Good morning,
I would like to find all files of a certain type and display their name as well as their modification date.
In order to do this, I would do the following:
find ./ -name *.csv | ????????
My question: what to put after the pipe instead of the question marks? Is there a basic... (5 Replies)
Hi
I'd like to know if is it possible to find files given a certain modification date (say, 01-05-2006, that's 1st of May 2006)
I can calculate the days backward:
find / -ctime 23
but I wish to search by exact modification day
Thanks (5 Replies)
Hello all,
I'm trying to determine when the last time a file in a certain directory was modified. I don't care what file it is, I just want to know when it was last updated. So far I have
ls -aRl --full-time --sort=time
which is close. The problem is that it only sorts within folders, not... (2 Replies)
Goodmorning,
I have a server with solaris 2.6 installed.
Is it possible modify system date only temporary that, automatically, after a reboot, I can have again the date after the temporary mofication?
I don't want to use "date" command after reboot for tidy up date. I only want to find a... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I was very surprised to not be able to find an answer to this question despite my best efforts in Google and elsewhere. Maybe it's a good thing as it forced me to finally become a member in this great forum that i use frequently.
Ok my question:
I want to be able to sort files inside a... (3 Replies)
Hi, I'm executing a script to check if a file has been modified on a shared folder.
I use this to start another script every time the file has been modified.
To do this I use the 'ls' command to get the last modification date of the file.
My problem is that the computer hosting the shared... (5 Replies)
Using either vim or awk or sed
If I wish to to search for an unknown pattern - lets say 1B2495 or 1Q2345
so Search pattern : 1
and replace the 1 with 2 to print out :
2B2495 or 2Q2345
what are the possible commands.
Struggling here - help would be appreciated. (5 Replies)
I'm trying to get the date output to be in the form yyyy-mm-dd (e.g. 2013-01-18)
!/bin/sh
modDate=$(stat -c %y $1)
echo $modDate >> $1
When I run this on another file (by typing ./dateScript theFile.txt), I keep getting this message:
stat: illegal option -- c
What's wrong with my code... (2 Replies)
Hello all !
I have a piece of code that generates the date of one day ago:
/usr/bin/gdate --date='1 day ago' | awk '{print $2 " " $3}'
Nov 3
I want the output to be in the form :
Nov 03
What other operation should I do for that ?
Help (2 Replies)
SunOS -s 5.10 Generic_147440-04 sun4u sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise
Hi,
In a folder, there are files. I have a script which reads the current date and subtract the modification date of each file.
How do I achieve this?
Regards,
Joe (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: roshanbi
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
calendar
CALENDAR(1) General Commands Manual CALENDAR(1)NAME
calendar - reminder service
SYNOPSIS
calendar [ - ]
DESCRIPTION
Calendar consults the file `calendar' in the current directory and prints out lines that contain today's or tomorrow's date anywhere in the
line. Most reasonable month-day dates such as `Dec. 7,' `december 7,' `12/7,' etc., are recognized, but not `7 December' or `7/12'. If
you give the month as ``*'' with a date, i.e. ``* 1'', that day in any month will do. On weekends `tomorrow' extends through Monday.
When an argument is present, calendar does its job for every user who has a file `calendar' in his login directory and sends him any posi-
tive results by mail(1). Normally this is done daily in the wee hours under control of cron(8).
The file `calendar' is first run through the ``C'' preprocessor, /lib/cpp, to include any other calendar files specified with the usual
``#include'' syntax. Included calendars will usually be shared by all users, maintained and documented by the local administration.
FILES
calendar
/usr/libexec/calendar to figure out today's and tomorrow's dates
/etc/passwd
/tmp/cal*
/lib/cpp, egrep, sed, mail as subprocesses
SEE ALSO at(1), cron(8), mail(1)BUGS
Calendar's extended idea of `tomorrow' doesn't account for holidays.
7th Edition October 21, 1996 CALENDAR(1)