The print command lists the path of the file being found. I want the output as the file name along with the date that particular files were created i.e similar to a ls -l command.
I am using find to list all the files that satisfy the selection criteria and delete them using rm. Can I display... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I want to display only the file names of the ls command with a delimiter of comma.
For example:-
ls /etc/dir/N*
gives the following output
/etc/dir/N1 /etc/dir/N2 /etc/dir/N3
I want the output as N1,N2,N3,-->Here i need the final comma also.
Also, here /etc/dir is being... (4 Replies)
Hello to all,
I am looking for a way to display only the names of function (calls & definition) of a C++ source code.There is already a post related to this, but the script is to find the functions using a specific variable, and the replies are not that convincing since they cannot be used for... (2 Replies)
Sun Solaris Unix Question
Haven't been able to find any solution for this situation. Let's just say the file names listed below exist in a directory. I want the find command to find all files in this directory but at the same time I want to eliminate certain file names or files with certain... (2 Replies)
Hi
When i do ls -ltr <file1> then it shows me the date and time of the file
if - for whatever reason file has future date/time stamp then ls -ltr is not showing the time, it just shows only date part ... even if time is ahead by 2 hr than current time.
suppose a file was copied from INDIA... (3 Replies)
OS: RHEL 5.8
shell: bash 3.2.25
Directory /home/guest/ contains these files:
file a
file b
file c
fileD
fileE
fileF
testFile.txt
I'm trying to find the syntax to run ls -ltr against this list of files that is contained within a text file, testFile.txt.
The file testFile.txt has... (4 Replies)
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)
All,
I am trying to create a report on the duration of an ETL load from the file arrival to the final dump in to a database for SLA's.
Does anyone have any guidance or ideas on how metadata can be extracted; information of a file: like file name, created timestamp, count of records and load... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pradeepp
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
csplit
CSPLIT(1) BSD General Commands Manual CSPLIT(1)NAME
csplit -- split files based on context
SYNOPSIS
csplit [-ks] [-f prefix] [-n number] file args ...
DESCRIPTION
The csplit utility splits file into pieces using the patterns args. If file is a dash ('-'), csplit reads from standard input.
The options are as follows:
-f prefix
Give created files names beginning with prefix. The default is ``xx''.
-k Do not remove output files if an error occurs or a HUP, INT or TERM signal is received.
-n number
Use number of decimal digits after the prefix to form the file name. The default is 2.
-s Do not write the size of each output file to standard output as it is created.
The args operands may be a combination of the following patterns:
/regexp/[[+|-]offset]
Create a file containing the input from the current line to (but not including) the next line matching the given basic regular
expression. An optional offset from the line that matched may be specified.
%regexp%[[+|-]offset]
Same as above but a file is not created for the output.
line_no
Create containing the input from the current line to (but not including) the specified line number.
{num} Repeat the previous pattern the specified number of times. If it follows a line number pattern, a new file will be created for each
line_no lines, num times. The first line of the file is line number 1 for historic reasons.
After all the patterns have been processed, the remaining input data (if there is any) will be written to a new file.
Requesting to split at a line before the current line number or past the end of the file will result in an error.
ENVIRONMENT
The LANG, LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE environment variables affect the execution of csplit as described in environ(7).
EXIT STATUS
The csplit utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
Split the mdoc(7) file foo.1 into one file for each section (up to 20):
csplit -k foo.1 '%^.Sh%' '/^.Sh/' '{20}'
Split standard input after the first 99 lines and every 100 lines thereafter:
csplit -k - 100 '{19}'
SEE ALSO sed(1), split(1), re_format(7)STANDARDS
The csplit utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'').
HISTORY
A csplit command appeared in PWB UNIX.
BUGS
Input lines are limited to LINE_MAX (2048) bytes in length.
BSD January 26, 2005 BSD