I'm not sure what happened, but when I logged back on to retry and better document results, the directory was gone.
Your command indeed delted the directory. The error message came from the fact that find was trying to recurse (per default it looks in subdirectories) and because the first hit removed already the complete directory the subsequent attempt to change into it failed.
The reason why perhaps your usual rm command failed was because "-p" was interpreted as an (invalid) option instead of a filename. This should have worked:
If I call my function with grouped options: "logm -TDIWEFO 'message' ", then only the "T" gets parsed correctly. The subsequent values returned have underscores prefixed to the value: "_D", "_I", etc. If I "logm -T -DIWEFO 'message' ", the "T" and the "D" are OK, but "I" through "O" get the... (2 Replies)
Ok so I know the title was probably confusing so here goes: I have a tarball (gzipped) that has a nested directory structure . For example:
my.tar.gz (contents)
---
------
---------
------------
---------------
... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm trying to work on a script to delete files older then 31 day's in certain directories. Now, that works, but in one directory there are 3 other maps which contains files that can be deleted but one map which contains files that can't be deleted.
My current command is: find... (6 Replies)
i have a process that receives files similar to below. these are files obviously generated on a windows machine that are submitted to a linux cluster. the one thing they have in common is the leading c:\any-number-of-leading-dirs\filename.xxx. is there a way to re-create/modify the file to remove... (3 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I have a directory in unix that is /usr/local/pos contain the folowing directoreis ..that is
dir1
dir2
dir3
now I want to delete only dir2 please advise how to remove the directory dir 2 ..that is rm command and how to use it , and second if I want to zip the dir3 please... (1 Reply)
I have a list of numbers extracted and need to delete the leading zeros from them, but when i do so, the command I am using also deletes numbers that end in Zero as well. eg 10, 20, 30, etc
this is part of a larger script and the only way I can think of is to try and detect the 10,20 30 etc in... (19 Replies)
I know that this basic question has been asked many times and solutions all over the internet, but none of the are working for me. I have a directory in the root directory, named "-p".
# ls -l /
total 198
<snip>
drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 4096 Dec 3 14:18 opt
drwxr-xr-x 2 root ... (2 Replies)
I have a directory under my home directory called: my work. I cannot delete this directory and I want to.
If anyone needs additional information. Please let me know.
Any help you can provide is greatly appreciated. (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nerdgirl1313
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
uuaids
uuaids(8c)uuaids(8c)Name
uucompact, uumkspool, uurespool, uupoll - uucp utilities
Syntax
uucompact -ssystem
uumkspool system ...
uurespool [ -t# ]
uupoll system ...
Description
All of the commands are located in
The command compacts uucp system spool directories and associated subdirectories. If system is ALL, then all existing uucp system spool
directories are compacted. Otherwise, only the specified system spool directory is compacted. If no system is specified, is compacted.
If is stopped before it is finished, it can be restarted without reprocessing directories. The command continues processing where it left
off during it's previous instantiation.
The command makes a per system spool directory and associated subdirectories for each of the specified systems. For example, if system is
mk3 and if the local system name is penny, the following directories are created:
/usr/spool/uucp/sys/mk3
/usr/spool/uucp/sys/mk3/C.
/usr/spool/uucp/sys/mk3/X.
/usr/spool/uucp/sys/mk3/D.
/usr/spool/uucp/sys/mk3/D.penny
/usr/spool/uucp/sys/mk3/D.penny
The command moves files from old spool directories to new spool directories. Because the structure of the spool directories has changed
from older versions of it is necessary to respool old spooled files to new spool directories in at least two instances:
o When installing the current version of
o When creating a new system spool directory for each system.
In the latter case, it is necessary to move files from to the new spool directories. To ease this task, moves files that have been spooled
in one of 4 formats and respools them under the new spooling structure. The format is specified by the -t# option, where the number sign
(#) can be any one of the following:
o Original spool - All files are in
o Split spool - Contains the subdirectories
o Modified split spool - Contains all subdirectories listed in split spool, and
o Used when a new system directory has been created and spool files must be moved from the DEFAULT directory to the new system directory.
The command forces a connect attempt to the named systems even if recent attempts have failed, but not if the file prohibits the call. For
example, the file will prohibit the call if it is the wrong time of day. Thus, the should be monitored for messages about the connection.
Files
Spool directory
Logfile
See Alsomail(1), uucp(1c), uux(1c)uuaids(8c)