I am using the following Command to delete Directory with contents. But this command is deleting inside files only not directories. is there any change need in my command?
find -type f -mtime +3 -exec rm -r {} \;
Thanks (3 Replies)
hi , let's assume i have a file that is located in the l*** directory and this file's name is t****_***s.php , how can i find this file and delete it using one single command ????? (3 Replies)
Hi Gurus
I am facing a problem, there is a folder called /a where there are lots of files which are occupying space anything between 30 GB to 100 GB as I am not able to check the space occupied by that folder through "du -sh /a" command as I don't see any output after more than 1 hour of... (4 Replies)
Hi all
i have a directory where it has files as shown below.Using find command how can i delete files which were modified more than 20 days ago and having the pattern jnhld15231 or jnhld15232.
find ./ -name "jnhld15231^" -type f -mtime +20 -exec rm {} \;
find ./ -name "jnhld15232^" -type f... (2 Replies)
This is a real world problem so I think you might found this interesting. We have servers which are shared by multiple team members. Each team member has its own user id and home directory. Now with time each user starts creating files which in end caused the disk to be full.
Now for creating a... (5 Replies)
Hello All,
Can someone please help me out in creating the find command to search and delete files older than 1 days at a desired location.
Thanks in advance for your help. (3 Replies)
Hi,
I want to delete all the log files that was created on year 2008. My command is not working. Any idea?
find . -name '*.log' -mtime 1460 -exec ls -lt {} \;
Thank you. (2 Replies)
hi every one. one of my friends has writen this script and send it to me. this script can find files that add-delete-modify and also send an alert by email
i'm not catch all part of it.
can anyone explain me how this work
#!/bin/bash
START="a.txt"
END="b.txt"
DIFF="c.txt"
mv ${START}... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nimafire
4 Replies
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tst
tst(3) InterNetNews Documentation tst(3)NAME
tst - ternary search trie functions
SYNOPSIS
#include <inn/tst.h>
struct tst;
struct tst *tst_init(int node_line_width);
void tst_cleanup(struct tst *tst);
int tst_insert(struct tst *tst, const unsigned char *key, void *data, int option, void **exist_ptr);
void *tst_search(struct tst *tst, const unsigned char *key);
void *tst_delete(struct tst *tst, const unsigned char *key);
DESCRIPTION
tst_init allocates memory for members of struct tst, and allocates the first node_line_width nodes. A NULL pointer is returned by tst_init
if any part of the memory allocation fails. On success, a pointer to a struct tst is returned.
The value for node_line_width must be chosen very carefully. One node is required for every character in the tree. If you choose a value
that is too small, your application will spend too much time calling malloc(3) and your node space will be too spread out. Too large a
value is just a waste of space.
tst_cleanup frees all memory allocated to nodes, internal structures, as well as tst itself.
tst_insert inserts the string key into the tree. Behavior when a duplicate key is inserted is controlled by option. If key is already in
the tree then TST_DUPLICATE_KEY is returned, and the data pointer for the existing key is placed in exist_ptr. If option is set to
TST_REPLACE then the existing data pointer for the existing key is replaced by data. Note that the old data pointer will still be placed
in exist_ptr.
If a duplicate key is encountered and option is not set to TST_REPLACE then TST_DUPLICATE_KEY is returned. If key is zero length then
TST_NULL_KEY is returned. A successful insert or replace returns TST_OK. A return value of TST_ERROR indicates that a memory allocation
error occurred while trying to grow the node free.
Note that the data argument must never be NULL. If it is, then calls to tst_search will fail for a key that exists because the data value
was set to NULL, which is what tst_search returns. If you just want a simple existence tree, use the tst pointer as the data pointer.
tst_search finds the string key in the tree if it exists and returns the data pointer associated with that key.
If key is not found then NULL is returned, otherwise the data pointer associated with key is returned.
tst_delete deletes the string key from the tree if it exists and returns the data pointer assocaited with that key.
If key is not found then NULL is returned, otherwise the data pointer associated with key is returned.
HISTORY
Converted to POD from Peter A. Friend's ternary search trie documentation by Alex Kiernan <alex.kiernan@thus.net> for InterNetNews 2.4.0.
$Id: tst.pod 8200 2008-11-30 13:31:30Z iulius $
INN 2.5.2 2009-05-21 tst(3)