I am trying to load a group of files and their last dates modified into a text file that will in turn be used with SQL*Loader to load these files into Oracle. I am using a *.ksh script. I am getting the name of the file in by using the following:
for file_ext in 'cat loaddir.ext';
do
find... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
If I have a flat file
ID|Location|Date|Hostname|Age|Sex
1|SFO|06/02/24 12:12:34|hawkeye|35|M
2|LAX|06/02/24 13:12:35|sf49ers|30|M
3|OAK|06/02/25 11:12:36|goraiders|27|F
4|PIT|06/02/25 12:12:37|steeler|35|M
How can I create an output
1|SFO|02/24/2006 12:12:34|hawkeye|35|M... (6 Replies)
I am trying to write a Korne Shell asking the user for a date and a directory and then search recursively in this directory the list of files modified after the date chosen. But I am not getting good results when I Test it...
#!/usr/bin/ksh
echo "Enter a date (YYYYMMDD) "
read date
touch -t... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am new bie to Unix. Might be a simple question I am asking.
I want to find the last modified time of a file and find the difference between the currrent time and the last modified time. Appreciate, if someone can throw some light on what commands can be used.
Cheers,
James (2 Replies)
Hi there
Im trying to find a way to test whether the last modified time is older than 1 day or not
so
#!/bin/bash
if ; then
$TOUCHED = "recently"
else
$TOUCHED = "not so recently"
fi
ive seen loads of posts where people are using find and the -mtime property but i... (2 Replies)
Hi ,
In my directory , i have many days file but i want to see all those which are of todays date.
i tried this but it gives all the files
mtime -0 |ls -ltr
I tried the below option as well.
19635 find -iname "*.LOG" -mtime
19636 ls -ltr *.LOG -mtime -1
19637 ls -ltr *.LOG... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I have a directory that has numerous files in it, and there is two which are named "filerec_ddmmyyHH24MMSS" by the time they are created so "filerec_010615012250" was created at 01:22:50 on 1st June 2015.
I need to find the most recently created of those 2 files and get the contents of... (4 Replies)
Can someone draw up a script that for every file, folder and subfolder and files that will copy the creation date over top of the modified date??
I know how to touch every file recursively, but no idea how to read a files creation date then use that to touch the modification date of that file,... (3 Replies)
I'm using a script that I need to get a file's "last modified date" in a format like 01:51:14 PM. We are running on AIX 6.1.0.0. I can't seem to find the right command parameters. Help! (4 Replies)
hi,
We have a huge directory that ha 5.1 Million files in it. We are trying to get the file name and modified timestamp of the most recent 3 years from this huge directory for a migration project.
However, the ls command (background process) to list the file names and timestamp is running for... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: subbu
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
locale
locale(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide locale(3pm)NAME
locale - Perl pragma to use or avoid POSIX locales for built-in operations
SYNOPSIS
@x = sort @y; # Unicode sorting order
{
use locale;
@x = sort @y; # Locale-defined sorting order
}
@x = sort @y; # Unicode sorting order again
DESCRIPTION
This pragma tells the compiler to enable (or disable) the use of POSIX locales for built-in operations (for example, LC_CTYPE for regular
expressions, LC_COLLATE for string comparison, and LC_NUMERIC for number formatting). Each "use locale" or "no locale" affects statements
to the end of the enclosing BLOCK.
Starting in Perl 5.16, a hybrid mode for this pragma is available,
use locale ':not_characters';
which enables only the portions of locales that don't affect the character set (that is, all except LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE). This is
useful when mixing Unicode and locales, including UTF-8 locales.
use locale ':not_characters';
use open ":locale"; # Convert I/O to/from Unicode
use POSIX qw(locale_h); # Import the LC_ALL constant
setlocale(LC_ALL, ""); # Required for the next statement
# to take effect
printf "%.2f
", 12345.67' # Locale-defined formatting
@x = sort @y; # Unicode-defined sorting order.
# (Note that you will get better
# results using Unicode::Collate.)
See perllocale for more detailed information on how Perl supports locales.
perl v5.16.2 2012-10-11 locale(3pm)