Delete Files Older Than X days in Unix or Solaris

February 5th, 2023, posted in Solaris
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Delete Files Older Than X days in Unix or Solaris,Delete Files Older Than X days in Solaris,

 

Introduction :

In Production server, there is always a need to free up the disk space from time to time. The best way to achieve is to have a cron job or an autosys job which will delete the older log files from the directory.

In this simple tutorial, we’ll quickly look at the solution to this problem. In order to delete files older than X number of days, try using Unix find command. find command is more powerful than you can really imagine. It comes up with multiple options which when gets handy can help you cover a lot of functional requirements like moving files among directories, deleting old files, archiving files etc.

Recently I came across one such requirement of deleting files older than X days from a directory in Unix server and I thought of sharing the solution with you.


Solution :

Unix find command is used to achieve the desired result.

find /path/to/the/directory/ -type f -name '*' -mtime +30 -exec rm {} \;


Explanation :

Time to breakdown the find command mentioned above :

  1. /path/to/the/directory Edit this portion of the code with the path of your target directory.
  2. -type f : It signifies that we are targeting all the ‘files’ in the specified directory.
  3. -name ‘*’We have used a general regex “*” to match all the file names. You can make it more specific if you need. For example , to delete only dat files use-name "*.dat".
  4. -mtime +30This refers to all the files which are older than 30 days. mtime stands for Modification time in Unix.You can change the number based on your requirement.
  5. exec rm {} \ : This is actually the execution command which calls for deletion of all the files filtered by all the above criteria. rm stands to remove in Unix.

Although it is a very simple command, still I want you understand the usage of mtime in find command in a little more detail.

The POSIX specification for find command states that :

-mtime n The primary shall evaluate as true if the file modification time subtracted from the initialization time, divided by 86400 (with any remainder discarded), is n.

In the descriptions, wherever n is used as a primary argument, it shall be interpreted as a decimal integer optionally preceded by a plus ( ‘+’ ) or minus-sign ( ‘-‘ ) sign, as follows: +n More than nn Exactly n-n Less than.

Important point to note in the above statement is that the fractional part is always ignored. So, when you specify -mtime +1 , it looks for files older more than 1 day. Rather to explain it further, it simply says to match files modified two or more days ago.

If you want to delete files older than 1 day, you can try using -mtime +0 or -mtime 1 or -mmin $((60*24)).

Would suggest you to try playing with the combinations on your own to deepen the understanding.
Still in case you have more questions, please feel free to get in touch with me.

 

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Oracle : FRM-92102 ERRORS

January 14th, 2023, posted in Oracle
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Error reported was

Users are experiencing FRM-92102:A network error has occurred . The forms client attempted to reestablish its connection to the server 5 time(s) witho
ut success. Please check the network connection and try again.

Reference SR is 6782240.992 ( Leviton Mfg Co )

Please read through Note: 365529.1 Ext/Pub Troubleshooting FRM-92XXX Errors in Oracle Applications:
Please provide feedback on the questions listed in sections:
A. General List of Questions
D. Intermittent or Random Disconnects

These sections gave very good understanding on the problem at hand.

The most important point was timeout settings.
What the following timeout settings are set to:
Timeout Parameters:

FORMS60_TIMEOUT = 120

Heartbeat = 2 in $OA_HTML/bin/appsweb.cfg

Self Service Timeout Profile Options:
ICX: Session Timeout = 30
ICX:Limit Time = 4
ICX:Limit connect = 1000

session.timeout=1800000 (zone.properties in Apache)

So analyst recommended following adjustments

The ‘FORMS60_TIMEOUT = 120’ should not be set so high. For users that walk away and stay con
nected, this will consume unnecessary resources.
It is recommended that the ‘FORMS60_TIMEOUT be set to something like 30 minutes with 60 minutes being about the
max.

Concerning the:
ICX:Limit Time = 4
ICX:Limit connect = 1000

The ICX:Limit Time, controls the total time a session can be logged in. If set to 4 hours,
then after 4 hours the user will get disconnected, regardless of what activity
is being done. Bump this setting up to something like 8 to 10 hours.

The ICX:Limit connect, needs to be bumped up to 2000 +, because each time Session Time is
checked it adds another ICX connection. This IS NOT DETERMEND BY THE NUMBER OF U
SER CONNECTIONS. The more ICX checks its self the more ICX connections you are g
oing to see. Session expiration can also occur when the total number of times th
e session is validated exceeds ‘ICX: Limit Connect’.

The above two ICX settings are most likely the source of the errors you are seeing.

So we had to reset above settings and bounce apps.

We had a question about licensing issue as well and analyst said

The ‘ICX:Limit Connect’ has nothing to do with the number of concurrent users connecting to the a
pplications. Increasing ICX:Limit Connect to 2000+ will NOT voilate your licens
ing with Oracle ( Leviton had only 1000 concurrent user license) .

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Happy New Year It Sucks

January 1st, 2023, posted in COMiCS, Scarface'S DIARY
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Happy New Year Sucks

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New Year 2023

December 31st, 2022, posted in COMiCS
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Happy New year 2023,Happy ,New year 2023,Happy New year, 2023

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Commonly used ILOM commands

December 27th, 2022, posted in Oracle, Solaris
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Integrated Lights-out Manager (ILOM) helps to manage and troubleshoot the complete hardware of a server. With the help of ILOM we can remotely manage a server. We can power on and power off it remotely. Let us see some of the most commonly used commands in the ILOM shell.

 

Login related commands

-> start /SP/console        -- start the SP-console
-> show /SP/sessions        -- see the currently active sessions
-> stop /SP/console         -- to stop any user session

Start and stop system

-> start /SYS                            (start system)  
-> stop [-force] /SYS                    (stop system)
-> show /SYS                             (shows the power status)
-> reset /SYS                            (reset host)
-> reset /SP                             (reset ILOM SP)
-> set /HOST send_break_action=break     (send break signal to the OS)
-> reset /CMM                            (to reset CMM on a blade Chassis)

 

Locator commands

To set the locator on or off

-> set /SYS LOCATE=on
-> set /SYS LOCATE=off

Networking Commands

To see the current network configuration of ILOM

-> show /SP/network

To set an IP address for ILOM

-> set pendingipdiscovery=static 
-> set pendingipaddress=10.10.10.10
-> set pendingipnetmask=255.255.255.0
-> set pendingipgateway=10.10.10.1
-> set commitpending=true

To show SP MAC address

show /SP/network macaddress

If on a Blade chassis, to check the CMM IP :

-> show /CMM/network

User administration

-> show /SP/users                  (Display all the ILOM users)
-> show /SP/user/admin             (Display configuration settings of a specific user)
-> create /SP/users/user_name password=PWD role=[administrator|operator]    (create new user)
-> delete /SP/users/username       (Delete a user)
-> set /SP/users/admin01 role=administrator           (set the role of a user)
-> set /SP/users/admin01           (set or change password of user)

Monitoring and logs

-> show /SP/logs/event/list     (ILOM event log)
-> show -level all -output table /SP/faultmgmt     (List all hardware faults)
-> show -level all -output table /SYS type==Temperature value       (List all temperature sensor readings)

Hardware info

-> show -level all -output table /SYS type==DIMM                (show DIMMS)
-> show -level all -output table /SYS type=='Host Processor'    (show CPUs)
-> show -l all /SYS type=='Hard Disk'                           (show disks)

 

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