Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX Find and rm files with spaces in the name Post 302926081 by bakunin on Friday 21st of November 2014 02:43:58 AM
Old 11-21-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by Papa Lee
Code:
# find ./* -prune -print
ksh: /usr/bin/find: 0403-027 The parameter list is too long.

It doesn't matter where you put the asterisk - as long as you put it anywhere it will expand to a long (and obviously too long) list of filenames.

The suggestion was to avoid the asterisk altogether, not to put it somewhere else in the command.

bakunin
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Find fields with no spaces in value

This is what I need to do I have a file that has a field with values like this 1111 2222 3333 4444 55555 666 333333333 444444444 I need for my command to out put only those fields that do not have spaces in them. So my output for the above file would be 333333333 444444444 how... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: alfredo123
10 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

For loop using find with file name spaces

Hello All, This question is actually for the service console of VMware ESX 3.5 but is relevant to this forum I think. I have been advised to use the following commands: for i in `find /vmfs/volumes/Test_VMFS/ -name "*.vmx"` do echo "$i" #sed -i 's/scsi1:0.present =... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mronsman
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

find command returns files with spaces, mv won't work...

Hi guys. I am trying, to move files found with the find command... Script runs fine, until it reaches a file that contains spaces... Here is what i wrote up quickly. ROOTDIR=/apps/data SEARCH=$(find /data/HDTMPRestore/home/tmq/ -type f -print | grep Mods/Input/bck | cut -c19-) for i... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Stephan
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script to find folders with spaces and end of files and directories

Hi I need a script that can search through a set of directories and can locate any file or directory that has a space at the end Filename(space) Foldername(space) I then need to remove that space within the script Hope someone can help thanks in advance Treds (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: treds
8 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk help with find command and filenames with spaces

I have the following code: find /usr/local/test5 -type f -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} \; | awk '{print $5, $6, $7, $8, $9}' I have this as output: 14 Aug 12 00:00 /usr/local/test5/file1 14 Aug 12 00:00 /usr/local/test5/lastname, The bolded part is where I run into trouble. The actual... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: streetfighter2
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

find -exec directories with spaces

All, I have a cleanup script that removes directories and all contents underneath, but I am having issues with directories with spaces. This is the command I am currently running, how can I get it to work with directories with spaces? find /path -mindepth 3 -type d -exec rm -rf {} \; (29 Replies)
Discussion started by: markdjones82
29 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Regular Expressions -- Find spaces outside

Hello, I need help with using grep and regular expressions.... I have a long list of about 1000 lines of Chinese flashcards. Here's a small excerpt: 意文 yìwén (given name) 貴姓 guìxìng (honorable surname) 貴 guì (honorable) 姓 xìng (one's surname is; to be surnamed; surname) 呢 ne (interrogative... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: arduino411
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to find spaces and update values on the same line.

Dear all, I'm trying to write a script where: A file contains more or less 2000 lines. To some of those lines, in a specific position, let's say 89-92 there are spaces. So, this script should find these spaces on specific position and update a value (from 2 to 1) to another position of the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: paniklas
4 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Loop with Find—damn spaces!

Hi Guys, I'm trying to find all files with a particular extension and then loop some actions. The problem is that if the files have spaces in their names I get end up being each word as a separate result rather than the entire file. ext=".txt" out=".rtf" for i in $( find "$1" -name "*$ext" );... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: imonkey
9 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to find and replace a string with spaces and / recursively?

Hi all, I wanted to find and replace an email id from entire directory structure on a Linux server. I found that find . -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i 's/abc@yahoo.com/xyz@gmail.com/g' would do it perfectly. But my search criteria has extended and now I want to search for a string1 like... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pat_pramod
2 Replies
fnmatch(5)						Standards, Environments, and Macros						fnmatch(5)

NAME
fnmatch - file name pattern matching DESCRIPTION
The pattern matching notation described below is used to specify patterns for matching strings in the shell. Historically, pattern match- ing notation is related to, but slightly different from, the regular expression notation. For this reason, the description of the rules for this pattern matching notation is based on the description of regular expression notation described on the regex(5) manual page. Patterns Matching a Single Character The following patterns matching a single character match a single character: ordinary characters, special pattern characters and pattern bracket expressions. The pattern bracket expression will also match a single collating element. An ordinary character is a pattern that matches itself. It can be any character in the supported character set except for NUL, those spe- cial shell characters that require quoting, and the following three special pattern characters. Matching is based on the bit pattern used for encoding the character, not on the graphic representation of the character. If any character (ordinary, shell special, or pattern spe- cial) is quoted, that pattern will match the character itself. The shell special characters always require quoting. When unquoted and outside a bracket expression, the following three characters will have special meaning in the specification of patterns: ? A question-mark is a pattern that will match any character. * An asterisk is a pattern that will match multiple characters, as described in Patterns Matching Multiple Characters, below. [ The open bracket will introduce a pattern bracket expression. The description of basic regular expression bracket expressions on the regex(5) manual page also applies to the pattern bracket expression, except that the exclamation-mark character ( ! ) replaces the circumflex character (^) in its role in a non-matching list in the regular expression notation. A bracket expression starting with an unquoted circumflex character produces unspecified results. The restriction on a circumflex in a bracket expression is to allow implementations that support pattern matching using the circumflex as the negation character in addition to the exclamation-mark. A portable application must use something like [^!] to match either character. When pattern matching is used where shell quote removal is not performed (such as in the argument to the find -name primary when find is being called using one of the exec functions, or in the pattern argument to the fnmatch(3C) function, special characters can be escaped to remove their special meaning by preceding them with a backslash character. This escaping backslash will be discarded. The sequence \ rep- resents one literal backslash. All of the requirements and effects of quoting on ordinary, shell special and special pattern characters will apply to escaping in this context. Both quoting and escaping are described here because pattern matching must work in three separate circumstances: o Calling directly upon the shell, such as in pathname expansion or in a case statement. All of the following will match the string or file abc: abc "abc" a"b"c ac a[b]c a["b"]c a[]c a[""]c a?c a*c The following will not: "a?c" a*c a[b]c o Calling a utility or function without going through a shell, as described for find(1) and the function fnmatch(3C) o Calling utilities such as find, cpio, tar or pax through the shell command line. In this case, shell quote removal is performed before the utility sees the argument. For example, in: find /bin -name ec[h]o -print after quote removal, the backslashes are presented to find and it treats them as escape characters. Both precede ordinary characters, so the c and h represent themselves and echo would be found on many historical systems (that have it in /bin). To find a file name that con- tained shell special characters or pattern characters, both quoting and escaping are required, such as: pax -r ... "*a(?" to extract a filename ending with a(?. Conforming applications are required to quote or escape the shell special characters (sometimes called metacharacters). If used without this protection, syntax errors can result or implementation extensions can be triggered. For example, the KornShell supports a series of extensions based on parentheses in patterns; see ksh(1) Patterns Matching Multiple Characters The following rules are used to construct patterns matching multiple characters from patterns matching a single character: o The asterisk (*) is a pattern that will match any string, including the null string. o The concatenation of patterns matching a single character is a valid pattern that will match the concatenation of the single charac- ters or collating elements matched by each of the concatenated patterns. o The concatenation of one or more patterns matching a single character with one or more asterisks is a valid pattern. In such patterns, each asterisk will match a string of zero or more characters, matching the greatest possible number of characters that still allows the remainder of the pattern to match the string. Since each asterisk matches zero or more occurrences, the patterns a*b and a**b have identical functionality. Examples: a[bc] matches the strings ab and ac. a*d matches the strings ad, abd and abcd, but not the string abc. a*d* matches the strings ad, abcd, abcdef, aaaad and adddd. *a*d matches the strings ad, abcd, efabcd, aaaad and adddd. Patterns Used for Filename Expansion The rules described so far in Patterns Matching Multiple Characters and Patterns Matching a Single Character are qualified by the following rules that apply when pattern matching notation is used for filename expansion. 1. The slash character in a pathname must be explicitly matched by using one or more slashes in the pattern; it cannot be matched by the asterisk or question-mark special characters or by a bracket expression. Slashes in the pattern are identified before bracket expres- sions; thus, a slash cannot be included in a pattern bracket expression used for filename expansion. For example, the pattern a[b/c]d will not match such pathnames as abd or a/d. It will only match a pathname of literally a[b/c]d. 2. If a filename begins with a period (.), the period must be explicitly matched by using a period as the first character of the pattern or immediately following a slash character. The leading period will not be matched by: o the asterisk or question-mark special characters o a bracket expression containing a non-matching list, such as: [!a] a range expression, such as: [%-0] or a character class expression, such as: [[:punct:]] It is unspecified whether an explicit period in a bracket expression matching list, such as: [.abc] can match a leading period in a filename. 3. Specified patterns are matched against existing filenames and pathnames, as appropriate. Each component that contains a pattern char- acter requires read permission in the directory containing that component. Any component, except the last, that does not contain a pat- tern character requires search permission. For example, given the pattern: /foo/bar/x*/bam search permission is needed for directories / and foo, search and read permissions are needed for directory bar, and search permission is needed for each x* directory. If the pattern matches any existing filenames or pathnames, the pattern will be replaced with those filenames and pathnames, sorted according to the collating sequence in effect in the current locale. If the pattern contains an invalid bracket expression or does not match any existing filenames or pathnames, the pattern string is left unchanged. SEE ALSO
find(1), ksh(1), fnmatch(3C), regex(5) SunOS 5.10 28 Mar 1995 fnmatch(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:53 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy