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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Find command size greater than or equalto Post 303000761 by rbatte1 on Wednesday 19th of July 2017 08:24:24 AM
Old 07-19-2017
Would stat give you a getter output to work with? It gives you the output in a customisable format. Using ls or the -ls flag on find can cause issues if the file has a group name with spaces, for example:-
Code:
# stat bigfile
  File: `bigfile'
  Size: 6762219520	Blocks: 13207472   IO Block: 4096   regular file
Device: fd00h/64768d	Inode: 2359475     Links: 1
Access: (0664/-rw-rw-r--)  Uid: (  500/rbatte1)   Gid: (  500/rbatte1)
Access: 2017-07-19 12:23:40.597780337 +0100
Modify: 2017-07-19 12:27:58.730711684 +0100
Change: 2017-07-19 12:28:17.474415803 +0100

It might not be neat, but if you use find to get a list of files based on whatever other criteria you have, you can then work through the list with some simple tests for file size, a bit like this:-
Code:
while read listed_file
do
   listed_file_size="$(stat -c%s${listed_file})
   if [ ${listed_file_size} -gt 10240 ]
   then
      echo "File ${listed_file} is greater than 10K at ${listed_file_size} bytes."
   fi
done < /tmp/file_list

Of course, you could substitute an input file for the output of your find command.

If you are looking for files over a certain size, then another option might be to call stat from your find with xargs, perhaps:-
Code:
find /path/to/search -type f any other options | xargs stat -c '%s %n' | sort -n

This will give you the files in size order, so once you have the first file that exceeds your limit, you can assume that all the others will too.


What is the full criteria of your search and what actions do you want to take? It would be useful to show us the output from uname -a too.

Thanks, in advance,
Robin
 

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File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3) 			User Contributed Perl Documentation			   File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3)

NAME
File::Find::Rule::Procedural - File::Find::Rule's procedural interface SYNOPSIS
use File::Find::Rule; # find all .pm files, procedurally my @files = find(file => name => '*.pm', in => @INC); DESCRIPTION
In addition to the regular object-oriented interface, File::Find::Rule provides two subroutines for you to use. "find( @clauses )" "rule( @clauses )" "find" and "rule" can be used to invoke any methods available to the OO version. "rule" is a synonym for "find" Passing more than one value to a clause is done with an anonymous array: my $finder = find( name => [ '*.mp3', '*.ogg' ] ); "find" and "rule" both return a File::Find::Rule instance, unless one of the arguments is "in", in which case it returns a list of things that match the rule. my @files = find( name => [ '*.mp3', '*.ogg' ], in => $ENV{HOME} ); Please note that "in" will be the last clause evaluated, and so this code will search for mp3s regardless of size. my @files = find( name => '*.mp3', in => $ENV{HOME}, size => '<2k' ); ^ | Clause processing stopped here ------/ It is also possible to invert a single rule by prefixing it with "!" like so: # large files that aren't videos my @files = find( file => '!name' => [ '*.avi', '*.mov' ], size => '>20M', in => $ENV{HOME} ); AUTHOR
Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2003 Richard Clamp. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
File::Find::Rule perl v5.16.3 2011-09-19 File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3)
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