03-01-2010
@cfajohnson
I have enjoyed this debate and look forward to many more. Our ripostes have been founded on logic and deep experience. With unix there is never one set solution to a problem.
bonsoir
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Hi to everyone!!. Here's my stupid question of the day.
When I have to rename a file I use "mv filename newfilename".
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Can someone please tell me how I can rename a bunch of files at a time. I hava a directory that has 700+ files that are named
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Hi All my dear friends
I had multiple files in my directory with .pcv and .sqv extn
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Hi,
I have several hundred files I need to rename, and I'm would rather not hit F2 for each file individually to rename them.
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I have multiple gif files in a directory with different names.
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Hi,
Can we rename multiples files using find or awk utility?
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Hi,
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mccs(1) Debian User's Manual mccs(1)
NAME
mccs - package dependency solver
SYNOPSIS
mccs [options]
DESCRIPTION
mccs (which stands for Multi Criteria CUDF Solver) is a solver for package dependency problems expressed in the CUDF format. By default,
mccs reads a problem specification from standard input, and writes the solution to standard output.
OPTIONS FOR CONTROLLING INPUT
/OUTPUT
-i file
Read input from file file instead of standard input.
-o file
Write the solution to file instead of standard output.
-fo full solution output
-v n set verbosity level to n.
-h print this help
OPTIONS FOR SELECTING THE SOLVER ENGINE
By default, mccs uses the cbc solving engine.
-lpsolve
use lpsolve solver
-lp lpsolver
specify a solving engine that takes the cplex input format. lpsolver is the path of a script that takes as input the file name con-
taining the cplex input, and that produces the solution on standard output (an example for scip is given in
/usr/share/doc/mccs/engines/sciplp).
-pblib pbsolver
use pseudo-Boolean solver pbsolver as solving engine.
-nosolve
do not solve the problem (for debugging)
OPTIONS FOR CONTROLLING CONSTRAINT GENERATION
-noreduce
do not reduce the initial problem
-only-agregate-constraints
generate only agregate constraints
-only-desagregate-constraints
generate only deagregate constraints (default)
-all-constraints
generate all kind of constraints (ensure redundancy)
OPTIONS FOR CONTROLLING OPTIMIZATION
See the file /usr/share/doc/mccs/README.optimization-criteria for a full grammar of optimization criteria.
EXAMPLES
An example input file can be found at /usr/share/doc/mccs/examples/legacy.cudf.
mccs -i legacy.cudf
calls mccs on examples/legacy.cudf and prints the solution on stdout. With such a call mccs will resort to the default underlying solver
cbc and use a default criterion to solve the problem.
mccs -i legacy.cudf -o sol -lexagregate[-removed,-changed]
-lpsolve
Here, mccs puts the solution into the file "sol" and solves the problem using the lpsolve solver with the paranoid criterion, which con-
sists of first minimizing the number of removed packaged, and then the number of packages that change installation status or installed ver-
sion.
mccs -i legacy.cudf -o sol
-lexsemiagregate[-removed,-notuptodate,
-nunsat[recommends:,true],-new]
The criterion used here is the trendy criterion, which consists of first minimizing the number of package removals, then to minimize the
number of installed packages that are installed in a version older the most recent available version, then to minimize the number of recom-
mendations of installed packages that are not satisfied, and finally the number of newly installed packages.
AUTHOR
mccs has been written by Claude Michel <cpjm@polytech.unice.fr>. The development of mccs has been partly supported by the European research
project Mancoosi.
9 May 2011 mccs(1)