Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: find + printf help
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting find + printf help Post 302468453 by danschmidt on Tuesday 2nd of November 2010 07:11:12 PM
Old 11-02-2010
find + printf help

Hi, I have a scripting assignment for an intro to linux class and I'm really confused about how to do something seemingly simple.

I am supposed to Print the name of each file in the /data/dir16/subdir1 directory in the following format: "My name is: bin"

The desired output example looks like:
My name is: /data/dir16/dir1/testfile1
My name is: /data/dir16/dir1/testfile2
so on...

So first question is, am I on the right track in thinking I am supposed to use the find and printf combination?

Right now, all I've tried is various combinations of find /data/dir16/dir1 printf "My name is:" which just produces 13 instances of "My name is:".

How do I append the filenames to the end of the "My name is" string?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

printf format

hi, i would like to extract the header and put it in a variable, then use printf to output the variable, but i keep on getting errors...please tell me if my format is incorrect. HDR = "`ps -e -o user,pid,ppid,pcpu,stime,etime,time,comm | head -n 1`" printf (%s, $HDR); thanks! (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: laila63
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

find: problems escaping printf-command string

Hi Folks! Can you help me with this find -printf command. I seem to be unable to execute the printf-command from my shell script. I'm confused: :confused: My shell script snippet looks like this: #!/bin/sh .. COMMAND="find ./* -printf '%p %m %s %u %g \n'" echo "Command: ${COMMAND}"... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: grahamb
1 Replies

3. Programming

printf

What is the output of the following program considering an x86 based parameter passing sequence where stack grows towards lower memory addresses and that arguments are evaluated from right to left: int i=10; int f1() { static int i = 15; printf("f1:%d ", i); return i--; } main() {... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: arunviswanath
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

printf

How to print output in following format? A..................ok AA................ok AAA..............ok AAAAAA........ok "ok" one under one (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mirusnet
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

printf / regex

Morning folks, I need help with the following issue: Let's say we I have the following output: First Name: Test Last Name: Test2 Number: T1234 Number2: T1234 Needed Output: T1234 Now I want to grep/nawk/printf/sed out the Number: (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: domi55
13 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Need help with printf

Hi, I have just completed my first script (:D) and now i just need to format it with printf. This is what I have: #!/bin/ksh TOTB=0 TOTF=0 TOTI=0 HOST=`hostname` echo " FSYSTEM BLKS FREE INUSE MOUNTEDON" df -m | grep -v ":"|grep -v Free|grep -v "/proc"| while read FSYSTEM... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: compan023
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

The meaning of %s in printf

I have this command like that has %s in it, I know %s calls a column, but I am not sure I understand which column (I mean for my case I can check the input file, but I want to know how is this %s used, how comes tha same symbo; gives different columns in one command line: {printf "grep %s... (22 Replies)
Discussion started by: cosmologist
22 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

"find . -printf" without prepended "." path? Getting path to current working directory?

If I enter (simplified): find . -printf "%p\n" then all files in the output are prepended by a "." like ./local/share/test23.log How can achieve that a.) the leading "./" is omitted and/or b.) the full path to the current directory is inserted (enclosed by brackets and a blank)... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pstein
1 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Using printf in bash

printf "%5.5\n" "1234567890" will print 12345 . How do I get it to print 67890 Essentially, I just want the last 5 characters rather than the first 5. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: lavender
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need find package that supports printf on AIX

My current find command does not support printf. I need find package that supports printf on AiX 6.1 system. Can anyone help me with the download link or where / how / if I can find it ? Can it be installed at a different non default location so that it can be reference without... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
5 Replies
mhddfs(1)						      General Commands Manual							 mhddfs(1)

NAME
mhddfs - The driver combines a several mount points into the single one. SYNOPSIS
mhddfs /dir1,/dir2[,/path/to/dir3] /path/to/mount [-o options] mhddfs /dir1 dir2,dir3 /mount/point [-o options] ... fusermount -u /path/to/mount fstab record example: mhddfs#/path/to/dir1,/path/to/dir2 /mnt/point fuse defaults 0 0 mhddfs#/dir1,/dir2,/dir3 /mnt fuse logfile=/var/log/mhddfs.log 0 0 OPTIONS
with an -o option1,option2... you can specify some additional options: logfile=/path/to/file.log specify a file that will contain debug information. loglevel=x 0 - debug messages 1 - info messages 2 - standard (default) messages mlimit=size[m|k|g] a free space size threshold If a drive has the free space less than the threshold specifed then another drive will be choosen while creat- ing a new file. If all the drives have free space less than the threshold specified then a drive containing most free space will be choosen. Default value is 4G, minimum value is 100M. This option accepts suffixes: [mM] - megabytes [gG] - gigabytes [kK] - kilobytes For an information about the additional options see output of: mhddfs -h DESCRIPTION
The file system allows to unite a several mount points (or directories) to the single one. So a one big filesystem is simulated and this makes it possible to combine a several hard drives or network file systems. This system is like unionfs but it can choose a drive with the most of free space, and move the data between drives transparently for the applications. While writing files they are written to a 1st hdd until the hdd has the free space (see mlimit option), then they are written on a 2nd hdd, then to 3rd etc. df will show a total statistics of all filesystems like there is a big one hdd. If an overflow arises while writing to the hdd1 then a file content already written will be transferred to a hdd containing enough of free space for a file. The transferring is processed on-the-fly, fully transparent for the application that is writing. So this behaviour simu- lates a big file system. WARNINGS The filesystems are combined must provide a possibility to get their parameters correctly (e.g. size of free space). Otherwise the writing failure can occur (but data consistency will be ok anyway). For example it is a bad idea to combine a several sshfs systems together. Please read FUSE documentation for a further conception. COPYRIGHT
Distributed under GPLv3 Copyright (C) 2008 Dmitry E. Oboukhov <dimka@avanto.org> February 2008 mhddfs(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:32 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy