07-16-2009
Thanks for the assistance. I was looking into find already and if I simply wanted to find all of the .txt files and name them something that I preset I could do that. I did not want to say that I thought I should use find in case there was another command out there that I did not know about that is better.
Where I am stuck though is the naming of the file after its directory name. I just do not see and example of that anywhere. My only thought would be to use find twice maybe?
find <the sub_dir> find <the .txt> mv <the .txt> <<sub_dir>.txt>
Any thoughts?
I'm still trying to find the right way to make it work.
---------- Post updated at 09:10 AM ---------- Previous update was at 08:23 AM ----------
Is there a way to specify which -exec variable you re dealing with if you have more than one?
I have been trying:
find . -type d -exec find {} \; -type f -name "*.txt" -exec mv {} (the file) {}.txt(the dir name that the fiel being renamed is in)
no luck so far
In testing I am just trying to echo both brackets:
find . -type d -exec find {} \; -type f -name "*.txt" -exec echo "one {} two {}" \;
But all I get is a print of all directories and all .txt files and it does not display the "one" or "two"
---------- Post updated at 09:54 AM ---------- Previous update was at 09:10 AM ----------
For the record I talked with a friend and came up with this.
For a file system that looks like this:
a
`-- b
|-- c
| |
| `-- somename.txt
`-- d
|
`-- somename.txt
> cd a/b/
> for x in *;do mv $x/*-.txt $x/${x}.txt;done
I hope this helps anyone else in the future.
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LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
sticky
STICKY(7) BSD Miscellaneous Information Manual STICKY(7)
NAME
sticky -- sticky text and append-only directories
DESCRIPTION
A special file mode, called the sticky bit (mode S_ISVTX), is used to indicate special treatment for directories. It is ignored for regular
files. See chmod(2) or the file <sys/stat.h> for an explanation of file modes.
STICKY DIRECTORIES
A directory whose `sticky bit' is set becomes an append-only directory, or, more accurately, a directory in which the deletion of files is
restricted. A file in a sticky directory may only be removed or renamed by a user if the user has write permission for the directory and the
user is the owner of the file, the owner of the directory, or the super-user. This feature is usefully applied to directories such as /tmp
which must be publicly writable but should deny users the license to arbitrarily delete or rename each others' files.
Any user may create a sticky directory. See chmod(1) for details about modifying file modes.
HISTORY
A sticky command appeared in Version 32V AT&T UNIX.
BUGS
Neither open(2) nor mkdir(2) will create a file with the sticky bit set.
BSD
June 5, 1993 BSD