Notice that the -exec ls ... output shows duplicate filenames.
There, not here. Not with my GNU find, which works as expected.
Please, again, try yourself:
Quote:
There is nothing in that find command that prints a matching file name twice (and non-consecutively), and since a directory cannot contain two identically-named files, the shell must be matching one or more directories with that pattern (in addition to *test* files in tmp, if any).
Strange. He run an -exec -ls -l, not an-execdir. And he didn't notice that the files were in different subdirectories!?
Quote:
With a directory path, the -exec predicates of those find commands will list or attempt to delete every regular file in that directory and its subdirectories, regardless of a file's name.
Of course.
So you're saying that his find is working as expected, too. Nice.
--
Bye
There, not here. Not with my GNU find, which works as expected.
Please, again, try yourself:
I don't need to try anything. Looking at your output, your test results are exactly what I would expect. However, your test is not relevant. Your file layout does not match the OP's (if it does, the sample data in post #3 is wrong).
can never ever be the output of an
command, we cannot know what the OP has really done and what has been the real output.
In his first post, the OP stated:
Quote:
It seems you have totally missed my point.
We both have made assumption about what has happened. You seem to be sure that the last output in post3 has been something with the names of the files repeated two times... and that the OP missed the different subdirs despite not using -execdir, which is a bit strange.
I assumed that that output has been duplicated by the OP in posting, and that he wrote the truth in his first post. So I just assured him that my find works as expected, not knowing what's going on there.
Re-reading all the thread, you can surely be right.
--
Bye
Since ... can never ever be the output of an ls -l command, we cannot know what the OP has really done and what has been the real output.
... <snip> ....
We both have made assumption about what has happened. You seem to be sure that the last output in post3 has been something with the names of the files repeated two times... and that the OP missed the different subdirs despite not using -execdir, which is a bit strange.
I assumed that that output has been duplicated by the OP in posting, and that he wrote the truth in his first post. So I just assured him that my find works as expected, not knowing what's going on there.
Very good points.
Add to them that none of the find commands in posts #1 and #3 are syntactically valid: the ; that terminates an -exec ... must be the only character in its argument.
Hello.
From a script, a command for a test is use :
find /home/user_install -maxdepth 1 -type f -newer /tmp/000_skel_file_deb ! -newer /tmp/000_skel_file_end -name '.bashrc' -o -name '.profile' -o -name '.gtkrc-2.0' -o -name '.i18n' -o -name '.inputrc'
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I am trying to find files newer than a given file and them mv them to a new location.
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and
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Hi,
I have two scripts that remove files. One works fine and is coded
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etc
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Hi
I have a little problem with the find command in a script that I'm writing. The script should check if there are some files younger than 100 seconds and then syncronise them with rsync.
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Hi People,
I have a directory full of compressed files (.Z extention)
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Regards,
Abhishek (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'm using the following command to get a list of files on the system.
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Hi All,
i am writing a shell script in korn shell
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the directory has different format files.
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cd /home/data/pavi
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read DAYS... (2 Replies)