On Fri, Apr 11, 2008 at 4:04 AM, James Youngman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 2008/4/10 Salman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > Please see attachment 2 (find.txt) for what is actually returned.
> > Please note that while these results were generated today (4/10), even
> > on 4/9, the same listing was
2008/4/10 Salman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Please see attachment 2 (find.txt) for what is actually returned.
> Please note that while these results were generated today (4/10), even
> on 4/9, the same listing was returned for -mtime 1.
You have probably run afoul of the rounding behaviour. Try us
On 2008-04-09 Salman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> Total number of files: 1442 (and growing)
> Oldest file:
> -rw--- 1 postgres postgres 3969164 Apr 8 13:50
> 000101BF00DB.gz
> Newest file:
> -rw--- 1 postgres postgres 3622808 Apr 9 10:22
> 000101C50081.
An example:
I need to write some scripts which can automatically, but reliably,
prune files older than X days old from our postgresql WAL log dir.
Thus far, I've been doing this by hand as I cannot get find to print
out the results I expect.
Since last clean-up, the directory contains the followi
As far as I can tell, all the facilities you need are already in
place. Did you read the documentation for the options that already
exist? What criteria do you want to use that aren't currently
supported? If you could construct a reproducible example (using date
and touch to generate appropria
* Request is for the 'find' utility.
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Package: findutils
Version: 4.4.0-2
Severity: wishlist
Hello,
I looked through the existing wishlist items to see if such a request
already had been made, but did not find any. I apologize if this is a
duplicate (I'm sure someone at some point had to have asked for this).
I think it would make t
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