using gsed with cp to sort files in directory - every N file copy to new place
Hi all,
I'm having a problem with some basic piping issues...
I have been able to get in a directory and ls | gsed in order to list every N file for instance:
The thing is I want to be able to copy the output files to a new directory. Basically directory /all has a bunch of jpegs in there. I need to copy every third one, starting at #2 to /selects.
Can some kind person point me on the way with this. I am on OS X but installing gsed as the OS X sed seems inconsistent with the examples I am using to get the initial output...
THANK YOU
Last edited by radoulov; 10-12-2011 at 04:20 PM..
Reason: Code tags!
hello
i have a requirement where i have a direcotry in which i get files in the format
STOCKS.20080114.dat
STOCKS.20080115.dat
STOCKS.20080117.dat
STOCKS.20080118.dat
i need to loop through the directory and sort by create date descending order and i need to process the first file.
... (1 Reply)
Dear Gurus,
I need you to advice or suggestion about the best solution to copy data around 200-300G from serverA(location A) to serverB(location B). Normally, I will share folder and then copy but it takes too long time(about 2 days).
Do you have any suggestion or which way should be... (9 Replies)
Hello all.
I'm not getting the hang of Paths. I have a dir w/files that I want to copy to another dir. Right now I am in the "source" directory. I want to copy it to Ch7.
"cp -r source Ch7". Ch7 was already created.
1st msg.: cannot stat `source`: No such file or dir.
I typed pwd & got... (3 Replies)
I have a NAS and I upload my videos to it from time to time. the video format is 3gp but my media player PBO could only play avi. I want to copy these files to different directory and change the extention from 3gp to avi. (yes I want to keep the original version and create a duplicate version with... (0 Replies)
I am trying to write a script that will copy all file listed in a text file (100s of file names) to a new directory
Assume script will run with main as current working directory and I know how many files/lines will be in List.txt
Im trying to work up a test script using this model
Contents of... (2 Replies)
How to copy files from one directory to another directory with the subfolders copied.
If i have folder1/sub1/sub2/* it needs to copy files to folder2/sub1/sub2/*.
I do not want to create sub folders in folder2.
Can copy command create them automatically?
I tried cp -a and cp -R but did... (4 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I want to search for a specific file in a directory which have a "b" letter as the 3rd character in the name of the file.
For Example :
/abc/efg/ldbjfblkj.sh
/abc/efg/erublkd.sh
/abc/efg/eibueora.sh
/abc/efg/kfvnmnb.sh
Since we have 2 files with "b" as a 3rd character in... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
Daily I am getting the updated file.
I have to search for this file in all directories and sub directories.
If the file existed in a particular directory then move this updated file to that particular directory.
If the file is not existed in any of the directories then place this... (4 Replies)
RMGDIFF(1x)RMGDIFF(1x)NAME
rmgdiff - use almost any graphical file difference browser to recursively view the differences between two directories.
SYNOPSIS
rmgdiff [-b] [-d] [-g gui] [-n] dir1 dir2
DESCRIPTION
rmgdiff is an awk script that works in conjunction with almost any graphical file difference browser. It is known to work with mgdiff,
tkdiff, and xdiff.
Unless I am mistaken, most of the GUI difference viewers (except for emacs) do not have built-in support for recursing down two directo-
ries, but diff does. Based on diff's output, rmgdiff decides when to invoke the graphical difference viewer.
In addition, rmgdiff also collates diff's output. As soon as a new difference is encountered in a text file, rmgdiff will print to stan-
dard output the name of the file that both directories have in common. It will then start the GUI and block until the user exits. As more
text files with differences are found, the GUI will be started up again.
In the interim, rmgdiff will keep track of differences in binary (non-text) files. It organizes the binary files as executables, shared
libraries, static libraries, object files, and other. Only after all the text files have been displayed will rmgdiff report the binary
differences.
It also keeps track of files and directories that diff reports as being only in one directory or another. rmgdiff organizes these entries
by directory. Thus, files in one directory will be reported in one block, and files that are in the other directory will be reported in a
different block.
In addition to printing the name of the files that are different, rmgdiff defaults to printing the relevant portion of the output from the
file command. This has the unfortunate side-effect of slowing things down; however, I find this information to be invaluable. If you're
just looking for a fast way to collate diff's output, try piping it into sort instead.
COMMAND LINE OPTIONS -b Sets the basic reporting mode. In basic mode, rmgdiff reports only file names. It does not report the file types involved.
-c By default, files relating to CVS are ignored by rmgdiff. If you want to include CVS files, use this option.
-d Sets rmgdiff to print way too much debugging information.
-g gui Tells rmgdiff which gui you would like to use for viewing differences. By default, mgdiff is used. You can also set $RMGDIFF_GUI
in your environment, but it can be overridden with this option.
-n rmgdiff will not invoke the gui. This is useful, if you only want to view the collated output.
AUTHOR
Paul Serice (paul@serice.net)
RMGDIFF(1x)