Hello all,
I have two files, that I suspect may contain hidden characters (EG, three spaces instead of a tab). Does anyone know of any tool that can display this (I have tried using diff, but I'm not quite sure it would do the job) (6 Replies)
Hi. I have a script which is deleting files with a particular extension and older than 45 days.The code is:
find <path> -name "<filename_pattern>" -mtime +45 -exec rm {} \;
But the problem is that some important files are also getting deleted.To prevent this I have decide to make a dummy... (4 Replies)
I know that cat -v will show me hidden characters in a file....
I for some reason seem to think that there's a bash command that will show me hidden characters in a variable in a script? Or am I just imagining it?
Thanks in advance (8 Replies)
Hi:
I found some "hidden" directories created by a version control tool that can't be displayed by "ls -al". but user can "cd" into them and see the files inside.
My questions are:
1) what commands can reveal those directories when "ls -al" fails?
2) how do you create such... (2 Replies)
Hi
I have a prompt like this:
PS1='\\u@\h \\w $(es=$?; ] && echo "\" || echo "\")\$\'
It works like it should, but have a bug.
Problem is the counting of hidden files
$(($(ls -ad .* | wc -l)-2))
echo $(($(ls -ad .* | wc -l)-2))
The . seems to create the problem when I cut and past to... (3 Replies)
Find all files in the current directory only excluding hidden directories and files.
For the below command, though it's not deleting hidden files.. it is traversing through the hidden directories and listing normal which should be avoided.
`find . \( ! -name ".*" -prune \) -mtime +${n_days}... (7 Replies)
Hello.
I use this command :
rsync -av --include=".*" --dry-run "$A_FULL_PATH_S" "$A_FULL_PATH_D"The data comes from the output of a find command.
And no full source directories are in use, only some files.
Source example... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jcdole
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bup-ls
bup-ls(1) General Commands Manual bup-ls(1)NAME
bup-ls - list the contents of a bup repository
SYNOPSIS
bup ls [-s] [-a]
DESCRIPTION
bup ls lists files and directories in your bup repository using the same directory hierarchy as they would have with bup-fuse(1).
The top level directory contains the branch (corresponding to the -n option in bup save), the next level is the date of the backup, and
subsequent levels correspond to files in the backup.
When bup ls is asked to output on a tty, it formats its output in columns so that it can list as much as possible in as few lines as possi-
ble. However, when bup ls is asked to output to something other than a tty (say you pipe the output to another command, or you redirect it
to a file), it will output one file name per line. This makes the listing easier to parse with external tools.
Note that bup ls doesn't show hidden files by default and one needs to use the -a option to show them. Files are hidden when their name
begins with a dot. For example, on the topmost level, the special directories named .commit and .tag are hidden directories.
Once you have identified the file you want using bup ls, you can view its contents using bup join or git show.
OPTIONS -s, --hash
show hash for each file/directory.
-a, --all
show hidden files.
EXAMPLE
bup ls /myserver/latest/etc/profile
bup ls -a /
SEE ALSO bup-join(1), bup-fuse(1), bup-ftp(1), bup-save(1), git-show(1)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-ls(1)