hi all,
can u please help me in finding all ksh file in directory and including all subdirectories and then copy those files into another directory.
thanks in advance
-bali (4 Replies)
hi all,
can i get script find file & copy that file with path
for an example
sourse : /home/abc/
destination : /home/backup/
files which need to find : tmp*
copy these files with its absolute path inside
like :- /home/abc/x/y/z/tmp.txt to /home/backup/date/x/y/z/tmp.txt
thanks in... (15 Replies)
I am wanting to find files within a directory that are over a certain number of days old and copy them to another directory. And unfortunately not having much luck.......is someone able to help.
Would also like to add that there are literally thousands of files that I am wanting to copy in one... (3 Replies)
Ok i have three directories
Destination - /u/dir1 (has subdirectories dir2 which also has subdirectory dir3)
Source1 - /u/test/files/dir1/dir2/dir3
Source2 - /u/out/images/dir1/dir2/dir3
What i would like to do is copy everything from Source1 and Source2 into the Destination directory.... (3 Replies)
Ok question number two: I'd like to search a directory for multiple file types (rar, txt, deb) and depending on what's found, copy those files to folders named Rar, TextFiles, and Debs. I'm looking for speed here so the faster the script the better. I want it to be a function that I pass 1 argument... (4 Replies)
I need to be able to find all *.doc files by year last modified and then perform an action such as copy to folder: /documents/2011
the 'find' command seems to show the path but not the full file details, which includes the date modified as the ls command does.
I got this far with ls, but have... (2 Replies)
RedHat Enterprise Linux 5.4
I have some files with the extension .cdp in several directories in various mountpoints(filesystems) . I would like to find and copy all these files into a single directory /u03/diagnore/data.
How can I do this ? (3 Replies)
Hi
I'm trying to writte a script (crontab) to copy files from one location to another... this is what i have:
find . -name "VPN_CALLRECORD_20130422*" | xargs cp "{}" /home/sysadm/patrick_temp/
but that is not working this is the ouput:
cp: Target... (5 Replies)
Hi all!
I have 10.000 files having generally this format:
text text text
text num text num text num
text text text GAP number text text
text num text num text num RMS num
text num text num text num
...
what I want is to copy the files if the GAP number is lower than a value e.g. <100... (5 Replies)
Hello there wonderful people,
I am running on Solaris 10 and with the following ksh version:
strings /bin/ksh | grep Version | tail -2
@(#)Version M-11/16/88i
Suppose I want to copy files that end in _v2 from underneath /dir1/dir2/save directory to /dir1/dir2. Basically, what I’m... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: ejianu
12 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
gendiff
GENDIFF(1) General Commands Manual GENDIFF(1)NAME
gendiff - utility to aid in error-free diff file generation
SYNOPSIS
gendiff <directory> <diff-extension>
DESCRIPTION
gendiff is a rather simple script which aids in generating a diff file from a single directory. It takes a directory name and a "diff-
extension" as its only arguments. The diff extension should be a unique sequence of characters added to the end of all original, unmodi-
fied files. The output of the program is a diff file which may be applied with the patch program to recreate the changes.
The usual sequence of events for creating a diff is to create two identical directories, make changes in one directory, and then use the
diff utility to create a list of differences between the two. Using gendiff eliminates the need for the extra, original and unmodified
directory copy. Instead, only the individual files that are modified need to be saved.
Before editing a file, copy the file, appending the extension you have chosen to the filename. I.e. if you were going to edit somefile.cpp
and have chosen the extension "fix", copy it to somefile.cpp.fix before editing it. Then edit the first copy (somefile.cpp).
After editing all the files you need to edit in this fashion, enter the directory one level above where your source code resides, and then
type
$ gendiff somedirectory .fix > mydiff-fix.patch
You should redirect the output to a file (as illustrated) unless you want to see the results on stdout.
SEE ALSO diff(1), patch(1)AUTHOR
Marc Ewing <marc@redhat.com>
4th Berkeley Distribution Mon Jan 10 2000 GENDIFF(1)