Hi,
I've to delete certain files older than X days from a Maintenance server.
I'm doing this using
find . -name lds\* -mtime $X \
-exec ls -l {} \;
find . -name lds\* -mtime $X \
-exec rm -fR {} \;
As well as I've to delete the files from another FTP server which are again older than X... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have a directory which contains files.This Directory keeps getting in new files from time to time.I want to maintain only 15 files in that directory at any time and the old files should be deleted.
Eg:
Directory 'c' @'a/b/c contains:
1_a
2_a
3_a...
I want to delete all the old... (2 Replies)
OK, Easy question probably, I have a directory that is full of like 1000 files.
I want to get rid of files more than 5 days old.
Is there an easy way to do this? there are like 800 files that fit into this category so doing it manually would be a pain.
Any help is appreciated! (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have been working with files in emacs and a file showed up in my directories called #main.c# (the original file being main.c). However I cannot delete this #main.c# file. Any suggestions? (1 Reply)
hi everybody,
urgently need solutioin
aftet i execute the command df -k, i get to see al the memory status blah blah
if some file system has 95% full then what should i do and any help on how and what to do ?
help really appriciated.
cheers (4 Replies)
hellooo.....
script is: To remove a file from a directory if a starting letter and a file size is given by the user.
My code is:
echo "Enter a letter"
read l
echo "Enter Size"
read size
for i in `ls $l*`
do
s=`stat -c %s $i`
if
then
rm $i
... (1 Reply)
:confused:
hi all,
I need to delete all the files from a archieve directory whose filename
starts with 2008, 2009. The folder consists of 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011.
the filename example is as below:
20081111_12_asc_ac_st.zip similarly there are files for 2009.
There are around... (2 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I am new to this , I am working on AIX system and my scenario is to retrive the files from remote system and remove the files from the remote system after retreving files. I can able to retrieve the files but Can't remove files in remote system. Please check my code and help me out... (3 Replies)
#!/bin/bash
#
name=$1
type=$2
number=1
for file in ./**
do
if
then
filenumber=00$number
elif
then
filenumber=0$number
fi
tempname="$name""$filenumber"."$type"
if (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: TheGreatGizmo
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
hcopy
HCOPY(1) General Commands Manual HCOPY(1)NAME
hcopy - copy files from or to an HFS volume
SYNOPSIS
hcopy [-m|-b|-t|-r|-a] source-path [...] target-path
DESCRIPTION
hcopy transfers files from an HFS volume to UNIX or vice versa. The named source files are copied to the named destination target, which
must be a directory if multiple files are to be copied.
Copies are performed using a translation mode, which must be one of:
-m MacBinary II: A popular format for binary file transfer. Both forks of the Macintosh file are preserved. This is the recommended
mode for transferring arbitrary Macintosh files.
-b BinHex: An alternative format for ASCII file transfer. Both forks of the Macintosh file are preserved.
-t Text: Performs end-of-line translation. Only the data fork of the Macintosh file is copied.
-r Raw Data: Performs no translation. Only the data fork of the Macintosh file is copied.
-a Automatic: A mode will be chosen automatically for each file based on a set of predefined heuristics.
If no mode is specified, -a is assumed.
If a UNIX source pathname is specified as a single dash (-), hcopy will copy from standard input to the HFS destination. Likewise, a single
dash used as a UNIX destination pathname will cause hcopy to copy the HFS source to standard output.
NOTES
Copied files may have their filenames altered during translation. For example, an appropriate file extension may be added or removed, and
certain other characters may also be transliterated.
The destination target must not be ambiguous; that is, it must be obvious whether the target is on the UNIX filesystem or on an HFS volume.
As a rule, HFS targets must contain at least one colon (:), usually as the beginning of a relative pathname or by itself to represent the
current working directory. To make a UNIX target unambiguous, either use an absolute pathname or precede a relative pathname with a dot and
slash (./).
SEE ALSO hfsutils(1), hls(1), hattrib(1)AUTHOR
Robert Leslie <rob@mars.org>
HFSUTILS 13-Jan-1997 HCOPY(1)