Hi all,
I am trying to execute the following command:
As you can see this simply finds files from a given path and runs cksum on them.
My problem is this, if i have a FIFO in a directory the find tries to execute cksum on it and gets stuck.
From the man page i understood that i cannot use -type and -exec together
so i am quite stuck here.
any ideas?
Perhaps the number one advanced find question is:
How to stop find from descending into subdirectories?
find command
Performing a non-recursive find in Unix
Use -prune with find command on AIX
Searching for files over 30 days old in current directory
disk space used for files with in a... (0 Replies)
hi,
I have to execute this line below from within a shell script; simply backquoting it is not doing the trick; it is mangling up all the options; but when i type it out on a command line, it executes cleanly. Please help me in getting this right;
$ vlc -I dummy --sout='#transcode{vcodec=mp4v,... (5 Replies)
hi all
i have file call "list.log" which contains like this
00300 000024501043846 0
00300 000034531322871 0
00600 000000489100734 0
and so on ..
the file goes like this:(example first row)
from position 1-5 the lider number(300),position 7-21
id... (0 Replies)
Haven't worked in bash for ages. did a good bit of shell scripting in regular sh, but have forgotten most of it.
I have several thousand php files that now include the following line at the end of the file. There is no LF or CR/LF before it begins, it is just concatenated to the final line of... (3 Replies)
How to I put my find command string into a script. It is currently to long to be entered manually at command line.
for FNAME in `find /unixsxxx/interface/x.x/xxxxxx -type f \( -name '*.KSH' -o -name '*.sh' -o -name '*.sql' -o -name '*.ksh' \) -exec grep -il xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx {} \;`; do C=`grep -c... (5 Replies)
help pls...
i would like to change this
CURVE2 565489 789458 1258649
random data here...
CURVE2 565489 568795 6548921
random data here...
CURVE2 565489 123598 6446259
random data here...
CURVE2 565489 672956 2489657
into this
CURVE2 565489 586423 1258649
random data here...... (2 Replies)
I'm looking to write a script that will do a find of directories and delete them if they are older than x days but keep the last x # of folders even if they are older than x days.
The usage is for a deployment location, so we want to keep the location clean but retain maybe the last 2 builds that... (5 Replies)
I need to modify the find command below to exclude the output of the directory /usr/UDPM/PerfMgmt/shmlck
find / \( -fstype ctfs -o -fstype mntfs -o -fstype objfs -o -fstype proc -o ! local \) -prune -o -type f -perm -0002 -print 2>/dev/null
I have tried many iterations and placement of... (2 Replies)
test.txt is the dynamic file but some of combination are fix
like below are the lines
;wonder_off =
;wonder_off = disabled
wonder_off =
wonder_off = disabled
the test.txt can content them in any order
#cat test.xt
;wonder_off =
;wonder_off = disabled
wonder_off =
wonder_off =... (5 Replies)
Hallo Team,
I need your help and its rather urgent.
I have a file with thousands of lines. Here is a sample below:
Sample1.txt
BW235045560121114833444044@196.35.130.5
BW235106757121114-574455394@196.35.130.5
BW2349514941211141077771352@196.35.130.5... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kekanap
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
contents
contents(4) File Formats contents(4)NAME
contents - list of files and associated packages
SYNOPSIS
/var/sadm/install/contents
DESCRIPTION
The file /var/sadm/install/contents is a source of information about the packages installed on the system. This file must never be edited
directly. Always use the package and patch commands (see SEE ALSO) to make changes to the contents file.
Each entry in the contents file is a single line. Fields in each entry are separated by a single space character.
Two major styles of entries exist, old style and new style. The following is the format of an old-style entry:
ftype class path package(s)
The following is the general format of a new-style entry:
path[=rpath] ftype class [ftype-optional-fields] package(s)
New-style entries differ for each ftype. The ftype designates the entry type, as specified in pkgmap(4). The format for new-style entries,
for each ftype, is as follows:
ftype s: path=rpath s class package
ftype l: path l class package
ftype d: path d class mode owner group package(s)
ftype b: path b class major minor mode owner group package
ftype c: path c class major minor mode owner group package
ftype f: path f class mode owner group size cksum modtime package
ftype x: path x class mode owner group package
ftype v: path v class mode owner group size cksum modtime package
ftype e: path e class mode owner group size cksum modtime package
A significant distinction between old- and new-style entries is that the former do not begin with a slash (/) character, while the latter
(new-style) always do. For example, the following are new-style entries:
d none /dev SUNWcsd
e passwd /etc/passwd SUNWcsr
The following are new-style entries:
/dev d none 0755 root sys SUNWcsr SUNWcsd
/etc/passwd e passwd 0644 root sys 580 48299 1077177419 SUNWcsr
The following are the descriptions of the fields in both old- and new-style entries.
path
The absolute path of the node being described. For ftype s (indicating a symbolic link) this is the indirect pointer (link) name.
rpath
The relative path to the real file or linked-to directory name.
ftype
A one-character field that indicates the entry type (see pkgmap(4)).
class
The installation class to which the file belongs (see pkgmap(4)).
package
The package associated with this entry. For ftype d (directory) more than one package can be present.
mode
The octal mode of the file (see pkgmap(4)).
owner
The owner of the file (see pkgmap(4)).
group
The group to which the file belongs (see pkgmap(4)).
major
The major device number (see pkgmap(4)).
minor
The minor device number (see pkgmap(4)).
size
The actual size of the file in bytes as reported by sum (see pkgmap(4)).
cksum
The checksum of the file contents (see pkgmap(4)).
modtime
The time of last modification (see pkgmap(4)).
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsr |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Interface Stability |Unstable |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO patchadd(1M), pkgadd(1M), pkgadm(1M), pkgchk(1M), pkgmap(4), attributes(5)NOTES
As shown above, the interface stability of /var/sadm/install/contents is Unstable (see attributes(5)). It is common practice to use this
file in a read-only manner to determine which files belong to which packages installed on a system. While this file has been present for
many releases of the Solaris operating system, it might not be present in future releases. The fully supported way to obtain information
from the installed package database is through pkgchk(1M). It is highly recommended that you use pkgchk rather than relying on the contents
file.
SunOS 5.10 29 Jun 2004 contents(4)