So this is the script that linux uses?
Or this script is used by you?
--- On Sun, 6/7/09, Bruno Wolff III <bruno(a)wolff.to> wrote:
From: Bruno Wolff III <bruno(a)wolff.to>
Subject: Re: Which directory contents I can remove??
To: "Steve Searle" <steve(a)stevesearle.com>
Cc: "Community assistance, encouragement, and advice for using Fedora."
<fedora-list(a)redhat.com>
Date: Sunday, June 7, 2009, 10:25 PM
On Sun, Jun 07, 2009 at 11:29:36
+0100,
Steve Searle <steve(a)stevesearle.com>
wrote:
> Around 03:03am on Sunday, June 07, 2009 (UK time),
Bruno Wolff III scrawled:
> > Normally you don't have to. There is supposed to
be cron job that deletes
> > files /tmp and /var/tmp that haven't been read or
written in a while.
>
> Supposed to be, or is? Can you give any more
information, esp what it
> is called?
>
> I alsways create my own, and put it in
/etc/cron.daily
That's were the installed one goes.
bash-4.0$ rpm -q --whatprovides /etc/cron.daily/tmpwatch
tmpwatch-2.9.14-1.i586
bash-4.0$ cat /etc/cron.daily/tmpwatch
#! /bin/sh
flags=-umc
/usr/sbin/tmpwatch "$flags" -x /tmp/.X11-unix -x
/tmp/.XIM-unix \
-x /tmp/.font-unix -x /tmp/.ICE-unix -x
/tmp/.Test-unix 10d /tmp
/usr/sbin/tmpwatch "$flags" 30d /var/tmp
for d in
/var/{cache/man,catman}/{cat?,X11R6/cat?,local/cat?}; do
if [ -d "$d" ]; then
/usr/sbin/tmpwatch "$flags" -f 30d "$d"
fi
done
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