I have to do a directory clean up on several machines. The task is as follows:
go to a particular directory (cd /xxx)
1. create a directory ' SCRIPTCLEANUP ' ( i KNOW IT)
loop through
2. List the directory
3. if directory and start with 'DQA' leave it,
4. if directory or file move it to... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I just want to ask the following use of find command:
1. how can I find files only to the current directory?
2. how can I find files to directories and all subdiretories (are this include soft links?) but will not go to other mountpoints that is under that mountpoint.
Im combining... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Has anyone tried to restrict Solaris 10 unix find on a large directory structure based on time to stop running after finding the first occurrence of a matching query. Basically I'm trying to build up a usage map of user workspaces based on file modification (week/month/3 months/year etc) and... (3 Replies)
hai,
I am new to Unix, I have a requirement to display owner name , directory or sub directory name, who's owner name is not equal to "oasitqtc".
(here "oasitqtc" is the owner of the directory or sub directory.)
i have a command (below) which will display all folders and sub folders, but i... (6 Replies)
I am trying to write a script that once executed it will search within a directory and copy only the newest directory that has not been copied before to a new location. Kind of like what ROBOCOPY /M does in windows?
The directories are not left in the new location so using a sync action won't... (2 Replies)
Need shell script to:
1/keep polling a directory "receive_dir" irrespective of having files or no files in it.
2/move the files over to another directory "send_dir".
3/the script should only stop polling upon a file "stopfile" get moved to "receive_dir". Thanks !!
My script:
until
do... (0 Replies)
Please, I beg you, “Stop!” Yes, stop writing scripts and instead build workflows.
Programmers, Sys-Admins, System Support, I'm talking to you.
Ok, I know in this community I'm going to get some serious backlash for my statements but I truly believe in my statement.
There was a time when... (13 Replies)
I know that this basic question has been asked many times and solutions all over the internet, but none of the are working for me. I have a directory in the root directory, named "-p".
# ls -l /
total 198
<snip>
drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 4096 Dec 3 14:18 opt
drwxr-xr-x 2 root ... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I've just started using a Solaris machine with SunOS 5.10.
After the machine is turned on, I open a Console window and at the prompt, if I execute a pwd command, it tells me I'm at my home directory (someone configured "myuser" as default user after init).
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: egyassun
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
rmdir
RMDIR(1) BSD General Commands Manual RMDIR(1)NAME
rmdir -- remove directories
SYNOPSIS
rmdir [-pv] directory ...
DESCRIPTION
The rmdir utility removes the directory entry specified by each directory argument, provided it is empty.
Arguments are processed in the order given. In order to remove both a parent directory and a subdirectory of that parent, the subdirectory
must be specified first so the parent directory is empty when rmdir tries to remove it.
The following option is available:
-p Each directory argument is treated as a pathname of which all components will be removed, if they are empty, starting with the last
most component. (See rm(1) for fully non-discriminant recursive removal.)
-v Be verbose, listing each directory as it is removed.
EXIT STATUS
The rmdir utility exits with one of the following values:
0 Each directory entry specified by a directory operand referred to an empty directory and was removed successfully.
>0 An error occurred.
EXAMPLES
Remove the directory foobar, if it is empty:
$ rmdir foobar
Remove all directories up to and including cow, stopping at the first non-empty directory (if any):
$ rmdir -p cow/horse/monkey
SEE ALSO rm(1)STANDARDS
The rmdir utility is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible.
HISTORY
A rmdir command appeared in Version 1 AT&T UNIX.
BSD March 15, 2013 BSD