Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting getting files between specific date ranges in solaris Post 302594887 by methyl on Wednesday 1st of February 2012 11:50:38 AM
Old 02-01-2012
Quote:
is there a way to use dates instead of +/- days ?
Yes.
One Shell method is to create two reference files with "touch". One dated the last second before the range, and one dated the first second after the range. Then use "find".
Code:
find /dir -type f \( -newer start_file -a ! -newer end_file \) -print

There is a similar approach using reference files and the little-known "ksh" Conditional Expressions "-nt" and "-ot" but it tends to be slower than "find".
This User Gave Thanks to methyl For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

[csh] checking for specific character ranges in a variable

I want to check if a zip code is valid, using a variable that stores the zipcode. I am not sure how I would do this in a script. I know that simply checking for the numerical range of the number will not work, because '1' would be '00001' in zip code format. I know when I am in shell, I can use... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: userix
5 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

find command: various date ranges

Hi, I have writtena script that will recursivly go into subdirecotries and report out what files there are in there that have not been accessed over various date ranges. I do this using a number of find commands: find . -path './.snapshot' -prune -o -type f -atime -8 find... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: littleIdiot
4 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

date ranges

Hi, Please anyone help to achive this using perl or unix scripting . This is date in my table 20090224,based on the date need to check the files,If file exist for that date then increment by 1 for that date and check till max date 'i.e.20090301 and push those files . files1_20090224... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: akil
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

extracting columns falling within specific ranges for multiple files

Hi, I need to create weekly files from daily records stored in individual monthly filenames from 1999-2010. my sample file structure is like the ones below: daily record stored per month: 199901.xyz, 199902.xyz, 199903.xyz, 199904.xyz ...199912.xyz records inside 199901.xyz (original data... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ida1215
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Generate Regex numeric range with specific sub-ranges

hi all, Say i have a range like 0 - 1000 and i need to split into diffrent files the lines which are within a specific fixed sub-range. I can achieve this manually but is not scalable if the range increase. E.g cat file1.txt Response time 2 ms Response time 15 ms Response time 101... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: varu0612
12 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk working inside specific pattern ranges

Hi, I have a text file, which I am trying to parse. File contents: BEG Id Job1 Id Stage1 1 EN Id Job2 Id Stage2 BEG Id2 Job3 Id Stage4 2 EN I have to process the data in this between every BEG and EN. so I am trying to restrict the range and inside every... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Kulasekar
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sum values of specific column in multiple files, considering ranges defined in another file

I have a file (let say file B) like this: File B: A1 3 5 A1 7 9 A2 2 5 A3 1 3 The first column defines a filename and the other two define a range in that specific file. In the same directory, I have also three more files (File A1, A2 and A3). Here is 10 sample lines... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Bastami
3 Replies

8. Programming

Derivation of values falling on date ranges

Hi Guys, I am having below tables used in oracle bal ID BALANCE BAL_DATE 1 -11.71 01-JAN-05 00.00.00 1 -405.71 02-JAN-05 00.00.00 1 -760.71 03-JAN-05 00.00.00 ref_table PRODUCT EFF_FROM_DATE EFF_TO_DATE TYPE MIN_AMT MAX_AMT CHARGE 12 01-JAN-05 00.00.00 01-JAN-06... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rohit_shinez
6 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Search files between date ranges - Ctime usage

Hello, I am a noob and need some help. I am trying to find files created between a date range. For Example: These are files in directory. -rw-r--r-- 1 user staff 6 May 8 09:43 file1.txt -rw-r--r-- 1 user staff 6 May 8 09:43 file2.txt -rw-r--r-- 1 user... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: r@v!7*7@
8 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Grepping the data between 2 date ranges

Hi There, Good Day !! I have txt file containing data in the below format. There are many lines, here i have mentioned for example. cat remo.txt 2/3/2017 file1 3/4/2016 file2 6/6/2015 file5 1/1/2018 file3 4/3/2014 file4 - - - I need to grep the file names for given date rage... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: kumar85shiv
11 Replies
ar(1)							      General Commands Manual							     ar(1)

Name
       ar - archive and library maintainer

Syntax
       ar option [ posname ] archive file ...

Description
       The archiver ar maintains groups of files as a single archive file.  This utility is generally used to create and update library files that
       the link editor uses; however, you can use the archiver for other similar purposes.  This version uses a portable ASCII-format archive that
       you can use on various machines that run UNIX.  If you have an archive that uses an older format, see

Options
       This  section  describes the options and suboptions that you can use with the ar utility.  Suboptions must be specified with options.  Fol-
       lowing is a list and description of the options:

       d      Deletes the specified files from the archive file.

       r      Replaces the specified files in the archive file.  If you use the suboption u with r, the archiver only replaces	those  files  that
	      have  last-modified  dates later than the archive files.	If you use a positioning character (from the set abi) you must specify the
	      posname argument to tell the archiver to put the new files after (a) or before (b or i).	Otherwise, the archiver puts new files	at
	      the end of the archive.

       q      Appends  the specified files to the end of the archive file.  The archiver does not accept suboption positioning characters with the
	      q option.  It also does not check whether the files you want to add already exist in the archive.  Use the q option  only  to  avoid
	      quadratic behavior when you create a large archive piece by piece.

       t      Prints  a  table of contents for the files in the archive file.  If you do not specify any filenames, the archiver builds a table of
	      contents for all files.  If you specify filenames, the archiver builds a table of contents only for those files.

       p      Prints the specified files from the archive.

       m      Moves the specified files to the end of the archive.  If you specify a positioning character, you must also specify the posname  (as
	      in option r) to tell the archiver where to move the files.

       x      Extracts	the  specified	files  from  the  archive.  If you do not specify any filenames, the archiver extracts all files.  When it
	      extracts files, the archiver does not change any file.  Normally, the last-modified date for each extracted file shows the date when
	      someone extracted it; however, when you use o, the archiver resets the last-modified date to the date recorded in the archive.

       s      Makes a symbol definition (symdef file) as the first file of an archive.	This file contains a hash table of ranlib structures and a
	      corresponding string table. The symdef file's name is based on the byte ordering of the hash table and  the  byte  ordering  of  the
	      file's target machine.  Files must be consistent in their target byte ordering before the archiver can create a symdef file.  If you
	      change the archive contents, the symdef file becomes obsolete because the archive file's	name  changes.	 If  you  specify  s,  the
	      archiver	creates the symdef file as its last action before finishing execution.	You must specify at least one other archive option
	      (m, p, q, r, or t) when you use the s option.  For UMIPS-V, archives include member objects based on  the  definition  of  a  common
	      object only.  For UMIPS-BSD, they define the common object, but do not include the object.

       v      Gives  a	file-by-file description as the archiver makes a new archive file from an old archive and its constituent files.  When you
	      use this option with t, the archiver lists all information about the files in the archive.  When you use this  option  with  p,  the
	      archiver precedes each file with a name.

       c      Suppresses  the  normal message that the archiver prints when it creates the specified archive file.  Normally, the archiver creates
	      the specified archiver file when it needs to.

       l      Places temporary files in the local directory.  If the l option is not used then the value of the  environment  symbol,  TMPDIR,	is
	      used  as the directory for temporary files.  If TMPDIR is not defined or if the directory it references is not writable then /tmp is
	      used.

       The suboptions do these things:

       a      Specifies that the file goes after the existing file (posname).  Use this suboption with the m or r options.

       b      Specifies that the file goes before the existing file (posname).	Use this suboption with the m or r options.

       i      Specifies that the file goes before the existing file (posname).	Use this suboption with the m or r options.

       o      Forces a newly created file to have the last-modified date that it had before it was extracted from the archive.	Use this suboption
	      with the x option.

       u      Prevents	the archiver from replacing an existing file unless the replacement is newer than the existing file.  This option uses the
	      UNIX system last modified date for this comparison.  Use this suboption with the r option.

Restrictions
       If you specify the same file twice in an argument list, it can appear twice in the archive file.

       The o option does not change the last-modified date of a file unless you own the extracted file or you are the superuser.

       This command truncates filenames to 15 characters.

Files
       /tmp/v*	 temporaries

See Also
       lorder(1), ld(1), odump(1), ranlib(1), ranhash(3x), ar(5), arcv(8)

								       RISC								     ar(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:49 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy