Hello,
Alright solution:
I need to move files to a backup folder, changing the datestamp to the current day so that the file stays in the backup folder for the full 30 days before another script removes it. Obviously, any file I move in will preserve the timestamp which is what I *don't* want.... (2 Replies)
I was wondering if there was a command to move files from one directory to another subdirectory based on the timestamp, i.e. moving from directory A files that have a timestamp of before the year 2005 into directory B. Directory B is a subdirectory located in directory A. I was advised to... (4 Replies)
I want a script that will add comments to a file before check-in files. comments depend on type of files.
i have a script to list files in the directory that will be checked-in
There are xml, js, html, vm files. vm will use comments like c/c++ ( // or /*..*/)
can you help me add a comment line... (0 Replies)
Hi,
In a field, I should receive the date with time stamp in a particular field. But sometimes the vendor sends just the date or the timestamp or correctl the date×tamp. I have to figure out the the data is a date or time stamp or date×tamp.
If it is date then append "<space>00:00:00"... (1 Reply)
How to move a file with mv command by adding yesteday's date(YYYYMMDD) at the end
Example:
/a/abc.txt should be moved to the same folder /a/abc_yyyymmdd.txt
YYYYMMDD should be yesterday's date (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have 20 files (file001.txt upto file020.txt) and I want to read them from 3rd line upto end of file (line 1002). But in the final file they should appear to start from line 1.
I need following kind of output in a single file:
Filename Line number 2ndcolumn 4thcolumn
I... (14 Replies)
Hi I have a problem, I have a large group of archive files in a folder some are later versions of the same archive, the only difference btween them is that the archiving program we use appends the name with a code for it to keep track of in its data base, and the modification date.
I am starting... (6 Replies)
Dear Experts
my scenario is as follows...
I have one source folder "Source" and 2 target folders "Target_123456" & "Target_789101". I have 2 series of files. 123456 series and 789101 series. Each series has got 3 types of fiels "Debit", "Refund", "Claims".
All files are getting... (17 Replies)
Hello,
I supposed that it was working fine but now I see that it's not working as expected.
I am running under ubuntu14.04, trusty.
My plan was to search folderA and all subdirectories and move any txt file to destination folder, folderB :
find /home/user/folderA/ -type f -iname "*.txt"... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: baris35
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
freebsd-file2c
FILE2C(1) BSD General Commands Manual FILE2C(1)NAME
file2c -- convert file to c-source
SYNOPSIS
file2c [-sx] [-n count] [prefix [suffix]]
DESCRIPTION
The file2c utility reads a file from stdin and writes it to stdout, converting each byte to its decimal or hexadecimal representation on the
fly. The byte values are separated by a comma. This also means that the last byte value is not followed by a comma. By default the byte
values are printed in decimal, but when the -x option is given, the values will be printed in hexadecimal. When -s option is given, each
line is printed with a leading tab and each comma is followed by a space except for the last one on the line.
If more than 70 characters are printed on the same line, that line is ended and the output continues on the next line. With the -n option
this can be made to happen after the specified number of byte values have been printed. The length of the line will not be considered any-
more. To have all the byte values printed on the same line, give the -n option a negative number.
A prefix and suffix strings can be printed before and after the byte values (resp.) If a suffix is to be printed, a prefix must also be
specified. The first non-option word is the prefix, which may optionally be followed by a word that is to be used as the suffix.
This program is typically used to embed binary files into C source files. The prefix is used to define an array type and the suffix is used
to end the C statement. The -n, -s and -x options are useful when the binary data represents a bitmap and the output needs to remain read-
able and/or editable. Fonts, for example, are a good example of this.
EXAMPLES
The command:
date | file2c 'const char date[] = {' ',0};'
will produce:
const char date[] = {
83,97,116,32,74,97,110,32,50,56,32,49,54,58,50,56,58,48,53,
32,80,83,84,32,49,57,57,53,10
,0};
BSD March 22, 2007 BSD