On Thu, Sep 13, 2001 at 02:43:02AM +0100, Chris Kenrick wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm a bit confused about Unix timestamps on files. In
> particular, I want to know what the timestamp on an
> 'ls -l' or a 'find . -ls' means.
>
You can usually get this kind of information from man pages or info docs.
On 13-Sep-2001 Chris Kenrick wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm a bit confused about Unix timestamps on files. In
> particular, I want to know what the timestamp on an
> 'ls -l' or a 'find . -ls' means.
>
$ ls -l test.py
-rw-r--r--1 shaleh users 131 Sep 12 13:10 test.py
This is referred t
Hi all,
I'm a bit confused about Unix timestamps on files. In
particular, I want to know what the timestamp on an
'ls -l' or a 'find . -ls' means.
On a different but related note, what is the easiest
combination of commands to find
A) A list of files in a given directory that have been
accessed
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