i have hundreds of directories that have to be renamed. the directory structure is fairly uniform which makes the scripting a little simpler.
suppose i have many directories like this */*/*/*abc* (in other words i have similar directory names 3 dirs deep that all contain the pattern abc in... (8 Replies)
hi! i need a command to recursivly search all html files below the current directory for the string "ABCDE". that´s very important to me, thanx!!! (3 Replies)
Hello guys,
I was looking for a shell script that removes all the special characters from the files and the subdirectories recursively. I could not locate it any more. Dose any body have a similar script that dose that?
Thanks for the help.
AV (0 Replies)
I have this directory tree under /apps/myapp/data:
imageshack.us/photo/my-images/703/foldersc.png
How to recursively rename ONLY directories with 5 digits (00000, 00100, 00200,..., 00007, 00107,...)?
I want to add to their name two more zeros:
Before: 00107
After: 0000107
Thanks in... (2 Replies)
I can rename a file with sequential numbers from 1 to N with this script:
num=1
for file in *.dat;do
mv "$file" "$(printf "%u" $num).txt"
let num=num+1
done
The script begins with renaming a some.dat file to 1.dat.txt and goes on sequentially renaming other DAT files to... (1 Reply)
Hello
Im trying to make a script in bash shell programming to find subdirectories with the same name into the same directory and rename one of them!!
Could you please help me?
Thanks in advance (1 Reply)
I am trying to create a script that will search for a directory named bob, and then rename that directory to peter. I do not want the directory path to change.
so /folders/bob
would become /folders/peter
It seems to be renaming the bob folder to peter correctly, but the peter folder ends... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have more than 12000 files in 46 different directories and each directory has 2 sub-directories named “dat” or “gridded”. Dat sub-directories have files with extension “jpg.dat” and gridded sub-directories have files with extension “.jpg”.
I need to... (1 Reply)
HI guys here's hoping some on pout the can help
I have a large library of epub and mobi file creates some what by calibre.
Output of tree listing below
I would like to recursively rename the directories removing the brackets and numbers
I have been scratching my head over... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Friends, i have a requirement where i need to rename my files residing in multiple sub directories and move them to one different directory along with some kind of directory indicator.
For eg:
test--is my parent directory and it has many files such as
a1.txt
a2.txt
a3.txt
... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gnnsprapa
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
rename
RENAME(2) System Calls Manual RENAME(2)NAME
rename - change the name of a file
SYNOPSIS
rename(from, to)
char *from, *to;
DESCRIPTION
Rename causes the link named from to be renamed as to. If to exists, then it is first removed. Both from and to must be of the same type
(that is, both directories or both non-directories), and must reside on the same file system.
Rename guarantees that an instance of to will always exist, even if the system should crash in the middle of the operation.
If the final component of from is a symbolic link, the symbolic link is renamed, not the file or directory to which it points.
CAVEAT
The system can deadlock if a loop in the file system graph is present. This loop takes the form of an entry in directory "a", say "a/foo",
being a hard link to directory "b", and an entry in directory "b", say "b/bar", being a hard link to directory "a". When such a loop
exists and two separate processes attempt to perform "rename a/foo b/bar" and "rename b/bar a/foo", respectively, the system may deadlock
attempting to lock both directories for modification. Hard links to directories should be replaced by symbolic links by the system admin-
istrator.
RETURN VALUE
A 0 value is returned if the operation succeeds, otherwise rename returns -1 and the global variable errno indicates the reason for the
failure.
ERRORS
Rename will fail and neither of the argument files will be affected if any of the following are true:
[EINVAL] Either pathname contains a character with the high-order bit set.
[ENAMETOOLONG] A component of either pathname exceeded 255 characters, or the entire length of either path name exceeded 1023 characters.
[ENOENT] A component of the from path does not exist, or a path prefix of to does not exist.
[EACCES] A component of either path prefix denies search permission.
[EACCES] The requested link requires writing in a directory with a mode that denies write permission.
[EPERM] The directory containing from is marked sticky, and neither the containing directory nor from are owned by the effective
user ID.
[EPERM] The to file exists, the directory containing to is marked sticky, and neither the containing directory nor to are owned by
the effective user ID.
[ELOOP] Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating either pathname.
[ENOTDIR] A component of either path prefix is not a directory.
[ENOTDIR] From is a directory, but to is not a directory.
[EISDIR] To is a directory, but from is not a directory.
[EXDEV] The link named by to and the file named by from are on different logical devices (file systems). Note that this error code
will not be returned if the implementation permits cross-device links.
[ENOSPC] The directory in which the entry for the new name is being placed cannot be extended because there is no space left on the
file system containing the directory.
[EDQUOT] The directory in which the entry for the new name is being placed cannot be extended because the user's quota of disk blocks
on the file system containing the directory has been exhausted.
[EIO] An I/O error occurred while making or updating a directory entry.
[EROFS] The requested link requires writing in a directory on a read-only file system.
[EFAULT] Path points outside the process's allocated address space.
[EINVAL] From is a parent directory of to, or an attempt is made to rename ``.'' or ``..''.
[ENOTEMPTY] To is a directory and is not empty.
SEE ALSO open(2)4.2 Berkeley Distribution May 22, 1986 RENAME(2)