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Full Discussion: Find recently changed files
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Find recently changed files Post 302434979 by raghu_shekar on Tuesday 6th of July 2010 05:26:49 AM
Old 07-06-2010
i was trying the below command:
Code:
 
find . -mtime 1 -type -f

but this is not giving me the result that im expecting... i m looking for something that s been changed since the last 1 hour by the abouve command. Any other way to achieve this. May be all the files changed as of today s date at a particular time....?
 

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AT(1)							      General Commands Manual							     AT(1)

NAME
at - execute commands at a later time SYNOPSIS
at time [ day ] [ file ] DESCRIPTION
At squirrels away a copy of the named file (standard input default) to be used as input to sh(1) at a specified later time. A cd(1) com- mand to the current directory is inserted at the beginning, followed by assignments to all environment variables. When the script is run, it uses the user and group ID of the creator of the copy file. The time is 1 to 4 digits, with an optional following `A', `P', `N' or `M' for AM, PM, noon or midnight. One and two digit numbers are taken to be hours, three and four digits to be hours and minutes. If no letters follow the digits, a 24 hour clock time is understood. The optional day is either (1) a month name followed by a day number, or (2) a day of the week; if the word `week' follows invocation is moved seven days further off. Names of months and days may be recognizably truncated. Examples of legitimate commands are at 8am jan 24 at 1530 fr week At programs are executed by periodic execution of the command /usr/lib/atrun from cron(8). The granularity of at depends upon how often atrun is executed. Standard output or error output is lost unless redirected. FILES
/usr/spool/at/yy.ddd.hhhh.uu activity to be performed at hour hhhh of year day ddd of year yy. uu is a unique number. /usr/spool/at/lasttimedone contains hhhh for last hour of activity. /usr/spool/at/past directory of activities now in progress /usr/lib/atrun program that executes activities that are due pwd(1) SEE ALSO
calendar(1), cron(8) DIAGNOSTICS
Complains about various syntax errors and times out of range. BUGS
Due to the granularity of the execution of /usr/lib/atrun, there may be bugs in scheduling things almost exactly 24 hours into the future. AT(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:50 AM.
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