NAME
ncheck_ffs
, ncheck
— generate names from
inode-numbers
SYNOPSIS
ncheck_ffs |
[-ams ] [-f
format] [-i
number ...] filesystem |
DESCRIPTION
ncheck_ffs
generates a list of filenames
and inode numbers for the given file system. Names of directories are
followed by a ‘.’. ncheck_ffs
may be
invoked more simply as ncheck
, with no change in
behaviour.
The options are as follows:
-a
- Print the file names ‘.’ and ‘..’, which are ordinarily skipped.
-f
format- Use a custom output format when printing inode information. Characters
from format are printed for each inode with the
following escape sequences:
\a
- Print a ⟨bell⟩ character.
\b
- Print a ⟨backspace⟩ character.
\e
- Print an ⟨escape⟩ character.
\f
- Print a ⟨form-feed⟩ character.
\I
- Print the inode number.
\n
- Print a ⟨new-line⟩ character.
\P
- Print the pathname to the file using the current inode number.
\r
- Print a ⟨carriage return⟩ character.
\t
- Print a ⟨tab⟩ character.
\v
- Print a ⟨vertical tab⟩ character.
\'
- Print a ⟨single quote⟩ character.
\\
- Print a backslash character.
\0
- Print a NUL character.
All other characters, when prefixed by a backslash, simply print the character following the backslash. The device name is not printed on the first line of output when the
-f
option is specified. -i
number ...- Report only those files whose inode numbers are as listed.
-m
- Give more verbose information on inodes.
-s
- Report only special files and files with set-user-ID or set-group-ID set. This is meant to find hidden violations of security policies.
The report is not sorted.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
An ncheck
command appeared in
Version 6 AT&T UNIX. The
ncheck_ffs
command was designed to be similar in
functionality to the corresponding command in SunOS 4.1.3.
AUTHORS
Thorsten Lockert <[email protected]>