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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers "find": search the a regex of FILES?? Post 302403198 by msf5042 on Thursday 11th of March 2010 07:08:23 PM
Old 03-11-2010
"find": search the a regex of FILES??

I want to use the find command to search a ton of files, but I want to break it up into multiple machines. I want to search for files with "filename." in the title.
The location I want to search is:
Code:
/u/*/*/*/stuff

On the first computer I want to search:
Code:
/u/[a-i]/*/*/stuff

Right now I am doing
Code:
find /u/*/*/*/stuff -iregex "/u/[a-i]/.*filename\..*" -print >>~/Desktop/find

This works correctly on the first machine, but for the second machine i will be searching [j-p] and in this case it will still search a-i first. I really want to do something like:
Code:
find /u/[j-p]/*/*/stuff -iregex ".*filename\..*" -print >>~/Desktop/find


Anyone know if/how I could do this?
 

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whereis(1)						      General Commands Manual							whereis(1)

NAME
whereis - Locates files for programs SYNOPSIS
whereis [-bms] [-u] [-BMS directory... -f] program... The whereis command locates source, binary, and/or reference page files for the specified program program. OPTIONS
The -b, -m, and -s options can be used in combination to restrict the search. Searches for an executable program. Searches for the refer- ence page for a program. Searches for the sources of a program. Use the -B, -M, and -S options to change or limit the places whereis searches. Specifies the binary directories to search. Specifies the reference page directories to search. Specifies the source directories to search. The other options that can be used with whereis are as follows: Terminates the last directory list and signals the start of program names. Used with other options to indicate when there is no file for program in the default or specified directory or directories (source, binary, or reference page). DESCRIPTION
The whereis program locates source, binary, and reference pages for the specified programs. When looking for a match, the program names are stripped of leading pathname components and any trailing extensions of the form (for example, s. resulting from the use of the Source Code Control System see sccs(1), are also handled. The default directories searched by the whereis command are as follows: /etc /etc/nls /sbin /usr/bin /usr/lbin /usr/lbin/spell /usr/ccs/lib /usr/lib /usr/local /usr/hosts /usr/sbin EXAMPLES
To find files matching cat in the default source, binary, and reference directories, enter: whereis cat To search for reference pages for app13 in the directory /usr/local/man, enter: whereis -M /usr/local/man -f -f appl3 To find the programs in /usr/bin that do not have ref- erence pages in /usr/share/man/man1 with source files in /usr/src/cmd, enter: whereis -u -M /usr/share/man/man1 -S /usr/src/cmd -f /usr/bin/* To find which files in the current directory either have no reference pages in the default reference directories or have more than one, enter: whereis -m -u * FILES
Default binary directories. Default binary directories. Default reference directories. Default source directories. SEE ALSO
Commands: apropos(1), find(1), man(1), which(1), catman(8) whereis(1)
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