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findCommand Tutorial
The find command is used to locate files on a Unix
or Linux system. 
find will search any set of directories you specify
for files that match the supplied search criteria. 
You can search for files by name, owner, group, type, permissions,
date, and other criteria. 
The search is recursive in that it will search all subdirectories
too. 
The syntax looks like this:
find where-to-look criteria what-to-do
All arguments to find are optional, and there are
defaults for all parts. 
(This may depend on which version of find is used. 
Here we discuss the freely available GNU version of find,
which is the version available on YborStudent.) 
For example where-to-look
defaults to . (that is, the current working directory),
criteria defaults to none (that is, show all
files), and what-to-do
(known as the find action)
defaults to -print (that is, display found files to
standard output).
For example:
find
will display all files in the current directory and all subdirectories. The commands
find . -print find -print find .
do the exact same thing. 
Here's an example find command using a search criteria
and the default action:
find / -name foo
will search the whole system for any files named foo
and display them. 
Here we are using the criteria -name with the argument
foo to tell find to perform a name search
for the filename foo. 
The output might look like this:
/home/wpollock/foo /home/ua02/foo /tmp/foo
If find doesn't locate any matching files, it produces
no output.
The above example said to search the whole system, by
specifying the root directory (
)
to search. 
If you don't run this command as root, /find will
display a error message for each directory on which you don't
have read permission. 
This can be a lot of messages, and the matching files that are
found may scroll right off your screen. 
A good way to deal with this problem is to redirect the error
messages so you don't have to see them at all:
find / -name foo 2>/dev/null
You can specify as many places to search as you wish:
find /tmp /var/tmp . $HOME -name foo
The 
 action lists the files separated by
a space when the output is piped to another command. 
This can lead to a problem if any found files contain spaces in
their names, as the output doesn't use any quoting. 
In such cases, when the output of -printfind contains a file
name such as 
 and is piped into
another command, that command foo barsees
 two file names, not one
file name containing a space.
In such cases you can specify the action 
instead, which lists the found files separated not with a space,
but with a null character (which is not a legal character
in Unix or Linux file names). 
Of course the command that reads the output of -print0find
must be able to handle such a list of file names.   Many
commands commonly used with find (such as
tar or cpio) have special options to
read in file names separated with NULLs instead of spaces.
You can use shell-style wildcards in the -name search
argument:
find . -name foo\*bar
This will search from the current directory down for foo*bar
(that is, any filename that begins with foo and
ends with bar). 
Note that wildcards in the name argument
must be quoted so the shell doesn't expand them before passing them
to find. 
Also, unlike regular shell wildcards, these will match leading
periods in filenames. 
(For example 
.)
find -name \*.txt
You can search for other criteria beside the name. 
Also you can list multiple search criteria. 
When you have multiple criteria any found files must match all
listed criteria. 
That is, there is an implied Boolean AND operator
between the listed search criteria. 
find also allows OR and NOT Boolean
operators, as well as grouping, to combine search criteria in
powerful ways (not shown here.)
Here's an example using two search criteria:
find / -type f -mtime -7 | xargs tar -rf weekly_incremental.tar gzip weekly_incremental.tar
will find any regular files (i.e., not directories or other special files)
with the criteria 
, and only those
modified seven or fewer days ago
(-type f
). 
Note the use of -mtime -7xargs, a handy utility that coverts a
stream of input (in this case the output of find) into
command line arguments for the supplied command (in this case
tar, used to create a backup archive).
Using the tar option 
is dangerous here; 
-cxargs may invoke tar several times if
there are many files found and each 
 will
cause -ctar to over-write the previous invocation. 
The 
 option appends files to an
archive. 
Other options such as those that would permit filenames containing
spaces would be useful in a -rproduction quality
 backup script.
Another use of xargs is illustrated below. 
This command will efficiently remove all files named
core from your system (provided you run the command
as root of course):
find / -name core | xargs /bin/rm -f
find / -name core -exec /bin/rm -f '{}' \; # same thing
find / -name core -delete                  # same if using Gnu find
(The last two forms run the rm command once per file,
and are not as efficient as the first form.)
One of my favorite find criteria is to locate files
modified less than 10 minutes ago. 
I use this right after using some system administration
tool, to learn which files got changed by that tool:
find / -mmin -10
(This search is also useful when I've downloaded some file but can't locate it.)
Another common use is to locate all files owned by a given user
(
). 
This is useful when deleting user accounts.
-user username
You can also find files with various permissions set. 
 means to find
files with any of the specified permissions
on, -perm /permissions
 means to
find files with all of the specified
permissions on, and
-perm -permissions
 means to
find files with exactly permissions. 
Permisisons can be specified either symbolically (preferred)
or with an octal number. 
The following will locate files that are writeable by -perm permissionsothers
(including symlinks, which should be writeable by all):
find . -perm -o=w
(Using -perm is more complex than this example
shows. 
You should check both the 
POSIX documentation for find
(which explains how the symbolic modes work) and the
Gnu find man page (which describes the Gnu extensions).
When using find to locate files for backups, it often
pays to use the 
 option (really a criteria
that is always true), which forces the
output to be depth-first—that is, files first
and then the directories containing them. 
This helps when the directories have restrictive permissions,
and restoring the directory first could prevent the files from
restoring at all (and would change the time stamp on the directory
in any case). 
Normally, -depthfind returns the directory first, before any
of the files in that directory. 
This is useful when using the 
 action to
prevent -prunefind from examining any files you want to
ignore:
find / -name /dev -prune | xargs tar ...
When specifying time with find options such as
-mmin (minutes) or -mtime (24 hour
periods, starting from now), you can specify a number
 to mean exactly
nn, 
to mean less than -nn, and
 to mean more than
+nn.
Fractional 24-hour periods are truncated! 
That means that 
 says
to match files modified two or more days ago.
find -mtime +1
For example:
find . -mtime 0   # find files modified between now and 1 day ago
                  # (i.e., within the past 24 hours)
find . -mtime -1  # find files modified less than 1 day ago
                  # (i.e., within the past 24 hours, as before)
find . -mtime 1   # find files modified between 24 and 48 hours ago
find . -mtime +1  # find files modified more than 48 hours ago
find . -mmin +5 -mmin -10 # find files modifed between
                          # 6 and 9 minutes ago
Using the 
 action instead of the default
-printf
 is useful to control the
output format better than you can with -printls or
dir. 
You can use find with -printf to produce
output that can easily be parsed by other utilities, or imported
into spreadsheets or databases. 
(See the man page for the dozens
of possibilities with the -printf action.) 
The following displays non-hidden (no leading dot) files in the
current directory only (no subdirectories),
with an custom output format:
find . -maxdepth 1 -name '[!.]*' -printf 'Name: %16f Size: %6s\n'
(
 is a Gnu extension.)
-maxdepth
As a system administrator you can use find to locate
suspicious files (e.g., world writable files, files with no valid
owner and/or group, SetUID files, files with unusual permissions,
sizes, names, or dates). 
Here's a final more complex example (which I save as a shell
script):
find / -noleaf -wholename '/proc' -prune \
     -o -wholename '/sys' -prune \
     -o -wholename '/dev' -prune \
     -o -wholename '/windows-C-Drive' -prune \
     -o -perm -2 ! -type l  ! -type s \
     ! \( -type d -perm -1000 \) -print
This says to seach the whole system, skipping the directories
/proc, /sys, /dev, and
/windows-C-Drive (presumably a Windows partition on
a dual-booted computer). 
The Gnu -noleaf option tells find not
to assume all remaining mounted filesystems are Unix file systems
(you might have a mounted CD for instance). 
The 
 is the Boolean OR operator, and
-o
 is the Boolean NOT operator (applies to the
following criteria).
!
So this criteria says to locate files that are world writable
(
, same as -perm -2
)
and NOT symlinks
(-o=w
) and NOT sockets
(! -type l
)
and NOT directories with the sticky (or text)
bit set
(! -type s
). 
(Symlinks, sockets and directories with the sticky bit set are often
world-writable and generally not suspicious.)
! \( -type d -perm -1000 \)
A common request is a way to find all the hard links to
some file. 
Using 
 will
tell you how many hard links the file has, and the
inode number. 
You can locate all pathnames to this file with:
ls -li file
find mount-point -xdev -inum inode-number
Since hard links are restricted to a single filesystem, you need
to search that whole filesystem so you start the search at the
filesystem's mount point. 
(This is likely to be either 
 or
/home
 for files in your home directory.) 
The /
 options tells -xdevfind
to not search any other filesystems.
(While most Unix and all Linux systems have a find
command that supports the 
 criteria,
this isn't POSIX standard. 
Older Unix systems provided the -inum
utility instead that could be used for this.)
ncheck
-exec Efficiently: 
The -exec option to find is great, but
since it runs the command listed for every found file, it isn't
very efficient. 
On a large system this makes a difference! 
One solution is to combine find with
xargs as discussed above:
find whatever... | xargs command
However this approach has two limitations. 
Firstly not all commands accept the
list of files at the end of the command. 
A good example is cp:
find . -name \*.txt | xargs cp /tmp # This won't work!
(Note the Gnu version of cp has a non-POSIX
option 
 for this.)
-t
Secondly filenames may contain spaces or newlines, which would
confuse the command used with xargs. 
(Again Gnu tools have options for that,
.)
find ... -print0 |xargs -0 ...
There are POSIX (but non-obvious) solutions to both problems. 
An alternate form of -exec ends with a plus-sign, not a
semi-colon. 
This form collects the filenames into groups or sets, and runs the
command once per set. 
(This is exactly what xargs does, to prevent argument
lists from becoming too long for the system to handle.) 
In this form the {} argument expands to the set of
filenames. 
For example:
find / -name core -exec /bin/rm -f '{}' +
This form of -exec can be combined with a shell
feature to solve the other problem (names with spaces). 
The POSIX shell allows us to use:
sh -c 'command-line' [ command-name [ args... ] ]
(We don't usually care about the command-name, so X
,
dummy
, or inline cmd
 is often used.) 
Here's an example of efficiently copying found files, in a
POSIX-compliant way
(Posted on 
comp.unix.shell netnews newsgroup on Oct. 28 2007 by
Stephane CHAZELAS):
find . -name '*.txt' -type f \
  -exec sh -c 'exec cp -f "$@" /tmp' find-copy {} +
The find command can be amazingly useful. 
See the man page to learn all the criteria and options you can use.