I need to copy about 13 Tb of data from one directory and subdirectories to the other (another mount point). If I run this as a cron, say between 10 pm and 7 am, not all of the files will be copied over. Is there a way of 'resuming' the copy the following evenings until all files are copied over? (0 Replies)
Hi
when copy the files from one directory to another as like below,it is tried to copy *. as a file.
cp /home/rha/*.
My objective is to copy all the files (don't care about case sensitive),
Thanks in advance for your valuable reply. (1 Reply)
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)
Iam in the process of copying a directory with thousands of directories and files into a new directory.
I need to preserve permissions, owner, group, date and timestamps, everything.
Iam using AIX and would need help of writing the command whether it is cp-RP or cpio.
Apprecaite your... (3 Replies)
Dear All,
Again I have another simple question. :confused:
I want to write a csh which can copy all files of a current directory with a new name in the same directory, I mean:
If I have tree bird apple as files in a directory I want to give ,say number 007 as argument to my csh and it copies... (3 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)
I can't find how to do this.
I want to take a bulk of files, and copy/move a specific number of them (say 1000) to a newly created directory. Once that directory is full, I want to create a new folder and copy/move another batch of files, and so on.
Seems like there should be an easy way to... (6 Replies)
I have directory that has some billion file inside , i tried copy some files for specific date but it's always did not respond for long time and did not give any result.. i tried everything with find command and also with xargs..
even this command find . -mtime -2 -print | xargs ls -d did not... (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)
Discussion started by: santosh2626
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
htstat
htdig(1) General Commands Manual htdig(1)NAME
htstat - returns statistics on the document and word databases, much like the -s option to htdig or htmerge.
SYNOPSIS
htstat [-v][-a][-c configfile][-u]
DESCRIPTION
Htdig retrieves HTML documents using the HTTP protocol and gathers information from these documents which can later be used to search these
documents. This program can be referred to as the search robot.
OPTIONS -a Use alternate work files. Tells htstat to append .work to database files, causing a second copy of the database to be built. This
allows the original files to be used by htsearch during the run.
-c configfile
Use the specified configfile instead of the default.
-u Give a list of URLs in the document database.
-v Verbose mode. This increases the verbosity of the program. Using more than 2 is probably only useful for debugging purposes. The
default verbose mode (using only one -v) gives a nice progress report while digging.
FILES
/etc/htdig/htdig.conf
The default configuration file.
SEE ALSO
Please refer to the HTML pages (in the htdig-doc package) /usr/share/doc/htdig-doc/html/index.html and the manual pages htdigconfig(8) ,
htdig(1) and htmerge(1) for a detailed description of ht://Dig and its commands.
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Robert Ribnitz, based on the HTML documentation of ht://Dig.
January 2004 htdig(1)