Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Tar file with newly created file Post 303021682 by dquake on Tuesday 14th of August 2018 02:57:43 PM
Old 08-14-2018
Good shout. Ended up mv files into subfolders and tar accordingly

what a brainfart!

this can be closed
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to FTP all newly created but the current open file?

An application running on HP-UX constantly generates new text log files ( I think using logpipe ). Any new file created requires to be ftp'ed to an offline server, however I want to make sure that the current file being written should not be transferred. For examples consider the following files... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: indianya
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to keep appending a newly created file based on some keywords

Hi Friends, I have to create a new log file everyday and append it with content based on some keywords found in another log file. Here is what I have tried so far... grep Error /parentfolder/someLogFile.log >> /parentfolder /Archive/"testlogfile_error_`date '+%d%m%y'`.txt" grep error... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: supreet
6 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help with command to find all newly created files in a given time period

Hi all! Can someone please help me create a command to accomplish the following task. I have a parent directory called ex. /var/www/parent and it has a bunch of sub-directories called /var/www/parent/1, var/www/parent/1/xyz/ and etc. What I would like to do is to count the number of files... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbzor
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to find the newly created directory

Hi, I need to create new directory by increasing the number by 1 of extracted lastly created directory. e.g. Log\out_log_1\ Log\out_log_2\ Log\out_log_3\ become Log\out_log_1\ Log\out_log_2\ Log\out_log_3\ Log\out_log_4\ Can anyone help how to do it in c-shell... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Andre_2008
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

sftp - get newly created files on incremental basis

Hi, We have a sftp server which creates files daily and keeps 6 months of files on the server. We are creating a daily job to get the files and load into database. My problem is "how to get ONLY those files which got created after my last get". Let me provide some more details to it. Below... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: ravi.videla
15 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

default size of a newly created folder

Hi all, In linux how to create a directory with specified size, so that it can be used only up to the mentioned size. Actually my question is, whether we can do directory quota in linux. mounting the directory in a partiton will do that, but do we have any other option... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: anishkumarv
1 Replies

7. Solaris

Can't see Newly created LUN by SAN admin

hello, i am an oracle DBA and trying to scan a newly created LUN of 200 GB on fiber channel by SAN admin.we have solaris 10 and SANtoolkit is installed.i tried following to get the new LUN at my machine. go /opt/Netapp/Santoolkit/bin and then ./sanlun lun show but i see only the existing... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: janakors
12 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Copy an array to a newly created directory

hello everyone, I am new to perl script and trying to develop a script as follows. I am trying to Create an array for storing all file names. I am trying to copy $libs into "scratch". however i am unable to do so. Please suggest.. #!/usr/bin/perl use File::Copy; #use... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rashid Khan
5 Replies

9. Hardware

Formatting a newly created lun

Hi , I have created one new lun in my SAN storage and make it visible to my HP servers , but the fdisk -l output is somehow confusing. Do not know what to do next ---------- fdisk -l /dev/sdo1 Disk /dev/sdo1 (Sun disk label): 64 heads, 32 sectors, 10238 cylinders Units =... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: mishra.sankar
7 Replies

10. AIX

No iscsi available in newly created AIX wpar

AIX 7.1 New to WPAR, hopefully just missing something simple here. Creating the WPAR like this..... (The box where the WPAR is hosted does have an iscsi protocol device) mkwpar -h wpar08 -l -n wpar08 -N interface=en0 address=xxx.xx.xx.xxx netmask=255.255.255.0 -D devname=/dev/iscsi0 -D... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: TomR
0 Replies
TAR(1)							      General Commands Manual							    TAR(1)

NAME
tar - tape archiver SYNOPSIS
tar [ key ] [ name ... ] DESCRIPTION
Tar saves and restores multiple files on a single file (usually a magnetic tape, but it can be any file). Tar's actions are controlled by the key argument. The key is a string of characters containing at most one function letter and possibly one or more function modifiers. Other arguments to tar are file or directory names specifying which files to dump or restore. In all cases, appearance of a directory name refers to the files and (recursively) subdirectories of that directory. The function portion of the key is specified by one of the following letters: r The named files are written on the end of the tape. The c function implies this. x The named files are extracted from the tape. If the named file matches a directory whose contents had been written onto the tape, this directory is (recursively) extracted. The owner, modification time, and mode are restored (if possible). If no file argument is given, the entire content of the tape is extracted. Note that if multiple entries specifying the same file are on the tape, the last one overwrites all earlier. t The names of the specified files are listed each time they occur on the tape. If no file argument is given, all of the names on the tape are listed. u The named files are added to the tape if either they are not already there or have been modified since last put on the tape. c Create a new tape; writing begins on the beginning of the tape instead of after the last file. This command implies r. The following characters may be used in addition to the letter which selects the function desired. o On output, tar normally places information specifying owner and modes of directories in the archive. Former versions of tar, when encountering this information will give error message of the form "<name>/: cannot create". This modifier will suppress the directory information. p This modifier says to restore files to their original modes, ignoring the present umask(2). Setuid and sticky information will also be restored to the super-user. 0, ..., 9 This modifier selects an alternate drive on which the tape is mounted. The default is drive 0 at 1600 bpi, which is normally /dev/rmt8. v Normally tar does its work silently. The v (verbose) option makes tar print the name of each file it treats preceded by the function letter. With the t function, the verbose option gives more information about the tape entries than just their names. w Tar prints the action to be taken followed by file name, then wait for user confirmation. If a word beginning with `y' is given, the action is done. Any other input means don't do it. f Tar uses the next argument as the name of the archive instead of /dev/rmt?. If the name of the file is `-', tar writes to stan- dard output or reads from standard input, whichever is appropriate. Thus, tar can be used as the head or tail of a filter chain. Tar can also be used to move hierarchies with the command cd fromdir; tar cf - . | (cd todir; tar xf -) b Tar uses the next argument as the blocking factor for tape records. The default is 20 (the maximum). This option should only be used with raw magnetic tape archives (See f above). The block size is determined automatically when reading tapes (key letters `x' and `t'). l tells tar to complain if it cannot resolve all of the links to the files dumped. If this is not specified, no error messages are printed. m tells tar not to restore the modification times. The modification time will be the time of extraction. h Force tar to follow symbolic links as if they were normal files or directories. Normally, tar does not follow symbolic links. B Forces input and output blocking to 20 blocks per record. This option was added so that tar can work across a communications channel where the blocking may not be maintained. C If a file name is preceded by -C, then tar will perform a chdir(2) to that file name. This allows multiple directories not related by a close common parent to be archived using short relative path names. For example, to archive files from /usr/include and from /etc, one might use tar c -C /usr include -C / etc Previous restrictions dealing with tar's inability to properly handle blocked archives have been lifted. FILES
/dev/rmt? /tmp/tar* SEE ALSO
tar(5) DIAGNOSTICS
Complaints about bad key characters and tape read/write errors. Complaints if enough memory is not available to hold the link tables. BUGS
There is no way to ask for the n-th occurrence of a file. Tape errors are handled ungracefully. The u option can be slow. The current limit on file name length is 100 characters. There is no way selectively to follow symbolic links. When extracting tapes created with the r or u options, directory modification times may not be set correctly. 7th Edition May 12, 1986 TAR(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:34 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy