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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Need help in batch renaming files with bash shell script. Post 302913582 by SriRamKrish on Monday 18th of August 2014 03:30:56 PM
Old 08-18-2014
We are doing some kind of a data load. For this we have to copy a set of source files from archival directory through ftp ,then unzip it and have to rename it before starting the data load. This is being done on a daily basis. So I'm trying to automate this process. So far I'm able to FTP download the files and rename them. Now I'm stuck at this step. As I already said I'm new to scripting. So far, whatever I have done is with the help of Google, and forums like this.

Hope this helps.

Cheers.
 

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RENAME(1)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide						 RENAME(1)

NAME
rename - renames multiple files SYNOPSIS
rename [ -v ] [ -n ] [ -f ] perlexpr [ files ] DESCRIPTION
"rename" renames the filenames supplied according to the rule specified as the first argument. The perlexpr argument is a Perl expression which is expected to modify the $_ string in Perl for at least some of the filenames specified. If a given filename is not modified by the expression, it will not be renamed. If no filenames are given on the command line, filenames will be read via standard input. For example, to rename all files matching "*.bak" to strip the extension, you might say rename 's/.bak$//' *.bak To translate uppercase names to lower, you'd use rename 'y/A-Z/a-z/' * OPTIONS
-v, --verbose Verbose: print names of files successfully renamed. -n, --no-act No Action: show what files would have been renamed. -f, --force Force: overwrite existing files. ENVIRONMENT
No environment variables are used. AUTHOR
Larry Wall SEE ALSO
mv(1), perl(1) DIAGNOSTICS
If you give an invalid Perl expression you'll get a syntax error. BUGS
The original "rename" did not check for the existence of target filenames, so had to be used with care. I hope I've fixed that (Robin Barker). perl v5.12.4 2011-08-10 RENAME(1)
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