Does anyone know how to display the time with seconds
of when a file was last modified. I can get hour & minutes but
would also like seconds. --Running AIX (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I would like to know the file modification time till seconds in Unix. So I tried ls -e and it worked fine. This Solaris 5.10
-rw-rw-r-- 1 test admin 22 Sep 12 11:01:37 2008 test_message
But I am not able to run the same command in SOlaris 5.6 and also in AIX/HP
Is there... (3 Replies)
Environment is cygwin on Windows Server 2003 as I could not think how I would achieve this using Windows tools.
What I want ot achieve is the following.
I have a Directory D:\Data which contains further subfolders and files. I need to move "files" older than 6 months modification time to... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I have two files (given below) each exists under different paths. I want to compare the modification time stamp of file1.txt is lessthan the modification time of file2.txt.
month1=`ls -l file1.txt | awk '{ print $6}'`
date1=`ls -file1.txt | awk '{ print $7}'`
time1=`ls... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a directory made up of many symbolic links to folders multiple file systems.
I want to return folders modified within the last 50 days, but find is using the link time rather than the target time.
find . -type d -mtime -50
Is there a way to either:
a) Make a symbolic link... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I need the modification time of a file on a particular day say 3 days before.
I just don't want the last modification time. I need all the modification times on a particualar day.
Is there anyway to do it? Kindly help. Could anyone tell me where the modification time is stored?... (1 Reply)
Hi everyone,
I'd like to know if is there a way to list files but ignoring some according to their modification time (or creation, access time, etc.) with the command 'ls' alone.
I know the option -I exist, but it seems to only looking in the file name..
Thank you in advance for the... (8 Replies)
This example shows last mtime from epoch
$ stat -f %m somefile
752911565
But would like to see it like that:
199311100606.05 (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tribe
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
set_color
set_color(1) fish set_color(1)NAME
set_color - set_color - set the terminal color
set_color - set the terminal color
Synopsis
set_color [-v --version] [-h --help] [-b --background COLOR] [COLOR]
Description
Change the foreground and/or background color of the terminal. COLOR is one of black, red, green, brown, yellow, blue, magenta, purple,
cyan, white and normal.
o -b, --background Set the background color
o -c, --print-colors Prints a list of all valid color names
o -h, --help Display help message and exit
o -o, --bold Set bold or extra bright mode
o -u, --underline Set underlined mode
o -v, --version Display version and exit
Calling set_color normal will set the terminal color to whatever is the default color of the terminal.
Some terminals use the --bold escape sequence to switch to a brighter color set. On such terminals, set_color white will result in a grey
font color, while set_color --bold white will result in a white font color.
Not all terminal emulators support all these features. This is not a bug in set_color but a missing feature in the terminal emulator.
set_color uses the terminfo database to look up how to change terminal colors on whatever terminal is in use. Some systems have old and
incomplete terminfo databases, and may lack color information for terminals that support it. Download and install the latest version of
ncurses and recompile fish against it in order to fix this issue.
Version 1.23.1 Sun Jan 8 2012 set_color(1)