Whenever you need to traverse the a filesystem but the command does not support -R/r, think find(1).
If your find is compliant with the POSIX 2004 edition or later, use + to increase efficiency:
Quote:
Originally Posted by glev2005
That would have failed even if -[r|R] were supported. A line from procnamelist, which is a pattern to match, is treated as a filename argument to -f. If you put procnamelist where it belongs, after -f, the pipe and while loop serve no purpose.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pamu
The sole reason for the existence of this thread is file system traversal. This proposal is an infinite loop that reads one file over and over and over and ...
Hi,
I have a file which contains the following :
select * from test where test_id=1;
select id
from test1, test2 where test_id=1 and test_id=2;
select * from
test1, test2, test3 where test_id=4 and test2_id where in (select test2_id from test2);
select
id1, id2 from test ... (6 Replies)
Hi all,
I am looking for a coomand to search for the keywords in susequenct lines. Keyword1 in a line and Keyword2 in the very next line.
Once i found the combination ineed to print the lines with patterns and the line above and one below.
I am giving an example here: Keywords are :ERROR and... (12 Replies)
Hi,
I'm the new user of linux/unix. Can I ask that anybody know how to use the linux/unix shortcut key to search a specific file from a list of directory?
For example, I know the file name that I want to search. But I forget which directory or location is my desired file put.Got any shortcut... (7 Replies)
I have a huge list of files in an Unix directory (around 10000 files).
I need to be able to search for a certain keyword only within files that are modified between certain date and time, say for e.g 2012-08-20 12:30 to 2012-08-20 12:40
Can someone let me know what would be the fastest way... (10 Replies)
have a very big file where need to format it like below
example file:
abcd today
is
great
day;
search keyword 'abcd' and append to it all words till we reach ; to make it a single line.
output should look like.
abcd today is great day;
There are many occurrence of such... (2 Replies)
Hi ,
I have been trying to write a perl script to do this job. But i am not able to achieve the desired result. Below is my code.
my $current_value=12345;
my @users=("bob","ben","tom","harry");
open DBLIST,"<","/var/tmp/DBinfo";
my @input = <DBLIST>;
foreach (@users)
{
my... (11 Replies)
I have ~100 text files in a directory that I am trying to parse and output to a new file. I am looking for the words chr,start,stop,ref,alt in each of the files. Those fields should appear somewhere in those files. The first two fields of each new set of rows is also printed. Since this is on a... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I hope somebody would be able to help me.
I would need to search a string coming from a file, example file.txt:
dog
cat
goat
horse
fish
For every string, I would need to know if there are any files inside a directory(recursively) that contains the string regardless of case.... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: kokoro
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
maildirkw
MAILDIRKW(1) Double Precision, Inc. MAILDIRKW(1)NAME
maildirkw - set maildir message keywords
SYNOPSIS
maildirkw [-c] [-l] [-a] [-r] {maildir} {message} [keyword...]
maildirkw [-c] {-L} {maildir}
DESCRIPTION
maildirkw modifies the Courier IMAP server compatible maildir message keywords. This command allows an easy way to set or clear custom IMAP
keywords associated with a particular message. maildir is the pathname to a maildir, or a maildir folder. The -L option lists all messages
in the maildir, and their associated keywords. message specified which message's keywords should be set. One or more keywords specifies a
list of keywords to be set for this message. The specified list of keywords replaces any keywords presently set for the message, unless the
-a or the -r option is specified.
The -a option adds the keyword to existing keywords that are set for message. The -r removes keywords from message, leaving any remaining
keywords set in place.
The -l should be used if the Courier IMAP server's configuration file has the IMAP_USELOCKS option set. -l enables a compatible locking
mechanism to update the message's keywords.
-c enables case-sensitive keywords. IMAP keywords are normally case insensitive. -c needs to be used if the SMAP1[1] protocol extension is
used, which uses case sensitive keywords.
SEE ALSO maildiracl(1)[2], maildirmake(1)[3].
AUTHOR
Sam Varshavchik
Author
NOTES
1. SMAP1
http://www.courier-mta.org/cone/smap1.html
2. maildiracl(1)
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildiracl.html
3. maildirmake(1)
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildirmake.html
Courier Mail Server 08/31/2011 MAILDIRKW(1)