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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers ?script/cmds 2 list open files???? Post 820 by bn80865 on Saturday 20th of January 2001 05:09:00 PM
Old 01-20-2001
Question

I would like to have the commands or a scripts that will show me files that are not open by any process and meet a certain pattern (ie arch.log1_117512.dbf).

Basically I a wanting to delete all arched redo logs that oracle has popped out execpt for the current one it is writting to. I am assuming that the ones it is done writting to are not opened by any process.

I have searched through my books and I can not find anything telling me how to determine if a file is open and who has it open.

A breif explanation of any commands given would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,
Harry Britton
::email removed::

Last edited by oombera; 02-18-2004 at 10:54 AM..
 

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pid(n)                                                         Tcl Built-In Commands                                                        pid(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
pid - Retrieve process identifiers SYNOPSIS
pid ?fileId? _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
If the fileId argument is given then it should normally refer to a process pipeline created with the open command. In this case the pid command will return a list whose elements are the process identifiers of all the processes in the pipeline, in order. The list will be empty if fileId refers to an open file that is not a process pipeline. If no fileId argument is given then pid returns the process identi- fier of the current process. All process identifiers are returned as decimal strings. EXAMPLE
Print process information about the processes in a pipeline using the SysV ps program before reading the output of that pipeline: set pipeline [open "| zcat somefile.gz | grep foobar | sort -u"] # Print process information exec ps -fp [pid $pipeline] >@stdout # Print a separator and then the output of the pipeline puts [string repeat - 70] puts [read $pipeline] close $pipeline SEE ALSO
exec(n), open(n) KEYWORDS
file, pipeline, process identifier Tcl 7.0 pid(n)
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