As pointed out by Max, you can't, but checking files modified or accessed is not all that hard. I wrote a tutorial about this, as late as today. The essence of which is to use -newerXY
and ! -newerXY
:
Example: To find all files modified on the 7th of June, 2007:
$ find . -type f -newermt 2007-06-07 ! -newermt 2007-06-08
To find all files accessed on the 29th of september, 2008:
$ find . -type f -newerat 2008-09-29 ! -newerat 2008-09-30
Or, files which had their permission changed on the same day:
$ find . -type f -newerct 2008-09-29 ! -newerct 2008-09-30
If you don't change permissions on the file, 'c' would normally correspond to the creation date, though.
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