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Operating Systems AIX AIX - find command with mtime Post 302959100 by carlino70 on Wednesday 28th of October 2015 03:26:37 PM
Old 10-28-2015
AIX - find command with mtime

Hello experts, I would get from a list of files, which are more ancient than 1 hour. Examples:

Current date:
Wed Oct 28 16:10:02 SAT 2015

using:
Code:
find path -name 'file_name. *' -mtime +0

I see files with less at 00:00:00 date of the current day.
Code:
/path/file_name.20151027170725
/path/file_name.20151027171225
/path/file_name.20151027171725
/path/file_name.20151027172225

But I need to see the files, less to date:
Code:
SAT Wed October 28 2015 15:10:02

So also see files with current date minus 1 hour.
Code:
/path/file_name.20151028150725
/path/file_name.20151028150625
/path/file_name.20151028150525
/path/file_name.20151028150425
/path/file_name.20151027170725
/path/file_name.20151027171225
/path/file_name.20151027171725
/path/file_name.20151027172225

then, with the list, I must remove them.

Also, I tried:
Code:
find path -name 'file_name. *' -mmin +60

but I see the error:
find: bad option -mmin

Could you tell me which is the variant of the "find" command to use?

I hope I was clear.

Thank you very much for the attention.

Regards.

Last edited by carlino70; 10-28-2015 at 05:06 PM.. Reason: CODE tags for data as well
 

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realpath(3)						     Library Functions Manual						       realpath(3)

NAME
realpath - Resolves pathname SYNOPSIS
#include <stdlib.h> char *realpath( const char *file_name, char *resolved_name); STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows: realpath(): POSIX.1, XPG4-UNIX Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags. DESCRIPTION
The realpath() function derives, from the file pointed to by file_name, an absolute pathname that names the same file, whose resolution does not involve ".", "..", or symbolic links. The generated pathname is stored, up to a maximum of PATH_MAX bytes, in the buffer pointed to by resolved_name. RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, the realpath() function returns a pointer to the resolved name. Otherwise, realpath() returns a null pointer and sets errno to indicate the error, and the contents of the buffer pointed to by resolved_name are undefined. ERRORS
If the realpath() function fails, errno may be set to one of the following values: Read or search permission was denied for a component of file_name. Either the file_name or resolved_name argument is a null pointer. An error occurred while reading from the file system. Too many symbolic links were encountered in resolving path. The file_name argument is longer than PATH_MAX or a pathname component is longer than NAME_MAX. A component of file_name does not name an existing file or file_name points to an empty string. Insufficient storage space available. A component of either path prefix is not a directory. RELATED INFORMATION
Functions: getcwd(3), sysconf(3) Standards: standards(5) delim off realpath(3)
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