HP-UX
All,
I work in a manufacturing environment where some users connect to our Progress-based system with wireless RF units (Bar-code). Sometimes they go out of range and get disconnected but their session remains alive (ghost sessions). This sometimes causes record lock problems and is a pain.... (6 Replies)
I want to copy last 30days old files from one location to another. Please help me to list the last 30 days files and copy the last 30 days files from the current list. (1 Reply)
Hi. Our shop is migrating to a new UNIX server and our hope is to do a full migration of all files to the new server weeks in advance of the final migration. As a result we want to identify files on our SOLARIS 8 UNIX server that have changed or that were created after a specific date & time... (2 Replies)
I have come into a business environtment problem and had been 10+ years since the last time I did any unix admin work.
A long time ago some mainframe person created an app that talked to a mainframe on UNIX and wrote a c program with "core" in the file name to indicate that the file was the... (2 Replies)
Dear All,
I'm an amateur to writing scripts and need to do the following
Need to read all files with a .log extension in a directory and identify the value for username i.e. all files have something like username = John. Once this is read, I need to print this value to a new file. The new file... (2 Replies)
How can view log messages between two time frame from /var/log/message or any type of log files.
when logfiles are very big and especially many messages with in few minutes, I would like to display log messages between 5 minute interval.
Could you pls give me the command? (1 Reply)
I need to be able to identify files with file timestamps greater than a given timestamp.
I am using the following solution, although it appears to compare files at the "seconds" granularity and I need it at the milliseconds. When I tested my solution, it missed files that had timestamps... (3 Replies)
Redirecting log files to null writing junk into log files.
i have log files which created from below command
exec <processname> >$logfile
but when it reaches some size i am redirecting to null while process is running like
>$logfile
manually but after that it writes some junk into... (7 Replies)
I have used yum list installed and rpm -qa commands.
But these provide only the source packages, I want the specific software name.
And how to identify any software that is installed without the yum or rpm package system.
I tried compgen -c but it doesn't works with rhel5.6 (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: PrabhaPatra4567
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
rcsclean
rcsclean(1)rcsclean(1)NAME
rcsclean - clean up working files
SYNOPSIS
rcsclean [options] [file...]
OPTIONS
Use subst style keyword substitution when retrieving the revision for comparison. See co(1) for details. Do not actually remove any files
or unlock any revisions. Using this option will tell you what rcsclean would do without actually doing it. Do not log the actions taken
on standard output. This option has no effect other than specifying the revision for comparison. Unlock the revision if it is locked and
no difference is found. Emulate RCS version n. See co(1) for details. Use suffixes to characterize RCS files. See ci(1) for details.
DESCRIPTION
rcsclean removes working files that were checked out and never modified. For each file given, rcsclean compares the working file and a
revision in the corresponding RCS file. If it finds a difference, it does nothing. Otherwise, it first unlocks the revision if the -u
option is given, and then removes the working file unless the working file is writable and the revision is locked. It logs its actions by
outputting the corresponding rcs -u and rm -f commands on the standard output.
If no file is given, all working files in the current directory are cleaned. Pathnames matching an RCS suffix denote RCS files; all others
denote working files. Names are paired as explained in ci(1).
The number of the revision to which the working file is compared may be attached to any of the options -n, -q, -r, or -u. If no revision
number is specified, then if the -u option is given and the caller has one revision locked, rcsclean uses that revision; otherwise rcsclean
uses the latest revision on the default branch, normally the root.
rcsclean is useful for clean targets in Makefiles. See also rcsdiff(1), which prints out the differences, and ci(1), which normally asks
whether to check in a file if it was not changed.
RESTRICTIONS
At least one file must be given in older Unix versions that do not provide the needed directory scanning operations.
EXAMPLES
rcsclean *.c *.h
removes all working files ending in or that were not changed since their checkout. rcsclean
removes all working files in the current directory that were not changed since their checkout.
ENVIRONMENT
options prepended to the argument list, separated by spaces. A backslash escapes spaces within an option. The RCSINIT options are
prepended to the argument lists of most RCS commands. Useful RCSINIT options include -q, -V, and -x.
DIAGNOSTICS
The exit status is zero if and only if all operations were successful. Missing working files and RCS files are silently ignored.
FILES
rcsclean accesses files much as ci(1) does.
IDENTIFICATION
Author: Walter F. Tichy.
Revision Number: 1.1.6.2; Release Date: 1993/10/07.
Copyright (C) 1982, 1988, 1989 by Walter F. Tichy.
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991 by Paul Eggert.
SEE ALSO ci(1), co(1), ident(1), rcs(1), rcsdiff(1), rcsintro(1), rcsmerge(1), rlog(1), rcsfile(5)
Walter F. Tichy, RCS--A System for Version Control, Software--Practice & Experience 15, 7 (July 1985), 637-654.
rcsclean(1)