Find: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
The <code> -type f </code> flag tells find to look for files ( <code> -type d </code> will tell find to look for directories.) | The <code> -type f </code> flag tells find to look for files ( <code> -type d </code> will tell find to look for directories.) | ||
== By Permission == | |||
You can have find files based on permissions: | |||
<code>find . -type f -perm 0777 -print</code> This will find files in the current directory with 0777 permissions | |||
<code></code> | |||
Revision as of 18:04, 23 December 2016
Find is used to search the directory system for files.
find location options search pattern
find /home myfile.txt
This will look in the /home folder for myfile.txt (if you leave out the location, find will look in the directory you are currently in.)
By Name
By default, find is case-sensitive. The above example will not find MYFILE.TXT. The -iname
flag tells find to ignore case.
If you want the search to be case insensitive:
find -iname myfile.txt
The above will find all of the following: myfile.txt MYFILE.TXT MyFile.txt (etc...)
By Type
find -type f -name "*.txt"
This will find all the files whose name ends in .txt in the current directory.
The -type f
flag tells find to look for files ( -type d
will tell find to look for directories.)
By Permission
You can have find files based on permissions:
find . -type f -perm 0777 -print
This will find files in the current directory with 0777 permissions