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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Some advice please on non-recursive find Post 302615885 by rangarasan on Friday 30th of March 2012 08:23:37 AM
Old 03-30-2012
awk

Hi,

Try this one,

Code:
find . \( ! -name . -prune \) \( -type f -name "*.aud" -mtime +10 \) | awk -v base=`pwd` '{gsub(/^./,base);}1'

Note: I am tested your find command. If it works well, awk command do the rest.

Cheers,
RangaSmilie
 

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UD.CONF(5)							File Formats Manual							UD.CONF(5)

NAME
ud.conf - ud configuration file SYNOPSIS
/etc/openldap/ud.conf DESCRIPTION
The ud configuration file is used to set system-wide defaults to be applied when running ud. Note that each user may specify an optional configuration file, .udrc, in his/her home directory which will be used instead of the system-wide configuration file. OPTIONS
The different configuration options are: HOST <name> Used to specify the name of an LDAP server to which ud should connect. There may be only one entry per config file. The server's name can be specified as a domain-style name or an IP address. BASE <base> Used to specify the search base to use when performing search operations. The base may be changed by those using ud by using the cb command. There may be only one entry per config file. The base must be specified as a Distinguished Name in LDAP format. GROUPBASE <base> Used to specify the base used when creating groups. The base may be changed by those using ud by using the changegroup command. There may be only one entry per config file. The base must be specified as a Distinguished Name in LDAP format. SEARCH <algorithm> Used to specify a search algorithm to use when performing searches. More than one algorithm may be specified, and each is tried in turn until a suitable response is found. Each algorithm specifies a filter that should be used when performing a find operation. Filters contain LDAP-style attribute types (e.g., uid, cn, postalAddress) and operators to test for equality or approximate equality. Prefix operators may also be used to specify AND, OR and NOT operations (see ldap(3) for more details on the filter format). Algorithms use a compile-time constant as a separator to use when parsing the input the user has provided. This parsed input can then be referenced similarly to an awk program using symbols like $1, $2, and $0 for the entire batch of input. For example, the algoritm cn=$0 causes ud to perform a lookup on the entire string the user has typed, searching for anything where the commonName exactly matches the whole thing. Another example, sn~=$NF causes ud to do a search where the last element the user has typed (NF = number of fields and is a spe- cial "number" that can be used in awk as well as ud) searching for any matches that approximately match Surname. Search algorithms also support a special feature which allows one to specify the exact number of fields that must be present in order for the algorithm to be applied. This number must be specified between square brackets. For example, [1] uid=$1 causes this algorithm to be applied when the number of fields is exactly equal to one. If there is exactly one field, the token is looked up as a UID. FILES
/etc/openldap/ud.conf SEE ALSO
ud(1), ldap(3) AUTHOR
Bryan Beecher, University of Michigan ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
OpenLDAP is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP Project (http://www.openldap.org/). OpenLDAP is derived from University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release. 4.3 Berkeley Distribution 20 August 2000 UD.CONF(5)
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