this only creates one ".ext2" in the same directory, without any name, with only the second extension
The solution works, though not the most elegant except to demonstrate that a goal can be achieved in unix by many means using all sorts of commands, some are more efficient, some, more accessible, some, very tricky...
I would imagine the most straightforward would have been using sed to rename in one pass... Only I avoided the solution for I have not found all the chars on this keyboard (powerbookG4... still looking for backslash andmore important the tilde!!! - How do mac users writes scripts?) and find myself very uncomfortable.
Alright, basically we're in the whole where we can't tar/gzip a folder since its to big so how do I copy files to a new folder for example
I got files from a-Z, i want to copy all files which starts with a A or a into another folder heres file structure
./backups/A
./backups/B... (11 Replies)
I've been able to find all the extensionless files named photos using the command:
find /usr/local/apache/htdocs -name photos -print0
I need to copy those files to the name photos.php in their same directory.
I've found a bunch of xarg examples for moving to other directories but I wasn't... (7 Replies)
Hey All,
I want to get the access time of files in a directory.
I used ls -lu on a directory and picked a file that had the access time of Mar 1 and used cat to get the contents of the file. Then I used the ls -lu again and the access time changed on that file. Perfect !!
Now if I cat a... (10 Replies)
Hi all,
i have 2 directory of files, the first directory(ext1directory) contain files of extension .ext1 and the second directory(allextdirectory) contains files of multiple extensions (.ext1,.ext2,.ext3,..)
so i want to copy the files from directory 2(allextdirectory) that have the same name... (8 Replies)
Hi all...
I am trying to copy all my shell script to some directory using following command, I want to simplify it by not using awk..please some one help me....
find -name "*.sh" | awk -F"/" '{a=$NF;gsub(".sh",x,a);cmd="cp"" " $0" ""/home/akshay/MY_ALL/"a"_"++i".sh";system(cmd)}' (3 Replies)
Hello
How do i copy files matching multiple conditions. Requirement is to search files starting with name abc* and def* and created on a particular date or date range given by the user and copy it to the destination folder.
i tried with different commands.
below one will give the list ,... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I want to fetch the files based on .done file and display the .csv files and Wil take .csv files for processing.
1.I need to display the .done files from the directory.
2.next i need to search for the .Csv files based on .done file.then move .csv files for the one directory
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have multiple files that read:
Asa.txt
Bad.txt
Gnu.txt
And I want to rename them using awk to
Asa_ddmmyytt.txt and so on
...
If there is a single command or more efficient executable please share!
Thanks! (4 Replies)
Hello All,
Since i'm relatively new in shell script need your guidance.
I'm copying files manually based on a specific word in a file name and its extension and then moving it into some destination folder.
so if filename contains hyr word and it has .md and .db extension; it will move to TUM/HYR... (13 Replies)
The bash executes but returns no results and the set -xv showed while the $run variable in blue, was extracted correctly, the $match value in green, was not, rather both values in home/cmccabe/Desktop/f1 were extracted not just the matching.
There will always be an exact match from the $run to... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
gendiff
GENDIFF(1) General Commands Manual GENDIFF(1)NAME
gendiff - utility to aid in error-free diff file generation
SYNOPSIS
gendiff <directory> <diff-extension>
DESCRIPTION
gendiff is a rather simple script which aids in generating a diff file from a single directory. It takes a directory name and a "diff-
extension" as its only arguments. The diff extension should be a unique sequence of characters added to the end of all original, unmodi-
fied files. The output of the program is a diff file which may be applied with the patch program to recreate the changes.
The usual sequence of events for creating a diff is to create two identical directories, make changes in one directory, and then use the
diff utility to create a list of differences between the two. Using gendiff eliminates the need for the extra, original and unmodified
directory copy. Instead, only the individual files that are modified need to be saved.
Before editing a file, copy the file, appending the extension you have chosen to the filename. I.e. if you were going to edit somefile.cpp
and have chosen the extension "fix", copy it to somefile.cpp.fix before editing it. Then edit the first copy (somefile.cpp).
After editing all the files you need to edit in this fashion, enter the directory one level above where your source code resides, and then
type
$ gendiff somedirectory .fix > mydiff-fix.patch
You should redirect the output to a file (as illustrated) unless you want to see the results on stdout.
SEE ALSO diff(1), patch(1)AUTHOR
Marc Ewing <marc@redhat.com>
4th Berkeley Distribution Mon Jan 10 2000 GENDIFF(1)