Do you run find on your machine every night? Do you know what it has to go through just to find out if a file is three days old and smaller than 10 blocks or owned by "fred" or setuid root? This is why I tried to combine all the things we need done for removal of files into one big find script:
| 2>&1 | 
#! /bin/sh
#
# cleanup - find files that should be removed and clean them
# out of the file system.
find / \(    \( -name '#*'                 -atime +1 \)  \
        -o   \( -name ',*'                 -atime +1 \)  \
        -o   \( -name rogue.sav            -atime +7 \)  \
        -o   \(      \( -name '*.bak'                    \
                     -o -name '*.dvi'                    \
                     -o -name '*.CKP'                    \
                     -o -name '.*.bak'                   \
                     -o -name '.*.CKP' \)  -atime +3 \)  \
        -o   \( -name '.emacs_[0-9]*'      -atime +7 \)  \
        -o   \( -name core                           \)  \
        -o   \( -user guest                -atime +9 \)  \
\) -print -exec rm -f {} \; > /tmp/.cleanup 2>&1 | 
|---|
[This is an example of using a single find command to search
for files with different names and last-access times (see article  
17.5).
As Chris points out, doing it all
with one find is much faster, and less work for the disk, than
running a lot of separate finds. 
The parentheses group each part of the expression.
The neat indentation makes this big thing easier to read.
The -print -exec at the end removes each file and also writes the
filenames to standard output, where they're collected into a file named
/tmp/.cleanup-people can read it to see what files were removed.
You should probably be aware that printing the names to 
/tmp/.cleanup lets everyone see pathnames,
like /home/joe/personal/resume.bak, that some
people might consider sensitive.
Another thing to be aware of is that
this find command starts at the root directory; you
can do the same thing for your own directories. -JP ]
- in net.unix-wizards on Usenet, 9 June 1985