Hi Everybody,
Can you explain the difference between the following commands:
1. find . -print|xargs grep -i dba_2pc_pending
2. find . -print|grep -i dba_2pc_pending (5 Replies)
Hello,
I'm on a mac trying to have the follow cmd list the files after touch, but very unsuccessful. Please can you help.
sort $BOTHFILE | uniq -u | xargs -I {} -t touch {} >> $LOGFILE ;
BOTHFile contents in form of
/directory/file.txt
thanx (3 Replies)
my task : tar up large bunch of files(about 10,000 files) in the current directories that created more than 30 days ago
but it come with following error
find ./ -ctime +30 | xargs tar rvf test1.tar
tar: test1.tar: A file or directory in the path name does not exist. (3 Replies)
what is the real use of xargs command ..?
ls -tr |xargs -I{} rm -f {}
....can any one tell me what is the significance of {} curly brackets in this command (1 Reply)
Hi
I am trying to use "xargs" command to loop through each file, modify it and overwrite the old file with the modification but with the same file name.
I thought it is easy but I just can't get it to work
I tried the following
I thought {} would give me the current file name, but it... (1 Reply)
Hi
The command below does not work. what I am doing wrong ?
For some reason second part of the xargs command is not does what I expect
If I get this working I intend to use it for multiple file rename later.
echo archDP105144_1_702159963.dbf|xargs -i cp {} `echo {}|awk... (11 Replies)
Hi,
What is the difference in capitalizing the option 'i' of xargs command, (i.e) xargs -i and xargs -I?
Also, what is the difference between the below 2 commands?
output_from_cmd | xargs -I {} grep '{}' file
output_from_cmd | xargs -I grep '{}' file
Any efficiency or performance... (4 Replies)
xargs work great when a command gives multiple line output which can be input to another. In my case it is not working coz the second command uses two words in it.
$ scr.sh
gives output like
193740
638102
375449
..
..
another command takes these number as inputs. it works great... (1 Reply)
ls | grep -E '^+$' | xargs --verbose -I{} rm -vfr "{}";
When i execute the command it works fine by removing the directories and its writing the output as below about which files are deleting.What i want know is,is there any XARGS command option that it should done silently in background with... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am working on a file copier utility where I have written the copy commands to a batch file e.g. file_copier.bat which i pass to xargs command as follows.
cat file_copier.bat | xargs -n 1 -P 40
I also want to record the copy command status of each file/command in the form "command... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ankur singh
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
dpkg-name
dpkg-name(1) dpkg utilities dpkg-name(1)NAME
dpkg-name - rename Debian packages to full package names
SYNOPSIS
dpkg-name [options] [--] files
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents the dpkg-name program which provides an easy way to rename Debian packages into their full package names. A full
package name consists of <package>_<version>_<architecture>.<package_type> as specified in the control file of the package. The <version>
part of the filename consists of the upstream version information optionally followed by a hyphen and the revision information. The <pack-
age_type> part comes from that field if present or fallbacks to deb.
OPTIONS -a, --no-architecture
The destination filename will not have the architecture information.
-k, --symlink
Create a symlink, instead of moving.
-o, --overwrite
Existing files will be overwritten if they have the same name as the destination filename.
-s, --subdir [dir]
Files will be moved into a subdirectory. If the directory given as argument exists the files will be moved into that directory oth-
erwise the name of the target directory is extracted from the section field in the control part of the package. The target directory
will be `unstable/binary-<architecture>/<section>'. If the section is not found in the control, then `no-section' is assumed, and in
this case, as well as for sections `non-free' and `contrib' the target directory is `<section>/binary-<architecture>'. The section
field isn't required so a lot of packages will find their way to the `no-section' area. Use this option with care, it's messy.
-c, --create-dir
This option can used together with the -s option. If a target directory isn't found it will be created automatically. Use this
option with care.
-h, --help
Show the usage message and exit.
-v, --version
Show the version and exit.
EXAMPLES
dpkg-name bar-foo.deb
The file `bar-foo.deb' will be renamed to bar-foo_1.0-2_i386.deb or something similar (depending on whatever information is in the
control part of `bar-foo.deb').
find /root/debian/ -name '*.deb' | xargs -n 1 dpkg-name -a
All files with the extension `deb' in the directory /root/debian and its subdirectory's will be renamed by dpkg-name if required
into names with no architecture information.
find -name '*.deb' | xargs -n 1 dpkg-name -a -o -s -c
Don't do this. Your archive will be messed up completely because a lot of packages don't come with section information. Don't do
this.
dpkg --build debian-tmp && dpkg-name -o -s .. debian-tmp.deb
This can be used when building new packages.
BUGS
Some packages don't follow the name structure <package>_<version>_<architecture>.deb. Packages renamed by dpkg-name will follow this struc-
ture. Generally this will have no impact on how packages are installed by dselect(1)/ dpkg(1), but other installation tools might depend on
this naming structure.
SEE ALSO deb(5), deb-control(5), dpkg(1), dpkg-deb(1), find(1), xargs(1).
AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1995,1996 Erick Branderhorst
This is free software; see the GNU General Public Licence version 2 or later for copying conditions. There is NO WARRANTY.
Debian Project 2008-08-18 dpkg-name(1)