Command Reference Guide

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STANDARD Printed by: Nora Chuang [nchuang] STANDARD
/build/1111/BRICK/man1/!!!intro.1
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d
dosls(1) dosls(1)
NAME
dosls, dosll - list contents of DOS directories
SYNOPSIS
dosls [-aAudl] device:[file ] ...
dosll [-aAudl] device:[file ] ...
DESCRIPTION
dosls is the DOS counterpart of ls (see ls(1)).
For each directory named, dosls lists the contents of that directory. For each file named, dosls
repeats its name and any other information requested. If invoked by the name dosll, the -l (ell) option
is implied.
Options
dosls and dosll recognizes the following options:
-a List all directory entries. In the absence of this option, hidden files, system files, and files
whose names begin with a dot (.
) are not listed.
-A Same as -a, except the current directory and the parent directory are not listed. For the
superuser, this option defaults to being set, and is disabled by -A.
-u Disable argument case conversion. In the absence of this option, all DOS file names are con-
verted to uppercase.
-d If an argument is a directory, list only its name. Often used with -l to get the status of a
directory.
-l List in long format, giving file attribute, size in bytes, and the date and time of last
modification for each file, as well as listing the
DOS volume label. Long listing is disabled if
this option is used with the dosll command.
A DOS file name is recognized by the presence of an embedded colon (:) delimiter; see dosif(4) for
DOS file
naming conventions.
Metacharacters
*, ?, and
[ ... ] can be used when specifying DOS file names. These must be quoted when
specifying a
DOS file name, because file name expansion must be performed by the DOS utilities, not by the
shell. DOS utilities expand file names as described in regexp(5) under PATTERN MATCHING NOTATION.
EXAMPLES
These examples assume that a
DOS directory structure exists on the device accessed through HP-UX special
file
/dev/rdsk/c2t1d0
.
The following example lists all of the files in the root directory of the
DOS directory structure:
dosls -a /dev/rdsk/c2t1d0:
The following example lists all of the files with extension bat in the root directory of the DOS directory
structure:
dosls -a ’/dev/rdsk/c2t1d0:*.bat’
The following example produces a long-format listing of all the information about the DOS directory
/dos/math, but does not list the files in the directory:
dosls -ld /dev/rdsk/c2t1d0:/dos/math
SEE ALSO
dos2ux(1), doschmod(1), doscp(1), dosdf(1), dosmkdir(1), dosrm(1), ls(1), dosif(4).
Section 1190 1 HP-UX Release 11i: December 2000
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