I am using a DEC ALPHA running Digital UNIX (formly DEC OSF/1) and ksh. I have a directory with hundreds of files that only share the extension .rpt. I would like to search that directory based on serial number and operation number and only files that meet both requirements to be printed out. I... (6 Replies)
Please help. I am getting back into UNIX and I need a script that requires me to start in one main directory (call it mydata) and under this directory searches several subdirectories within subdirectories. I need to search each directory to locate *_source and delete files within the directory... (2 Replies)
Guys
I need to write a korn shell script that will search for a list of empty sub-directories in a specific directory and then email a list of these empty directories.
Any ideas - apologies, I am new to shell scripting.
Thanks (4 Replies)
Hi
I was wondering why command 2 doesn't work like command 1 below.
1.
find . -exec grep "test" '{}' \; -print
2.
ls -R | grep "test"
I am trying to search "test" from all the files in the current and sub directories. What's wrong with my command 2?
Thanks in advance for your help (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am searching for a file named "Backup.txt" but I don't know in which directory it is.
Can someone tell me, how I can search recursiv in all directories and subdirectories?
thanks (2 Replies)
Hi ,
I 'm trying to check if multiple directories exist on a server, if not create the missing ones and print " creating missing directory.
how to write this in a simple script, I have made my code complex
if ; then
taskStatus="Schema extract directory exists, checking if SQL,Count and... (7 Replies)
I use this command to find a search (Nr of active alarms are) and print one line before and 10 lines after the search keywords.
nawk 'c-->0;$0~s{if(b)for(c=b+1;c>1;c--)print r;print;c=a}b{r=$0}' b=1 a=10 s="Nr of active alarms are:" *.log
However, I would like to know how to tell it to print... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a directory /home/datasets/ which contains a bunch (720) of subdirectories called hour_1/ hour_2/ etc..etc.. in each of these there is a single text file called (hour_1.txt in hour_1/ , hour_2.txt for hour_2/ etc..etc..) and i would like to do some text processing in them.
Each of... (20 Replies)
Hi,
Very unfamiliar with unix/linux stuff. Our admin is on vacation so, need help very quickly.
I have directories (eg 40001, 40002, etc) that each have one subdirectory (01).
Each subdir 01 has multiple subdirs (001, 002, 003, etc). They are same in each dir.
I need to keep the top and... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: kkouraus1
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
whereis
WHEREIS(1) BSD General Commands Manual WHEREIS(1)NAME
whereis -- locate programs
SYNOPSIS
whereis [-abmqsux] [-BMS dir ... -f] program ...
DESCRIPTION
The whereis utility checks the standard binary, manual page, and source directories for the specified programs, printing out the paths of any
it finds. The supplied program names are first stripped of leading path name components, any single trailing extension added by gzip(1),
compress(1), or bzip2(1), and the leading 's.' or trailing ',v' from a source code control system.
The default path searched is the string returned by the sysctl(8) utility for the ``user.cs_path'' string, with /usr/libexec and the current
user's $PATH appended. Manual pages are searched by default along the $MANPATH. Program sources are located in a list of known standard
places, including all the subdirectories of /usr/src and /usr/ports.
The following options are available:
-B Specify directories to search for binaries. Requires the -f option.
-M Specify directories to search for manual pages. Requires the -f option.
-S Specify directories to search for program sources. Requires the -f option.
-a Report all matches instead of only the first of each requested type.
-b Search for binaries.
-f Delimits the list of directories after the -B, -M, or -S options, and indicates the beginning of the program list.
-m Search for manual pages.
-q (``quiet''). Suppress the output of the utility name in front of the normal output line. This can become handy for use in a back-
quote substitution of a shell command line, see EXAMPLES.
-s Search for source directories.
-u Search for ``unusual'' entries. A file is said to be unusual if it does not have at least one entry of each requested type. Only
the name of the unusual entry is printed.
-x Do not use ``expensive'' tools when searching for source directories. Normally, after unsuccessfully searching all the first-level
subdirectories of the source directory list, whereis will ask locate(1) to find the entry on its behalf. Since this can take much
longer, it can be turned off with -x.
EXAMPLES
The following finds all utilities under /usr/bin that do not have documentation:
whereis -m -u /usr/bin/*
Change to the source code directory of ls(1):
cd `whereis -sq ls`
SEE ALSO find(1), locate(1), man(1), which(1), sysctl(8)HISTORY
The whereis utility appeared in 3.0BSD. This version re-implements the historical functionality that was lost in 4.4BSD.
AUTHORS
This implementation of the whereis command was written by Jorg Wunsch.
BUGS
This re-implementation of the whereis utility is not bug-for-bug compatible with historical versions. It is believed to be compatible with
the version that was shipping with FreeBSD 2.2 through FreeBSD 4.5 though.
The whereis utility can report some unrelated source entries when the -a option is specified.
BSD August 22, 2002 BSD