Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: mtime unexpected behaviour
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers mtime unexpected behaviour Post 302647125 by harris on Sunday 27th of May 2012 01:25:55 PM
Old 05-27-2012
Hi Vryali,
Thank you for your help, but i forgot to mention some information in my script. Actually i used for loop to maintain log. Like
Code:
for files in `find /abc/Archive/<file_name_25032012.dat> -type f -mtime 61|xargs ls -lrt`
echo "List of archive files are:"$files>>logdir/log.txt
do
rm -f $files
done

Can you help check with this way?

Thanks,
Harris

Last edited by Scrutinizer; 05-27-2012 at 05:01 PM.. Reason: code tags
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

find . -mtime

...what am i doing wrong?? I need to find all files older than 30 days and delete but I can't get it to pull details for ANY + times. The file below has a time stamp which is older than 1 day, however if I try and select it using any of the -time flags it just doesn't see it. (the same thing... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: topcat8
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

mtime help!!!!!

thank you for the help. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: scooter17
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

mtime

hi, :) consider the following statement find . -type f -mtime -1 -print here what is the use of -1 option. any help? cheers RRK (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ravi raj kumar
7 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

-mtime +30

Hello, Can someone help me to understand the following: find /test/rman/ -mtime +30 -exec rm '{}' \; What does -mtime +30 mean? Thanks! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Blue68
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

mtime

Hi, I've some files of some past days and everyday some new files are also getting added to the same. Now how can i use mtime to get the files of the current date i.e if i want the files of 25th feb 2009 and if im finding the files on 25th 12:10 am then i should only get the files after... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ss_ss
4 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

(find) mtime vs. (unix) mtime

Hi I've made some test with perl script to learn more about mtime... So, my question is : Why the mtime from findfind /usr/local/sbin -ctime -1 -mtime -1 \( -name "*.log" -o -name "*.gz" \) -print are not the same as mtime from unix/linux in ls -ltr or in stat() function in perl : stat -... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hiddenshadow
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find by name and mtime

Hi, I'm trying to find all files that have a .ksh and .p extension and that are 7 days old by using the below find command but it doesn't seem to as expected. It gives me random results.. Can someone point out what may be wrong? find . -name "*.ksh" -o -name "*.p" -mtime -7 (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jazmania
2 Replies

8. AIX

Unexpected Behaviour with WPAR

Hello, We have a system running AIX 6.1.7.1. We have created a Workload Partition(wpar) on this system with wpar specific routing enabled. On wpar, we are running DNS (UDP/53) and syslog (UDP/514). en0: 1.1.1.1/255.255.255.0 NOT assigned to any wpar en1:... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: 03sep2011
0 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Unexpected Behaviour from grepping Text File

Hi! I recently downloaded a wordlist file called 2of12.txt, which is a wordlist of common words, part of the 12dicts package. I've been getting unexpected results from grepping it, such as getting no matches when clearly there ought to be, or returns that are simply wrong. Par exemple: egrep... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sudon't
4 Replies

10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

[BASH] Getopts/shift within a function, unexpected behaviour

Hello Gurus :) I'm "currently" (for the last ~2weeks) writing a script to build ffmpeg with some features from scratch. This said, there are quite a few features, libs, to be downloaded, compiled and installed, so figured, writing functions for some default tasks might help. Specialy since... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sea
3 Replies
CLEAN-BINARY-FILES(1)						   User Commands					     CLEAN-BINARY-FILES(1)

NAME
clean-binary-files - remove a third party binaries (JARs) from an upstream archive SYNOPSIS
clean-binary-files {[-f {-, instructions_file}], [-e exclusion_file] [-l]} [-a archive_file] [-d custom_jar_map] [-n] [-p] [-s] OPTIONS
-f The instructions file, specifying which files to keep and which to remove -e The exclusions file, specifying special binary files that are to be preserved, or non-binary files that are to be removed. -l Only list instructions (to put in instructions file), do not delete anything. -a Archive file on which actions will be performed, as opposed to current directory -d A custom jar map file (has priority over the generic one). -n No symlinks (i.e. only clean jars, don't run build-jar-repository afterwards) -p Preserve original file names (-p to build-jar-repository) -s Silent mode. Won't output commands during cleanup -f The instructions file, specifying which files to keep and which to remove -e - The exclusions file, specifying special binary files that are to be preserved, or non-binary files that are to be removed. -l - Only list instructions (to put in instructions file), do not delete anything. -a - Archive file on which actions will be performed, as opposed to current directory -d - A custom jar map file (has priority over the generic one). -n - No symlinks (i.e. only clean jars, don't run build-jar-repository afterwards) -p - Preserve original file names (-p to build-jar-repository) -s - Silent mode. Won't output commands during cleanup EXAMPLES
Suppose there is a vanilla tarball abc-1.tar.gz with some binary files (jars) in it. In the source repo, we would want a clean copy without any jars. We can use the scripts to achieve this: To generate an instructions file: clean-binary-files -e <exclusion file> -l -a abc-1.tar.gz > instructions This creates an 'instructions' file, which contains info on what stays and what goes. Then, one can run: clean-binary-files -f instructions -n -a abc-1.tar.gz This would create abc-1-clean.tar.gz for uploading into jpp/fedora/etc. repositories with no binary (jar) files. Alternatively, if you have a vanilla tarball, you can clean and create symlinks in it's place all at once by: clean-binary-files -e <exclusion file> -d <custom_jar_map> -a abc-1.tar.gz Note: If the -a <file> is not given to clean-binary-files(1), all actions are performed on current directory. SEE ALSO
Regular Manual Pages check-binary-files(1), create-jar-ks(1), jpackage-utils(7) Documentation Further reading should be found in clean-binary-files.txt located in your standard documentation directory. Original mail is here: https://www.zarb.org/pipermail/jpackage-discuss/2005-November/009158.html AUTHOR
Written by Deepak Bhole REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs using JPackage Bugzilla (http://www.jpackage.org/bugzilla/) clean-binary-files (jpackage-utils) 1.7.5 February 2009 CLEAN-BINARY-FILES(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:34 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy