12-08-2010
Well, even if you search on man pages of find, you will not find the creation time. So you better search in the forum for much better answer.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
I need to find files that have the ending of .out and that are older than 20 days. However, I cannot use find as I do not want to search in the directories that are underneath the directory that I am searching in.
How can this be done?? Find returns files that I do not want. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: halo98
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have an application which creates some directories while running. I want to delete these directories which are 4 days older.
i tried
find . type d -mtime +1 -print
And it is working fine..
but
find . type d -mtime +4 -print
is not giving any results which are 4 days... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tuxidow
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all!
Can someone please help me create a command to accomplish the following task.
I have a parent directory called ex. /var/www/parent and it has a bunch of sub-directories called /var/www/parent/1, var/www/parent/1/xyz/ and etc.
What I would like to do is to count the number of files... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbzor
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
find . -name *.txt -mmin -30
This is working in Redhat but not in Solaris..
What is the equivalent option in Solaris? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tene
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello
I have some directories and files created under /export/local/user
I would like to delete directories only under /export/local/user, created before 3 days
Can someone help me with command to do this task?
Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: needyourhelp10
4 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
HI,
I have 2 questions.
1>
Is there any code to see files that created some day or some time before in a directory???
2>
how or where i will find the last exit status of a process??
thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: jyotidas
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
i want to find unix file created how many days ago? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: utoptas
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8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Need to cpy those files which are created or modified in last 2 days.
bash$ ll -lrt
total 184
drwxr-xr-x 2 ons dce 256 Oct 12 06:58 files
-rw-r--r-- 1 ons dce 4313 Oct 14 06:06 cab.ksh
-rw-r--r-- 1 ons dce 6 Oct 14 07:03 Code.txt... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: saluja.deepak
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9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I want to find the sum of all the files created 5 days ago and store it in a variable. (os is HP-UX)
can this be extracted from ls -l
Is there any other way of getting the sum of all the files created (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bang_dba
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10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello All,
Can someone please help me out in creating the find command to search and delete files older than 1 days at a desired location.
Thanks in advance for your help. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pandee
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SHAR(1) BSD General Commands Manual SHAR(1)
NAME
shar -- create a shell archive of files
SYNOPSIS
shar file ...
DESCRIPTION
The shar command writes a sh(1) shell script to the standard output which will recreate the file hierarchy specified by the command line op-
erands. Directories will be recreated and must be specified before the files they contain (the find(1) utility does this correctly).
The shar command is normally used for distributing files by ftp(1) or mail(1).
EXAMPLES
To create a shell archive of the program ls(1) and mail it to Rick:
cd ls
shar `find . -print` | mail -s "ls source" rick
To recreate the program directory:
mkdir ls
cd ls
...
<delete header lines and examine mailed archive>
...
sh archive
SEE ALSO
compress(1), mail(1), tar(1), uuencode(1)
HISTORY
The shar command appeared in 4.4BSD.
BUGS
The shar command makes no provisions for special types of files or files containing magic characters. The shar command cannot handle files
without a newline ('
') as the last character.
It is easy to insert trojan horses into shar files. It is strongly recommended that all shell archive files be examined before running them
through sh(1). Archives produced using this implementation of shar may be easily examined with the command:
egrep -v '^[X#]' shar.file
BSD
June 6, 1993 BSD