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find
find can be used both to locate files and run operations on the files it
finds.
Main syntax
No options
Without options specified, find alone will return a recursive index of all the
files in the directory from which it is run.
Sub-directory
If we pass a directory to find it will repeat the above process but
specifically for that directory.
$ find i3
i3
i3/config
Filters
We can specify flags as filters (known as 'tests' within the program).
Type
Filter by type: file or directory
$ find -type d # return dirs only
$ find -type f # return files only
Within a specified directory:
$ find i3 -type f
Filename
This is the most frequent use case: filter files by name with globbing.
$ find -name "config"
./.git/config
./i3/config
$ find -name "*.js"
The same, but case insensitive: iname
$ find -iname "*.JS"
Path
As above but this time includes directory names in the match. ipath is the
case-insensitive version.
$ find -path "utils*"
utils.js
utils/do-something.js
Operators
We can combine find commands by using logical operators: -and, -or,
-not. For example:
$ find -not -name "*.js" -type f
./app/index.html
./app/style.css
./dist/index.html
./dist/style.c
Applied to a directory:
find . -type -f -not -path "./.git/"
Run programs against results
Using the exec keyword we can run a program against the files that are
returned from find.
In this syntax we use {} as a placeholder for the path of the file that is
matched. We use ; (escaped) to indicate the end of the operation.
Examples
This script deletes the files that match the filter criteria:
$ find -name "*.js" -exec rm {} \;
This script finds all the files with the substring 'config' in their name and writes their file size to a file.
find -name '*config*' -exec wc -c {} \; > config-sizes