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Commands using wc

Commands using wc from sorted by
Terminal - Commands using wc - 136 results
find . -name "*.EXT" | xargs grep -n "TODO" | wc -l
cmp -l file1.bin file2.bin | wc -l
# wc -l /var/log/security/writable.today
2009-03-19 12:25:52
User: mpb
Functions: wc
0

Mandriva Linux includes a security tool called "msec" (configurable via "draksec").

One of the many things it regularily checks for is world writeable files.

If any are found, it writes the list to /var/log/security/writable.today.

"wc -l" simply counts the number of lines in the file.

This number should be low.

Browse through /var/log/security/writable.today and consider if any of those files *need* to be world-writeable (and if not, modify the permissions. eg: "chmod o-w $file").

A large number of world-writeable files may indicate that umask is not correctly set in /etc/profile (or ${HOME}/.bash_profile) but could also indicate poor security configuration or even malicious activity.

for file in `find . -type f`; do cat $file; done | wc -l
find . -type f | wc -l
while [ $(deborphan | wc -l) -gt 0 ]; do dpkg --purge $(deborphan); done
2009-02-18 22:31:22
User: mulad
Functions: wc
5

Upgraded Debian/Ubuntu/etc. systems may have a number of "orphaned" packages which are just taking up space, which can be found with the "deborphan" command. While you could just do "dpkg --purge $(deborphan)", the act of purging orphans will often create more orphans. This command will get them all in one shot.

grep "processor" /proc/cpuinfo | wc -l
2009-02-17 05:39:49
User: jbcurtis
Functions: grep wc
4

/proc/cpuinfo contains information about the CPU.

Search for "processor" in the /proc/cpuinfo file

wc -l, counts the number of lines.

i=0; f=$(find . -type f -iregex ".*jpg");c=$(echo $f|sed "s/ /\n/g"| wc -l);for x in $f;do i=$(($i + 1));echo "$x $i of $c"; mogrify -strip $x;done
find . \( -name '*.h' -o -name '*.cc' \) | xargs grep . | wc -l
2009-02-09 11:44:35
User: dgomes
Functions: find grep wc xargs
3

Counts number of lines of code in *.h and *.cc files

find . -name "*.py" | xargs wc -l
find . -type f | wc -l