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How to find the files that are created in the last hour in unix

Tags:

find

unix

People also ask

How do I find the last modified file in Unix 1 hour?

You can use -mtime option. It returns list of file if the file was last accessed N*24 hours ago. For example to find file in last 2 months (60 days) you need to use -mtime +60 option. -mtime +60 means you are looking for a file modified 60 days ago.

Which command will to find all files which are changed in last 1 hour?

Thus find -ctime 0 finds everything for which the inode has changed (e.g. includes file creation, but also counts link count and permissions and filesize change) less than an hour ago.

How do I find recently created files in Linux?

You can use the ls command to list files including their modification date by adding the -lt flag as shown in the example below. The flag -l is used to format the output as a log. The flag -t is used to list last modified files, newer first.


If the dir to search is srch_dir then either

$ find srch_dir -cmin -60 # change time

or

$ find srch_dir -mmin -60 # modification time

or

$ find srch_dir -amin -60 # access time

shows files created, modified or accessed in the last hour.

correction :ctime is for change node time (unsure though, please correct me )


UNIX filesystems (generally) don't store creation times. Instead, there are only access time, (data) modification time, and (inode) change time.

That being said, find has -atime -mtime -ctime predicates:

$ man 1 find
...
-ctime  n
        The primary shall evaluate as true if the time of last change of
        file status information subtracted from the initialization time,
        divided by 86400 (with any remainder discarded), is n.
...

Thus find -ctime 0 finds everything for which the inode has changed (e.g. includes file creation, but also counts link count and permissions and filesize change) less than an hour ago.


check out this link and then help yourself out.

the basic code is

#create a temp. file
echo "hi " >  t.tmp
# set the file time to 2 hours ago
touch -t 200405121120  t.tmp 
# then check for files
find /admin//dump -type f  -newer t.tmp -print -exec ls -lt {} \; | pg

find ./ -cTime -1 -type f

OR

find ./ -cmin -60 -type f


sudo find / -Bmin 60

From the man page:

-Bmin n

True if the difference between the time of a file's inode creation and the time find was started, rounded up to the next full minute, is n minutes.

Obviously, you may want to set up a bit differently, but this primary seems the best solution for searching for any file created in the last N minutes.