Your attempt at an ls long listing suggests that there may be more to your filenames than just a simple asterisk.
I am not so sure, what I see is just a *, *1, *2 and so forth..thats the way I created them
Quote:
Which version of the cygwin.dll are you using?
CYGWIN_NT-6.1
Quote:
You neglected to be specific regarding how the files were created. Please tell us as much about the sequence of commands that produced the filenames.
I probably missed seeing the question, these files were created by tcpdump, with basic filename being * and a value that increments and creates a new file each time the file reaches beyond a value. These were created on a unix system and then moved to another harddisk without any trouble.
Quote:
Have you tried simply deleting them using Windows' file manager (Explorer)?
Tried that, get a response saying the filename is not valid or too long.
I've been searching around here and other places, but can't put this together...
I've got a unique list of words in file 1 (one word on each line).
I need to delete each line in file2 that begins with the word in file1.
I started this way, but want to know how to use file1 words instead... (13 Replies)
I want to script out deleting the first field of a file when it is created. I'm looking to store the output of an ls -l commad to a file but leaving off the permissions so when the file is opened I see something like;
2 bin bin 256 Feb 6 2005 mnt
5 root system 256... (2 Replies)
Greetings,
I want to use a script (preferably awk) which determines if the first character in a line is double-byte (as in Japanese or Chinese) and deletes it.
For example:
(in the above quote, I see Japanese on my screen for two lines - with 2 characters in the first and 3 characters in the... (8 Replies)
Hello. I have the following issue: my txt file has the following format:
train/dr4/fklc0/sx175.txt
0 80282 Severe myopia contributed to Ron's inferiority complex.
train/dr4/fklc0/sx355.txt
0 42906 Dolphins are intelligent marine mammals. train/dr4/fklc0/sa2.txt
awk 'NR%2==0' test1.txt >... (4 Replies)
Hi All
I have a folder that contains hundreds of file with a names
3.msa
4.msa
21.msa
6.msa
345.msa
456.msa
98.msa
...
...
...
I need rename each of this file by adding "core_" in the begiining of each file such as
core_3.msa
core_4.msa
core_21.msa (4 Replies)
Im trying to use wild cards to find files that start with either an upper or lower case letter e.g. list files that beginning with b or B, i also want to sort them by the time they were last modified. e.g latest file created first.
At the moment i have the following code that
ls -d... (3 Replies)
I am writing a code to append some numbers in the beginning of each line in all the files present in a directory. The number of files are really huge. The files are numbered as 1.sco, 2.sco, 4.sco (Note: 3.sco is missing).
The files currently look like this:
1.sco
2 3
5 6
6 7My task is to... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have multiple files having many lines like as bvelow:
file Name a.txt
abc def
def xyz
123 5678
file Name b.txt
abc def
def xyz
123 5678
I would like to append files in the below format to a new file:
file Name c.txt (7 Replies)
Hi
My directory structure is as below.
dir1, dir2, dir3
I have the list of files to be deleted in the below path as below.
/staging/retain_for_2years/Cleanup/log $ ls -lrt
total 0
drwxr-xr-x 2 nobody nobody 256 Mar 01 16:15 01-MAR-2015_SPDBS2
drwxr-xr-x 2 root ... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have been searching how to do this but I can't seem to find how to do it. Hopefully someone can help.
I have multiplr files, 100's example 12345-zxys.213423.zyz.txt. I want to be able to take all these files and remove the first '12345-' from each of the files. '12345-' these characters... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: israr75
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
file::stat
File::stat(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide File::stat(3pm)NAME
File::stat - by-name interface to Perl's built-in stat() functions
SYNOPSIS
use File::stat;
$st = stat($file) or die "No $file: $!";
if ( ($st->mode & 0111) && $st->nlink > 1) ) {
print "$file is executable with lotsa links
";
}
use File::stat qw(:FIELDS);
stat($file) or die "No $file: $!";
if ( ($st_mode & 0111) && $st_nlink > 1) ) {
print "$file is executable with lotsa links
";
}
DESCRIPTION
This module's default exports override the core stat() and lstat() functions, replacing them with versions that return "File::stat"
objects. This object has methods that return the similarly named structure field name from the stat(2) function; namely, dev, ino, mode,
nlink, uid, gid, rdev, size, atime, mtime, ctime, blksize, and blocks.
You may also import all the structure fields directly into your namespace as regular variables using the :FIELDS import tag. (Note that
this still overrides your stat() and lstat() functions.) Access these fields as variables named with a preceding "st_" in front their
method names. Thus, "$stat_obj->dev()" corresponds to $st_dev if you import the fields.
To access this functionality without the core overrides, pass the "use" an empty import list, and then access function functions with their
full qualified names. On the other hand, the built-ins are still available via the "CORE::" pseudo-package.
BUGS
As of Perl 5.8.0 after using this module you cannot use the implicit $_ or the special filehandle "_" with stat() or lstat(), trying to do
so leads into strange errors. The workaround is for $_ to be explicit
my $stat_obj = stat $_;
and for "_" to explicitly populate the object using the unexported and undocumented populate() function with CORE::stat():
my $stat_obj = File::stat::populate(CORE::stat(_));
NOTE
While this class is currently implemented using the Class::Struct module to build a struct-like class, you shouldn't rely upon this.
AUTHOR
Tom Christiansen
perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 File::stat(3pm)