Category : Recently Uploaded Files
Archive   : OXCC1411.ZIP
Filename : CFLS.DOC

 
Output of file : CFLS.DOC contained in archive : OXCC1411.ZIP
CFLS.DOC

`cfls' is a modified version of GNU `ls' which will list normal and
.cff directories.

Usage: cfls [-abdgiklnpqrstxABCFNQRSUX1] [path...]\n");

Switch-------------------Meaning\n\
a, +all List all files.\n\
b, +escape Quote nongraphic characters.\n\
d, +directory List directory name, not contents.\n\
g, Ignored for Unix compatibility.\n\
i, +inode Print index number of each file.\n\
k, +kilobytes Print file sizes in kilobyte blocks.\n\
l, +format=long Print in long format.\n\
m, +format=commas List files horizontally, separated by commas.\n\
p Put '/' after each directory, if not multi-col.\n\
r, +reverse Sort in reverse order.\n\
s, +size Print the size of each file in blocks allocated.\n\
t, +sort=time Sort directory contents by timestamp.\n\
x, +format=across Multi-column, sorted horizontally.\n\
A, +almost-all List all files except for '.' and '..'.\n\
B, +ignore-backups Do not list files that end with '~'.\n\
C, +format=vertical Multi-column, sorted vertically.\n\
F, +classify Tag the file type of each file.\n\
N, +literal Do not quote file names.\n\
Q, +quote-name Enclose file names in double quotes.\n\
R, +recursive List the contents of directories recursively.\n\
S, +sort=size Sort directory contents by file size.\n\
U, +sort=none Do not sort directory contents.\n\
X, +sort=extension Sort directory contents by file extension.\n\
1, +format=single-column List one file per line.\n\
w, +width cols Assume screen width to be 'cols' wide.\n\
T. +tabsize cols Assume that each tabstop is 'cols' wide.\n\
I, +ignore pattern Do not list files that match 'pattern'.\n");



  3 Responses to “Category : Recently Uploaded Files
Archive   : OXCC1411.ZIP
Filename : CFLS.DOC

  1. Very nice! Thank you for this wonderful archive. I wonder why I found it only now. Long live the BBS file archives!

  2. This is so awesome! 😀 I’d be cool if you could download an entire archive of this at once, though.

  3. But one thing that puzzles me is the “mtswslnkmcjklsdlsbdmMICROSOFT” string. There is an article about it here. It is definitely worth a read: http://www.os2museum.com/wp/mtswslnk/