How to fix a broken owner for files from world & build from ports?
Ralf Mardorf
ralf.mardorf at rocketmail.com
Tue Jan 29 03:18:25 UTC 2013
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013 04:04:21 +0100, Joshua Isom <jrisom at gmail.com> wrote:
> On 1/28/2013 8:54 PM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>> On Tue, 29 Jan 2013 03:41:34 +0100, Joshua Isom <jrisom at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>> On 1/28/2013 7:56 PM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>>>> Still not perfect, I guess I need something similar to ls -RAl for
>>>> some
>>>> directories :S and I didn't test what awk will do with names
>>>> including a
>>>> space.
>>>
>>> Try `find /dir -ls`. You can pipe it into sed like this `find /dir
>>> -ls| sed -e 's%/dir%%g'` and then get something easily comparable.
>>
>> Cool, it does display the path, but there's still the other issue:
>>
>> $ touch test\ test
>> $ find * -ls| sed -e 's%/dir%%g'| awk '{print $5" "$11}'
>> rocketmouse test
>>
>> Perhaps awk isn't that important, but it e.g. will filter different file
>> sizes, for e.g. configurations I edited in the meantime.
>>
>> :(
>
> You're basically getting down to the dirty tedious parts. Unless you
> know a full featured scripting language with a find library to find and
> compare ownership, or you want a custom c program for a rare occurrence,
> you're just going to have to do it the tedious way. Computer's aren't
> always fun and glory. For every beautiful network, someone had to run
> the wires into the wall, through the dirt, and to the other building.
I already have an idea. Since $11 is the last output I might be able to
check whether there is a space followed by a sign, by a loop, assumed
there should be several spaces, interrupted by signs. I guess to care for
several spaces one after the other and exotic signs that might "break" awk
IMO isn't needed.
It might become a very long "command line" ;). Perhaps I don't need it, I
have to test it. I extracted the first dump, but need a rest now.
Thank you :).
More information about the freebsd-questions
mailing list