUNCTIONS DESCRIPTIONS
printOK [indent]
Prints a standard [ OK ] message (green)
printFAIL [indent]
Prints a standard [FAIL] message (red)
printNA [indent]
Prints a standard [ N/A] message (yellow)
printATTN [indent]
Prints a standard [ATTN] message (yellow)
printWAIT [indent]
Prints a standard [WAIT] message (yellow)
EXAMPLES
Run a program named MyProg, and report it's success or failure:
echo -n 'Running MyProg...'
printWAIT
if MyProg ; then
printOK
else
printFAIL
fi
AUTHORS
Hai Zaar <haizaar@haizaar.com>
Gil Ran <gil@ran4.net>
SEE ALSO ldbash(1), libbash(1)Linux Epoch Linux