NetBSD/etc/weekly
lukem 0c70e530af use ${foo##*/} instead of basename $foo. as suggested (with minor variation)
by Toru Nishimura <nisimura@itc.aist-nara.ac.jp>
2000-10-07 07:36:56 +00:00

80 lines
1.8 KiB
Bash

#!/bin/sh -
#
# $NetBSD: weekly,v 1.15 2000/10/07 07:36:57 lukem Exp $
# from: @(#)weekly 8.2 (Berkeley) 1/2/94
#
export PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/usr/libexec
umask 077
if [ -s /etc/weekly.conf ]; then
. /etc/weekly.conf
fi
host=`hostname`
date=`date`
echo "To: ${MAILTO:-root}"
echo "Subject: $host weekly output for $date"
echo ""
if [ -f /etc/rc.subr ]; then
. /etc/rc.subr
else
echo "Can't read /etc/rc.subr; aborting."
exit 1;
fi
#echo ""
#echo "Removing old .o files:"
#find /usr/src -name '*.o' -atime +21 -print -a -exec rm -f {} \;
# see if /usr/src exists and is local
# before looking there for checked-out files
#if [ -d /usr/src -a \
# -n "`find -f /usr/src ! -fstype local -prune -or -type d -print -prune`" ];
#then
# echo "looking for checked out files:"
# TDIR=/tmp/_checkout$$
#
# mkdir $TDIR
# for file in `find -f /usr/src ! -fstype local -prune -or \
# -name 'p.*' -print | egrep 'SCCS/p\.'`; do
# owner=`awk '{ print $3 }' $file`
# echo "$owner $file"
# echo $file >> $TDIR/$owner
# done | sed -e 's,SCCS/p.,,'
# if test -n "`ls $TDIR`"; then
# for file in $TDIR/*; do
# sed -e 's,SCCS/p.,,' $file | \
# Mail -s 'checked out files' ${file##*/}
# done
# fi
# rm -rf $TDIR
#fi
if checkyesno clean_uucp && [ -f /usr/libexec/uucp/clean.weekly ]; then
echo ""
echo "Cleaning up UUCP:"
su daemon -c /usr/libexec/uucp/clean.weekly
fi
echo ""
echo ""
if checkyesno rebuild_locatedb && [ -f /var/db/locate.database ]; then
echo "Rebuilding locate database:"
chmod 644 /var/db/locate.database
chown nobody:nobody /var/db/locate.database
nice -5 su -m nobody -c /usr/libexec/locate.updatedb 2>/dev/null
chown root:wheel /var/db/locate.database
else
echo "Not rebuilding locate database; no /var/db/locate.database"
fi
if [ -f /etc/weekly.local ]; then
echo ""
echo "Running /etc/weekly.local:"
. /etc/weekly.local
fi