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!!!
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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 $src -name '*.h' -o -name '*.cpp'
it gives out this:
H:\FileList\A\E\F\G\newCppFile.cpp
H:\FileList\header01.h
H:\FileList\B\nextCppFile.cpp
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Am running the command below to search for files that contains a certain string.
grep -il "shutdown" `find . -type f -mtime -1 -print` | grep "^./scripts/active"
How do I get it to do a ls -l on the list of files? I tried doing ls -l `grep -il "shutdown" `find . -type f -mtime -1... (5 Replies)
i feel weird with this 2 command
find /tmp/*test* -user `whoami` -mtime +1 -type f -exec rm -f {}\;
find /tmp/*test* -user `whoami` -mtime +1 -type f -exec ls -lrt {}\;
the first one return correct which only delete those filename that consist *test* where second command it listed all the... (12 Replies)
I have a text file downloaded from the web, I want to count the unique words used in the file, and a person's speaking length during conversation by counting the words between the opening and closing quotation marks which differ from the standard ASCII code. Also I found out the file contains some... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: yifangt
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
feed::find
Feed::Find(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Feed::Find(3pm)NAME
Feed::Find - Syndication feed auto-discovery
SYNOPSIS
use Feed::Find;
my @feeds = Feed::Find->find('http://example.com/');
DESCRIPTION
Feed::Find implements feed auto-discovery for finding syndication feeds, given a URI. It (currently) passes all of the auto-discovery tests
at http://diveintomark.org/tests/client/autodiscovery/.
Feed::Find will discover the following feed formats:
o RSS 0.91
o RSS 1.0
o RSS 2.0
o Atom
USAGE
Feed::Find->find($uri)
Given a URI $uri, use a variety of techniques to find the feeds associated with that page. If $uri itself points to a feed (i.e., if the
Content-Type of the response is a recognized feed type), returns $uri.
Returns a list of feed URIs.
The following techniques are used:
1. <link> tag auto-discovery
If the page contains any <link> tags in the <head> section, these tags are examined for recognized feed content types. The following
content types are treated as feeds: application/x.atom+xml, application/atom+xml, application/xml, text/xml, application/rss+xml, and
application/rdf+xml.
2. Scanning <a> tags
If the page does not contain any known <link> tags, the page is then scanned for <a> tags for links to URIs with certain file
extensions. The following extensions are treated as feeds: .rss, .xml, and .rdf.
Note that this technique is employed only if the first technique returns no results.
Feed::Find->find_in_html($html [, $base_uri ])
Given a reference to a string $html containing an HTML page, uses the same techniques as described above in find to find the feeds
associated with that page.
If you know the URI of the page, you should provide it in $base_uri, so that relative links can be properly made absolute. Feed::Find will
attempt to determine the correct base URI, but unless that URI is specified in the HTML itself (in a "<meta>" tag), you'll need to supply
it yourself.
Returns a list of feed URIs.
LICENSE
Feed::Find is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR & COPYRIGHT
Except where otherwise noted, Feed::Find is Copyright 2004 Benjamin Trott, ben+cpan@stupidfool.org. All rights reserved.
perl v5.10.1 2011-01-28 Feed::Find(3pm)