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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Using find for variable combination of perms Post 302828147 by alanp36 on Monday 1st of July 2013 11:00:15 PM
Old 07-02-2013
Using find for variable combination of perms

Hi,

I'm trying to use find in kshell (AIX) to find all files with perms of
write for other
AND
any execute bit set.

e.g:
r--r-x-w- would qualify
and rw-rw--wx would qualify
but ---rwxr-xr-x wouldn't qualify

So far, I've been trying something like this:
Code:
find . -type f -perm -o=w -a \( -perm -u=x -o -perm -g=x -o -perm o=x \) -ls

But this is just giving me files with execute bit set anywhere, but not necessarily files with write for other.

Any help much appreciated thanks, Alan.
 

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Symbol(3pm)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide					       Symbol(3pm)

NAME
Symbol - manipulate Perl symbols and their names SYNOPSIS
use Symbol; $sym = gensym; open($sym, "filename"); $_ = <$sym>; # etc. ungensym $sym; # no effect # replace *FOO{IO} handle but not $FOO, %FOO, etc. *FOO = geniosym; print qualify("x"), " "; # "Test::x" print qualify("x", "FOO"), " " # "FOO::x" print qualify("BAR::x"), " "; # "BAR::x" print qualify("BAR::x", "FOO"), " "; # "BAR::x" print qualify("STDOUT", "FOO"), " "; # "main::STDOUT" (global) print qualify(*x), " "; # returns *x print qualify(*x, "FOO"), " "; # returns *x use strict refs; print { qualify_to_ref $fh } "foo! "; $ref = qualify_to_ref $name, $pkg; use Symbol qw(delete_package); delete_package('Foo::Bar'); print "deleted " unless exists $Foo::{'Bar::'}; DESCRIPTION
"Symbol::gensym" creates an anonymous glob and returns a reference to it. Such a glob reference can be used as a file or directory handle. For backward compatibility with older implementations that didn't support anonymous globs, "Symbol::ungensym" is also provided. But it doesn't do anything. "Symbol::geniosym" creates an anonymous IO handle. This can be assigned into an existing glob without affecting the non-IO portions of the glob. "Symbol::qualify" turns unqualified symbol names into qualified variable names (e.g. "myvar" -> "MyPackage::myvar"). If it is given a sec- ond parameter, "qualify" uses it as the default package; otherwise, it uses the package of its caller. Regardless, global variable names (e.g. "STDOUT", "ENV", "SIG") are always qualified with "main::". Qualification applies only to symbol names (strings). References are left unchanged under the assumption that they are glob references, which are qualified by their nature. "Symbol::qualify_to_ref" is just like "Symbol::qualify" except that it returns a glob ref rather than a symbol name, so you can use the result even if "use strict 'refs'" is in effect. "Symbol::delete_package" wipes out a whole package namespace. Note this routine is not exported by default--you may want to import it explicitly. perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 Symbol(3pm)
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