Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: find results
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers find results Post 80643 by Carmen123 on Wednesday 10th of August 2005 10:17:19 AM
Old 08-10-2005
I try
find / -size -nc10000
I get

/bla..bla../ Permissions denied
...
for a lot of times

and then .. nothing !
The session is expired.

Unlucky I work from a PC.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to sort find results

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)
Discussion started by: groundlevel
8 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

need to move find results

I am looking for files of a certian type and logging them. After they are logged they need to be moved to a different directory. HOw can i incorporate that in my current script? CSV_OUTFILE="somefile.csv" find . -name W\* -exec printf "%s,%s,OK" {} `date '+%Y%m%d%H%M%S'` \; > ${CSV_OUTFILE} ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: pimentelgg
9 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

FIND returns different results in script

When I execute this line at the command prompt I get a different answer than when I run it in a script? Any ideas on how to resolve? I'm trying to find all files/dir in a directory except files that start with the word file. Once I get this command to work, I will add the "delete" part to the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: blt123
6 Replies

4. Solaris

Piping results of 'ls' to 'find' using 'xargs'

I'm trying to get a count of all the files in a series of directories on a per directory basis. Directory structure is like (but with many more files): /dir1/subdir1/file1.txt /dir1/subdir1/file2.txt /dir1/subdir2/file1.txt /dir1/subdir2/file2.txt /dir2/subdir1/file1.txt... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: MartynAbbott
4 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Why do these 2 find commands return different results?

Hi, I am using the korn shell on Solaris box. Why does the following 2 commands return different results? This command returns no results (I already used this command to create a list of files which I moved to an archive directory) find ????10??_*.dat -type f -mtime +91 However this... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: stumpy1
15 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sort find results

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)
Discussion started by: shellBeginner75
4 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to do ls -l on results of grep and find?

Hi, Am running the command below to search for files that contains a certain string. grep -il "shutdown" `find . -type f -mtime -1 -print` | grep "^./scripts/active" How do I get it to do a ls -l on the list of files? I tried doing ls -l `grep -il "shutdown" `find . -type f -mtime -1... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
5 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

HP-UX find -mmtime results are one day off

Hey, I am writing a script to delete log files that are older than one day (I'm going to run it weekly). Basically, it should work so that it only keeps the current day, but keeping the previous day as well isn't a dealbreaker. I am running the following line on the files listed below: ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: unaligned
1 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Weird 'find' results

Hello and thanks in advance for any help anyone can offer me I'm trying to learn the find command and thought I was understanding it... Apparently I was wrong. I was doing compound searches and I started getting weird results with the -size test. I was trying to do a search on a 1G file owned by... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: bodisha
14 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find with rm command gives strange results

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)
Discussion started by: jtamminen
2 Replies
Simplex(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					      Simplex(3pm)

NAME
PDL::Opt::Simplex -- Simplex optimization routines SYNOPSIS
use PDL::Opt::Simplex; ($optimum,$ssize,$optval) = simplex($init,$initsize,$minsize, $maxiter, sub {evaluate_func_at($_[0])}, sub {display_simplex($_[0])} ); DESCRIPTION
This package implements the commonly used simplex optimization algorithm. The basic idea of the algorithm is to move a "simplex" of N+1 points in the N-dimensional search space according to certain rules. The main benefit of the algorithm is that you do not need to calculate the derivatives of your function. $init is a 1D vector holding the initial values of the N fitted parameters, $optimum is a vector holding the final solution. $optval is the evaluation of the final solution. $initsize is the size of $init (more...) $minsize is some sort of convergence criterion (more...) - e.g. $minsize = 1e-6 The sub is assumed to understand more than 1 dimensions and threading. Its signature is 'inp(nparams); [ret]out()'. An example would be sub evaluate_func_at { my($xv) = @_; my $x1 = $xv->slice("(0)"); my $x2 = $xv->slice("(1)"); return $x1**4 + ($x2-5)**4 + $x1*$x2; } Here $xv is a vector holding the current values of the parameters being fitted which are then sliced out explicitly as $x1 and $x2. $ssize gives a very very approximate estimate of how close we might be - it might be miles wrong. It is the euclidean distance between the best and the worst vertices. If it is not very small, the algorithm has not converged. FUNCTIONS
simplex Simplex optimization routine ($optimum,$ssize,$optval) = simplex($init,$initsize,$minsize, $maxiter, sub {evaluate_func_at($_[0])}, sub {display_simplex($_[0])} ); See module "PDL::Opt::Simplex" for more information. CAVEATS
Do not use the simplex method if your function has local minima. It will not work. Use genetic algorithms or simulated annealing or conjugate gradient or momentum gradient descent. They will not really work either but they are not guaranteed not to work ;) (if you have infinite time, simulated annealing is guaranteed to work but only after it has visited every point in your space). SEE ALSO
Ron Shaffer's chemometrics web page and references therein: "http://chem1.nrl.navy.mil/~shaffer/chemoweb.html". Numerical Recipes (bla bla bla XXX ref). The demonstration (Examples/Simplex/tsimp.pl and tsimp2.pl). AUTHOR
Copyright(C) 1997 Tuomas J. Lukka. All rights reserved. There is no warranty. You are allowed to redistribute this software / documentation under certain conditions. For details, see the file COPYING in the PDL distribution. If this file is separated from the PDL distribution, the copyright notice should be included in the file. perl v5.14.2 2012-01-02 Simplex(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:00 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy