Hi,
I want to get the disk usage of a directory. But I want it to ignore a particular directory within it.
Lets say I want disk usage of all files/dirs within dir1 except those that are named .snapshot
Does du have the option of excluding a particular directory. (1 Reply)
Hello experts,
I run Solaris 9. I have a below script which is used for gunzip the thousand files from a directory.
----
#!/usr/bin/sh
cd /home/thousands/gzipfiles/
for i in `ls -1`
do
gunzip -c $i > /path/to/file/$i
done
----
In my SAME directory there thousand of GZIP file and also... (4 Replies)
If I execute the command "ls -l /export/home/abcde/dev/proj/code/* | awk -F' ' '{print $9}' | cut -d'/' -f6-8" it will list all the files in /export/home/abcde/dev/proj/code/ directory as well as the files in subdirectories also
proj/code/test.sh
proj/code/test1.c
proj/code/unix... (8 Replies)
I had a Shell script that removes the files that are in a directory older than the specified days.
find /test/files -mtime +10
I would like to add another condition to the find command above that is to exclude any file starting with ‘CGU'
Thanks (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have a random test file: test.txt, size: 146
$ ll test.txt
$ 146 test.txt
Take 1:
$ cat test.txt | gzip > test.txt.gz
$ ll test.txt.gz
$ 124 test.txt.gz
Take 2:
$ gzip test.txt
$ ll test.txt.gz
$ 133 test.txt.gz
As you can see, gzipping a file and piping into gzip... (1 Reply)
The below 'ls' command will list down files with extensions and suppress the ones with no extension
ls |grep "\\." But this dosen't work when I apply the same logic using 'find' command
find . -type f |grep "\\." I need help on how this logic can be implemented using 'find' command (3 Replies)
I am new to Shell Scripting and need some help.
The following batch job has been failing for me due to the .nfsxxx files in use. I need to know how to modify the following script to exclude the .nfsxxx files so this batch job will not fail on me. I have done lots of googling and keep coming back... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need to exlucde the files which are present in exclude.txt from a directory
exlcude.txt
AUZ.txt
AUZ.chk
NZ.txt
NZ.chk
tried with below code but not working
ls -ltr | grep -v `cat exclude.lst` (9 Replies)
Can you please help tweak the below command to exclude all directories with the name "logs" and "tmp"
find . -type f \( ! -name "*.tar*" ! -name "*.bkp*" \) -exec /usr/xpg4/bin/grep -i "user_1" /dev/null {} + >result.out
bash-3.2$ uname -a
SunOS mymac 5.10 Generic_150400-26 sun4v sparc sun4v... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
lzfgrep
XZGREP(1) XZ Utils XZGREP(1)NAME
xzgrep - search compressed files for a regular expression
SYNOPSIS
xzgrep [grep_options] [-e] pattern file...
xzegrep ...
xzfgrep ...
lzgrep ...
lzegrep ...
lzfgrep ...
DESCRIPTION
xzgrep invokes grep(1) on files which may be either uncompressed or compressed with xz(1), lzma(1), gzip(1), or bzip2(1). All options
specified are passed directly to grep(1).
If no file is specified, then the standard input is decompressed if necessary and fed to grep(1). When reading from standard input,
gzip(1) and bzip2(1) compressed files are not supported.
If xzgrep is invoked as xzegrep or xzfgrep then egrep(1) or fgrep(1) is used instead of grep(1). The same applies to names lzgrep, lze-
grep, and lzfgrep, which are provided for backward compatibility with LZMA Utils.
ENVIRONMENT
GREP If the GREP environment variable is set, xzgrep uses it instead of grep(1), egrep(1), or fgrep(1).
SEE ALSO grep(1), xz(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), zgrep(1)Tukaani 2009-07-05 XZGREP(1)