Hello,
I've had a daemon go a little bit mental and create directories using somments from a config file. The end result is I've ended up with directories with names such as #, 5625), (5725 etc etc etc...
However, when I try and delete them I get syntax errors, ( not expected,
rmdir #... (2 Replies)
Hi,
' recgrep find . | xargs grep ' is used to scan the contents recursively. I have a different requirement. I need to scan just the names and check for a pattern and display with fullpath. Is that already available? Closest that I am trying is 'ls -R | grep pattern' Here I would get multiple... (1 Reply)
Greetings!
I have multiple files, one per subdirectory, all with the same file name. All subdirectories are one level deep from the main directory.
The data in the files is tab delimited between fields and record delimited with a newline.
The subdirectory names have the date in the... (5 Replies)
I'm an experienced awk user, but this one has me stumped. I have an awk script which is called from a UNIX command line as you'd expect:
myscript.awk -v foo=$1 -v bar=$2 filename
My question is this: is there a mechanism for determining the names of the -v variables within a script?
... (3 Replies)
Hey all,
i want to copy only the file names from an ftp server (directory and all sub directory) to a text file in another server (non ftp), i.e. i want to recursively move through directories and copy only the names to a text file.
any help is appreciated...thank you in advance (1 Reply)
Hi,
i have a directory and sub directory`s inside.
i want to take all the files name and add them into array.
for example :
$ ls
Debug script.c src typescript
$
Array = Debug
Array= scripts.c
Array = src
Array = typescript.
Thanks for the help.
Or. (2 Replies)
Dear Gurus,
I have 57 tab-delimited different text files, each one containing entries in 3 columns. The first column in each file contains names of objects. Some names are present in more than one file. I would like to find those names and store them in a separate text file, preferably with a... (6 Replies)
Hi Team,
I'm new to Unix shell scripting .
I've the following requirement
A folder contains the list of files with the following format
ab.name.11.first
ab.name.12.second
ab.name.13.third
----------
I have to rename the above file to like below
... (6 Replies)
I have 2 files; file 1 having smaller positions that overlap with the positions with positions in file2.
file1
aaa 20 22 apple
aaa 18 25 banana
aaa 12 30 grapes
aaa 22 25 melon
file2
aaa 18 26 cdded
aaa 10 35 abcde
I want to get something like this
output
aaa 18 26 cdded banana... (4 Replies)
whereis(1) General Commands Manual whereis(1)Name
whereis - locate source, binary, and or manual for program
Syntax
whereis [-sbm] [-u] [-SBM dir... -f] name...
Description
The command locates source/binary and manuals sections for specified files. The supplied names are first stripped of leading pathname com-
ponents and any (single) trailing extension of the form ``.ext'', for example,``.c''. Prefixes of ``s.'' resulting from use of source code
control are also dealt with. The command then attempts to locate the desired program in a list of standard places.
Options-S dir
Search for source files in specified directory.
-B dir
Search for binary files in given directory.
-M dir
Search for manual section files in given directory.
-b Searches only for binary files.
-f Terminates last directory list created from use of -S, -B or -M flags and signals the start of file names.
-m Searches only for manual section files.
-s Searches only for source files.
-u Searches for files that do not have one of binary, source or manual section files. A file is said to be unusual if it does not have one
entry of each requested type. Thus ``whereis -m -u *'' asks for those files in the current directory which have no documentation.
Examples
The following finds all the files in which are not documented in with source in
cd /usr/ucb
whereis -u -M /usr/man/man1 -S /usr/src/cmd -f *
Restrictions
Since the program uses to run faster, pathnames given with the -M -S and -B must be full. That is, they must begin with a ``/''.
Files
/usr/src/*
/usr/{doc,man}/*
/lib, /etc, /usr/{lib,bin,ucb,old,new,local}
whereis(1)