Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Ubuntu Delete all files that match date '+%Y-%m-%d_%H:%M' Post 303031595 by Don Cragun on Saturday 2nd of March 2019 04:08:55 PM
Old 03-02-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by drew77
I showed my work. I am stuck.


I see no need to remind me how many posts I have made each time I post.
Well before the time you get to 100 posts, we expect you to have a basic understanding of the commands that you are posting and have some idea of what they are doing. Your question seems to imply that you have no idea what the code you have shown us is doing.

In post #1 you implied that the code you are using is keeping two "date" files. With the tail -1 I don't see anything in your code that would keep more than one file.

We would expect by now that you would know that the rm in the find -exec primary is what is being used to remove files and that the find ! -name "$LATEST_FILE" is what is keeping one file from being removed, and if that is the case it would seem that removing that primary from the find command would make that command also remove the file that is being skipped:
Code:
find "$TARGET_DIR" ! -type f -regextype egrep -regex ".*/${REGEX}$" -exec rm -f {} +

But, of course, I would never try that without first running:
Code:
find "$TARGET_DIR" ! -type f -regextype egrep -regex ".*/${REGEX}$" -exec echo rm -f {} +

and verifying that the rm commands that find prints are what you would expect them to be for what you are trying to do.

And, I don't see how the rsync command you have shown us has anything to do with the problem you have described.

Or, maybe I have misunderstood your problem. Are you saying that you want files removed from the target directory used in your rsync command instead of from the source directory used in your rsync command? But, if that was the case, we would expect you to say that none of the "date" files are being removed from that directory instead of implying that after you run this script only two "date" files are kept in that directory.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to delete files by date

My apache logs are saved in the following format (using rotatelogs): Oct 8 01:59 access_log.1002412800 Oct 9 01:55 access_log.1002499200 Oct 10 01:58 access_log.1002585600 Oct 11 01:56 access_log.1002672000 Oct 12 01:59 access_log.1002758400 I would like to run a cronjob once a week to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jamesbond
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Delete files by date

Hi, Can anyone help me delete old files in a directory? Let's say, I want to delete all files which are 365 days old. Thank you. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: risk_sly
2 Replies

3. Solaris

Delete files according to date

Hi All, I am wondering whether is there a way to remove files according to date. For example, I have 500 files between Jan - April, and I want to remove files created only on March. Is there any way to do this? Thanks in advanced. rgds, Ronny (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ronny_nch
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

find files for a particular date and delete

How can I delete files for a particular date ? I apologize in advance If there is solution please put the link. Thanks, (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: jville
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Delete files by date

Hello, Due to an error while processing data I have to delete all files created the 4 october on a RED HAT 3 Server. I am wondering if one of you is aware of a command that could only delete all files that were created the Oct 4 This will be very, very, very helpful Thanks for your... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Aswex
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Delete log files content older than 30 days and append the lastest date log file date

To delete log files content older than 30 days and append the lastest date log file date in the respective logs I want to write a shell script that deletes all log files content older than 30 days and append the lastest log file date in the respective logs This is my script cd... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sreekumarhari
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Delete files of a particular date

dear all, i m a newbie and i want to delete all files of a particular date,how can i do this? your help appreciated,thanks in advance. OS:RHEL 6 (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mdabdul
5 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to delete all the files older than a date?

Hi, I need a command for deleting all the compress files *.Z that are older than the current date - 5 days. Basically I have a directory where daily I meet some back up files and I want to remove automatically the ones 5 days (or more) older than the current date. How can I write a 'rm' command... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Francy
1 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Delete Files from a date

I'm quite new to Unix but I want to delete some old backup files stored in a directory. the backups are stored on a network storage device located at /mnt/terastation12/backup. I want to delete everything upto one month ago. would the following command in Unix Sun do that? find... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dbajtr
5 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Count the number of files to delete doesnt match

Good evening, need your help please Need to delete certain files before octobre 1 2016, so need to know how many files im going to delete, for instance ls -lrt file_20160*.lis!wc -l but using grep -c to another file called bplist which contains the list of all files backed up doesn match... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: alexcol
7 Replies
DH-EXEC(1)							      dh-exec								DH-EXEC(1)

NAME
dh-exec - Debhelper executable file helpers SYNOPSIS
#! /usr/bin/dh-exec src/libfoo-*.so.* debian/foo-plugins/usr/lib/foo/${DEB_HOST_MULTIARCH}/ etc/example.conf => debian/foo/etc/foo/foo.conf DESCRIPTION
dh-exec is a simple program, meant to be used as the interpreter for executable debhelper config files. It is a wrapper around the various other sub-commands (see below), and will pipe the input file through all of them in turn, using an ordering that makes most sense in the vast majority of cases. The order as of now is dh-exec-subst gets run first, followed by dh-exec-install, so that variable expansion happens before files need to be copied. ARCHITECTURE
dh-exec is built up from three layers: there is the dh-exec utility, its single entry point, the only thing one will need to call. Below that, there are the various sub-commands, such as dh-exec-subst, dh-exec-installs and dh-exec-illiterate, which are thin wrappers around the various dh-exec scripts, that make sure they only run those that need to be run. And the lowest layer are the various scripts that do the actual work. One can control which sub-commands to run, or if even more granularity is desired, one can limit which scripts shall be run, too. See below for the options! OPTIONS
--with=command[,command ...] Replace the list of sub-commands to run the input through with a custom list (where entries are separated by whitespace or commas). This option will always replace the existing list with whatever is specified. This can be used to explicitly set which sub-commands to use. The list must not include the dh-exec- prefix. Defaults to subst,install. --without=command[,command ...] Inversely to the option above, this lists all the sub-commands which should not be used. The list must not include the dh-exec- prefix. --with-scripts=script[,script ...] Replace the list of scripts to run the input through with a custom list (where entries are separated by whitespace or commas). This option will always replace the existing list with whatever is specified. This can be used to explicitly specify which scripts to use, limiting even beyond what the --with option is capable of. The list must not include the dh-exec- prefix. By default it is empty, meaning there is no filtering done, and whatever scripts the sub-commands find, will be run. --no-act Do not really do anything, but print the pipeline that would have been run instead. --list List the available sub-commands and scripts, grouped by sub-command. --help, --version Display a short help or the package version, respectively. SUB-COMMANDS dh-exec-subst Substitutes various variables (either from the environment, or from dpkg-architecture(1)). dh-exec-install An extension to dh_install(1), that supports renaming files during the copy process, using a special syntax. ENVIRONMENT
DH_EXEC_LIBDIR The directory in which the wrapped sub-commands reside. Defaults to /usr/lib/dh-exec/. DH_EXEC_SCRIPTDIR The directory in which the scripts that do the heavy work live. Defaults to /usr/share/dh-exec/. FILES
$DH_EXEC_LIBDIR/dh-exec-* The various sub-commands. $DH_EXEC_SCRIPTDIR/dh-exec-* The various scripts ran by the sub-commands. SEE ALSO
debhelper(1), dh-exec-subst(1), dh-exec-install(1) AUTHOR
dh-exec is copyright (C) 2011-2012 by Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>. 2012-05-03 DH-EXEC(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:03 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy