If find doesn't work, no other user-mode application is going to work. The filename is invalid and the kernel refuses to touch it. You need a disk editor.
This is also my last attempt.
YOU USE THIS AT YOUR OWN RISK!
I discovered that Windows CP 1252 certainly does have these characters as single bytes in it.
Example printout:
REMEMBER! You are messing with a file that is NOT native to OSX 10.11.x.
Save/backup everything you need before removing the final '#' on the last line and then executing this code. WWW.UNIX.COM and its helpers in this thread do NOT hold any responsibility for anything that goes awry.
IMHO a glob match returns even unprintable characters.
So the last proposal does not improve anything.
And the clri command (didn't know it yet), will cause extra harm.
It is useless to clear the inode of the file, because an inode contains the data block structure and all meta information BUT THE FILENAME.
The filename and the pointer to the inode is stored in the directory.
The directory is another inode. To have an effect you must clear the directory inode.
I expect less damage with
if supported by the OS. If successful, you need a full file system check, in order to collect the dangling file inode and its data blocks.
I successfully did that a couple of times on a non-journaling UFS in single-user mode (no desktop, no other processes running).
I would go for a disk editor. Find the offending name, compare the shown bytes with the characters from the ls command, change one byte, save, compare again, ...
Clri is obsoleted for normal file system repair work by fsck(8).
Clri zeros out the inodes with the specified inode number(s) on the filesystem residing on the given special_device. The fsck(8) utility is
usually run after clri to reclaim the zero'ed inode(s) and the blocks previously claimed by those inode(s). Both read and write permission
are required on the specified special_device.
The primary purpose of this routine is to remove a file which for some reason is not being properly handled by fsck(8). Once removed, it is
anticipated that fsck(8) will be able to clean up the resulting mess.
Shell script logic
Hi
I have 2 input files like with file 1 content as (file1)
"BRGTEST-242" a.txt "BRGTEST-240" a.txt "BRGTEST-219" e.txt
File 2 contents as fle(2)
"BRGTEST-244" a.txt "BRGTEST-244" b.txt "BRGTEST-231" c.txt "BRGTEST-231" d.txt "BRGTEST-221" e.txt
I want to get... (22 Replies)
Hi,
I need to compare 2 text files with around 60000 rows and 1 column. I need to compare these and write the mismatch data to 3rd file.
File1 - file2 = file3
wc -l file1.txt
58112
wc -l file2.txt
55260
head -5 file1.txt
101214200123
101214700300
101250030067
101214100500... (10 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I'm a great fan of this forum... it has helped me tone my skills in shell scripting. I have a challenge here, which I'm sure you guys would help me in achieving...
File A has a list of job ids and I need to compare this with the File B (*.log) and File C (extend *.log) and copy... (6 Replies)
I've some files created by a script.
For some reason last time the script run was interrupted for an error and the files produced by the script are undeletable.
i've tryed as root with command 'rm' and even if i got no error in command execution the files are still there.
These are the... (9 Replies)
when i try to ls -lrt the directory, the "undeletable" file is listed.
but when i try to ls -lrt *exe, the "undeletable" file is not listed.
this "undeletable" is the file that i want to delete from the directory.
but when i try to delete/rename/copy.... it, it show that "No such file or... (10 Replies)