-since option for ls -lt
Leo de Wit
leo at philmds.UUCP
Fri Jun 17 23:27:28 AEST 1988
In article <355 at conexch.UUCP> root at conexch.UUCP (Larry Dighera) writes:
>In article <10981 at cgl.ucsf.EDU> seibel at hegel.mmwb.ucsf.edu.UUCP (George Seibel) writes:
[lines deleted]...
simple matter to get a listing of the files that have been changed within
n days. Try this:
find . -ctime -n -exec ls -l {} \;
Where n is the number of days. Use -n to see all files newer than n-days
old, and +n to see all files older n-days old. You can also use all the
other useful options to find like -type, -user, -size, ...
There is a problem with this approach however, there's no way that I am aware
of to prevent find from descending the directory tree. There's yet another
option that would be useful for find.
If you reverse the find and the ls, you get a much faster one:
ls -l `find . -ctime -n -print`
Only one ls needed for all the files (the former solution fires up an ls for
each file that satisfies the condition); you could even use it to exclude
subdirectories, although find will do recursion:
ls -l `find . -ctime -n -print|sed '/\/.*\//d'`
i.e. sed removes lines containing two or more /'s. Not to be recommended for
deep nesting!
Leo.
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