Rodolfo Alcazar Portillo wrote:
On 7/31/07, Mark Haney <mhaney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 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...
Okay, here goes, the XXXX part denotes a 4 character symbol for a NWS
radar site, the 8 digits after that is the date followed by '_HHMMSS_'
of time the data was collected. The next part I'm not certain, but
believe it's the scan number of that particular radar scan, then the
last 2 digits are the part number of a complete scan. In other words, I
have a series of weather radar scans that get broken up into 'radials'
(the .bz2 files) and numbered. Our customers get fed this data through
our servers, but a couple have reported missing files. I'm trying to
track down the problem, but can't go through 2GB of volume scans every
day for possibly one missing file.
The files are stored in directories in this format: XXXX/date/ so I have
multiple volume scans in each day's directory.
Does this help?
--
Recedite, plebes! Gero rem imperialem!
Mark Haney
Sr. Systems Administrator
ERC Broadband
(828) 350-2415
Call (866) ERC-7110 for after hours support
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