If you need to set up a similar process:
Create a script (nightly_process.sh):
#!/bin/bash # Define postal codes CODES=("75001" "75002" "75015" "69001") NIGHT_DIR="/data/night_folder"
for code in "$CODES[@]"; do echo "Working on postal code $code" # Compress with RAR 7.0, 70MB volumes rar a -ma -v70m "$NIGHT_DIR/code_postal_$code.rar" "/raw_data/$code/" # Move to final folder mv "$NIGHT_DIR"/*.rar "$NIGHT_DIR/final_$code/" done echo "Night work completed at $(date)" >> /var/log/nightly.logcode postal night folder 70rar work
Schedule with cron for 2 AM:
0 2 * * * /usr/local/bin/nightly_process.sh
Use tree (Windows: tree /F; Linux: ls -R) to list contents:
Night_Folder/
├── code_postal_75015/
│ ├── data.part01.rar
│ ├── data.part02.rar
│ └── ... (up to 70 parts)
├── code_postal_69001/
│ ├── manifest.70rar
│ └── ...
└── night_logs.txt
In French, "code postal" refers to the numerical system used by La Poste (the French postal service) to identify geographic locations. France uses five-digit postal codes (e.g., 75001 for the Louvre area in Paris, 13001 for Marseille). If you need to set up a similar
Why does a postal code appear in a digital folder name?