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
LORDER(1) General Commands Manual LORDER(1)
NAME
lorder - find ordering relation for an object library
SYNOPSIS
lorder file ...
DESCRIPTION
The input is one or more object or library archive (see ar(1)) files. The standard output is a list of pairs of object file names, meaning
that the first file of the pair refers to external identifiers defined in the second. The output may be processed by tsort(1) to find an
ordering of a library suitable for one-pass access by ld(1).
This brash one-liner intends to build a new library from existing `.o' files.
ar cr library `lorder *.o | tsort`
FILES
*symref, *symdef
nm(1), sed(1), sort(1), join(1)
SEE ALSO
tsort(1), ld(1), ar(1)
BUGS
The names of object files, in and out of libraries, must end with `.o'; nonsense results otherwise.
LORDER(1)