Hello and thanks in advance for any help anyone can offer me
I'm trying to learn the find command and thought I was understanding it... Apparently I was wrong. I was doing compound searches and I started getting weird results with the -size test. I was trying to do a search on a 1G file owned by the user database. I was expecting to get a single file back, but for some reason the find returns not only the 1G file but the scripting files owned by the database user. I've been messing with this for a while trying to understand it. I can filter it out by using a -not -name ".*" but that's not the point. I want to understand why it's including the start up scripts & what I'm doing wrong. Here's the command and the results... If someone could tell me what I'm doing wrong I would greatly appreciate it!!!
Moderator's Comments:
Please use CODE tags as required by forum rules!
Last edited by rbatte1; 02-20-2017 at 07:47 AM..
Reason: RudiC: Added CODE tags; rbatte1 added ICODE tags and bold highlighting for clarity
Hi--
Ok. I have now found that:
find -x -ls
will do what I need as far as finding all files on a particular volume. Now I need to sort the results by the file's modification date/time.
Is there a way to do that?
Also, I notice that for many files, whereas the man for find says ls is... (8 Replies)
I am looking for files of a certian type and logging them. After they are logged they need to be moved to a different directory. HOw can i incorporate that in my current script?
CSV_OUTFILE="somefile.csv"
find . -name W\* -exec printf "%s,%s,OK" {} `date '+%Y%m%d%H%M%S'` \; > ${CSV_OUTFILE}
... (9 Replies)
I'm attempting to read a file that is composed of complex 32-bit floating point values on Solaris 10 that came from a 64-bit Red Hat computer.
When I first tried reading the file, it looked like there was a byte-swapping problem and after running the od command on the file Solaris and Red Hat... (2 Replies)
I was running some timings in my code to see which of several functions was the best and I've been getting some odd results. Here's the code I'm using:
static double time_loop(int (*foo)(int)) {
clock_t start, end;
int n = 0, i = 0;
start = clock();
for (; i <= MAXN; i++)
if... (6 Replies)
I have an issue with a korn shell script that I am writing. The script parses through a configuration file which lists a heap of path/directories for some files which need to be FTP'd. Now the script needs to check whether there are any files which have not been processed and are X minutes old.
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a problem with a shell script.
The script should find all .cpp and .h files and list them.
With:
for file in `find $src -name '*.h' -o -name '*.cpp'
it gives out this:
H:\FileList\A\E\F\G\newCppFile.cpp
H:\FileList\header01.h
H:\FileList\B\nextCppFile.cpp
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Am running the command below to search for files that contains a certain string.
grep -il "shutdown" `find . -type f -mtime -1 -print` | grep "^./scripts/active"
How do I get it to do a ls -l on the list of files? I tried doing ls -l `grep -il "shutdown" `find . -type f -mtime -1... (5 Replies)
i feel weird with this 2 command
find /tmp/*test* -user `whoami` -mtime +1 -type f -exec rm -f {}\;
find /tmp/*test* -user `whoami` -mtime +1 -type f -exec ls -lrt {}\;
the first one return correct which only delete those filename that consist *test* where second command it listed all the... (12 Replies)
I have a text file downloaded from the web, I want to count the unique words used in the file, and a person's speaking length during conversation by counting the words between the opening and closing quotation marks which differ from the standard ASCII code. Also I found out the file contains some... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: yifangt
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
ovdb_recover
ovdb_recover(8) InterNetNews Documentation ovdb_recover(8)NAME
ovdb_recover - Perform recovery on the ovdb database, if needed
SYNOPSYS
ovdb_recover [-f]
DESCRIPTION
Attempts to open the ovdb database, and if the database needs recovery, it attempts to perform the recovery. Similar in function to the
BerkeleyDB db_recover command.
Specify the `-f' option to force a recovery, even if the database appears to not need it. It is not an error to perform a recovery opera-
tion on a clean database. However, do not run `ovdb_recover -f' while the database is in use by any other processes.
Returns exit status of 0 if the database did not need recovery or if recovery succeeded, and returns exit status 1 if recovery failed. In
the latter case, the database may be damaged beyond repair, requiring a rebuild with makehistory(8).
This command is normally called automatically by rc.news(8).
HISTORY
Written by Heath Kehoe <hakehoe@avalon.net> for InterNetNews.
SEE ALSO ovdb(5), makehistory(8)3rd Berkeley Distribution INN 2.3 ovdb_recover(8)