Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Problem with bash find command Post 302409653 by turdferguson on Thursday 1st of April 2010 09:08:55 PM
Old 04-01-2010
Problem with bash find command

I'm trying to print all files which have the file permission 775 and that is 1MB or greater in long format.

This is what I have:
find -L -perm 775 -size +1000k -print


when I run this script nothing appears in terminal. What am I doing wrong?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Problem with find command

Hi, I am using the find command to remove all the files in a directory ending .NEW and created more than a day ago. The command I am using is: find . -name '*.NEW' -ctime +1 | xargs rm The problem is that it does not work properly. I still have files which were craeted more than a day... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: nattynatty
7 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

command find returned bash: /usr/bin/find: Argument list too long

Hello, I create a file touch 1201093003 fichcomp and inside a repertory (which hava a lot of files) I want to list all files created before this file : find *.* \! -maxdepth 1 - newer fichcomp but this command returned bash: /usr/bin/find: Argument list too long but i make a filter all... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: yacsil
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

problem with output of find command being input to basename command...

Hi, I am triying to make sure that there exists only one file with the pattern abc* in path /path/. This directory is having many huge files. If there is only one file then I have to take its complete name only to use furter in my script. I am planning to do like this: if ; then... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: new_learner
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Problem with find command

Hello Friends, When i give the command from path from path /var/tmp/asirohi/jdk/docs:- find /var/tmp/asirohi/jdk/docs/ . -depth -name license_*.html I get the following output:- /var/tmp/asirohi/jdk/docs/zh_Hant/jre/license_zh_Hant.html... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: asirohi
3 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Problem with Find command

Hi, I have a script below,which reads dates from No_weekandMonthend_dates.txt performs the copy operation. for i in `cat /tmp/No_weekandMonthend_dates.txt` do cd $Gerenimopath/ZH_LP find . -type f -name "$i_*.txt" -exec cp {} /home/gaddamja/TempLocal \; cd... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jagadish_gaddam
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

BASH script problem using find, ideas?

Hi, I'm trying to write a script to search through my computer and find all .jpg files and put them all in a directory. So far I have this: for i in `find /home -name '*.jpg' ` ; do mv $i home/allen/Pictures/PicturesFound ; done When I run it, I get this error (this is only part of it, it... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: FortressPTH
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

problem in find command

I am facing problem in find command. I want to read all file names of a directory and write those names in a text file. My script is find /home/Pratik/src -type f -exec basename {} \; >> names.txt The script is working fine and writing all the file names but problem is file names are not... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: pratikjain998
5 Replies

8. Programming

Bash script - find command with delete and exec

hi all, i have devised a script that starts in /restored/ and in there, there are a lot of sub folders called peoples names and in the sub folders are files/folders and it deletes the data in the sub folders BUT not the sub folder itself and it should then touch a file in all the sub folders... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: robertkwild
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Bash command to find a file and print contents

I need to find a file and print its contents I am trying but it is not working find -path /opt/app-root/src/.npm/_logs -type f -name "*.log" -print Version $ bash -version GNU bash, version 4.4.12(1)-release (x86_64-pc-msys) (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: SVRao19056
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bash find : another problem with prune

Hello. I am searching file between dates and try to apply the comments from Chubler_XL in my thread : Linux find command : how to use multiple conditions But i get a null result as i am expecting to find 32 files. Setting my computer date to the date of the thread ( 30/05/2019 ) and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jcdole
4 Replies
getacl(1)						      General Commands Manual							 getacl(1)

NAME
getacl - list access control lists (ACLs) for files (JFS File Systems only) SYNOPSIS
file... DESCRIPTION
For each argument that is a regular file, special file, or named pipe, displays the owner, group, and the Access Control List (ACL). For each directory argument, displays the owner, group, and the ACL and/or the default ACL. Only directories contain default ACLs. With the option specified, the filename, owner, group, and the ACL of the file will be displayed. With the option specified, the filename, owner, group, and the default ACL of the file, if it exists, will be displayed. With options not specified, the filename, owner, group, and both the ACL, and the default ACL, if it exists, will be displayed. This command may be executed on a file system that does not support ACLs. It will report the ACL consisting of only the owning user, own- ing group, class and other entries, based on the permission bits. When multiple files are specified on the command line, a blank line will separate the ACL for each file. Options The command recognizes the following options: Displays the filename, owner, group, and the ACL of the specified file. Displays the the filename, owner, group, and the default ACL of the file, if it exists. Operands The command recognizes the following operand: file The file or directory from which retrieves the access control information. ACL Format The format of an ACL is: The first three lines show the filename, the file owner, and the file owning group. Note that when only the option is specified, and the file has no default ACL, only these three lines will be displayed. The entry without a user ID indicates the permissions that will be granted to the owner of the file. One or more additional entries indi- cate the permissions that will be granted to the specified users. The entry without a group identifier indicates the permissions that will be granted to the owning group of the file. One or more additional entries indicate the permissions that will be granted to the specified groups. The entry indicates the permissions that will be granted to others. The entries and may only exist for directories, and indicate the default user, group, and other entries that will be added to a file cre- ated within the directory. The uid is a login name, or a user ID if there is no entry for the uid in the system's password file; gid is a group name, or a group ID if there is no entry for the gid in the system's group file; and perm is a three character string composed of the letters representing the separate discretionary access rights: (read), (write), (execute/search), or the placeholder character The perm will be displayed in the following order: If a permission is not granted by an ACL entry, the placeholder character will appear. The ACL entries will be displayed in the order in which they will be evaluated when an access check is performed. The default ACL entries that may exist on a directory have no effect on access checks. The file owner permission bits represent the access that the owning user ACL entry has. The file group class permission bits represent the most access that any additional user entry, additional group entry, or the owning group entry may grant. The file other permission bits represent the access that the other ACL entry has. If a user invokes the command and changes the file group class permission bits, the access granted by the additional ACL entries may be restricted. In order to indicate that the file group class permission bits restrict an ACL entry, will display, after each affected entry, text in the form , where perm will show only the permissions actually granted. EXAMPLES
Given file with an ACL six entries long, the command would print: Given file with an ACL six entries long, after the command was issued, the command would print: Given directory with an ACL containing default entries, the command would print: Given directory the command would print: NOTICES
The output from will be in the correct format for input to the command. If the output from is redirected to a file, the file may be used as input to In this way, a user may easily assign one file's ACL to another file. FILES
for user IDs for group IDs SEE ALSO
chmod(1), ls(1), setacl(1). acl(2), aclsort(3C). getacl(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:49 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy