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)
Hi
When trying to find and delete files which are, say, 1 day, the find command misses a day. Please refer the following example.
xxxd$ find . -type f -ctime +1 -exec ls -ltr {} \;
total 64
-rw-rw-r-- 1 oracle xxxd 81 Apr 30 11:25 ./ful_cfg_tmp_20080429_7.dat
-rw-rw-r-- 1... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have hundered's of files of the name
CMP_PORT_IN_P200903271623042437_20090328122430_err.xml in error directory of todays date ie 20090328 and in the file name 5th field specifies date only now i want to move all files of 20090328 to another directory i.e reprocess directory.
So... (3 Replies)
Hello!!
I have directories from 2008, with files in them. I want to create a script that will find the directoried from 2008 (example directory:
drwxr-xr-x 2 isplan users 1024 Nov 21 2008 FILES_112108), delete the files within those directories and then delete the directories... (3 Replies)
Dear Members,
I have a list of xml files like
abc.xml.table
prq.xml.table
...
..
.
in a txt file.
Now I have to search the file(s) in all directories and sub-directories and print the full path of file in a output txt file.
Please help me with the script or command to do so.
... (11 Replies)
Hi,
I would like to list all files, older than 7 days, in a directory, but exclude all subdirectories in the find command. If I use find . -type f -mtime +7 all files in the subdirs are also included. How can I exclude them?
Regards,
JW (6 Replies)
I need to archive the older than 30 day file to another uinx server.I have wrote the below uinx script.
for LOOK_DIR in /TempFiles
do
for FILE in `find ${LOOK_DIR} -mtime -30 -exec ls {} \;`
do
echo ${FILE} >> file_list ## This file will have the list of files copied and... (12 Replies)
Need to write a shell script on AIX box which will connect to different servers using SFTP and get the file count of only 1 day older files. (purging list)
How to achieve this?
On local server we can use:
find <path> -type f -mtime +1
But how to do it in case of SFTP? Please advise. Thanks... (9 Replies)
// AIX 6.1
I need to extract PIDs of
ps -ef |grep /usr/lib/lpd/pio | awk '{print $2}'
ps -ef |grep qdaemon |grep /usr/bin/ksh | awk '{print $2}'
that are older than 1 day.
I know find . -type f -mtime +1, but it doesn't work for PIDs.
Please let me know how to get the PIDs older than... (1 Reply)
I thought that this would work for grep'ing files older than 1 day.
ps -o etime,pid,user,args -e|awk '/^+-/'|sort -t- -n -k 1,1 |grep qdaemon |grep /usr/bin/ksh
But, it is not grep'ing any of files (i.e. below) older than 1 day.
d_prod 33757970 61999560 0 Oct 27 - 0:00... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Daniel Gate
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
file::find::wanted
Wanted(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Wanted(3pm)NAME
File::Find::Wanted - More obvious wrapper around File::Find
VERSION
Version 1.00
SYNOPSIS
File::Find is a great module, except that it doesn't actually find anything. Its "find()" function walks a directory tree and calls a
callback function. Unfortunately, the callback function is deceptively called "wanted", which implies that it should return a boolean
saying whether you want the file. That's not how it works.
Most of the time you call "find()", you just want to build a list of files. There are other modules that do this for you, most notably
Richard Clamp's great File::Find::Rule, but in many cases, it's overkill, and you need to learn a new syntax.
With the "find_wanted" function, you supply a callback sub and a list of starting directories, but the sub actually should return a boolean
saying whether you want the file in your list or not.
To get a list of all files ending in .jpg:
my @files = find_wanted( sub { -f && /.jpg$/ }, $dir );
For a list of all directories that are not CVS or .svn:
my @files = find_wanted( sub { -d && !/^(CVS|.svn)$/ }, $dir ) );
It's easy, direct, and simple.
WHY DO THIS ?
The cynical may say "that's just the same as doing this":
my @files;
find( sub { push @files, $File::Find::name if -f && /.jpg$/ }, $dir );
Sure it is, but File::Find::Wanted makes it more obvious, and saves a line of code. That's worth it to me. I'd like it if find_wanted()
made its way into the File::Find distro, but for now, this will do.
FUNCTIONS
find_wanted( &wanted, @directories )
Descends through @directories, calling the wanted function as it finds each file. The function returns a list of all the files and
directories for which the wanted function returned a true value.
This is just a wrapper around "File::Find::find()". See File::Find for details on how to modify its behavior.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2005-2012 Andy Lester.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License v2.0.
perl v5.14.2 2012-06-08 Wanted(3pm)