Oh! Bad advice!
Sure, delete the files *first*, *then* check to see whether the date criteria is met.
It will "work", but it won't do what you wanted...
In general, you need to prefix the "*" in your find command with a "\", however,
your use of double-quotes *should* achieve the same end. All the same, why don't
you try?
On 7/10/06, Stefan Knecht <
knecht.stefan@gmail.com> wrote:I've been having some odd issues with find where the order of the filters mattered.
try to put -mtime before -name and see if that helps
Stefan
On 7/8/06,
Steve Perry <sperry@sprynet.com> wrote:
Didn't know if anyone else has run across this, but I spent 1.5 hours
trying to get a tried and true find command to work on RHEL4 (32-bit)
without success.
I wanted to delete the audit files in $ORACLE_BASE/admin/<SID>/
adump that were older than 60 days. It shouldn't be rocket science
or so I thought.
the command was
find $ORACLE_BASE/admin/<SID>/adump -name "ora*.aud" -mtime +60
It was supposed to have " -exec rm {} \;", but I never got that far
because it wouldn't return any files.
i could use -60 and it would return files less than 60 days, but "+"
failed to return anything. I tried ctime as well, but nothing.
man and google didn't return anything.
Anybody run across this before?
I thought I'd ask before writing a perl script. Does anyone have any
one-line perl scripts before I write a longer one?
Thanks,
steve
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