Hi,
Chris Davies wrote:
Robert P. J. Day <rpj...@crashcourse.ca> wrote:
for instance, if a given shared library hasn't been linked in weeks
or months, that's something to look at. if none of the binary
executables in a package have been executed in that long, another
package to examine, that sort of thing.
You could possibly do something with this, which checks each installed
package for files that have been accessed in the last six months. Please
note, however, that it cannot work if you mount your relevant filesystems
with noatime!
for P in $(dpkg -l '*' | awk '/^i/{print $2}')
do
echo -n "Checking $P: " >&2
U=$(
for F in $(dpkg -L "$P")
do
test -f "$F" && find "$F" -atime +180
done 2>/dev/null
)
test -n "$U" && echo "in use" >&2 || echo "MAYBE NOT USED RECENTLY" >&2
done
That all looks good Chris, but I tried it and saw no results for "in
use" and that makes no sense. I don't use noatime mount option either.
--
Kind Regards
AndrewM
Andrew McGlashan
Broadband Solutions now including VoIP
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