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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers [Tip] Housekeeping Tasks Made Easy - User Home directories and Leftover Files Post 303037287 by bakunin on Monday 29th of July 2019 08:45:16 AM
Old 07-29-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by MadeInGermany
1. scanning "unowned" homedirs for recently accessed files. If nothing found, delete. If something found, display it and stop the search - and do not delete.
Yes, that is another possible solution. A problem could be that users put things in their homedir crontab and so some files get regularly accessed even if the accounts are deleted. If this or my solution is better is perhaps depending on the environment you work in, policies in place and - last but not least - personal taste. The real point, though, is to take care of (removed users) data in some way in specific and to not let accumulate data waste on the system in general.

Quote:
Originally Posted by MadeInGermany
2. scanning shared project directories in "deepest first fashion" (find -depth), and assign each "unowned" directory to the owner of its parent directory.
This is a very good idea! I will update the above script eventually when i find time.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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bcron-update(8) 					      System Manager's Manual						   bcron-update(8)

NAME
bcron-update - Update system crontabs. SYNOPSIS
bcron-update path [ path ... ] DESCRIPTION
bcron-update polls the named files or directories periodically to see if there are any new, changed, or removed files. When it detects changes, it mirrors those changes into the crontab spool directory. bcron-update runs as root in order to be able to read system files that would potentially be unreadable otherwise. On Debian, if path is a directory, bcron-update skips files in this directory with names that do not solely consist of lower- and uppercase letters ('a'-'z', 'A'-'Z'), digits ('0'-'9'), underscores ('_'), and hyphens ('-'). EXAMPLES
To mirror modern vixie-cron's behavior, use: bcron-update /etc/crontab /etc/cron.d ENVIRONMENT
BCRON_SPOOL The spool directory for bcron. Defaults to /var/spool/cron. BCRON_USER After writing files and before moving them into their final location, bcron-update changes the ownership of the file to this user so that bcron-sched can read them. SEE ALSO
bcron-sched(8) DIAGNOSTICS
bcron-update outputs three different kinds of messages about actions it is taking. Rescanning /etc/cron.d The named directory has been modified, and will be scanned to determine what files have been added or deleted. -/etc/cron.d/oldfile The named file no longer exists and will be removed from the spool. +/etc/cron.d/newfile The named file was either created or modified since the last scan, and will be copied into the spool. AUTHOR
Bruce Guenter <bruceg@em.ca> bcron-update(8)
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