Using the 'strings' command and piping the result to 'sort' is producing strange results. I get block of lines that begin with asterisks, then a block that begins with some text, then more lines that begin with asterisks. The actual content is correct - lines beginning with asterisks is the actual content of the file. My question is about the resulting sort order. Within a grouping things are in order, but I don't understand why the lines beginning with an asterisk are broken into two groups, separated by a group of lines that begin with an alphabetic character.
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 using th following to get the percentage and have never used bc before:
percent=$(echo "scale=4;(34117/384000)*100" | bc)
8.884600
percent=$(echo "scale=2;(34117/384000)*100" | bc)
8.00
Why do I get the results of 8.00 instead of 8.88 when using a scale of 2. I only want 2 decimal... (2 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have the following example data:
A;00:00:19
B;00:01:02
C;00:00:13
D;00:00:16
E;00:02:27
F;00:00:12
G;00:00:21
H;00:00:19
I;00:00:13
J;00:13:22
I run the following sort against it, yet the output is as follows:
sort -t";" +1 -nr example_data.dat
A;00:00:19 (16 Replies)
Hi all,
I am writing script that returns the size of each disk or partition when called. I am using FDISK -l and parsing the results to get the result I want. When I execute fdisk -l it shows correct results, BUT when I execute the same thing with results to be put in a variable, I get strange... (5 Replies)
Here is the code, but the list is not sorted properly (alphabetically)?
<?php
function folderlist(){
$startdir = './';
$ignoredDirectory = '.';
$ignoredDirectory = '..';
if (is_dir($startdir)){
if ($dh = opendir($startdir)){
while (($folder = readdir($dh)) !== false){
if... (0 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)
Disclaimer, I've been a Linux admin for a while but don't frequently setup rsysnc jobs.
Here's the command I'm running on CentOS 5.5, rsync 2.6.8:
rsync -arvz --progress --compress-level=9 /src/ /dest/
/src has 1.5 TB of data, /dest/ is a new destination and started out empy. Oh ya, both... (4 Replies)
I want to remove any files that are older than 2 days from a directory. It deletes those files. Then it comes back with a message it is a directory. What am I doing wrong here?
+ find /mydir -mtime +2 -exec rm -f '{}' ';'
rm: /mydir is a directory (2 Replies)
Hi Folks -
I have this file that looks like this:
outbox/logs/Client_1042.log
outbox/logs/Client_941.log
outbox/logs/Client_942.log
outbox/logs/Client_943.log
outbox/logs/Client_944.log
And this is my code:
#!/bin/bash
_OUTBOX_BIN="outbox/logs/"
_NAME="Client"
_TEMP="temp.txt"... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: SIMMS7400
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
locate
LOCATE(1) BSD General Commands Manual LOCATE(1)NAME
locate -- find filenames quickly
SYNOPSIS
locate [-0Scims] [-l limit] [-d database] pattern ...
DESCRIPTION
The locate program searches a database for all pathnames which match the specified pattern. The database is recomputed periodically (usually
weekly or daily), and contains the pathnames of all files which are publicly accessible.
Shell globbing and quoting characters (``*'', ``?'', ``'', ``['' and ``]'') may be used in pattern, although they will have to be escaped
from the shell. Preceding any character with a backslash (``'') eliminates any special meaning which it may have. The matching differs in
that no characters must be matched explicitly, including slashes (``/'').
As a special case, a pattern containing no globbing characters (``foo'') is matched as though it were ``*foo*''.
Historically, locate only stored characters between 32 and 127. The current implementation store any character except newline ('
') and NUL
('