Are you trying to determine if the script is started on the correct day, i.e. 2nd & 4th Monday only?
If so, start it every day and have a section to test the date at the top similar to this:-
Apologies if I have missed the point, but I hope that this helps.
Hi,
I am trying to do achieving of files by months.
find /test -name \*.* -mtime +30
will give me the result of all modified files after 30 days.
But lets say i want to list all files that is modified in last months... what is the command to do it?
Thanks! (13 Replies)
Help please! I need to read the calendar and put the date of the third Friday of each month into a variable for comparison in an "if" statement. How would I do this?
Thnx,
leslie02 (10 Replies)
I know I can't schedule this in cron and would have to write a wrapper around my script and schedule it in cron ....but not sure how do to this?
How do I exclude Monday if the 2nd day of the month falls on a Monday?
Thanks.
I tried this:
0 0 2 * 0,2-6 command
And I know this doesnt... (2 Replies)
Hi All
Any one please suggest me...
I have one directory every monday one file will be created in that directory. so if the file is created on monday or not i need check first.
How can write a script??? if the file is not created i want to quit from script.
Thanks
K.Srinivas (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I need to find last two files for the month.
lets say there are following files in directory
-rwxr-xr-x 1 user userg 1596 Mar 19 15:43 c.txt
-rwxr-xr-x 1 user userg 1596 Mar 21 15:43 d.txt
-rwxr-xr-x 1 user userg 1596 Mar 22 15:43 f.txt
-rwxr-xr-x 1... (14 Replies)
Hi,
I want two dates one will be the current date and the other one will be just one month before. Say if current month is 11/4/2014 then the other date should be 11/3/2014.
#!/bin/ksh
currentDtae=`date`
oneMonthBefore= ?
I dont know how to do it. Went through some of the related threads... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sharma331
15 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
nngoback
NNGOBACK(1) General Commands Manual NNGOBACK(1)NAME
nngoback - make news articles unread on a day-by-day basis (nn)
SYNOPSIS
nngoback [ -NQvi ] [-d] days [ group ]...
DESCRIPTION
nngoback will rewind the .newsrc record file of nn(1) one or more days. It can be used to rewind all groups, or only a specified set of
groups. In other words, nngoback can mark news articles which have arrived on the system during the last days days unread.
Only subscribed groups that occur in the current presentation sequence are rewound. That means that if no group arguments are specified,
all groups occurring in the sequence defined in the init file will be rewound. Otherwise, only the groups specified on the argument line
will be rewound.
When a group is rewound, the information about selections, partially read digests etc. are discarded. It will print notifications about
this unless the -Q (quiet) option is used.
If the -i (interactive) option is specified, nngoback will report for each how many articles can be marked unread, and ask for confirmation
before going back in that group.
If the -v (verbose) option is specified, nngoback will report how many articles are marked unread.
If the -N (no-update) option is specified, nngoback will perform the entire goback operation, but not update the .newsrc file.
If you are not up-to-date with your news reading, you can also use nngoback to catch up to only have the last few days of news waiting to
be read in the following way:
nn -a0
nngoback 3
The nn command will mark all articles in all groups as read (answer all to the catch-up question.) The following nngoback will then make
the last three days of news unread again.
Examples:
nngoback 0
Mark the articles which have arrived today as unread.
nngoback 1
Mark the articles which have arrived yesterday and today as unread.
nngoback 6
Mark the articles which have arrived during the last week as unread.
You cannot go more than 14 days back with nngoback. (You can change this limit as described below.)
THE BACK_ACT DAEMON
It is a prerequisite for the use of nngoback that the script back_act is executed at an appropriate time once (and only once) every day.
Preferably this is done by cron right before the bacth of news for `today' is received. back_act will maintain copies of the active file
for the last 14 days.
Optionally, the back_act program accepts a single numerical argument specifying how many copies of the active file it should maintain.
This is useful if news is expired after 7 days, in which case keeping more than 7 days of active file copies is wasteful.
FILES
~/.newsrc The record of read articles.
~/.newsrc.goback The original rc file before goback.
$db/active.N The N days `old' active file.
$master/back_act Script run by cron to maintain old active files.
SEE ALSO nn(1), nncheck(1), nngrab(1), nngrep(1), nnpost(1), nntidy(1)nnadmin(1M), nnusage(1M), nnmaster(8)NOTES
nngoback does not check the age of the `old' active files; it will blindly believe that active.0 was created today, and that active.7 is
really seven days old! Therefore, the back_act script should be run once and only once every day for nngoback to work properly.
The days are counted relative to the time the active files were copied.
AUTHOR
Kim F. Storm, Texas Instruments A/S, Denmark
E-mail: storm@texas.dk
4th Berkeley Distribution Release 6.6 NNGOBACK(1)