You could just let the shell expand the filenames:
If you have a lot of files (enough to exceed the maximum length of an argument list) then you could use find with -exec or xargs:
I have a directory full of zip files.
How would I write a bash script to enumerate all the zip files, remove the ".zip" from the file name, create a directory by that name and unzip each zip file into its corresponding directory?
Thanks!
Siegfried (3 Replies)
Helllo UNIX Forum :)
Since I am posting on this board, yes, I am new to UNIX!
I read a copy of "UNIX made easy" from 1990, which felt like a making a "computer-science time jump" backwards ;)
So, basically I have some sort of understanding what the basic concept is.
Problem Description:... (6 Replies)
Hi!
I have 2 files containing data that I need to process at the same time, I have problems in reading a different number of lines from the different files.
Here is an explanation of what I need to do (possibly with an awk script).
File "samples.txt" contains data in the format:
time_instant... (6 Replies)
I'm trying to write a bash script and call it "compile" such that running it allows me to compile multiple files with the options "-help," "-backup," and "-clean". I've got the code for the options written, i just can't figure out how to read the input string and then translate that into option... (5 Replies)
Hi, I have a bunch of media files in a directory that have been converted (from MTS to MOV format), so my directory contains something like this:
clip1.mts
clip1.mov
clip2.mts
clip2.mov
The problem is that the .mov files that have been created have the timestamps of the conversion task,... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a load of files in the format e.g.
a_1.out
a_300.out
a_20.out
etc
I would like to numeric sort them in ascending order by the number in the file name,
then pass them into awk for manipulation. How do I do this? (8 Replies)
hai i need my single awk script to act on 4 trace files of ns2 and to calculate througput and it should print result from each trace file in a single trace file. i tried with the following code but it doesnt work awk -f awkscript inputfile1 inputfile2 inputfile3 inputfile4>outputfile ... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I extracted a list of files in a directory with the command ls . However this is not my computer, so the ls functionality has been revamped so that it gives the filesizes in front like this :
This is the output of ls command : I stored the output in a file filelist
1.1M... (5 Replies)
I'm completely brand new to bash scripting (migrating from Windows batch file scripting). I'm currently trying to write a bash script that will automatically reset "error-disabled" Cisco switch ports. Please forgive the very crude and inefficient script I have so far (shown below). It is... (10 Replies)
Hi Everybody,
I'm a newbie to shell scripting, and I'd appreciate some help. I have a bunch of .txt files that have some unwanted content. I want to remove lines 1-3 and 1028-1098.
#!/bin/bash
for '*.txt' in <path to folder>
do
sed '1,3 d' "$f";
sed '1028,1098 d' "$f";
done
I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: BabyNuke
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
lorder
lorder(1) General Commands Manual lorder(1)NAME
lorder - Finds the best order for member files in an object library
SYNOPSIS
lorder file...
DESCRIPTION
The lorder command is essentially obsolete. Use the following command in its place: % ar -ts file.a
The lorder command reads one or more object or library archive files, looks for external references, and writes a list of paired filenames
to standard output. The first of each pair of files contains references to identifiers that are defined in the second file. You can send
this list to the tsort command to find an ordering of a library member file suitable for 1-pass access by ld.
If object files do not end with lorder overlooks them and attributes their global symbols and references to some other file.
EXAMPLES
To create a subroutine library, enter: lorder charin.o scanfld.o scan.o scanln.o | tsort | xargs ar qv libsubs.a
(Enter this command entirely on one line, not on two lines as shown above.)
This creates a subroutine library named libsubs.a that contains charin.o, scanfld.o, scan.o, and scanln.o. The ordering of the object mod-
ules in the library is important. The lorder and tsort commands together add the subroutines to the library in the proper order.
Suppose that scan.o calls entry points in scanfld.o and scanln.o. scanfld.o also calls entry points in charin.o. First, the lorder command
creates a list of pairs that shows these dependencies: charin.o charin.o scanfld.o scanfld.o scan.o scan.o scanln.o scanln.o scanfld.o
charin.o scanln.o charin.o scan.o scanfld.o
This list is piped to the tsort command, which converts the list into the ordering that is needed:
scan.o scanfld.o scanln.o charin.o
Note that each module precedes the module it calls. charin.o, which does not call another module, is last. The second list is then piped
to xargs, which constructs and runs the following ar command: ar qv libsubs.a scan.o scanfld.o scanln.o charin.o
This ar command creates the properly ordered library.
FILES
Temporary files
SEE ALSO
Commands: ar(1), as(1), cc(1), ld(1), make(1), nm(1), size(1), strip(1), tsort(1), xargs(1)
Files: a.out(4), ar(4)lorder(1)