My company has a lot of automation that runs overnight via batch scripts. Mostly just copying new files here and there. What I am looking for is a way to run a check of the file creation dates / last modification dates after all the scripts have ran to ensure everything is up to date. It would basically look to a specific file in a shared drive or UNC path. If that file is less than 24 hours old, do nothing. If the subject file is OLDER than 24 hours, then trigger an email. I already have a VBS to send an email so I could add that at the end of the IF statement. Any help is appreciated.
3 Answers
There are ways and means...
Here's a routine that will do something along the lines you outline:
@ECHO Off
SETLOCAL
:: remove variables starting $
FOR /F "delims==" %%a In ('set $ 2^>Nul') DO SET "%%a="
SET "sourcedir=U:\sourcedir"
SET "runflag=runflag.###"
SET "foundrun="
ATTRIB -h "%sourcedir%\runflag.###"
FOR /f "tokens=1,2delims=:" %%a IN ('dir /b /od /a-d "%sourcedir%"^|findstr /n /r "^"') DO (
IF %%b==%runflag% SET foundrun=Y
IF NOT DEFINED foundrun SET "$%%a=%%b"
)
(
ECHO(Old file list
FOR /F "tokens=1,2delims==" %%a In ('set $ 2^>Nul') DO ECHO(%%b
)>"%sourcedir%\%runflag%"
ATTRIB +h "%sourcedir%\runflag.###"
IF DEFINED $1 ECHO(send email
GOTO :EOF
You would need to change the setting of sourcedir
to suit your circumstances. runflag
is simply a convenient filename.
The object here is to look for files that have not been updated since the previous run of this routine. This gets over the fixed "24 hours" idea - in case of holidays, weekends, etc.
The names of files that haven't changed would be in runflag.###
- ideal for using in a mailer like blat
.
I played around with the hidden
flag here - to hide the file from "this shouldn't be here - I don't understand. I'll delete it". (those who take that attitude may often be defeated with a simple +H and +R). Improve or remove the ATTRIB commands as you will.
you can get the file modification date with for %a in (file.txt) do echo %~ta
(double the %
in batch files)
-
This is definitely getting me on the right track. However, if I run the command in the batch file I do not receive a result. "for %a in (C:\PROJECTS\results.txt) do echo %~ta > C:\PROJECTS\NAVIS_MONITOR.txt". If I copy and paste the string to a cmd prompt it works perfectly and then I can do a FC and get what I need. But when I run that line out of a batch file, I don't get anything.– John ESep 12, 2014 at 12:31
-
In a batch file
%%
must be written twice instead of just%
. See the help on commandfor
output on entering in a command prompt window eitherhelp for
orfor /?
.– MofiSep 12, 2014 at 13:17 -
Change \\server\share
and use the filename in place of filename.ext
and this should launch your email.bat
file if the file is older than 1 day.
robocopy "\\server\share" "%temp%" filename.ext /minage:1 /L |find " New File " >nul && call email.bat