On 7/31/07, Mark Haney <mhaney ercbroadband org> wrote:
Rodolfo Alcazar Portillo wrote:
Am Dienstag, den 31.07.2007, 11:00 -0400 schrieb Miner, Jonathan W (CSC)
...
[rodolfoap] /home/rodolfoap > for n in $(seq 10 40); do touch XXXX20070515_112011_942_${n}.bz2; done
[rodolfoap] /home/rodolfoap > rm XXXX20070515_112011_942_11.bz2
[rodolfoap] /home/rodolfoap > rm XXXX20070515_112011_942_22.bz2
[rodolfoap] /home/rodolfoap > rm XXXX20070515_112011_942_33.bz2
[rodolfoap] /home/rodolfoap > for n in $(seq 10 40); do if [ ! -e *_${n}.bz2 ]; then echo NOT FOUND: $n; fi; done
NOT FOUND: 11
NOT FOUND: 22
NOT FOUND: 33
[rodolfoap] /home/rodolfoap >
Good luck.
I think this would probably work except I really need to know which ones
are out of sequence as is, changing the filename would eliminate that
capability and the missing files are the ones I need. See, I'm
receiving the files from a separate server and they are sent to me in
this format. I need to know which ones I /don't/ receive so I know
which ones I need to have resent. Make sense?
Yes. But you must have a pattern with which we can compare your received
files. Which is the exact pattern? If you have this clear, we can
probably solve the problem with bash.
Waiting...