The first command (ls -1 /backup/*.dump) just creates a list of files in the backup folder that have the extension .dump. the output of the prior command is then sent to the next command (head -n -2) this cuts the list down to everything except the last 2 items in the list this is then sent to the final command which takes the list and runs the final (rm -f) command with the items in the list as the targets to delete.
There is an explanation on that post that explains it in better detail but in simple terms it deletes all files but the most recent 3 files in the directory that have the .dump extension
The first command (ls -1 /backup/*.dump) just creates a list of files in the backup folder that have the extension .dump. the output of the prior command is then sent to the next command (head -n -2) this cuts the list down to everything except the last 2 items in the list this is then sent to the final command which takes the list and runs the final (rm -f) command with the items in the list as the targets to delete.
heres a solution based on this post https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25785/delete-all-but-the-most-recent-x-files-in-bash
ls -tp /backup/*.dump | grep -v ‘/$’ | tail -n +4 | tr ‘\n’ ‘\0’ | xargs -0 rm -f
There is an explanation on that post that explains it in better detail but in simple terms it deletes all files but the most recent 3 files in the directory that have the .dump extension