Searching for a files based on current date directory
Hi All,
I've been trying to do some recursive searching but not been very successful. Can someone please help.
Scenario:
I have directory structure
so what I want to do is run a script and as its 2019/11/18/ today it would go and only search on that folder and give me number of files init and tomorrow it would search in 2019/11/19/
Last edited by vbe; 11-18-2019 at 12:54 PM..
Reason: code tags use [] not <>
May be a simple question for experts here....
I need to get the list of files older than 30 days in the current folder. I tried "find", but it searches recursively in all the sub directories.
Can I restrict the recursive search and extract the files only from current directory ? (18 Replies)
i want to make a bash script that searches a specific pattern in files through all subdirectories beneath the current directory..without using the command grep-R
but only the command grep..
e.g
for i in *
do
grep "pattern" $i
.....
...
done
using the character (*) the script... (5 Replies)
Hi
I was wondering why command 2 doesn't work like command 1 below.
1.
find . -exec grep "test" '{}' \; -print
2.
ls -R | grep "test"
I am trying to search "test" from all the files in the current and sub directories. What's wrong with my command 2?
Thanks in advance for your help (4 Replies)
Hi All
I was wondering what is the most efficient way to find files in the current directory(that may contain 100,000's files), that meets a certain specified file type and of a certain age.
I have experimented with the find command in unix but it also searches all sub directories. I have... (2 Replies)
hi all,
here is the description to my problem.
input parameters: $date1 & $date2
based on the range i need to select the archived files from the archived directory and moved them in to working directory.
can u please help me in writing the code to select the multiple files based on the... (3 Replies)
Hi, I have a question, is there any way I can, when i create a directory, put the current date on it so that the directory name will be "name-current date"? just curious (3 Replies)
this is what i have to find the files modified within the past 24 hours
find . -mtime -1 -type f -print0 | xargs -0 tar rvf "$archive.tar"
however i need to save/name this archive as the current date (MM-DD,YYYY.tar.gz)
how do i doo this (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I am currently coding for a requirement(LINUX OS) where I am supposed to move a file (Lets Call it Employee.txt) from Directory A to Directory B based on 2 date fields as below,
Date_Current = 20120620
Date_Previous = 20120610
Source Directory : /iis_data/source
Target... (11 Replies)
Hi All,
Really stuck up with a requirement where I need to move a file (Lets say date_Employee.txt--the date will have different date values like 20120612/20120613 etc) from one directory to another based on creation/modification dates.
While visiting couple of posts, i could see we can... (3 Replies)
Hi
I am unable to find files, those are present anywhere in the same directory tree, based on the creation date. I need to find the files with their path, as I need to create them in another location and move them. I need some help with a script that may do the job.
Please help (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sam192837465
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
file::dircompare
DirCompare(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation DirCompare(3pm)NAME
File::DirCompare - Perl module to compare two directories using callbacks.
SYNOPSIS
use File::DirCompare;
# Simple diff -r --brief replacement
use File::Basename;
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, sub {
my ($a, $b) = @_;
if (! $b) {
printf "Only in %s: %s
", dirname($a), basename($a);
} elsif (! $a) {
printf "Only in %s: %s
", dirname($b), basename($b);
} else {
print "Files $a and $b differ
";
}
});
# Version-control like Deleted/Added/Modified listing
my (@listing, @modified); # use closure to collect results
File::DirCompare->compare('old_tree', 'new_tree', sub {
my ($a, $b) = @_;
if (! $b) {
push @listing, "D $a";
} elsif (! $a) {
push @listing, "A $b";
} else {
if (-f $a && -f $b) {
push @listing, "M $b";
push @modified, $b;
} else {
# One file, one directory - treat as delete + add
push @listing, "D $a";
push @listing, "A $b";
}
}
});
DESCRIPTION
File::DirCompare is a perl module to compare two directories using a callback, invoked for all files that are 'different' between the two
directories, and for any files that exist only in one or other directory ('unique' files).
File::DirCompare has a single public compare() method, with the following signature:
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, $opts);
The first three arguments are required - $dir1 and $dir2 are paths to the two directories to be compared, and $sub is the subroutine
reference called for all unique or different files. $opts is an optional hashref of options - see OPTIONS below.
The provided subroutine is called for all unique files, and for every pair of 'different' files encountered, with the following signature:
$sub->($file1, $file2)
where $file1 and $file2 are the paths to the two files. For 'unique' files i.e. where a file exists in only one directory, the subroutine
is called with the other argument 'undef' i.e. for:
$sub->($file1, undef)
$sub->(undef, $file2)
the first indicates $file1 exists only in the first directory given ($dir1), and the second indicates $file2 exists only in the second
directory given ($dir2).
OPTIONS
The following optional arguments are supported, passed in using a hash reference after the three required arguments to compare() e.g.
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, {
cmp => $cmp_sub,
ignore_unique => 1,
});
cmp By default, two files are regarded as different if their contents do not match (tested with File::Compare::compare). That default
behaviour can be overridden by providing a 'cmp' subroutine to do the file comparison, returning zero if the two files are equal, and
non-zero if not.
E.g. to compare using modification times instead of file contents:
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, {
cmp => sub { -M $_[0] <=> -M $_[1] },
});
ignore_cmp
If you want to see all corresponding files, not just 'different' ones, set the 'ignore_cmp' flag to tell File::DirCompare to skip its
file comparison checks i.e.
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub,
{ ignore_cmp => 1 });
ignore_unique
If you want to ignore files that only exist in one of the two directories, set the 'ignore_unique' flag i.e.
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub,
{ ignore_unique => 1 });
SEE ALSO
File::Dircmp, which provides similar functionality (and whose directory walking code I've adapted for this module), but a simpler
reporting-only interface, something like the first example in the SYNOPSIS above.
AUTHOR AND CREDITS
Gavin Carr <gavin@openfusion.com.au>
Thanks to Robin Barker for a bug report and fix for glob problems with whitespace.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2006-2007 by Gavin Carr.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.10.1 2010-03-02 DirCompare(3pm)