I am getting the list of all the files which have "aaa" from files whose name is File*_bbb*.
grep -l "aaa" File*_bbb*
But I want to count the number of files. That is I want the total number of files which have "aaa" in
files File*_bbb*
If I run the following for getting number of... (1 Reply)
I am trying to find all files in a directory whose name has a real number larger then the number I am looking for.
For example:
.
|-- delta.1.5.sql
|-- delta.2.1.sql
|-- delta.2.2.sql
|-- delta.2.3.sql
|-- delta.2.4.sql
`-- delta.2.5.sql
I know my database is at 2.2 so I want an... (2 Replies)
Hi, here comes another newbie question:
How to find the number of non-duplicate names recursively?
For example, my files are stored in the folders like:
If I do
find . -depth -name "*.txt" | wc -l
This will gives out a result "4". One .txt file named "1.txt" in folder "1",
and... (2 Replies)
I've start and end time in two columns. How can I substract time from column 2 and column 1 and receive output in another file 'd' ?
$ cat c
12:55:04 2:03:56
2:03:56 3:20:17
14:00:00 13:05:00 (1 Reply)
Hi!
I just want to count number of files in a directory, and write to new text file, with number of files and their name
output should look like this,,
assume that below one is a new file created by script
Number of files in directory = 25
1. a.txt
2. abc.txt
3. asd.dat... (20 Replies)
Hi,
I am writing a small unix command to substract one month from the MonthID.
If MonthID = 201301 the below script returns me 201212
if ] then
a=`echo $monthid | cut -c1-4`
b=`expr $a - 1`
c=12
echo "$b$c"
else
a=`echo $monthid | cut -c5-6`
b=`expr $a - 1`
c=`echo $monthid | cut... (4 Replies)
I have 2 files each containing a list of same fedora packages but with different version number. I want to compare the 2 files and remove the lines containing a newer or older version number (1 Reply)
Data files coming in different names in a file name called process.txt.
1. shipments_yyyymmdd.gz
2 Order_yyyymmdd.gz
3. Invoice_yyyymmdd.gz
4. globalorder_yyyymmdd.gz
The process needs to discard all the below files and only process two of the 4 file names available
... (1 Reply)
Hey,
So I'm having issues sorting a data set.
The data set contains entries as such;
# key: sex, time, athlete, athlete's nationality, date, city, country
M, 2:30:57.6, Harry Payne, GBR, 1929-07-05, Stamford Bridge, England
M, 2:5:42, Khalid Khannouchi, MAR, 1999-10-24, Chicago, USA
M,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: DNM_UKN
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
qmail-pw2u
qmail-pw2u(8) System Manager's Manual qmail-pw2u(8)NAME
qmail-pw2u - build address assignments from a passwd file
SYNOPSIS
qmail-pw2u [ -/ohHuUC ] [ -cchar ]
DESCRIPTION
qmail-pw2u reads a V7-format passwd file from standard input and prints a qmail-users-format assignment file.
A V7-format passwd file is a series of lines. Each line has the format
user:password:uid:gid:gecos:home:shell
where user is an account name, uid and gid are the user id and group id of that account, and home is the account's home directory. pass-
word, gecos, and shell are ignored by qmail-pw2u.
If you put the output of qmail-pw2u into /var/lib/qmail/users/assign, and then run qmail-newu, qmail-lspawn will obey the assignments
printed by qmail-pw2u. WARNING: After changing any users, uids, gids, or home directories in your passwd file, you must run qmail-pw2u and
qmail-newu again if you want qmail-lspawn to see the changes.
RULES
By default, qmail-pw2u follows the same rules as qmail-getpw. It skips user if (1) uid is zero, (2) home does not exist, (3) user does not
own home, or (4) user contains uppercase letters. It then gives each remaining user control over the basic user address and all addresses
of the form user-anything. A catch-all user, alias, controls all other addresses.
You may change these rules by setting up files in /var/lib/qmail/users:
include
Allowed users, one per line. If include exists, and user is not listed in include, user is ignored.
exclude
Ignored users, one per line. If exclude exists, and user is listed in exclude, user is ignored.
mailnames
Replacement names for users. Each line has the form
user:mailname1:mailname2:...
The addresses mailname1 and mailname1-ext and mailname2 and so on will be delivered to user.
WARNING: The addresses user and user-ext will not be delivered to user unless user is listed as one of the mailnames.
A line in mailnames is silently ignored if the user does not exist.
subusers
Extra addresses. Each line has the form
sub:user:pre:
sub will be handled by home/.qmail-pre, where home is user's home directory; sub-ext will be handled by home/.qmail-pre-ext.
append Extra assignments, printed at the end of qmail-pw2u's output.
OPTIONS -o (Default.) Skip user if home does not exist (or is not visible to qmail-pw2u). Skip user if home is not owned by user.
-h Stop if home does not exist. This is appropriate if every user is supposed to have a home directory. Skip user if home is not
owned by user.
-H Do not check the existence or ownership of home.
-U (Default.) Skip user if there are any uppercase letters in user.
-u Allow uppercase letters in user.
-cchar Use char as the user-extension delimiter in place of -.
-C Disable the user-extension mechanism.
-/ Use home/.qmail-/... instead of home/.qmail-...
SEE ALSO qmail-users(5), qmail-lspawn(8), qmail-newu(8), qmail-getpw(8)qmail-pw2u(8)