Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Identify age of the file.
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Identify age of the file. Post 302427790 by bankimmehta on Tuesday 8th of June 2010 02:09:29 AM
Old 06-08-2010
Identify age of the file.

Hi all,
I'm using SunOS.
need to find age of the file in terms of seconds. The file
name with its path will be given to the script as input.

Any kinda help will be appreciated.

Thanks in advance
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to find the File Age and wait for that...

Hi, I want to know my file is 1 hr 30 min old or not, If 1 hr 30 min old I will do some tasks in that file.. other wise I will wait to 1 hr 30 min and then do the tasks.. how to do it in Unix script? any idea? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: redlotus72
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find the age of a file in Minutes

KSH: Please lt me know how to find the age of a file in minutes(Based on last modified time). ie, if the file was modified 15 Minutes ago, the output should be 15 (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hari_anj
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

file age

How can I count the age of the file (e.g. in minutes)? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jarmo.leppanen
4 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

ksh - AIX: get epoch time/age for a file?

Hi, (AIX 5.1) Is there any way to find the epoch timestamp for a file without having to use fancy perl (or similar) scripts? If anyone knows of a way to do this using just ksh commands it would be appreciated. (It also appears I don't have the stat command available). Alternatively is... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: b0bbins
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl Find file age

Hi I can not say that i am new to perl but today i learned something new, i wanted to know age (last time file got modified) of file so i initially thought of using find -mtime command but when i googled it, i found perl solution for the same my $age = -M $ARGV ; print "$ARGV age is... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: zedex
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Determine file age in days?

I am using AIX 6.1 and would like to use a one line command to determine the age of a file in days. I would like to look at a specific file. I would like to use the command to run on a remote server (AIX 6.1) to return the age of a specific file in days. So if the file is 42 days old I would... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: oldman2
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Age of file in storage / disk

Hello all, Below is scripts to find the file following by: 30 days <- How many total file space within 30 days and not quantity 90 days 120 days 1 year From here also I can get data space to put on PIE Chart. Following this scripts can I do some enhance from this scripts like do... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sheikh76
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare large file and identify difference in separate file

I have a very large system generated file containing around 500K rows size 100MB like following HOME|ALICE STREET|3||NEW LISTING HOME|NEWPORT STREET|1||NEW LISTING HOME|KING STREET|5||NEW LISTING HOME|WINSOME AVENUE|4||MODIFICATION CAR|TOYOTA|4||NEW LISTING CAR|FORD|4||NEW... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: jubaier
9 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Check age of the file

hi, i am working on a shell script where i have 2 files & i need to check age of those files. one file should be of the same day and other shoudn't be more then 20 days old. how could i acheive this? please help!!!! (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: lovelysethii
10 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Age of file

Hi All.. Is there any easy way to find out how many days older is file? for ex. fileA 20 days fileB 10 days I am currently on AIX, and there is no STAT command available in this environment. What are my options? Thanks Abhijeet R (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: freakabhi
1 Replies
EXPIRE_BACKUPS(1)						       S3QL							 EXPIRE_BACKUPS(1)

NAME
expire_backups - Intelligently expire old backups SYNOPSIS
expire_backups [options] <age> [<age> ...] DESCRIPTION
The expire_backups command intelligently remove old backups that are no longer needed. To define what backups you want to keep for how long, you define a number of age ranges. expire_backups ensures that you will have at least one backup in each age range at all times. It will keep exactly as many backups as are required for that and delete any backups that become redundant. Age ranges are specified by giving a list of range boundaries in terms of backup cycles. Every time you create a new backup, the existing backups age by one cycle. Example: when expire_backups is called with the age range definition 1 3 7 14 31, it will guarantee that you always have the following backups available: 1. A backup that is 0 to 1 cycles old (i.e, the most recent backup) 2. A backup that is 1 to 3 cycles old 3. A backup that is 3 to 7 cycles old 4. A backup that is 7 to 14 cycles old 5. A backup that is 14 to 31 cycles old Note If you do backups in fixed intervals, then one cycle will be equivalent to the backup interval. The advantage of specifying the age ranges in terms of backup cycles rather than days or weeks is that it allows you to gracefully handle irregular backup intervals. Imagine that for some reason you do not turn on your computer for one month. Now all your backups are at least a month old, and if you had specified the above backup strategy in terms of absolute ages, they would all be deleted! Specifying age ranges in terms of backup cycles avoids these sort of problems. expire_backups usage is simple. It requires backups to have names of the forms year-month-day_hour:minute:seconds (YYYY-MM-DD_HH:mm:ss) and works on all backups in the current directory. So for the above backup strategy, the correct invocation would be: expire_backups.py 1 3 7 14 31 When storing your backups on an S3QL file system, you probably want to specify the --use-s3qlrm option as well. This tells expire_backups to use the s3qlrm command to delete directories. expire_backups uses a "state file" to keep track which backups are how many cycles old (since this cannot be inferred from the dates con- tained in the directory names). The standard name for this state file is .expire_backups.dat. If this file gets damaged or deleted, expire_backups no longer knows the ages of the backups and refuses to work. In this case you can use the --reconstruct-state option to try to reconstruct the state from the backup dates. However, the accuracy of this reconstruction depends strongly on how rigorous you have been with making backups (it is only completely correct if the time between subsequent backups has always been exactly the same), so it's gener- ally a good idea not to tamper with the state file. OPTIONS
The expire_backups command accepts the following options: --quiet be really quiet --debug activate debugging output --version just print program version and exit --state <file> File to save state information in (default: ".expire_backups.dat") -n Dry run. Just show which backups would be deleted. --reconstruct-state Try to reconstruct a missing state file from backup dates. --use-s3qlrm Use s3qlrm command to delete backups. EXIT STATUS
expire_backups returns exit code 0 if the operation succeeded and 1 if some error occured. SEE ALSO
expire_backups is shipped as part of S3QL, http://code.google.com/p/s3ql/. COPYRIGHT
2008-2011, Nikolaus Rath 1.11.1 August 27, 2014 EXPIRE_BACKUPS(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:02 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy