10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I supposed that it was working fine but now I see that it's not working as expected.
I am running under ubuntu14.04, trusty.
My plan was to search folderA and all subdirectories and move any txt file to destination folder, folderB :
find /home/user/folderA/ -type f -iname "*.txt"... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: baris35
0 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Have you tried running the command below? On the same RHEl 6.8 or 6.6. It will give you different output.
find . -maxdepth 1 -ctime -7 -type f
rpm -qa|grep find
findutils-4.4.2-9.el6.x86_64
# cat /etc/redhat-release
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.8 (Santiago)
# (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: invinzin21
6 Replies
3. Homework & Coursework Questions
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
Write a shell script that takes a single command line parameter, a file path (might be relative or absolute). The script should examine that file and print a single line consisting of the phrase:
Windows ASCII
if the files is an... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kwatt019
4 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
Is there an easy way to find the disk-type from the command line or with another api ? sdparm works for SAS but not for SATA, hdparm works for SATA but not SAS.
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: coderd
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Can anyone see why the following command returns all files and not just the directories as specified?
find . -type d -exec ls -F {} \;
Also tried
find . -type d -name "*" -exec ls -F {} \;
find . -type d -name "*" -exec ls -F '{}' \; -print
Always returns all files :-\
OS is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tuns99
2 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all does find command return anything if the file to be searched is not found? Like if I search from a file in a dir does it return false or null if the file is not found? Please suggests. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Veenak15
3 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
i have a file that contents multiple instances of the same ERROR.Below the content of the file
ERROR_FILE.txt
Archiver6.log:2009-05-25 17:58:44,385 ERROR - CleanLPDataMessage: Missing Intervals: 2
Archiver6.log:2009-05-25 18:27:36,056 ERROR - CleanLPDataMessage: Missing Intervals: 5... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ali560045
5 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
Simple question :
How to find the value type from a variable :
Ex : var="1" => type is numeric
var="a" => type is character
Thx :D (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: madmat
3 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
#!/bin/ksh
find /home/other -ls -type f -xdev | sort -nrk7 | head -2 >bigfile.txt
The above is my script, which writes the large file into a file called bigfile.txt. My script contains only the above two lines.
after execution i am getting the output like
find: cannot chdir to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Arunprasad
1 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all
Can anyone tell me why this is not working ?
i saw somewhere that i must have serach (execute) permission which i have
but it still wont work
thx (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shimont
2 Replies
File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3)
NAME
File::Find::Rule::Procedural - File::Find::Rule's procedural interface
SYNOPSIS
use File::Find::Rule;
# find all .pm files, procedurally
my @files = find(file => name => '*.pm', in => @INC);
DESCRIPTION
In addition to the regular object-oriented interface, File::Find::Rule provides two subroutines for you to use.
"find( @clauses )"
"rule( @clauses )"
"find" and "rule" can be used to invoke any methods available to the OO version. "rule" is a synonym for "find"
Passing more than one value to a clause is done with an anonymous array:
my $finder = find( name => [ '*.mp3', '*.ogg' ] );
"find" and "rule" both return a File::Find::Rule instance, unless one of the arguments is "in", in which case it returns a list of things
that match the rule.
my @files = find( name => [ '*.mp3', '*.ogg' ], in => $ENV{HOME} );
Please note that "in" will be the last clause evaluated, and so this code will search for mp3s regardless of size.
my @files = find( name => '*.mp3', in => $ENV{HOME}, size => '<2k' );
^
|
Clause processing stopped here ------/
It is also possible to invert a single rule by prefixing it with "!" like so:
# large files that aren't videos
my @files = find( file =>
'!name' => [ '*.avi', '*.mov' ],
size => '>20M',
in => $ENV{HOME} );
AUTHOR
Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2003 Richard Clamp. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
File::Find::Rule
perl v5.16.2 2011-09-19 File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3)