On Sat, Aug 10, 2013 at 09:30:56AM -0500, David Fleck wrote: > > On 08/08/2013 06:47 PM, John Jason Jordan wrote: > >> Is there a way to do a ls command and have it sort by date of creation? > > Try > > ls -lrt
Creation? That isn't available in contemporary *nix, including Linuxes. ctime https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stat_(Unix) ctime originally meant creation time,[8] however it has since been used almost always to refer to change time. It is updated any time file content changes (together with mtime), and also by changes in metadata such as file permissions, file ownership, and creation and deletion of hard links. In some implementations, ctime is affected by renaming a file (both original Unix and modern Linux tend to do this). Unlike atime and mtime, ctime cannot be set to an arbitrary value with utime() (as used e.g. by touch). Instead, when utime() is used, the ctime value is set to the current time. And this is confirmed by `man 2 stat` All of these system calls return a stat structure, which contains the following fields: struct stat { dev_t st_dev; /* ID of device containing file */ ino_t st_ino; /* inode number */ [ other stuff snipped ] time_t st_atime; /* time of last access */ time_t st_mtime; /* time of last modification */ time_t st_ctime; /* time of last status change */ }; -- Michael Rasmussen, Portland Oregon Be Appropriate && Follow Your Curiosity Other Adventures: http://www.jamhome.us/ or http://gplus.to/MichaelRpdx A special random fortune cookie fortune: I'm eating slightly green peaches right now - kind of bitter, kind of sweet - sort of like my day. ~ Prefers to remain anonymous _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list PLUG@lists.pdxlinux.org http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug