06-21-2005
Thanks!!! Can I Marry You ? :-)
you are the best
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
I posted this over at Macnn and was redirected here... I'm not a unix programmer at all, but I have some backup if needed. Thanks in advance for any input.
Is there a command for the osX terminal that will list sequentially numbered groups of file as one line instead of individually,... (1 Reply)
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
i have some 100's of files in the format .tar.gz. how to uncompress them in a single shot
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:
:
:
file100.tar.gz
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3. Shell Programming and Scripting
i have some 350 files in a dir: i want to remove them in one shot,
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I need to find all the files that have group Read or Write permission or files that have user write permission.
This is what I have so far:
find . -exec ls -l {} \; | awk '/-...rw..w./ {print $1 " " $3 " " $4 " " $9}'
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a master file that i need to split into multiple files based on matched patterns. sample of my data as follows:-
scaff_1 a e 123 130 c_scaff_100
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6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi I have 4 files in a folder and I am supposed to group and zip them via a mapping file as such:
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Hi
Is there an easy was to list a group of file (*.txt) and report how much disk space they are using in total?
Cheers (2 Replies)
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9. AIX
Dears
it is normal that the below binaries stay without any owner and group
I have checked it in many servers and the like the below
/usr/lpp/bos.net/inst_root/etc/ipsec# ls -lrt
total 248
-r-xr-xr-x 1 987 987 13589 Jun 29 2005 default_group
-r-xr-xr-x ... (5 Replies)
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10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
I have two directories of files (new-config-files and old-config-files):
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new-config-files/that-db/config.inc.php
new-config-files/old-db/config.inc.php
new-config-files/new-db/config.inc.php
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etc.
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GROUP(5) BSD File Formats Manual GROUP(5)
NAME
group -- format of the group permissions file
DESCRIPTION
The file </etc/group> consists of newline separated ASCII records, one per group, containing four colon ':' separated fields. These fields
are as follows:
group Name of the group.
passwd Group's encrypted password.
gid The group's decimal ID.
member Group members.
The group field is the group name used for granting file access to users who are members of the group. The gid field is the number associ-
ated with the group name. They should both be unique across the system (and often across a group of systems) since they control file access.
The passwd field is an optional encrypted password. This field is rarely used and an asterisk is normally placed in it rather than leaving
it blank. The member field contains the names of users granted the privileges of group. The member names are separated by commas without
spaces or newlines. A user is automatically in a group if that group was specified in their /etc/passwd entry and does not need to be added
to that group in the /etc/group file.
INTERACTION WITH DIRECTORY SERVICES
Processes generally find group records using one of the getgrent(3) family of functions. On Mac OS X, these functions interact with the
DirectoryService(8) daemon, which reads the /etc/group file as well as searching other directory information services to determine groups and
group membership.
FILES
/etc/group
SEE ALSO
passwd(1), setgroups(2), crypt(3), getgrent(3), initgroups(3), passwd(5), DirectoryService(8)
BUGS
The passwd(1) command does not change the group passwords.
HISTORY
A group file format appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX.
Mac OS X July 18, 1995 Mac OS X