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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Du command and modified date in ssh Post 302929421 by junior-helper on Sunday 21st of December 2014 07:56:47 AM
Old 12-21-2014
Code:
paste -d' ' \
<(du -hs * | awk -F'\t' '{printf "%8s\n", $1}') \
<(ls -lh | awk 'NR>1{for (i=6;i<=NF;i++) printf "%s ", $i; print ""}')

The paste command lets the two input streams merge.

<(du -hs * ...)
Only first column (correct dir/file size) is used and printed right aligned.
<(ls -lh ...)
All columns from (including) column 6 until the end of the line are used (timestamp + file name).
Note I used NR>1 in the awk command to skip the first line, because the first line produced by ls -lh is total 56K (on my system, in the test directory) which is not needed. You may want to remove NR>1 if there is no total line in your output produced by ls -lh.
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PASTE(1)						      General Commands Manual							  PASTE(1)

NAME
paste - paste multiple files together SYNOPSIS
paste [-s] [-d list] file... OPTIONS
-d Set delimiter used to separate columns to list. -s Print files sequentially, file k on line k. EXAMPLES
paste file1 file2 # Print file1 in col 1, file2 in col 2 paste -s f1 f2 # Print f1 on line 1 and f2 on line 2 paste -d : file1 file2 # Print the lines separated by a colon DESCRIPTION
Paste concatenates corresponding lines of the given input files and writes them to standard output. The lines of the different files are separated by the delimiters given with the option -s. If no list is given, a tab is substituted for every linefeed, except the last one. If end-of-file is hit on an input file, subsequent lines are empty. Suppose a set of k files each has one word per line. Then the paste output will have k columns, with the contents of file j in column j. If the -s flag is given, then the first file is on line 1, the second file on line 2, etc. In effect, -s turns the output sideways. If a list of delimiters is given, they are used in turn. The C escape sequences , , \, and are used for linefeed, tab, backslash, and the null string, respectively. PASTE(1)
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