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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How do I find files which are older than 30 days and greater than 1GB Post 302551205 by ocramas on Monday 29th of August 2011 05:11:47 PM
Old 08-29-2011
Yes it should work, but I personally should print the output first and not go directly to remove them.

Thanks
 

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lprm(1B)					     SunOS/BSD Compatibility Package Commands						  lprm(1B)

NAME
lprm - remove print requests from the print queue SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/lprm [-P destination] [-] [request-ID]... [user]... DESCRIPTION
The lprm utility removes print requests (request-ID) from the print queue. Without arguments, lprm deletes the current print request. lprm reports the name of the file associated with print requests that it removes. lprm is silent if there are no applicable print requests to remove. Users can only remove print requests associated with their user name. See Notes. If a superuser executes lprm and specifies the user oper- and, lprm removes all print requests belonging to the specified user. The print client commands locate destination information using the "printers" database in the name service switch. See nsswitch.conf(4), printers(4), and printers.conf(4) for details. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -P destination The name of the printer or class of printers (see lpadmin(1M)) from which to remove print requests. Specify destination using atomic, URI-style (scheme://endpoint), or POSIX-style (server:destination) names. See printers.conf(4) for informa- tion regarding the naming naming conventions for destination names. - If a user specifies this option, removes all print requests owned by that user. If a superuser specifies this option, removes all requests in the print queue. Job ownership is determined by the user's login name and host name on the machine from which lpr was executed. See Notes. OPERANDS
The following operands are supported. request-ID Removes a specific print request. Specify request-ID as the job number (Job) associated with a print request and reported by lpq. See lpq(1B). user Removes print requests associated with a specific user. Specify user as a valid user name. This option can only be used by a superuser. EXAMPLES
Example 1 Removing a Print Request The following example removes request-ID 385 from destination killtree: example% lprm -P killtree 385 EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful completion. non-zero An error occurred. FILES
$HOME/.printers User-configurable printer database /etc/printers.conf System printer configuration database printers.conf.byname NIS version of /etc/printers.conf printers.org_dir NIS+ version of /etc/printers.conf ou=printers LDAP version of /etc/printers.conf ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWlpr-cmds | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Standard | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
lp(1), lpc(1B), lpq(1B), lpr(1B), lpstat(1), lpadmin(1M), nsswitch.conf(4), printers(4), printers.conf(4), attributes(5), standards(5) NOTES
Users can only remove print requests associated with their user name. By default, users can only remove print requests on the host from which the print request was submitted. If a superuser has set user-equivalence=true in /etc/printers.conf on the print server, users can remove print requests associated with their user name on any host. Superusers can remove print requests on the host from which the print request was submitted. Superusers can also remove print requests from the print server. Some print servers send cancelation notification to job owners when their print jobs have been cancelled. This notification usually comes in the form of an email message. Cancelation notices cannot be disabled on a Solaris server. NOTES
When IPP is in use, the user is prompted for a passphrase if the remote print service is configured to require authentication. SunOS 5.11 2 Jun 2006 lprm(1B)
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