Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Touch Challenge
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Touch Challenge Post 302682571 by neutronscott on Monday 6th of August 2012 11:51:51 AM
Old 08-06-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cludgie
Thanks very much NeutronScott, that's brilliant. This seems to have the logic I'm looking for, only it's returning "touch: invalid date format `201207292000'." Yet, if I enter in this date for 1 file, it accepts it fine. Any thoughts?
I originally put touch -d ... but it needs to in fact be touch -t .... which do you have in the script?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

safeword challenge

Hi, there are some servers here at work which issue a Safeword challenge after I login. Can anyone tell me exactly how the challenge/response system works? In particular, how are the valid keys decided? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: blowtorch
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

camma challenge (in ksh)

Hi Gurus, I am a starter in ksh scripting I have a requirment where i need to ucertain that each line contain only 5 occurances of "," (comma) in a CSV file ; I don't want to use perl,is it possible in ksh;; Kindly help I am going to read CSV file and ; redirect all those lines which are... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Amresh Dubey
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

AWK Challenge

I have the following text Microsoft iSCSI Initiator version 2.0 Build 3497 Targets List: iqn.2001-05.com.equallogic:0-8a0906-daef43402-138000002a4477ba-grsrv12-extra iqn.2001-05.com.equallogic:0-8a0906-986f43402-520000002b447951-exchange ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: netmedic
9 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed replacement, challenge one!!!!

Hi all, Thanks in advanced. This question really bothered me much. What i want is to replace any times of repeated 'TB' to 'T', below is example. It can be fullfil by AWK and perl, but my desire is using SED to realize it. So here means we treat TB as a whole part, which means 's/TB*/T/'... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: summer_cherry
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed xml challenge

I have a web xml file that looks like this: <allinfo> <info> <a>Name1<\a> <b>address1<\b> <c>phone1<c> <\info> <info> <a>Name2<\a> <b>address2<\b> <c>phone2<c> <\info> <\allinfo> I want to use sed to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: katrvu
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

regex challenge

Here's a regex substitution operation that has stumped me with sed: How do you convert lines like this: first.key ?{x.y.z} second.key ?{xa.ys.zz.s} third.key ?{xa.k} to: first.key ?{x_y_z} second.key ?{xa_ys_zz_s} third.key ?{xa_k} So i'm basically converting all the... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: neked
11 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need complex script, anyone up for a challenge?

Default shell is /usr/bin/zsh Script will be running #!/bin/bash Need to pull information from database while using other scripts already made (not by me). Ok, so i need a script pulling certain information about a customer's router interfaces. I am using a ROUTER-DNS-NAME as variable $1 I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ///NNM
3 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Touch all files and subdirectories (recursive touch)

I have a folder with many subdirectories and i need to set the modified date to today for everything in it. Please help, thanks! I tried something i found online, find . -print0 | xargs -r0 touch but I got the error: xargs: illegal option -- r (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: glev2005
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

PS1 challenge

Ok then i Have a challenge for you : Give me PS1 so that it always display the least 2 levels of directory (except if i am above of course) I want it this way : so if i go to / /home/ /home/user /home/user/whatever /home/user/whatever1/whatever2 my PS1 should respectively... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: ctsgnb
12 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Anyone like a challenge?

I have searched through google, and this forum to try and find the answer, but alas, nothing quite hits the whole answer. I am trying to read the last line (or lines) of some log files. I do this often. The files are named sequentially, using the date as part of the file name, and appending... (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: BatterBits
18 Replies
LOGWATCH(8)							   User Manuals 						       LOGWATCH(8)

NAME
logwatch - system log analyzer and reporter SYNOPSIS
logwatch [--detail level ] [--logfile log-file-group ] [--service service-name ] [--print] [--mailto address ] [--archives] [--range range ] [--debug level ] [--save file-name ] [--logdir directory ] [--hostname hostname ] [--help|--usage] DESCRIPTION
LogWatch is a customizable, pluggable log-monitoring system. It will go through your logs for a given period of time and make a report in the areas that you wish with the detail that you wish. Easy to use - works right out of the package on almost all systems. OPTIONS
--detail level This is the detail level of the report. level can be high, med, low. --logfile log-file-group This will force LogWatch to process only the set of logfiles defined by log-file-group (i.e. messages, xferlog, ...). LogWatch will therefore process all services that use those logfiles. This option can be specified more than once to specify multiple logfile- groups. --service service-name This will force LogWatch to process only the service specified in service-name (i.e. login, pam, identd, ...). LogWatch will there- fore also process any log-file-groups necessary to process these services. This option can be specified more than once to specify multiple services to process. A useful service-name is All which will process all services (and logfile-groups) for which you have filters installed. --print Print the results to stdout (i.e. the screen). --mailto address Mail the results to the email address or user specified in address. --archives Each log-file-group has basic logfiles (i.e. /var/log/messages) as well as archives (i.e. /var/log/messages.? or /var/log/mes- sages.?.gz). This option will make LogWatch search through the archives in addition to the regular logfiles. The entries must still be in the proper date range (see below) to be processed, however. --range range You can specify a date-range to process. This option is currently limited to only Yesterday, Today and All. --debug level For debugging purposes. level can range from 0 to 100. This will really clutter up your output. You probably don't want to use this. --save file-name Save the output to file-name instead of displaying or mailing it. --logdir directory Look in directory for log files instead of the default directory. --hostname hostname Use hostname for the reports instead of this system's hostname. In addition, if HostLimit is set in /etc/log.d/logwatch.conf, then only logs from this hostname will be processed (where appropriate). --usage Displays usage information --help same as --usage. FILES
/etc/log.d/logwatch.conf Really a symlink to /etc/log.d/conf/logwatch.conf. This file sets the default values of all the above options. These defaults are used when LogWatch is called without any parameters (i.e. from cron.daily). The file is well-documented, but the explanations above also apply to this config file. /etc/log.d/conf/services/* Configuration files for the various services whose log entries LogWatch can process. /etc/log.d/conf/logfiles/* Configuration files for the various logfiles that the above service's log entries are stored in. /etc/log.d/scripts/shared/* Filters common to many services and/or logfiles. /etc/log.d/scripts/logfiles/* Filters specific to just particular logfiles. /etc/log.d/scripts/services/* Actual filter programs for the various services. EXAMPLES
logwatch --service ftpd-xferlog --range all --detail high --print --archives This will print out all FTP transfers that are stored in all current and archived xferlogs. logwatch --service pam_pwdb --range yesterday --detail high --print This will print out login information for the previous day... MORE INFORMATION
For information on adding your own filter, please see the file HOWTO-Make-Filter which should have been included with Logwatch. If you installed from an RPM, it is probably under /usr/share/doc/logwatch-XXX. BUGS
The --range option is very weak... this will be fixed in the future. AUTHOR
Kirk Bauer <kirk@kaybee.org> http://www.kaybee.org/~kirk ftp://ftp.kaybee.org/pub/redhat/RPMS Linux MARCH 1998 LOGWATCH(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:15 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy