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Date:      Tue, 21 Nov 2000 06:38:01 -0800
From:      Chip <chip@wiegand.org>
To:        "freebsd-questions@freebsd.org" <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: 'find' is running all by itself
Message-ID:  <3A1A88C9.2EE37BA5@wiegand.org>
References:  <3A19E749.E9E048E2@wiegand.org> <20001120191139.A12194@intacct.com> <3A1A0506.AC75E96C@wiegand.org> <20001121031225.A65525@intacct.com>

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John P. Campbell wrote:
> 
> Wading through the serious and not so serious responses, I hope you got your
> answer.  Explaining again:

Yes, thankyou for you help. I did find the listings from grep.
There 
is a lot of parameters, is that the correct term?, after each. I
will
have to learn what they mean.
 
> In the directory /etc/periodic/daily there are a number of scripts.
> In mine, they are named 110.clean-tmps, etc, etc.  These scripts contain
> commands that run each day.  find is most likely one of them.  You can see this
> by running the following commands:
> 
> cd /etc/periodic/daily
> grep find *

Yes, it is there on five lines.
 
> This looks for the string 'find' in any file in the current directory.  There
> are two other directories in /etc/periodic: weekly and monthly.  These are the
> scripts that run weekly and monthly respectively.
> 
> If you need more help, feel free to write.

Once again, thank you for your help.

--
Chip
 
> jpc
> 
> On Mon, Nov 20, 2000 at 09:15:50PM -0800, owner-freebsd-questions @ FreeBSD . ORG Mon Nov 20 21 wrote:
> > John P. Campbell wrote:
> > >
> > > A look at /etc/periodic/daily on my box shows that find runs quite often.
> > > It's a good chance that is what you are seeing.
> > >
> > > <rubina>: jpc % cd /etc/periodic/daily/
> > > <rubina>: daily % grep find *
> >
> > I tried this command as you have it shown above and get
> > daily: command not found
> > Besides that, in my daily directory is a whole bunch of stuff,
> > and
> > find is not amoung any of it. Should it be? It's not any big
> > deal,
> > I'm just curious where it's starting and what is telling it to
> > start. None of the other fbsd machines do this.
> >
> > --
> > Chip
> >
> > > 100.clean-disks:find / \( ! -fstype local -o -fstype rdonly \) -a -prune -o \
> > > 110.clean-tmps: find . -type f -atime +3 -ctime +3 ! -name '.X*-lock' \
> > > 110.clean-tmps: find -d . ! -name . -type d -mtime +1 -delete
> > > 110.clean-tmps: find . ! -name . -atime +7 -ctime +3 -delete
> > > 110.clean-tmps: find -d . ! -name . ! -name vi.recover -type d -mtime +1
> > > -delete
> > > 120.clean-preserve:     cd /var/preserve && find . ! -name . -mtime +7 -delete
> > > 140.clean-rwho: cd /var/rwho && find . ! -name . -mtime +7 -delete
> > > 150.clean-hoststat:     cd /var/spool/.hoststat && find * -mtime +3 -delete
> > >
> > > jpc
> > >
> > > On Mon, Nov 20, 2000 at 07:08:57PM -0800, owner-freebsd-questions @ FreeBSD . ORG Mon Nov 20 19 wrote:
> > > > I have several FBSD 4.0 machines, and on one of them
> > > > the 'find' command will start running by itself. I found
> > > > out about this when I heard the hard drive reading itself
> > > > wildly, so I looked at top, and there was find at the top.
> > > > This happens at least every evening, sometimes several times.
> > > > This machine has mysql installed, and nothing much else, just
> > > > a straight install of 4.0.
> > > > Any ideas what could be causing this?
> > > >
> > > > --
> > > > Chip W.
> > > > www.wiegand.org
> > > > Alternative Operating Systems
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
> > > > with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
> > > >
> > >
> > > --
> > > John P. Campbell
> > > Application Engineer
> > > Intacct Corporation
> > > 408-395-0961
> >
> > --
> > Chip W.
> > www.wiegand.org
> > Alternative Operating Systems
> >
> >
> > To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
> > with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
> >
> 
> --
> John P. Campbell
> Intacct Corporation
>         - "Good judgement comes from experience.
>                 Experience comes from bad judgement."

-- 
Chip W.	
www.wiegand.org
Alternative Operating Systems


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