On some OS there are commands that have printf style formatting. For instance, this works on my current system (Linux):
or perhaps you can filter the stat command
No the rwx-rw-r ,octal format would be shown for this place,but other result from ls -l would be same.
Suppose
Octal format would replace drwxr-xr-x.The right side of the output would be same.
Can anyone tell me which is the equivalent command to
'stats' in ksh shell which discribes the file system?
Thanks in advance
Regards,
Im_new (6 Replies)
I'm on hp-unix. I would like a variable to hold the last change date of a file. I looked at the man pages for stat, but I don't see any examples and can't get the syntax right. Can anyone help me? Thank you. (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I want to check whether a file is not updated in last 15 minutes, for this i need to get timestamp of file, (yyyy:mm:dd:hh:mi:ss). I dont have access to STAT command :(.
Please suggest a program or command to do this .
Thanks,
Saravana (1 Reply)
To list file permission/access right in octal format, linux has a command 'stat'. For example, we can use the followin -
stat -c %a `find . -type f
Is there any equivalent command in AIX and HP-UX to give the same result as linux 'stat' command?
Please advice. (3 Replies)
i know this command does not exist in solaris. however, i read somewhere on this forum that basically everything the stat command provides in other oses can be obtained in solaris using the ls command.
i've searched the forum for a while now and i cant find the thread. does anyone know about... (1 Reply)
Die to what all operations, the "Modify" and "Change" values of stat output changes for a file.
I found, during editing a file, Change and Modify alters. When chmod'ing Change alters, while Modify doesnot alters. Is there more situations where these changes? (1 Reply)
Hi Experts,
I am here with very simple request:
#!bin/bash
a=`stat -c %y log1.csv`
echo $a
and this stat command returning value as
2013-08-11 05:42:10.000000000 -0400:
But I want to see in mm/dd/yyyy format?
any help is highly appreciated thank you
---------- Post... (9 Replies)
hello, I wanted to know which is the output of the stat command with a file, for example if I write on the terminal:
stat ./unix.pdf
i get the output:
754974726 6915670 -rwxrwxrwx 1 mbruno106 staff 0 90501 "Aug 13 13:26:02 2013" "Aug 13 13:26:02 2013" "Aug 13 13:26:02 2013" "Aug 13... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Marina2013
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
chmod
CHMOD(3) 1 CHMOD(3)chmod - Changes file modeSYNOPSIS
bool chmod (string $filename, int $mode)
DESCRIPTION
Attempts to change the mode of the specified file to that given in $mode.
PARAMETERS
o $filename
- Path to the file.
o $mode
- Note that $mode is not automatically assumed to be an octal value, so to ensure the expected operation, you need to prefix $mode
with a zero (0). Strings such as "g+w" will not work properly.
<?php
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 755); // decimal; probably incorrect
chmod("/somedir/somefile", "u+rwx,go+rx"); // string; incorrect
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0755); // octal; correct value of mode
?>
man 1 chmod' and ' man 2 chmod'.
<?php
// Read and write for owner, nothing for everybody else
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0600);
// Read and write for owner, read for everybody else
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0644);
// Everything for owner, read and execute for others
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0755);
// Everything for owner, read and execute for owner's group
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0750);
?>
RETURN VALUES
Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
NOTES
Note
The current user is the user under which PHP runs. It is probably not the same user you use for normal shell or FTP access. The
mode can be changed only by user who owns the file on most systems.
Note
This function will not work on remote files as the file to be examined must be accessible via the server's filesystem.
Note
When safe mode is enabled, PHP checks whether the files or directories you are about to operate on have the same UID (owner) as the
script that is being executed. In addition, you cannot set the SUID, SGID and sticky bits.
SEE ALSO chown(3), chgrp(3), fileperms(3), stat(3).
PHP Documentation Group CHMOD(3)