The power of find command in Linux – advanced.

2010-05-24 2 min read Linux

Generally whoever uses Linux, would know about the find command. Find the man page <a href="http://amit.themafia.info/phpMan.php?parameter=find&mode=man" target="_blank">here.

There are also lots of blogs, tutorials and other articles on find command on the web, so why write another one. Because it&#8217;s worth every word spent on it πŸ™‚
find is a very powerful command, let&#8217;s see how (options for find command from man page and usage):

–depth β€” Process each directory&#8217;s contents before the directory itself.
–maxdepth β€” Descend at most <span style="text-decoration: underline;">levels (a non-negative integer) levels of directories below the command line arguments.
–xdev β€” Don&#8217;t descend directories on other filesystems.
–executable β€” Matches files which are executable and directories which are searchable (in a file name resolution sense).
This takes into account access control lists and other permissions artefacts which the -perm test ignores.
–iname β€” Like -name, but the match is case insensitive.
–nogroup β€” No group corresponds to file&#8217;s numeric group ID.
–nouser β€” No user corresponds to file&#8217;s numeric user ID.
–fls <span style="text-decoration: underline;">file β€” True; like -ls but write to <span style="text-decoration: underline;">file like -fprint.
–ok <span style="text-decoration: underline;">command β€” Like -exec but ask the user first (on the standard input);
–print0 β€” True; print the full file name on the standard output, followed by a null character
(instead of the newline character that -print uses).
–printf <span style="text-decoration: underline;">format β€” True; print <span style="text-decoration: underline;">format on the standard output, interpreting &#8217;&#8217; escapes and &#8217;%&#8217; directives.

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