Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Help with moving files from one directory to another directory. Post 302920953 by Vasanth_bala1 on Monday 13th of October 2014 10:16:33 PM
Old 10-13-2014
Code Help with moving files from one directory to another directory.

Hi all,

Please help me creating a job that runs on every monday.

And the job must have a script to move the files from directory1 to directory2 based on date.

eg: directory1 = usr/appl/src/archive; directory2 = usr/appl/failed
filename : PHDG_90021.txt

when the job runs,it must move all the files with date not equal to today's date to failed directory.
i.e: the files with older date(!=today's date) in archive directory should be moved to failed folder.

please let me know for any questions.

Thanks & Regards,
Vasanth
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

moving files from a unix directory to a windows directory

Any body any ideas i'm failry new to this so any help would be appreciated. Cheers Steve (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gleads
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Moving files not directory.

Hi, I want to move only files not subdirectories. I issued the below command, but subdirectories are also gets moved. mv /ucrrpd/input/upload/ /ucsspd/common/history/ In the above case, all subdirectories in /ucrrpd/input/upload/ also gets moved to /ucsspd/common/history/ I want to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: senthil_is
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Creating date directory and moving files into that directory

I have list of files named file_username_051208_025233.log. Here 051208 is the date and 025233 is the time.I have to run thousands of files daily.I want to put all the files depending on the date of running into a date directory.Suppose if we run files today they should put into 05:Dec:08... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ravi030
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Moving files to specified directory.

Hi I have made a shell script which moves files from a trash bin back to the original directory and also has the option to restoring the file to a directory that is specified by the user. The restoring it to the original directory is working fine, the restoring it to a specified directory is now.... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jodi
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Moving all files from 1 directory to another

For example i have a directory called name and another called school how to remove first 5 files from name into school? thanks for helping (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cryogen
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Moving Files from one directory to another directory

Please do help me out with this. I have to write the following script. There is a directory named "storage_directory" and it has hundreds of files in it. My script has to move each file from the storage_directory to "temp_directory" After moving each file, it has to create a log of the File... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ss3944
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Grepping file names, comparing them to a directory of files, and moving them into a new directory

got it figured out :) (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sHockz
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Moving all files in a directory to another directory and archiving them

Hi All, i need to move all files in a directory to some other directory and need to archive them,,, Ex.. Source_Path/my_directory/ files in it are... acw.csv 123.txt bge.dat etc ..and we dont know how many files does my_directory contains and all are with different extensions ..so i need... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: dssyadav
6 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Moving Files one directory to another directory shell script

Hi, Could you please assist how to move the gz files which are older than the 90 days from one folder to another folder ,before that it need to check the file system named "nfs" if size is less than 90 or not. If size is above 90 then it shouldn't perform file move and exit the script throwing... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkat918
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Moving files to a directory with a variable name

I have this shell script which i am going to package into an application: cd /Users/william/Desktop Cleaning; mkdir "date"; cp ~/Desktop/* ~/"date"; how would i point to the directory with the name unknown to cp? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ws1
2 Replies
File::NCopy(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					  File::NCopy(3pm)

NAME
File::NCopy - Deprecated module. Use File::Copy::Recursive instead. Copy file, file. Copy file[s] | dir[s], dir SYNOPSIS
use File::NCopy qw(copy); copy "file","other_file"; copy "file1","file2","file3","directory"; # we want to copy the directory recursively copy 1,"directory1","directory2"; copy 1,"file1","file2","directory1","file3","directory2","file4", "directory"; # can also use references to file handles, this is for backward # compatibility with File::Copy copy *FILE1,*FILE2; copy *FILE1,"file"; copy "file1",*FILE2; # we don't specify 1 as the first argument because we don't want to # copy directories recursively copy "*.c","*.pl","programs"; copy "*", "backup"; use File::NCopy; # the below are the default config values $file = File::NCopy->new( 'recursive' => 0, 'preserve' => 0, 'follow_links' => 0, 'force_write' => 0, 'set_permission' => &File::NCopy::u_chmod, 'file_check' => &File::NCopy::f_check, 'set_times' => &File::NCopy::s_times, ); set_permission will take two file names, the original to get the file permissions from and the new file to set the file permissions for. file_check takes two parameters, the file names to check the file to copy from and the file to copy to. I am using flock for Unix systems. Default for this is &File::NCopy::f_check. On Unix you can also use &File::NCopy::unix_check. This one compares the inode and device numbers. set_times is used if the preserve attribute is true. It preserves the access and modification time of the file and also attempts to set the owner of the file to the original owner. This can be useful in a script used by root, though enyone can preserve the access and modification times. This also takes two arguments. The file to get the stats from and apply the stats to. On Unix boxes you shouldn't need to worry. On other system you may want to supply your own sub references. $file = File::NCopy->new(recursive => 1); $file->copy "file","other_file"; $file->copy "directory1","directory2"; $file = File::NCopy->new(u_chmod => &my_chmod,f_check => &my_fcheck); $file->copy "directory1","directory2"; DESCRIPTION
File::NCopy::copy copies files to directories, or a single file to another file. You can also use a reference to a file handle if you wish whem doing a file to file copy. The functionality is very similar to cp. If the argument is a directory to directory copy and the recursive flag is set then it is done recursively like cp -R. In fact it behaves like cp on Unix for the most part. If called in array context, an array of successful copies is returned, otherwise the number of successful copies is returned. If passed a file handle, it's difficult to make sure the file we are copying isn't the same that we are copying to, since by opening the file in write mode it gets pooched. To avoid this use file names instead, if at all possible, especially for the to file. If passed a file handle, it is not closed when copy returns, files opened by copy are closed. copy Copies a file to another file. Or a file to a directory. Or multiple files and directories to another directory. Or a directory to another directory. Wildcard arguments are expanded, except for the last argument which should not be expanded. The file and directory permissions are set to the orginating file's permissions and if preserve is set the access and modification times are also set. If preserve is set then the uid and gid will also be attempted to be set, though this may only for for the men in white hats. In list context it returns all the names of the files/directories that were successfully copied. In scalar context it returns the number of successful copies made. A directory argument is considerd a single successful copy if it manages to copy anything at all. To make a directory to directory copy the recursive flag must be set. cp Just calls copy. It's there to be compatible with File::Copy. new If used then you can treat this as an object oriented module with some configuration abilities. recursive If used as an object then you can use this to set the recursive attribute. It can also be set when instantiating with new. The other attributes must all be set when instantiating the object. If it isn't specified then directories are not followed. preserve Attempt to preserve the last modification and access time as well as user and group id's. This is a useful feature for sysadmins, though the access and modification time should always be preservable, the uid and gid may not. follow_links If the link is to a directory and this attribute is true then the directory is followed and recursively copied. Otherwise a link is made to the root directory the link points to. eg. /sys/ is a link to /usr/src/sys/ is a link to /usr/src/i386/sys then the link /sys/ is actually created in the source directory as a link to /usr/src/i386/sys/ rather than /usr/src/sys/ since if the link /usr/src/sys/ is removed then we lost the link even though the directory we originally intended to link to still exists. force_write Force the writing of a file even if the permissions are read only on it. EXAMPLE
See SYNOPSIS. BUGS
When following links the target directory might not exactly the same as the source directory. The reason is that we have to make sure we don't follow circular or dead links. This is really a feature though the result may not quite resemble the source dir, the overall content will be the same. :) From Ken Healy (Version 0.34) On Win32, The use of backslash for paths is required. AUTHOR
Gabor Egressy gabor AT vmunix.com Copyright (c) 1998 Gabor Egressy. All rights reserved. All wrongs reversed. This program is free software; you can redistribute and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. Some ideas gleaned from File::Copy by Aaron Sherman & Charles Bailey, but the code was written from scratch. Patch at versions 0.33, and 0.34 added by MZSANFORD. 0.35, 0.36 - Alexandr Ciornii (alexchorny AT gmail.com) perl v5.12.3 2011-06-18 File::NCopy(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:14 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy