1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
4 @settitle Finding Files
5 @c For double-sided printing, uncomment:
6 @c @setchapternewpage odd
17 * Finding files: (find). Operating on files matching certain criteria.
20 @dircategory Individual utilities
22 * find: (find)Invoking find. Finding and acting on files.
23 * locate: (find)Invoking locate. Finding files in a database.
24 * updatedb: (find)Invoking updatedb. Building the locate database.
25 * xargs: (find)Invoking xargs. Operating on many files.
30 This file documents the GNU utilities for finding files that match
31 certain criteria and performing various operations on them.
33 Copyright (C) 1994, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 Free
34 Software Foundation, Inc.
36 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
37 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
38 are preserved on all copies.
41 Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
42 results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
43 notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
44 (this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
47 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
48 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the
49 entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
50 permission notice identical to this one.
52 Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
53 manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
54 versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a
55 translation approved by the Foundation.
60 @subtitle Edition @value{EDITION}, for GNU @code{find} version @value{VERSION}
61 @subtitle @value{UPDATED}
62 @author by David MacKenzie and James Youngman
65 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
72 @node Top, Introduction, , (dir)
73 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
75 This file documents the GNU utilities for finding files that match
76 certain criteria and performing various actions on them.
78 This is edition @value{EDITION}, for @code{find} version @value{VERSION}.
81 @c The master menu, created with texinfo-master-menu, goes here.
84 * Introduction:: Summary of the tasks this manual describes.
85 * Finding Files:: Finding files that match certain criteria.
86 * Actions:: Doing things to files you have found.
87 * Databases:: Maintaining file name databases.
88 * File Permissions:: How to control access to files.
89 * Reference:: Summary of how to invoke the programs.
90 * Common Tasks:: Solutions to common real-world problems.
91 * Worked Examples:: Examples demonstrating more complex points.
92 * Security Considerations:: Security issues relating to findutils.
93 * Error Messages:: Explanations of some messages you might see.
94 * Primary Index:: The components of @code{find} expressions.
97 @node Introduction, Finding Files, Top, Top
100 This manual shows how to find files that meet criteria you specify,
101 and how to perform various actions on the files that you find. The
102 principal programs that you use to perform these tasks are
103 @code{find}, @code{locate}, and @code{xargs}. Some of the examples in
104 this manual use capabilities specific to the GNU versions of those
107 GNU @code{find} was originally written by Eric Decker, with
108 enhancements by David MacKenzie, Jay Plett, and Tim Wood. GNU
109 @code{xargs} was originally written by Mike Rendell, with enhancements
110 by David MacKenzie. GNU @code{locate} and its associated utilities
111 were originally written by James Woods, with enhancements by David
112 MacKenzie. The idea for @samp{find -print0} and @samp{xargs -0} came
113 from Dan Bernstein. The current maintainer of GNU findutils (and this
114 manual) is James Youngman. Many other people have contributed bug
115 fixes, small improvements, and helpful suggestions. Thanks!
117 To report a bug in GNU findutils, please use the form on the Savannah
119 @code{http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=findutils}. Reporting bugs
120 this way means that you will then be able to track progress in fixing
123 If you don't have web access, you can also just send mail to the
124 mailing list. The mailing list @email{bug-findutils@@gnu.org} carries
125 discussion of bugs in findutils, questions and answers about the
126 software and discussion of the development of the programs. To join
127 the list, send email to @email{bug-findutils-request@@gnu.org}.
129 Please read any relevant sections of this manual before asking for
130 help on the mailing list. You may also find it helpful to read the
131 NON-BUGS section of the @code{find} manual page.
133 If you ask for help on the mailing list, people will be able to help
134 you much more effectively if you include the following things:
137 @item The version of the software you are running. You can find this
138 out by running @samp{locate --version}.
139 @item What you were trying to do
140 @item The @emph{exact} command line you used
141 @item The @emph{exact} output you got (if this is very long, try to
142 find a smaller example which exhibits the same problem)
143 @item The output you expected to get
155 For brevity, the word @dfn{file} in this manual means a regular file,
156 a directory, a symbolic link, or any other kind of node that has a
157 directory entry. A directory entry is also called a @dfn{file name}.
158 A file name may contain some, all, or none of the directories in a
159 path that leads to the file. These are all examples of what this
160 manual calls ``file names'':
167 /usr/local/include/termcap.h
170 A @dfn{directory tree} is a directory and the files it contains, all
171 of its subdirectories and the files they contain, etc. It can also be
172 a single non-directory file.
174 These programs enable you to find the files in one or more directory
179 have names that contain certain text or match a certain pattern;
181 are links to certain files;
183 were last used during a certain period of time;
185 are within a certain size range;
187 are of a certain type (regular file, directory, symbolic link, etc.);
189 are owned by a certain user or group;
191 have certain access permissions;
193 contain text that matches a certain pattern;
195 are within a certain depth in the directory tree;
197 or some combination of the above.
200 Once you have found the files you're looking for (or files that are
201 potentially the ones you're looking for), you can do more to them than
202 simply list their names. You can get any combination of the files'
203 attributes, or process the files in many ways, either individually or
204 in groups of various sizes. Actions that you might want to perform on
205 the files you have found include, but are not limited to:
215 change access permissions
220 This manual describes how to perform each of those tasks, and more.
225 The principal programs used for making lists of files that match given
226 criteria and running commands on them are @code{find}, @code{locate},
227 and @code{xargs}. An additional command, @code{updatedb}, is used by
228 system administrators to create databases for @code{locate} to use.
230 @code{find} searches for files in a directory hierarchy and prints
231 information about the files it found. It is run like this:
234 find @r{[}@var{file}@dots{}@r{]} @r{[}@var{expression}@r{]}
238 Here is a typical use of @code{find}. This example prints the names
239 of all files in the directory tree rooted in @file{/usr/src} whose
240 name ends with @samp{.c} and that are larger than 100 Kilobytes.
242 find /usr/src -name '*.c' -size +100k -print
245 Notice that the wildcard must be enclosed in quotes in order to
246 protect it from expansion by the shell.
248 @code{locate} searches special file name databases for file names that
249 match patterns. The system administrator runs the @code{updatedb}
250 program to create the databases. @code{locate} is run like this:
253 locate @r{[}@var{option}@dots{}@r{]} @var{pattern}@dots{}
257 This example prints the names of all files in the default file name
258 database whose name ends with @samp{Makefile} or @samp{makefile}.
259 Which file names are stored in the database depends on how the system
260 administrator ran @code{updatedb}.
262 locate '*[Mm]akefile'
265 The name @code{xargs}, pronounced EX-args, means ``combine
266 arguments.'' @code{xargs} builds and executes command lines by
267 gathering together arguments it reads on the standard input. Most
268 often, these arguments are lists of file names generated by
269 @code{find}. @code{xargs} is run like this:
272 xargs @r{[}@var{option}@dots{}@r{]} @r{[}@var{command} @r{[}@var{initial-arguments}@r{]}@r{]}
276 The following command searches the files listed in the file
277 @file{file-list} and prints all of the lines in them that contain the
280 xargs grep typedef < file-list
283 @node find Expressions
284 @section @code{find} Expressions
286 The expression that @code{find} uses to select files consists of one
287 or more @dfn{primaries}, each of which is a separate command line
288 argument to @code{find}. @code{find} evaluates the expression each
289 time it processes a file. An expression can contain any of the
290 following types of primaries:
294 affect overall operation rather than the processing of a specific
297 return a true or false value, depending on the file's attributes;
299 have side effects and return a true or false value; and
301 connect the other arguments and affect when and whether they are
305 You can omit the operator between two primaries; it defaults to
306 @samp{-and}. @xref{Combining Primaries With Operators}, for ways to
307 connect primaries into more complex expressions. If the expression
308 contains no actions other than @samp{-prune}, @samp{-print} is
309 performed on all files for which the entire expression is true
310 (@pxref{Print File Name}).
312 Options take effect immediately, rather than being evaluated for each
313 file when their place in the expression is reached. Therefore, for
314 clarity, it is best to place them at the beginning of the expression.
316 Many of the primaries take arguments, which immediately follow them in
317 the next command line argument to @code{find}. Some arguments are
318 file names, patterns, or other strings; others are numbers. Numeric
319 arguments can be specified as
323 for greater than @var{n},
325 for less than @var{n},
330 @node Finding Files, Actions, Introduction, Top
331 @chapter Finding Files
333 By default, @code{find} prints to the standard output the names of the
334 files that match the given criteria. @xref{Actions}, for how to get
335 more information about the matching files.
349 * Combining Primaries With Operators::
355 Here are ways to search for files whose name matches a certain
356 pattern. @xref{Shell Pattern Matching}, for a description of the
357 @var{pattern} arguments to these tests.
359 Each of these tests has a case-sensitive version and a
360 case-insensitive version, whose name begins with @samp{i}. In a
361 case-insensitive comparison, the patterns @samp{fo*} and @samp{F??}
362 match the file names @file{Foo}, @samp{FOO}, @samp{foo}, @samp{fOo},
366 * Base Name Patterns::
367 * Full Name Patterns::
368 * Fast Full Name Search::
369 * Shell Pattern Matching:: Wildcards used by these programs.
372 @node Base Name Patterns
373 @subsection Base Name Patterns
375 @deffn Test -name pattern
376 @deffnx Test -iname pattern
377 True if the base of the file name (the path with the leading
378 directories removed) matches shell pattern @var{pattern}. For
379 @samp{-iname}, the match is case-insensitive.@footnote{Because we
380 need to perform case-insensitive matching, the GNU fnmatch
381 implementation is always used; if the C library includes the GNU
382 implementation, we use that and otherwise we use the one from gnulib}
383 To ignore a whole directory tree, use @samp{-prune}
384 (@pxref{Directories}). As an example, to find Texinfo source files in
385 @file{/usr/local/doc}:
388 find /usr/local/doc -name '*.texi'
391 Notice that the wildcard must be enclosed in quotes in order to
392 protect it from expansion by the shell.
394 As of findutils version 4.2.2, patterns for @samp{-name} and
395 @samp{-iname} will match a file name with a leading @samp{.}. For
396 example the command @samp{find /tmp -name \*bar} will match the file
397 @file{/tmp/.foobar}. Braces within the pattern (@samp{@{@}}) are not
398 considered to be special (that is, @code{find . -name 'foo@{1,2@}'}
399 matches a file named @file{foo@{1,2@}}, not the files @file{foo1} and
404 @node Full Name Patterns
405 @subsection Full Name Patterns
407 @deffn Test -wholename pattern
408 @deffnx Test -iwholename pattern
409 True if the entire file name, starting with the command line argument
410 under which the file was found, matches shell pattern @var{pattern}.
411 For @samp{-iwholename}, the match is case-insensitive. To ignore a
412 whole directory tree, use @samp{-prune} rather than checking every
413 file in the tree (@pxref{Directories}). The ``entire file name'' as
414 used by @code{find} starts with the starting-point specified on the
415 command line, and is not converted to an absolute pathname, so for
416 example @code{cd /; find tmp -wholename /tmp} will never match
420 @deffn Test -path pattern
421 @deffnx Test -ipath pattern
422 These tests are deprecated, but work as for @samp{-wholename} and
423 @samp{-iwholename}, respectively. The @samp{-ipath} test is a GNU
424 extension, but @samp{-path} is also provided by HP-UX @code{find}.
427 @deffn Test -regex expr
428 @deffnx Test -iregex expr
429 True if the entire file name matches regular expression @var{expr}.
430 This is a match on the whole path, not a search. For example, to
431 match a file named @file{./fubar3}, you can use the regular expression
432 @samp{.*bar.} or @samp{.*b.*3}, but not @samp{f.*r3}. @xref{Regexps,
433 , Syntax of Regular Expressions, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for a
434 description of the syntax of regular expressions. For @samp{-iregex},
435 the match is case-insensitive. There are several varieties of regular
436 expressions; by default this test uses POSIX basic regular
437 expressions, but this can be changed with the option
441 @deffn Option -regextype name
442 This option controls the variety of regular expression syntax
443 understood by the @samp{-regex} and @samp{-iregex} tests. This option
444 is positional; that is, it only affects regular expressions which
445 occur later in the command line. If this option is not given, GNU
446 Emacs regular expressions are assumed. Currently-implemented types
452 Regular expressions compatible with GNU Emacs; this is also the
453 default behaviour if this option is not used.
455 Regular expressions compatible with the POSIX awk command (not GNU awk)
457 POSIX Basic Regular Expressions.
459 Regular expressions compatible with the POSIX egrep command
461 POSIX Extended Regular Expressions
464 @ref{Regular Expressions} for more information on the regular
465 expression dialects understood by GNU findutils.
470 @node Fast Full Name Search
471 @subsection Fast Full Name Search
473 To search for files by name without having to actually scan the
474 directories on the disk (which can be slow), you can use the
475 @code{locate} program. For each shell pattern you give it,
476 @code{locate} searches one or more databases of file names and
477 displays the file names that contain the pattern. @xref{Shell Pattern
478 Matching}, for details about shell patterns.
480 If a pattern is a plain string---it contains no
481 metacharacters---@code{locate} displays all file names in the database
482 that contain that string. If a pattern contains
483 metacharacters, @code{locate} only displays file names that match the
484 pattern exactly. As a result, patterns that contain metacharacters
485 should usually begin with a @samp{*}, and will most often end with one
486 as well. The exceptions are patterns that are intended to explicitly
487 match the beginning or end of a file name.
489 If you only want @code{locate} to match against the last component of
490 the file names (the ``base name'' of the files) you can use the
491 @samp{--basename} option. The opposite behaviour is the default, but
492 can be selected explicitly by using the option @samp{--wholename}.
499 is almost equivalent to
501 find @var{directories} -name @var{pattern}
504 where @var{directories} are the directories for which the file name
505 databases contain information. The differences are that the
506 @code{locate} information might be out of date, and that @code{locate}
507 handles wildcards in the pattern slightly differently than @code{find}
508 (@pxref{Shell Pattern Matching}).
510 The file name databases contain lists of files that were on the system
511 when the databases were last updated. The system administrator can
512 choose the file name of the default database, the frequency with which
513 the databases are updated, and the directories for which they contain
516 Here is how to select which file name databases @code{locate}
517 searches. The default is system-dependent.
520 @item --database=@var{path}
522 Instead of searching the default file name database, search the file
523 name databases in @var{path}, which is a colon-separated list of
524 database file names. You can also use the environment variable
525 @code{LOCATE_PATH} to set the list of database files to search. The
526 option overrides the environment variable if both are used.
529 @node Shell Pattern Matching
530 @subsection Shell Pattern Matching
532 @code{find} and @code{locate} can compare file names, or parts of file
533 names, to shell patterns. A @dfn{shell pattern} is a string that may
534 contain the following special characters, which are known as
535 @dfn{wildcards} or @dfn{metacharacters}.
537 You must quote patterns that contain metacharacters to prevent the
538 shell from expanding them itself. Double and single quotes both work;
539 so does escaping with a backslash.
543 Matches any zero or more characters.
546 Matches any one character.
549 Matches exactly one character that is a member of the string
550 @var{string}. This is called a @dfn{character class}. As a
551 shorthand, @var{string} may contain ranges, which consist of two
552 characters with a dash between them. For example, the class
553 @samp{[a-z0-9_]} matches a lowercase letter, a number, or an
554 underscore. You can negate a class by placing a @samp{!} or @samp{^}
555 immediately after the opening bracket. Thus, @samp{[^A-Z@@]} matches
556 any character except an uppercase letter or an at sign.
559 Removes the special meaning of the character that follows it. This
560 works even in character classes.
563 In the @code{find} tests that do shell pattern matching (@samp{-name},
564 @samp{-wholename}, etc.), wildcards in the pattern will match a
565 @samp{.} at the beginning of a file name. This is also the case for
566 @code{locate}. Thus, @samp{find -name '*macs'} will match a file
567 named @file{.emacs}, as will @samp{locate '*macs'}.
569 Slash characters have no special significance in the shell pattern
570 matching that @code{find} and @code{locate} do, unlike in the shell,
571 in which wildcards do not match them. Therefore, a pattern
572 @samp{foo*bar} can match a file name @samp{foo3/bar}, and a pattern
573 @samp{./sr*sc} can match a file name @samp{./src/misc}.
575 If you want to locate some files with the @samp{locate} command but
576 don't need to see the full list you can use the @samp{--limit} option
577 to see just a small number of results, or the @samp{--count} option to
578 display only the total number of matches.
583 There are two ways that files can be linked together. @dfn{Symbolic
584 links} are a special type of file whose contents are a portion of the
585 name of another file. @dfn{Hard links} are multiple directory entries
586 for one file; the file names all have the same index node
587 (@dfn{inode}) number on the disk.
595 @subsection Symbolic Links
597 Symbolic links are names that reference other files. GNU @code{find}
598 will handle symbolic links in one of two ways; firstly, it can
599 dereference the links for you - this means that if it comes across a
600 symbolic link, it examines the file that the link points to, in order
601 to see if it matches the criteria you have specified. Secondly, it
602 can check the link itself in case you might be looking for the actual
603 link. If the file that the symbolic link points to is also within the
604 directory hierarchy you are searching with the @code{find} command,
605 you may not see a great deal of difference between these two
608 By default, @code{find} examines symbolic links themselves when it
609 finds them (and, if it later comes across the linked-to file, it will
610 examine that, too). If you would prefer @code{find} to dereference
611 the links and examine the file that each link points to, specify the
612 @samp{-L} option to @code{find}. You can explicitly specify the
613 default behaviour by using the @samp{-P} option. The @samp{-H}
614 option is a half-way-between option which ensures that any symbolic
615 links listed on the command line are dereferenced, but other symbolic
618 Symbolic links are different to ``hard links'' in the sense that you
619 need permissions upon the linked-to file in order to be able to
620 dereference the link. This can mean that even if you specify the
621 @samp{-L} option, @code{find} may not be able to determine the
622 properties of the file that the link points to (because you don't have
623 sufficient permissions). In this situation, @code{find} uses the
624 properties of the link itself. This also occurs if a symbolic link
625 exists but points to a file that is missing.
627 The options controlling the behaviour of @code{find} with respect to
628 links are as follows :-
632 @code{find} does not dereference symbolic links at all. This is the
633 default behaviour. This option must be specified before any of the
634 file names on the command line.
636 @code{find} does not dereference symbolic links (except in the case of
637 file names on the command line, which are dereferenced). If a
638 symbolic link cannot be dereferenced, the information for the symbolic
639 link itself is used. This option must be specified before any of the
640 file names on the command line.
642 @code{find} dereferences symbolic links where possible, and where this
643 is not possible it uses the properties of the symbolic link itself.
644 This option must be specified before any of the file names on the
645 command line. Use of this option also implies the same behaviour as
646 the @samp{-noleaf} option. If you later use the @samp{-H} or
647 @samp{-P} options, this does not turn off @samp{-noleaf}.
650 This option forms part of the ``expression'' and must be specified
651 after the file names, but it is otherwise equivalent to @samp{-L}.
652 The @samp{-follow} option affects only those tests which appear after
653 it on the command line. This option is deprecated. Where possible,
654 you should use @samp{-L} instead.
657 The following differences in behavior occur when the @samp{-L} option
662 @code{find} follows symbolic links to directories when searching
665 @samp{-lname} and @samp{-ilname} always return false (unless they
666 happen to match broken symbolic links).
668 @samp{-type} reports the types of the files that symbolic links point
669 to. This means that in combination with @samp{-L}, @samp{-type l}
670 will be true only for broken symbolic links. To check for symbolic
671 links when @samp{-L} has been specified, use @samp{-xtype l}.
673 Implies @samp{-noleaf} (@pxref{Directories}).
676 If the @samp{-L} option or the @samp{-H} option is used,
677 the file names used as arguments to @samp{-newer}, @samp{-anewer}, and
678 @samp{-cnewer} are dereferenced and the timestamp from the pointed-to
679 file is used instead (if possible -- otherwise the timestamp from the
680 symbolic link is used).
682 @deffn Test -lname pattern
683 @deffnx Test -ilname pattern
684 True if the file is a symbolic link whose contents match shell pattern
685 @var{pattern}. For @samp{-ilname}, the match is case-insensitive.
686 @xref{Shell Pattern Matching}, for details about the @var{pattern}
687 argument. If the @samp{-L} option is in effect, this test will always
688 return false for symbolic links unless they are broken. So, to list
689 any symbolic links to @file{sysdep.c} in the current directory and its
690 subdirectories, you can do:
693 find . -lname '*sysdep.c'
698 @subsection Hard Links
700 Hard links allow more than one name to refer to the same file. To
701 find all the names which refer to the same file as NAME, use
702 @samp{-samefile NAME}. If you are not using the @samp{-L} option, you
703 can confine your search to one filesystem using the @samp{-xdev}
704 option. This is useful because hard links cannot point outside a
705 single filesystem, so this can cut down on needless searching.
707 If the @samp{-L} option is in effect, and NAME is in fact a symbolic
708 link, the symbolic link will be dereferenced. Hence you are searching
709 for other links (hard or symbolic) to the file pointed to by NAME. If
710 @samp{-L} is in effect but NAME is not itself a symbolic link, other
711 symbolic links to the file NAME will be matched.
713 You can also search for files by inode number. This can occasionally
714 be useful in diagnosing problems with filesystems for example, because
715 @code{fsck} tends to print inode numbers. Inode numbers also
716 occasionally turn up in log messages for some types of software, and
717 are used to support the @code{ftok()} library function.
719 You can learn a file's inode number and the number of links to it by
720 running @samp{ls -li} or @samp{find -ls}.
722 You can search for hard links to inode number NUM by using @samp{-inum
723 NUM}. If there are any filesystem mount points below the directory
724 where you are starting the search, use the @samp{-xdev} option unless
725 you are also using the @samp{-L} option. Using @samp{-xdev} this
726 saves needless searching, since hard links to a file must be on the
727 same filesystem. @xref{Filesystems}.
729 @deffn Test -samefile NAME
730 File is a hard link to the same inode as NAME. If the @samp{-L}
731 option is in effect, symbolic links to the same file as NAME points to
736 File has inode number @var{n}. The @samp{+} and @samp{-} qualifiers
737 also work, though these are rarely useful. Much of the time it is
738 easier to use @samp{-samefile} rather than this option.
741 You can also search for files that have a certain number of links,
742 with @samp{-links}. Directories normally have at least two hard
743 links; their @file{.} entry is the second one. If they have
744 subdirectories, each of those also has a hard link called @file{..} to
745 its parent directory. The @file{.} and @file{..} directory entries
746 are not normally searched unless they are mentioned on the @code{find}
750 File has @var{n} hard links.
753 @deffn Test -links +n
754 File has more than @var{n} hard links.
757 @deffn Test -links -n
758 File has fewer than @var{n} hard links.
764 Each file has three time stamps, which record the last time that
765 certain operations were performed on the file:
769 access (read the file's contents)
771 change the status (modify the file or its attributes)
773 modify (change the file's contents)
776 There is no timestamp that indicates when a file was @emph{created}.
778 You can search for files whose time stamps are within a certain age
779 range, or compare them to other time stamps.
783 * Comparing Timestamps::
787 @subsection Age Ranges
789 These tests are mainly useful with ranges (@samp{+@var{n}} and
793 @deffnx Test -ctime n
794 @deffnx Test -mtime n
795 True if the file was last accessed (or its status changed, or it was
796 modified) @var{n}*24 hours ago. The number of 24-hour periods since
797 the file's timestamp is always rounded down; therefore 0 means ``less
798 than 24 hours ago'', 1 means ``between 24 and 48 hours ago'', and so
805 True if the file was last accessed (or its status changed, or it was
806 modified) @var{n} minutes ago. These tests provide finer granularity
807 of measurement than @samp{-atime} et al., but rounding is done in a
808 similar way. For example, to list files in @file{/u/bill} that were
809 last read from 2 to 6 minutes ago:
812 find /u/bill -amin +2 -amin -6
816 @deffn Option -daystart
817 Measure times from the beginning of today rather than from 24 hours
818 ago. So, to list the regular files in your home directory that were
819 modified yesterday, do
822 find ~ -daystart -type f -mtime 1
825 The @samp{-daystart} option is unlike most other options in that it
826 has an effect on the way that other tests are performed. The affected
827 tests are @samp{-amin}, @samp{-cmin}, @samp{-mmin}, @samp{-atime},
828 @samp{-ctime} and @samp{-mtime}. The @samp{-daystart} option only
829 affects the behaviour of any tests which appear after it on the
833 @node Comparing Timestamps
834 @subsection Comparing Timestamps
836 As an alternative to comparing timestamps to the current time, you can
837 compare them to another file's timestamp. That file's timestamp could
838 be updated by another program when some event occurs. Or you could
839 set it to a particular fixed date using the @code{touch} command. For
840 example, to list files in @file{/usr} modified after February 1 of the
843 @c Idea from Rick Sladkey.
845 touch -t 02010000 /tmp/stamp$$
846 find /usr -newer /tmp/stamp$$
850 @deffn Test -anewer file
851 @deffnx Test -cnewer file
852 @deffnx Test -newer file
853 True if the file was last accessed (or its status changed, or it was
854 modified) more recently than @var{file} was modified. These tests are
855 affected by @samp{-follow} only if @samp{-follow} comes before them on
856 the command line. @xref{Symbolic Links}, for more information on
857 @samp{-follow}. As an example, to list any files modified since
858 @file{/bin/sh} was last modified:
861 find . -newer /bin/sh
866 True if the file was last accessed @var{n} days after its status was
867 last changed. Useful for finding files that are not being used, and
868 could perhaps be archived or removed to save disk space.
874 @deffn Test -size n@r{[}bckwMG@r{]}
875 True if the file uses @var{n} units of space, rounding up. The units
876 are 512-byte blocks by default, but they can be changed by adding a
877 one-character suffix to @var{n}:
881 512-byte blocks (never 1024)
885 kilobytes (1024 bytes)
889 Megabytes (units of 1048576 bytes)
891 Gigabytes (units of 1073741824 bytes)
894 The `b' suffix always considers blocks to be 512 bytes. This is not
895 affected by the setting (or non-setting) of the POSIXLY_CORRECT
896 environment variable. This behaviour is different to the behaviour of
897 the @samp{-ls} action). If you want to use 1024-byte units, use the
900 The number can be prefixed with a `+' or a `-'. A plus sign indicates
901 that the test should succeed if the file uses at least @var{n} units
902 of storage (a common use of this test) and a minus sign
903 indicates that the test should succeed if the file uses less than
904 @var{n} units of storage. There is no `=' prefix, because that's the
907 The size does not count indirect blocks, but it does count blocks in
908 sparse files that are not actually allocated. In other words, it's
909 consistent with the result you get for @samp{ls -l} or @samp{wc -c}.
910 This handling of sparse files differs from the output of the @samp{%k}
911 and @samp{%b} format specifiers for the @samp{-printf} predicate.
916 True if the file is empty and is either a regular file or a directory.
917 This might help determine good candidates for deletion. This test is
918 useful with @samp{-depth} (@pxref{Directories}) and @samp{-delete}
919 (@pxref{Single File}).
926 True if the file is of type @var{c}:
930 block (buffered) special
932 character (unbuffered) special
940 symbolic link; if @samp{-L} is in effect, this is true only for broken
941 symbolic links. If you want to search for symbolic links when
942 @samp{-L} is in effect, use @samp{-xtype} instead of @samp{-type}.
951 This test behaves the same as @samp{-type} unless the file is a
952 symbolic link. If the file is a symbolic link, the result is as
953 follows (in the table below, @samp{X} should be understood to
954 represent any letter except @samp{l}):
957 @item @samp{-P -xtype l}
958 True if the symbolic link is broken
959 @item @samp{-P -xtype X}
960 True if the (ultimate) target file is of type @samp{X}.
961 @item @samp{-L -xtype l}
963 @item @samp{-L -xtype X}
964 False unless the symbolic link is broken
967 In other words, for symbolic links, @samp{-xtype} checks the type of
968 the file that @samp{-type} does not check.
970 The @samp{-H} option also affects the behaviour of @samp{-xtype}.
971 When @samp{-H} is in effect, @samp{-xtype} behaves as if @samp{-L} had
972 been specified when examining files listed on the command line, and as
973 if @samp{-P} had been specified otherwise. If neither @samp{-H} nor
974 @samp{-L} was specified, @samp{-xtype} behaves as if @samp{-P} had
977 @xref{Symbolic Links}, for more information on @samp{-follow} and
984 @deffn Test -user uname
985 @deffnx Test -group gname
986 True if the file is owned by user @var{uname} (belongs to group
987 @var{gname}). A numeric ID is allowed.
992 True if the file's numeric user ID (group ID) is @var{n}. These tests
993 support ranges (@samp{+@var{n}} and @samp{-@var{n}}), unlike
994 @samp{-user} and @samp{-group}.
998 @deffnx Test -nogroup
999 True if no user corresponds to the file's numeric user ID (no group
1000 corresponds to the numeric group ID). These cases usually mean that
1001 the files belonged to users who have since been removed from the
1002 system. You probably should change the ownership of such files to an
1003 existing user or group, using the @code{chown} or @code{chgrp}
1008 @section Permissions
1010 @xref{File Permissions}, for information on how file permissions are
1011 structured and how to specify them.
1013 Four tests determine what users can do with files. These are
1014 @samp{-readable}, @samp{-writable}, @samp{-executable} and
1015 @samp{-perm}. The first three tests ask the operating system if the
1016 current user can perform the relevant operation on a file, while
1017 @samp{-perm} just examines the file's mode. The file mode may give
1018 a misleading impression of what the user can actually do, because the
1019 file may have an access control list, or exist on a read-only
1020 filesystem, for example. Of these four tests though, only
1021 @samp{-perm} is specified by the POSIX standard.
1023 The @samp{-readable}, @samp{-writable} and @samp{-executable} tests
1024 are implemented via the @code{access} system call. This is
1025 implemented within the operating system itself. If the file being
1026 considered is on an NFS filesystem, the remote system may allow or
1027 forbid read or write operations for reasons of which the NFS client
1028 cannot take account. This includes user-ID mapping, either in the
1029 general sense or the more restricted sense in which remote superusers
1030 are treated by the NFS server as if they are the local user
1031 @samp{nobody} on the NFS server.
1033 None of the tests in this section should be used to verify that a user
1034 is authorised to perform any operation (on the file being tested or
1035 any other file) because of the possibility of a race condition. That
1036 is, the situation may change between the test and an action being
1037 taken on the basis of the result of that test.
1040 @deffn Test -readable
1041 True if the file can be read by the invoking user.
1044 @deffn Test -writable
1045 True if the file can be written by the invoking user. This is an
1046 in-principle check, and other things may prevent a successful write
1047 operation; for example, the filesystem might be full.
1050 @deffn Test -executable
1051 True if the file can be executed by the invoking user.
1054 @deffn Test -perm mode
1056 True if the file's permissions are exactly @var{mode}, which can be
1057 numeric or symbolic.
1059 If @var{mode} starts with @samp{-}, true if
1060 @emph{all} of the permissions set in @var{mode} are set for the file;
1061 permissions not set in @var{mode} are ignored.
1063 If @var{mode} starts with @samp{/}, true if
1064 @emph{any} of the permissions set in @var{mode} are set for the file;
1065 permissions not set in @var{mode} are ignored.
1066 This is a GNU extension.
1068 If you don't use the @samp{/} or @samp{-} form with a symbolic mode
1069 string, you may have to specify a rather complex mode string. For
1070 example @samp{-perm g=w} will only match files which have mode 0020
1071 (that is, ones for which group write permission is the only permission
1072 set). It is more likely that you will want to use the @samp{/} or
1073 @samp{-} forms, for example @samp{-perm -g=w}, which matches any file
1074 with group write permission.
1079 Match files which have read and write permission for their owner,
1080 and group, but which the rest of the world can read but not write to.
1081 Files which meet these criteria but have other permissions bits set
1082 (for example if someone can execute the file) will not be matched.
1085 Match files which have read and write permission for their owner,
1086 and group, but which the rest of the world can read but not write to,
1087 without regard to the presence of any extra permission bits (for
1088 example the executable bit). This will match a file which has mode
1092 Match files which are writable by somebody (their owner, or
1093 their group, or anybody else).
1096 Match files which are writable by either their owner or their
1097 group. The files don't have to be writable by both the owner and
1098 group to be matched; either will do.
1100 @item -perm /g+w,o+w
1103 @item -perm /g=w,o=w
1107 Search for files which are writable by both their owner and their
1110 @item -perm -444 -perm /222 ! -perm /111
1111 Search for files which are readable for everybody, have at least one
1112 write bit set (i.e. somebody can write to them), but which cannot be
1113 executed by anybody. Note that in some shells the @samp{!} must be
1116 @item -perm -a+r -perm /a+w ! -perm /a+x
1120 @item -perm -g+w,o+w
1125 If you specify @samp{-perm /000} or @samp{-perm /mode} where the
1126 symbolic mode @samp{mode} has no bits set, the test currently matches
1127 no files. This differs from the behaviour of @samp{-perm -000}, which
1128 matches all files. The behaviour of @samp{-perm /000} will be changed
1129 to be consistent with the behaviour of @samp{-perm -000}. The change
1130 will probably be made in early 2006.
1138 To search for files based on their contents, you can use the
1139 @code{grep} program. For example, to find out which C source files in
1140 the current directory contain the string @samp{thing}, you can do:
1143 grep -l thing *.[ch]
1146 If you also want to search for the string in files in subdirectories,
1147 you can combine @code{grep} with @code{find} and @code{xargs}, like
1151 find . -name '*.[ch]' | xargs grep -l thing
1154 The @samp{-l} option causes @code{grep} to print only the names of
1155 files that contain the string, rather than the lines that contain it.
1156 The string argument (@samp{thing}) is actually a regular expression,
1157 so it can contain metacharacters. This method can be refined a little
1158 by using the @samp{-r} option to make @code{xargs} not run @code{grep}
1159 if @code{find} produces no output, and using the @code{find} action
1160 @samp{-print0} and the @code{xargs} option @samp{-0} to avoid
1161 misinterpreting files whose names contain spaces:
1164 find . -name '*.[ch]' -print0 | xargs -r -0 grep -l thing
1167 For a fuller treatment of finding files whose contents match a
1168 pattern, see the manual page for @code{grep}.
1171 @section Directories
1173 Here is how to control which directories @code{find} searches, and how
1174 it searches them. These two options allow you to process a horizontal
1175 slice of a directory tree.
1177 @deffn Option -maxdepth levels
1178 Descend at most @var{levels} (a non-negative integer) levels of
1179 directories below the command line arguments. @samp{-maxdepth 0}
1180 means only apply the tests and actions to the command line arguments.
1183 @deffn Option -mindepth levels
1184 Do not apply any tests or actions at levels less than @var{levels} (a
1185 non-negative integer). @samp{-mindepth 1} means process all files
1186 except the command line arguments.
1189 @deffn Option -depth
1190 Process each directory's contents before the directory itself. Doing
1191 this is a good idea when producing lists of files to archive with
1192 @code{cpio} or @code{tar}. If a directory does not have write
1193 permission for its owner, its contents can still be restored from the
1194 archive since the directory's permissions are restored after its
1199 This is a deprecated synonym for @samp{-depth}, for compatibility with
1200 Mac OS X, FreeBSD and OpenBSD. The @samp{-depth} option is a POSIX
1201 feature, so it is better to use that.
1204 @deffn Action -prune
1205 If the file is a directory, do not descend into it. The result is
1206 true. For example, to skip the directory @file{src/emacs} and all
1207 files and directories under it, and print the names of the other files
1211 find . -wholename './src/emacs' -prune -o -print
1214 The above command will not print @file{./src/emacs} among its list of
1215 results. This however is not due to the effect of the @samp{-prune}
1216 action (which only prevents further descent, it doesn't make sure we
1217 ignore that item). Instead, this effect is due to the use of
1218 @samp{-o}. Since the left hand side of the ``or'' condition has
1219 succeeded for @file{./src/emacs}, it is not necessary to evaluate the
1220 right-hand-side (@samp{-print}) at all for this particular file. If
1221 you wanted to print that directory name you could use either an extra
1222 @samp{-print} action:
1225 find . -wholename './src/emacs' -prune -print -o -print
1228 or use the comma operator:
1231 find . -wholename './src/emacs' -prune , -print
1234 If the @samp{-depth} option is in effect, the subdirectories will have
1235 already been visited in any case. Hence @samp{-prune} has no effect
1241 Exit immediately (with return value zero if no errors have occurred).
1242 No child processes will be left running, but no more files specified
1243 on the command line will be processed. For example, @code{find
1244 /tmp/foo /tmp/bar -print -quit} will print only @samp{/tmp/foo}. Any
1245 command lines which have been built by @samp{-exec ... \+} or
1246 @samp{-execdir ... \+} are invoked before the program is executed.
1249 @deffn Option -noleaf
1250 Do not optimize by assuming that directories contain 2 fewer
1251 subdirectories than their hard link count. This option is needed when
1252 searching filesystems that do not follow the Unix directory-link
1253 convention, such as CD-ROM or MS-DOS filesystems or AFS volume mount
1254 points. Each directory on a normal Unix filesystem has at least 2
1255 hard links: its name and its @file{.} entry. Additionally, its
1256 subdirectories (if any) each have a @file{..} entry linked to that
1257 directory. When @code{find} is examining a directory, after it has
1258 statted 2 fewer subdirectories than the directory's link count, it
1259 knows that the rest of the entries in the directory are
1260 non-directories (@dfn{leaf} files in the directory tree). If only the
1261 files' names need to be examined, there is no need to stat them; this
1262 gives a significant increase in search speed.
1265 @deffn Option -ignore_readdir_race
1266 If a file disappears after its name has been read from a directory but
1267 before @code{find} gets around to examining the file with @code{stat},
1268 don't issue an error message. If you don't specify this option, an
1269 error message will be issued. This option can be useful in system
1270 scripts (cron scripts, for example) that examine areas of the
1271 filesystem that change frequently (mail queues, temporary directories,
1272 and so forth), because this scenario is common for those sorts of
1273 directories. Completely silencing error messages from @code{find} is
1274 undesirable, so this option neatly solves the problem. There is no
1275 way to search one part of the filesystem with this option on and part
1276 of it with this option off, though. When this option is turned on and
1277 find discovers that one of the start-point files specified on the
1278 command line does not exist, no error message will be issued.
1282 @deffn Option -noignore_readdir_race
1283 This option reverses the effect of the @samp{-ignore_readdir_race}
1289 @section Filesystems
1291 A @dfn{filesystem} is a section of a disk, either on the local host or
1292 mounted from a remote host over a network. Searching network
1293 filesystems can be slow, so it is common to make @code{find} avoid
1296 There are two ways to avoid searching certain filesystems. One way is
1297 to tell @code{find} to only search one filesystem:
1300 @deffnx Option -mount
1301 Don't descend directories on other filesystems. These options are
1305 The other way is to check the type of filesystem each file is on, and
1306 not descend directories that are on undesirable filesystem types:
1308 @deffn Test -fstype type
1309 True if the file is on a filesystem of type @var{type}. The valid
1310 filesystem types vary among different versions of Unix; an incomplete
1311 list of filesystem types that are accepted on some version of Unix or
1314 ext2 ext3 proc sysfs ufs 4.2 4.3 nfs tmp mfs S51K S52K
1316 You can use @samp{-printf} with the @samp{%F} directive to see the
1317 types of your filesystems. The @samp{%D} directive shows the device
1318 number. @xref{Print File Information}. @samp{-fstype} is usually
1319 used with @samp{-prune} to avoid searching remote filesystems
1320 (@pxref{Directories}).
1323 @node Combining Primaries With Operators
1324 @section Combining Primaries With Operators
1326 Operators build a complex expression from tests and actions.
1327 The operators are, in order of decreasing precedence:
1330 @item @asis{( @var{expr} )}
1332 Force precedence. True if @var{expr} is true.
1334 @item @asis{! @var{expr}}
1335 @itemx @asis{-not @var{expr}}
1338 True if @var{expr} is false. In some shells, it is necessary to
1339 protect the @samp{!} from shell interpretation by quoting it.
1341 @item @asis{@var{expr1 expr2}}
1342 @itemx @asis{@var{expr1} -a @var{expr2}}
1343 @itemx @asis{@var{expr1} -and @var{expr2}}
1346 And; @var{expr2} is not evaluated if @var{expr1} is false.
1348 @item @asis{@var{expr1} -o @var{expr2}}
1349 @itemx @asis{@var{expr1} -or @var{expr2}}
1352 Or; @var{expr2} is not evaluated if @var{expr1} is true.
1354 @item @asis{@var{expr1} , @var{expr2}}
1356 List; both @var{expr1} and @var{expr2} are always evaluated. True if
1357 @var{expr2} is true. The value of @var{expr1} is discarded. This
1358 operator lets you do multiple independent operations on one traversal,
1359 without depending on whether other operations succeeded. The two
1360 operations @var{expr1} and @var{expr2} are not always fully
1361 independent, since @var{expr1} might have side effects like touching
1362 or deleting files, or it might use @samp{-prune} which would also
1366 @code{find} searches the directory tree rooted at each file name by
1367 evaluating the expression from left to right, according to the rules
1368 of precedence, until the outcome is known (the left hand side is false
1369 for @samp{-and}, true for @samp{-or}), at which point @code{find}
1370 moves on to the next file name.
1372 There are two other tests that can be useful in complex expressions:
1382 @node Actions, Databases, Finding Files, Top
1385 There are several ways you can print information about the files that
1386 match the criteria you gave in the @code{find} expression. You can
1387 print the information either to the standard output or to a file that
1388 you name. You can also execute commands that have the file names as
1389 arguments. You can use those commands as further filters to select
1394 * Print File Information::
1400 @node Print File Name
1401 @section Print File Name
1403 @deffn Action -print
1404 True; print the entire file name on the standard output, followed by a
1405 newline. If there is the faintest possibility that one of the files
1406 for which you are searching might contain a newline, you should use
1407 @samp{-print0} instead.
1410 @deffn Action -fprint file
1411 True; print the entire file name into file @var{file}, followed by a
1412 newline. If @var{file} does not exist when @code{find} is run, it is
1413 created; if it does exist, it is truncated to 0 bytes. The named
1414 output file is always created, even if no output is sent to it. The
1415 file names @file{/dev/stdout} and @file{/dev/stderr} are handled
1416 specially; they refer to the standard output and standard error
1417 output, respectively.
1419 If there is the faintest possibility that one of the files for which
1420 you are searching might contain a newline, you should use
1421 @samp{-fprint0} instead.
1425 @c @deffn Option -show-control-chars how
1426 @c This option affects how some of @code{find}'s actions treat
1427 @c unprintable characters in file names. If @samp{how} is
1428 @c @samp{literal}, any subsequent actions (i.e. actions further on in the
1429 @c command line) print file names as-is.
1431 @c If this option is not specified, it currently defaults to @samp{safe}.
1432 @c If @samp{how} is @samp{safe}, C-like backslash escapes are used to
1433 @c indicate the non-printable characters for @samp{-ls} and @samp{-fls}.
1434 @c On the other hand, @samp{-print}, @samp{-fprint}, @samp{-fprintf} and
1435 @c @code{-printf} all quote unprintable characters if the data is going
1436 @c to a tty, and otherwise the data is emitted literally.
1440 @c Escaped if @samp{how} is @samp{safe}
1442 @c Escaped if @samp{how} is @samp{safe}
1444 @c Always quoted if stdout is a tty,
1445 @c @samp{-show-control-chars} is ignored
1447 @c Always literal, never escaped
1449 @c Always quoted if the destination is a tty;
1450 @c @samp{-show-control-chars} is ignored
1452 @c Always literal, never escaped
1454 @c If the destination is a tty, the @samp{%f},
1455 @c @samp{%F}, @samp{%h}, @samp{%l}, @samp{%p},
1456 @c and @samp{%P} directives produce quoted
1457 @c strings if stdout is a tty and are treated
1458 @c literally otherwise.
1460 @c As for @code{-fprintf}.
1465 @node Print File Information
1466 @section Print File Information
1469 True; list the current file in @samp{ls -dils} format on the standard
1470 output. The output looks like this:
1473 204744 17 -rw-r--r-- 1 djm staff 17337 Nov 2 1992 ./lwall-quotes
1480 The inode number of the file. @xref{Hard Links}, for how to find
1481 files based on their inode number.
1484 the number of blocks in the file. The block counts are of 1K blocks,
1485 unless the environment variable @code{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is set, in
1486 which case 512-byte blocks are used. @xref{Size}, for how to find
1487 files based on their size.
1490 The file's type and permissions. The type is shown as a dash for a
1491 regular file; for other file types, a letter like for @samp{-type} is
1492 used (@pxref{Type}). The permissions are read, write, and execute for
1493 the file's owner, its group, and other users, respectively; a dash
1494 means the permission is not granted. @xref{File Permissions}, for
1495 more details about file permissions. @xref{Permissions}, for how to
1496 find files based on their permissions.
1499 The number of hard links to the file.
1502 The user who owns the file.
1508 The file's size in bytes.
1511 The date the file was last modified.
1514 The file's name. @samp{-ls} quotes non-printable characters in the
1515 file names using C-like backslash escapes. This may change soon, as
1516 the treatment of unprintable characters is harmonised for @samp{-ls},
1517 @samp{-fls}, @samp{-print}, @samp{-fprint}, @samp{-printf} and
1522 @deffn Action -fls file
1523 True; like @samp{-ls} but write to @var{file} like @samp{-fprint}
1524 (@pxref{Print File Name}). The named output file is always created,
1525 even if no output is sent to it.
1528 @deffn Action -printf format
1529 True; print @var{format} on the standard output, interpreting @samp{\}
1530 escapes and @samp{%} directives. Field widths and precisions can be
1531 specified as with the @code{printf} C function. Format flags (like
1532 @samp{#} for example) may not work as you expect because many of the
1533 fields, even numeric ones, are printed with %s. Numeric flags which
1534 are affected in this way include G, U, b, D, k and n. This difference
1535 in behaviour means though that the format flag @samp{-} will work; it
1536 forces left-alignment of the field. Unlike @samp{-print},
1537 @samp{-printf} does not add a newline at the end of the string. If
1538 you want a newline at the end of the string, add a @samp{\n}.
1541 @deffn Action -fprintf file format
1542 True; like @samp{-printf} but write to @var{file} like @samp{-fprint}
1543 (@pxref{Print File Name}). The output file is always created, even if
1544 no output is ever sent to it.
1549 * Format Directives::
1556 The escapes that @samp{-printf} and @samp{-fprintf} recognise are:
1564 Stop printing from this format immediately and flush the output.
1576 A literal backslash (@samp{\}).
1580 The character whose ASCII code is NNN (octal).
1583 A @samp{\} character followed by any other character is treated as an
1584 ordinary character, so they both are printed, and a warning message is
1585 printed to the standard error output (because it was probably a typo).
1587 @node Format Directives
1588 @subsection Format Directives
1590 @samp{-printf} and @samp{-fprintf} support the following format
1591 directives to print information about the file being processed. The C
1592 @code{printf} function, field width and precision specifiers are
1593 supported, as applied to string (%s) types. That is, you can specify
1594 "minimum field width"."maximum field width" for each directive.
1595 Format flags (like @samp{#} for example) may not work as you expect
1596 because many of the fields, even numeric ones, are printed with %s.
1597 The format flag @samp{-} does work; it forces left-alignment of the
1600 @samp{%%} is a literal percent sign. A @samp{%} character followed by
1601 an unrecognised character (i.e. not a known directive or @code{printf} field
1602 width and precision specifier), is discarded (but the unrecognised
1603 character is printed), and a warning message is printed to the
1604 standard error output (because it was probably a typo).
1608 * Ownership Directives::
1610 * Location Directives::
1612 * Formatting Flags::
1615 @node Name Directives
1616 @subsubsection Name Directives
1621 File's name (not the absolute path name, but the name of the file as
1622 it was encountered by @code{find} - that is, as a relative path from
1623 one of the starting points).
1625 File's name with any leading directories removed (only the last
1629 Leading directories of file's name (all but the last element and the
1630 slash before it). If the file's name contains no slashes (for example
1631 because it was named on the command line and is in the current working
1632 directory), then ``%h'' expands to ``.''. This prevents ``%h/%f''
1633 expanding to ``/foo'', which would be surprising and probably not
1637 File's name with the name of the command line argument under which
1638 it was found removed from the beginning.
1641 Command line argument under which file was found.
1645 @node Ownership Directives
1646 @subsubsection Ownership Directives
1651 File's group name, or numeric group ID if the group has no name.
1654 @c TODO: Needs to support # flag and 0 flag
1655 File's numeric group ID.
1658 File's user name, or numeric user ID if the user has no name.
1661 @c TODO: Needs to support # flag
1662 File's numeric user ID.
1664 @c full support, including # and 0.
1665 File's permissions (in octal). If you always want to have a leading
1666 zero on the number, use the '#' format flag, for example '%#m'.
1668 The permission numbers used are the traditional Unix permission
1669 numbers, which will be as expected on most systems, but if your
1670 system's permission bit layout differs from the traditional Unix
1671 semantics, you will see a difference between the mode as printed by
1672 @samp{%m} and the mode as it appears in @code{struct stat}.
1675 File's permissions (in symbolic form, as for @code{ls}). This
1676 directive is supported in findutils 4.2.5 and later.
1679 @node Size Directives
1680 @subsubsection Size Directives
1684 The amount of disk space used for this file in 1K blocks. Since disk
1685 space is allocated in multiples of the filesystem block size this is
1686 usually greater than %s/1024, but it can also be smaller if the file
1687 is a sparse file (that is, it has ``holes'').
1689 The amount of disk space used for this file in 512-byte blocks. Since
1690 disk space is allocated in multiples of the filesystem block size this
1691 is usually greater than %s/1024, but it can also be smaller if the
1692 file is a sparse file (that is, it has ``holes'').
1694 File's size in bytes.
1697 @node Location Directives
1698 @subsubsection Location Directives
1702 File's depth in the directory tree (depth below a file named on the
1703 command line, not depth below the root directory). Files named on the
1704 command line have a depth of 0. Subdirectories immediately below them
1705 have a depth of 1, and so on.
1707 The device number on which the file exists (the @code{st_dev} field of
1708 @code{struct stat}), in decimal.
1710 Type of the filesystem the file is on; this value can be used for
1711 @samp{-fstype} (@pxref{Directories}).
1713 Object of symbolic link (empty string if file is not a symbolic link).
1715 File's inode number (in decimal).
1717 Number of hard links to file.
1719 Type of the file as used with @samp{-type}. If the file is a symbolic
1720 link, @samp{l} will be printed.
1722 Type of the file as used with @samp{-type}. If the file is a symbolic
1723 link, it is dereferenced. If the file is a broken symbolic link,
1724 @samp{N} is printed.
1728 @node Time Directives
1729 @subsubsection Time Directives
1731 Some of these directives use the C @code{ctime} function. Its output
1732 depends on the current locale, but it typically looks like
1735 Wed Nov 2 00:42:36 1994
1740 File's last access time in the format returned by the C @code{ctime}
1743 File's last access time in the format specified by @var{k}
1744 (@pxref{Time Formats}).
1746 File's last status change time in the format returned by the C
1747 @code{ctime} function.
1749 File's last status change time in the format specified by @var{k}
1750 (@pxref{Time Formats}).
1752 File's last modification time in the format returned by the C
1753 @code{ctime} function.
1755 File's last modification time in the format specified by @var{k}
1756 (@pxref{Time Formats}).
1760 @subsection Time Formats
1762 Below are the formats for the directives @samp{%A}, @samp{%C}, and
1763 @samp{%T}, which print the file's timestamps. Some of these formats
1764 might not be available on all systems, due to differences in the C
1765 @code{strftime} function between systems.
1770 * Combined Time Formats::
1773 @node Time Components
1774 @subsubsection Time Components
1776 The following format directives print single components of the time.
1790 time zone (e.g., EDT), or nothing if no time zone is determinable
1796 seconds since Jan. 1, 1970, 00:00 GMT.
1799 @node Date Components
1800 @subsubsection Date Components
1802 The following format directives print single components of the date.
1806 locale's abbreviated weekday name (Sun..Sat)
1808 locale's full weekday name, variable length (Sunday..Saturday)
1811 locale's abbreviated month name (Jan..Dec)
1813 locale's full month name, variable length (January..December)
1817 day of month (01..31)
1821 day of year (001..366)
1823 week number of year with Sunday as first day of week (00..53)
1825 week number of year with Monday as first day of week (00..53)
1829 last two digits of year (00..99)
1832 @node Combined Time Formats
1833 @subsubsection Combined Time Formats
1835 The following format directives print combinations of time and date
1840 time, 12-hour (hh:mm:ss [AP]M)
1842 time, 24-hour (hh:mm:ss)
1844 locale's time representation (H:M:S)
1846 locale's date and time (Sat Nov 04 12:02:33 EST 1989)
1850 locale's date representation (mm/dd/yy)
1852 Date and time, separated by '+', for example `2004-04-28+22:22:05'.
1853 The time is given in the current timezone (which may be affected by
1854 setting the TZ environment variable). This is a GNU extension.
1857 @node Formatting Flags
1858 @subsubsection Formatting Flags
1860 The @samp{%m} and @samp{%d} directives support the @samp{#}, @samp{0}
1861 and @samp{+} flags, but the other directives do not, even if they
1862 print numbers. Numeric directives that do not support these flags
1872 All fields support the format flag @samp{-}, which makes fields
1873 left-aligned. That is, if the field width is greater than the actual
1874 contents of the field, the requisite number of spaces are printed
1875 after the field content instead of before it.
1878 @section Run Commands
1880 You can use the list of file names created by @code{find} or
1881 @code{locate} as arguments to other commands. In this way you can
1882 perform arbitrary actions on the files.
1891 @subsection Single File
1893 Here is how to run a command on one file at a time.
1895 @deffn Action -execdir command ;
1896 Execute @var{command}; true if zero sftatus is returned. @code{find}
1897 takes all arguments after @samp{-exec} to be part of the command until
1898 an argument consisting of @samp{;} is reached. It replaces the string
1899 @samp{@{@}} by the current file name being processed everywhere it
1900 occurs in the command. Both of these constructions need to be escaped
1901 (with a @samp{\}) or quoted to protect them from expansion by the
1902 shell. The command is executed in the directory in which @code{find}
1905 For example, to compare each C header file in or below the current
1906 directory with the file @file{/tmp/master}:
1909 find . -name '*.h' -execdir diff -u '@{@}' /tmp/master ';'
1913 If you use`@samp{-execdir}, you must ensure that the current directory
1914 is not on @var{$PATH}, because otherwise an attacker could make
1915 @samp{find} run commands of their choice simply by leaving a
1916 suitably-named file in the right directory. GNU find will refuse to
1917 run if you use @samp{-execdir} and the current directory is in
1920 Another similar option, @samp{-exec} is supported, but is less secure.
1921 @xref{Security Considerations}, for a discussion of the security
1922 problems surrounding @samp{-exec}.
1925 @deffn Action -exec command ;
1926 This insecure variant of the @samp{-execdir} action is specified by
1927 POSIX. The main difference is that the command is executed in the
1928 directory from which @code{find} was invoked, meaning that @samp{@{@}}
1929 is expanded to a relative path starting with the name of one of the
1930 starting directories, rather than just the basename of the matched
1933 While some implementations of @code{find} replace the @samp{@{@}} only
1934 where it appears on its own in an argument, GNU @code{find} replaces
1935 @samp{@{@}} wherever it appears.
1939 @node Multiple Files
1940 @subsection Multiple Files
1942 Sometimes you need to process files one of the time. But usually this
1943 is not necessary, and, it is faster to run a command on as many files
1944 as possible at a time, rather than once per file. Doing this saves on
1945 the time it takes to start up the command each time.
1947 The @samp{-execdir} and @samp{-exec} actions have variants that build
1948 command lines containing as many matched files as possible.
1950 @deffn Action -execdir command @{@} +
1951 This works as for @samp{-execdir command ;}, except that the
1952 @samp{@{@}} at the end of the command is expanded to a list of names
1953 of matching files. This expansion is done in such a way as to avoid
1954 exceeding the maximum command line length available on the system.
1955 Only one @samp{@{@}} is allowed within the command, and it must appear
1956 at the end, immediately before the @samp{+}. A @samp{+} appearing in
1957 any position other than immediately after @samp{@{@}} is not
1958 considered to be special (that is, it does not terminate the command).
1962 @deffn Action -exec command @{@} +
1963 This insecure variant of the @samp{-execdir} action is specified by
1964 POSIX. The main difference is that the command is executed in the
1965 directory from which @code{find} was invoked, meaning that @samp{@{@}}
1966 is expanded to a relative path starting with the name of one of the
1967 starting directories, rather than just the basename of the matched
1971 Before @code{find} exits, any partially-built command lines are
1972 executed. This happens even if the exit was caused by the
1973 @samp{-quit} action. However, some types of error (for example not
1974 being able to invoke @code{stat()} on the current directory) can cause
1975 an immediate fatal exit. In this situation, any partially-built
1976 command lines will not be invoked (this prevents possible infinite
1979 Another, but less secure, way to run a command on more than one file
1980 at once, is to use the @code{xargs} command, which is invoked like
1984 xargs @r{[}@var{option}@dots{}@r{]} @r{[}@var{command} @r{[}@var{initial-arguments}@r{]}@r{]}
1987 @code{xargs} normally reads arguments from the standard input. These
1988 arguments are delimited by blanks (which can be protected with double
1989 or single quotes or a backslash) or newlines. It executes the
1990 @var{command} (default is @file{/bin/echo}) one or more times with any
1991 @var{initial-arguments} followed by arguments read from standard
1992 input. Blank lines on the standard input are ignored.
1994 Instead of blank-delimited names, it is safer to use @samp{find
1995 -print0} or @samp{find -fprint0} and process the output by giving the
1996 @samp{-0} or @samp{--null} option to GNU @code{xargs}, GNU @code{tar},
1997 GNU @code{cpio}, or @code{perl}. The @code{locate} command also has a
1998 @samp{-0} or @samp{--null} option which does the same thing.
2000 You can use shell command substitution (backquotes) to process a list
2001 of arguments, like this:
2004 grep -l sprintf `find $HOME -name '*.c' -print`
2007 However, that method produces an error if the length of the @samp{.c}
2008 file names exceeds the operating system's command line length limit.
2009 @code{xargs} avoids that problem by running the command as many times
2010 as necessary without exceeding the limit:
2013 find $HOME -name '*.c' -print | xargs grep -l sprintf
2016 However, if the command needs to have its standard input be a terminal
2017 (@code{less}, for example), you have to use the shell command
2018 substitution method or use the @samp{--arg-file} option of
2021 The @code{xargs} command will process all its input, building command
2022 lines and executing them, unless one of the commands exits with a
2023 status of 255 (this will cause xargs to issue an error message and
2024 stop) or it reads a line contains the end of file string specified
2025 with the @samp{--eof} option.
2028 * Unsafe File Name Handling::
2029 * Safe File Name Handling::
2030 * Unusual Characters in File Names::
2031 * Limiting Command Size::
2032 * Interspersing File Names::
2035 @node Unsafe File Name Handling
2036 @subsubsection Unsafe File Name Handling
2038 Because file names can contain quotes, backslashes, blank characters,
2039 and even newlines, it is not safe to process them using @code{xargs}
2040 in its default mode of operation. But since most files' names do not
2041 contain blanks, this problem occurs only infrequently. If you are
2042 only searching through files that you know have safe names, then you
2043 need not be concerned about it.
2045 @c This example is adapted from:
2046 @c From: pfalstad@stone.Princeton.EDU (Paul John Falstad)
2047 @c Newsgroups: comp.unix.shell
2048 @c Subject: Re: Beware xargs security holes
2049 @c Date: 16 Oct 90 19:12:06 GMT
2051 In many applications, if @code{xargs} botches processing a file
2052 because its name contains special characters, some data might be lost.
2053 The importance of this problem depends on the importance of the data
2054 and whether anyone notices the loss soon enough to correct it.
2055 However, here is an extreme example of the problems that using
2056 blank-delimited names can cause. If the following command is run
2057 daily from @code{cron}, then any user can remove any file on the
2061 find / -name '#*' -atime +7 -print | xargs rm
2064 For example, you could do something like this:
2072 and then @code{cron} would delete @file{/vmunix}, if it ran
2073 @code{xargs} with @file{/} as its current directory.
2075 To delete other files, for example @file{/u/joeuser/.plan}, you could
2083 eg$ mkdir u u/joeuser u/joeuser/.plan'
2085 eg$ echo > u/joeuser/.plan'
2088 eg$ find . -name '#*' -print | xargs echo
2089 ./# ./# /u/joeuser/.plan /#foo
2092 @node Safe File Name Handling
2093 @subsubsection Safe File Name Handling
2095 Here is how to make @code{find} output file names so that they can be
2096 used by other programs without being mangled or misinterpreted. You
2097 can process file names generated this way by giving the @samp{-0} or
2098 @samp{--null} option to GNU @code{xargs}, GNU @code{tar}, GNU
2099 @code{cpio}, or @code{perl}.
2101 @deffn Action -print0
2102 True; print the entire file name on the standard output, followed by a
2106 @deffn Action -fprint0 file
2107 True; like @samp{-print0} but write to @var{file} like @samp{-fprint}
2108 (@pxref{Print File Name}). The output file is always created.
2111 As of findutils version 4.2.4, the @code{locate} program also has a
2112 @samp{--null} option which does the same thing. For similarity with
2113 @code{xargs}, the short form of the option @samp{-0} can also be used.
2115 If you want to be able to handle file names safely but need to run
2116 commands which want to be connected to a terminal on their input, you
2117 can use the @samp{--arg-file} option to @code{xargs} like this:
2120 find / -name xyzzy -print0 > list
2121 xargs --null --arg-file=list munge
2124 The example above runs the @code{munge} program on all the files named
2125 @file{xyzzy} that we can find, but @code{munge}'s input will still be
2126 the terminal (or whatever the shell was using as standard input). If
2127 your shell has the ``process substitution'' feature @samp{<(...)}, you
2128 can do this in just one step:
2131 xargs --null --arg-file=<(find / -name xyzzy -print0) munge
2134 @node Unusual Characters in File Names
2135 @subsubsection Unusual Characters in File Names
2136 As discussed above, you often need to be careful about how the names
2137 of files are handled by @code{find} and other programs. If the output
2138 of @code{find} is not going to another program but instead is being
2139 shown on a terminal, this can still be a problem. For example, some
2140 character sequences can reprogram the function keys on some terminals.
2141 @xref{Security Considerations}, for a discussion of other security
2142 problems relating to @code{find}.
2144 Unusual characters are handled differently by various
2145 actions, as described below.
2150 Always print the exact file name, unchanged, even if the output is
2151 going to a terminal.
2154 Always print the exact file name, unchanged. This will probably
2155 change in a future release.
2158 Unusual characters are always escaped. White space, backslash, and
2159 double quote characters are printed using C-style escaping (for
2160 example @samp{\f}, @samp{\"}). Other unusual characters are printed
2161 using an octal escape. Other printable characters (for @samp{-ls} and
2162 @samp{-fls} these are the characters between octal 041 and 0176) are
2166 If the output is not going to a terminal, it is printed as-is.
2167 Otherwise, the result depends on which directive is in use:
2170 @item %D, %F, %H, %Y, %y
2171 These expand to values which are not under control of files' owners,
2172 and so are printed as-is.
2173 @item %a, %b, %c, %d, %g, %G, %i, %k, %m, %M, %n, %s, %t, %u, %U
2174 These have values which are under the control of files' owners but
2175 which cannot be used to send arbitrary data to the terminal, and so
2176 these are printed as-is.
2177 @item %f, %h, %l, %p, %P
2178 The output of these directives is quoted if the output is going to a
2181 This quoting is performed in the same way as for GNU @code{ls}. This
2182 is not the same quoting mechanism as the one used for @samp{-ls} and
2183 @samp{fls}. If you are able to decide what format to use for the
2184 output of @code{find} then it is normally better to use @samp{\0} as a
2185 terminator than to use newline, as file names can contain white space
2186 and newline characters.
2190 Quoting is handled in the same way as for the @samp{%p} directive of
2191 @samp{-printf} and @samp{-fprintf}. If you are using @code{find} in a
2192 script or in a situation where the matched files might have arbitrary
2193 names, you should consider using @samp{-print0} instead of
2198 The @code{locate} program quotes and escapes unusual characters in
2199 file names in the same way as @code{find}'s @samp{-print} action.
2201 The behaviours described above may change soon, as the treatment of
2202 unprintable characters is harmonised for @samp{-ls}, @samp{-fls},
2203 @samp{-print}, @samp{-fprint}, @samp{-printf} and @samp{-fprintf}.
2205 @node Limiting Command Size
2206 @subsubsection Limiting Command Size
2208 @code{xargs} gives you control over how many arguments it passes to
2209 the command each time it executes it. By default, it uses up to
2210 @code{ARG_MAX} - 2k, or 128k, whichever is smaller, characters per
2211 command. It uses as many lines and arguments as fit within that
2212 limit. The following options modify those values.
2215 @item --no-run-if-empty
2217 If the standard input does not contain any nonblanks, do not run the
2218 command. By default, the command is run once even if there is no
2219 input. This option is a GNU extension.
2221 @item --max-lines@r{[}=@var{max-lines}@r{]}
2222 @itemx -L @var{max-lines}
2223 @itemx -l@r{[}@var{max-lines}@r{]}
2224 Use at most @var{max-lines} nonblank input lines per command line;
2225 @var{max-lines} defaults to 1 if omitted; omitting the argument is not
2226 allowed in the case of the @samp{-L} option. Trailing blanks cause an
2227 input line to be logically continued on the next input line, for the
2228 purpose of counting the lines. Implies @samp{-x}. The preferred name
2229 for this option is @samp{-L} as this is specified by POSIX.
2231 @item --max-args=@var{max-args}
2232 @itemx -n @var{max-args}
2233 Use at most @var{max-args} arguments per command line. Fewer than
2234 @var{max-args} arguments will be used if the size (see the @samp{-s}
2235 option) is exceeded, unless the @samp{-x} option is given, in which
2236 case @code{xargs} will exit.
2238 @item --max-chars=@var{max-chars}
2239 @itemx -s @var{max-chars}
2240 Use at most @var{max-chars} characters per command line, including the
2241 command initial arguments and the terminating nulls at the ends of the
2242 argument strings. If you specify a value for this option which is too
2243 large or small, a warning message is printed and the appropriate upper
2244 or lower limit is used instead. You can use @samp{--show-limits}
2245 option to understand the command-line limits applying to @code{xargs}
2246 and how this is affected by any other options.
2248 @item --max-procs=@var{max-procs}
2249 @itemx -P @var{max-procs}
2250 Run up to @var{max-procs} processes at a time; the default is 1. If
2251 @var{max-procs} is 0, @code{xargs} will run as many processes as
2252 possible at a time. Use the @samp{-n}, @samp{-s}, or @samp{-L} option
2253 with @samp{-P}; otherwise chances are that the command will be run
2257 @node Interspersing File Names
2258 @subsubsection Interspersing File Names
2260 @code{xargs} can insert the name of the file it is processing between
2261 arguments you give for the command. Unless you also give options to
2262 limit the command size (@pxref{Limiting Command Size}), this mode of
2263 operation is equivalent to @samp{find -exec} (@pxref{Single File}).
2266 @item --replace@r{[}=@var{replace-str}@r{]}
2267 @itemx -I @var{replace-str}
2268 @itemx -i @var{replace-str}
2269 Replace occurrences of @var{replace-str} in the initial arguments with
2270 names read from the input. Also, unquoted blanks do not terminate
2271 arguments; instead, the input is split at newlines only. For the
2272 @samp{-i} option, if @var{replace-str} is omitted for @samp{--replace}
2273 or @samp{-i}, it defaults to @samp{@{@}} (like for @samp{find -exec}).
2274 Implies @samp{-x} and @samp{-l 1}. @samp{-i} is deprecated in favour
2275 of @samp{-I}. As an example, to sort each file in the @file{bills}
2276 directory, leaving the output in that file name with @file{.sorted}
2277 appended, you could do:
2280 find bills -type f | xargs -I XX sort -o XX.sorted XX
2284 The equivalent command using @samp{find -execdir} is:
2287 find bills -type f -execdir sort -o '@{@}.sorted' '@{@}' ';'
2292 When you use the @samp{-I} option, each line read from the input is
2293 buffered internally. This means that there is an upper limit on the
2294 length of input line that xargs will accept when used with the
2295 @samp{-I} option. To work around this limitation, you can use the
2296 @samp{-s} option to increase the amount of buffer space that xargs
2297 uses, and you can also use an extra invocation of xargs to ensure that
2298 very long lines do not occur. For example:
2301 somecommand | xargs -s 50000 echo | xargs -I '@{@}' -s 100000 rm '@{@}'
2304 Here, the first invocation of @code{xargs} has no input line length
2305 limit because it doesn't use the @samp{-I} option. The second
2306 invocation of @code{xargs} does have such a limit, but we have ensured
2307 that the it never encounters a line which is longer than it can
2310 This is not an ideal solution. Instead, the @samp{-I} option should
2311 not impose a line length limit (apart from any limit imposed by the
2312 operating system) and so one might consider this limitation to be a
2313 bug. A better solution would be to allow @code{xargs -I} to
2314 automatically move to a larger value for the @samp{-s} option when
2317 This sort of problem doesn't occur with the output of @code{find}
2318 because it emits just one filename per line.
2321 @subsection Querying
2323 To ask the user whether to execute a command on a single file, you can
2324 use the @code{find} primary @samp{-okdir} instead of @samp{-execdir},
2325 and the @code{find} primary @samp{-ok} instead of @samp{-exec}:
2327 @deffn Action -okdir command ;
2328 Like @samp{-execdir} (@pxref{Single File}), but ask the user first (on
2329 the standard input); if the response does not start with @samp{y} or
2330 @samp{Y}, do not run the command, and return false. If the command is
2331 run, its standard input is redirected from @file{/dev/null}.
2334 @deffn Action -ok command ;
2335 This insecure variant of the @samp{-okdir} action is specified by
2336 POSIX. The main difference is that the command is executed in the
2337 directory from which @code{find} was invoked, meaning that @samp{@{@}}
2338 is expanded to a relative path starting with the name of one of the
2339 starting directories, rather than just the basename of the matched
2340 file. If the command is run, its standard input is redirected from
2344 When processing multiple files with a single command, to query the
2345 user you give @code{xargs} the following option. When using this
2346 option, you might find it useful to control the number of files
2347 processed per invocation of the command (@pxref{Limiting Command
2353 Prompt the user about whether to run each command line and read a line
2354 from the terminal. Only run the command line if the response starts
2355 with @samp{y} or @samp{Y}. Implies @samp{-t}.
2359 @section Delete Files
2361 @deffn Action -delete
2362 Delete files or directories; true if removal succeeded. If the
2363 removal failed, an error message is issued.
2365 The use of the @samp{-delete} action on the command line automatically
2366 turns on the @samp{-depth} option (@pxref{find Expressions}).
2370 @section Adding Tests
2372 You can test for file attributes that none of the @code{find} builtin
2373 tests check. To do this, use @code{xargs} to run a program that
2374 filters a list of files printed by @code{find}. If possible, use
2375 @code{find} builtin tests to pare down the list, so the program run by
2376 @code{xargs} has less work to do. The tests builtin to @code{find}
2377 will likely run faster than tests that other programs perform.
2379 For reasons of efficiency it is often useful to limit the number of
2380 times an external program has to be run. For this reason, it is often
2381 a good idea to implement ``extended'' tests by using @code{xargs}.
2383 For example, here is a way to print the names of all of the unstripped
2384 binaries in the @file{/usr/local} directory tree. Builtin tests avoid
2385 running @code{file} on files that are not regular files or are not
2389 find /usr/local -type f -perm /a=x | xargs file |
2390 grep 'not stripped' | cut -d: -f1
2394 The @code{cut} program removes everything after the file name from the
2395 output of @code{file}.
2397 However, using @code{xargs} can present important security problems
2398 (@pxref{Security Considerations}). These can be avoided by using
2399 @samp{-execdir}. The @samp{-execdir} action is also a useful way of
2400 putting your own test in the middle of a set of other tests or actions
2401 for @code{find} (for example, you might want to use @samp{-prune}).
2403 @c Idea from Martin Weitzel.
2404 To place a special test somewhere in the middle of a @code{find}
2405 expression, you can use @samp{-execdir} (or, less securely,
2406 @samp{-exec}) to run a program that performs the test. Because
2407 @samp{-execdir} evaluates to the exit status of the executed program,
2408 you can use a program (which can be a shell script) that tests for a
2409 special attribute and make it exit with a true (zero) or false
2410 (non-zero) status. It is a good idea to place such a special test
2411 @emph{after} the builtin tests, because it starts a new process which
2412 could be avoided if a builtin test evaluates to false.
2414 Here is a shell script called @code{unstripped} that checks whether
2415 its argument is an unstripped binary file:
2419 file "$1" | grep -q "not stripped"
2423 This script relies on the shell exiting with the status of
2424 the last command in the pipeline, in this case @code{grep}. The
2425 @code{grep} command exits with a true status if it found any matches,
2426 false if not. Here is an example of using the script (assuming it is
2427 in your search path). It lists the stripped executables (and shell
2428 scripts) in the file @file{sbins} and the unstripped ones in
2432 find /usr/local -type f -perm /a=x \
2433 \( -execdir unstripped '@{@}' \; -fprint ubins -o -fprint sbins \)
2437 @node Databases, File Permissions, Actions, Top
2438 @chapter File Name Databases
2440 The file name databases used by @code{locate} contain lists of files
2441 that were in particular directory trees when the databases were last
2442 updated. The file name of the default database is determined when
2443 @code{locate} and @code{updatedb} are configured and installed. The
2444 frequency with which the databases are updated and the directories for
2445 which they contain entries depend on how often @code{updatedb} is run,
2446 and with which arguments.
2448 You can obtain some statistics about the databases by using
2449 @samp{locate --statistics}.
2452 * Database Locations::
2453 * Database Formats::
2454 * Newline Handling::
2458 @node Database Locations
2459 @section Database Locations
2461 There can be multiple file name databases. Users can select which
2462 databases @code{locate} searches using the @code{LOCATE_PATH}
2463 environment variable or a command line option. The system
2464 administrator can choose the file name of the default database, the
2465 frequency with which the databases are updated, and the directories
2466 for which they contain entries. File name databases are updated by
2467 running the @code{updatedb} program, typically nightly.
2469 In networked environments, it often makes sense to build a database at
2470 the root of each filesystem, containing the entries for that
2471 filesystem. @code{updatedb} is then run for each filesystem on the
2472 fileserver where that filesystem is on a local disk, to prevent
2473 thrashing the network.
2475 @xref{Invoking updatedb},
2476 for the description of the options to @code{updatedb}, which specify
2477 which directories would each database contain entries for.
2480 @node Database Formats
2481 @section Database Formats
2483 The file name databases contain lists of files that were in particular
2484 directory trees when the databases were last updated. The file name
2485 database format changed starting with GNU @code{locate} version 4.0 to
2486 allow machines with different byte orderings to share the databases.
2487 The new GNU @code{locate} can read both the old and new database
2488 formats. However, old versions of @code{locate} and @code{find}
2489 produce incorrect results if given a new-format database.
2491 Support for the old database format will eventually be discontinued,
2492 first in @code{updatedb} and later in @code{xargs}.
2494 If you run @samp{locate --statistics}, the resulting summary indicates
2495 the type of each @code{locate} database.
2499 * New Database Format::
2501 * Old Database Format::
2504 @node New Database Format
2505 @subsection New Database Format
2507 @code{updatedb} runs a program called @code{frcode} to
2508 @dfn{front-compress} the list of file names, which reduces the
2509 database size by a factor of 4 to 5. Front-compression (also known as
2510 incremental encoding) works as follows.
2512 The database entries are a sorted list (case-insensitively, for users'
2513 convenience). Since the list is sorted, each entry is likely to share
2514 a prefix (initial string) with the previous entry. Each database
2515 entry begins with an offset-differential count byte, which is the
2516 additional number of characters of prefix of the preceding entry to
2517 use beyond the number that the preceding entry is using of its
2518 predecessor. (The counts can be negative.) Following the count is a
2519 null-terminated ASCII remainder---the part of the name that follows
2522 If the offset-differential count is larger than can be stored in a
2523 byte (+/-127), the byte has the value 0x80 and the count follows in a
2524 2-byte word, with the high byte first (network byte order).
2526 Every database begins with a dummy entry for a file called
2527 @file{LOCATE02}, which @code{locate} checks for to ensure that the
2528 database file has the correct format; it ignores the entry in doing
2531 Databases cannot be concatenated together, even if the first (dummy)
2532 entry is trimmed from all but the first database. This is because the
2533 offset-differential count in the first entry of the second and
2534 following databases will be wrong.
2536 In the output of @samp{locate --statistics}, the new database format
2537 is referred to as @samp{LOCATE02}.
2539 @node Sample Database
2540 @subsection Sample Database
2542 Sample input to @code{frcode}:
2543 @c with nulls changed to newlines:
2547 /usr/src/cmd/aardvark.c
2548 /usr/src/cmd/armadillo.c
2552 Length of the longest prefix of the preceding entry to share:
2561 Output from @code{frcode}, with trailing nulls changed to newlines
2562 and count bytes made printable:
2572 (6 = 14 - 8, and -9 = 5 - 14)
2574 @node Old Database Format
2575 @subsection Old Database Format
2577 The old database format is used by Unix @code{locate} and @code{find}
2578 programs and earlier releases of the GNU ones. @code{updatedb}
2579 produces this format if given the @samp{--old-format} option.
2581 @code{updatedb} runs programs called @code{bigram} and @code{code} to
2582 produce old-format databases. The old format differs from the new one
2583 in the following ways. Instead of each entry starting with an
2584 offset-differential count byte and ending with a null, byte values
2585 from 0 through 28 indicate offset-differential counts from -14 through
2586 14. The byte value indicating that a long offset-differential count
2587 follows is 0x1e (30), not 0x80. The long counts are stored in host
2588 byte order, which is not necessarily network byte order, and host
2589 integer word size, which is usually 4 bytes. They also represent a
2590 count 14 less than their value. The database lines have no
2591 termination byte; the start of the next line is indicated by its first
2592 byte having a value <= 30.
2594 In addition, instead of starting with a dummy entry, the old database
2595 format starts with a 256 byte table containing the 128 most common
2596 bigrams in the file list. A bigram is a pair of adjacent bytes.
2597 Bytes in the database that have the high bit set are indexes (with the
2598 high bit cleared) into the bigram table. The bigram and
2599 offset-differential count coding makes these databases 20-25% smaller
2600 than the new format, but makes them not 8-bit clean. Any byte in a
2601 file name that is in the ranges used for the special codes is replaced
2602 in the database by a question mark, which not coincidentally is the
2603 shell wildcard to match a single character.
2605 The old format therefore cannot faithfully store entries with
2606 non-ASCII characters. It therefore should not be used in
2607 internationalised environments.
2609 The output of @samp{locate --statistics} will give an incorrect count
2610 of the number of file names containing newlines or high-bit characters
2611 for old-format databases.
2613 @node Newline Handling
2614 @section Newline Handling
2616 Within the database, file names are terminated with a null character.
2617 This is the case for both the old and the new format.
2619 When the new database format is being used, the compression technique
2620 used to generate the database though relies on the ability to sort the
2621 list of files before they are presented to @code{frcode}.
2623 If the system's sort command allows its input list of files to be
2624 separated with null characters via the @samp{-z} option, this option
2625 is used and therefore @code{updatedb} and @code{locate} will both
2626 correctly handle file names containing newlines. If the @code{sort}
2627 command lacks support for this, the list of files is delimited with
2628 the newline character, meaning that parts of file names containing
2629 newlines will be incorrectly sorted. This can result in both
2630 incorrect matches and incorrect failures to match.
2632 On the other hand, if you are using the old database format, file
2633 names with embedded newlines are not correctly handled. There is no
2634 technical limitation which enforces this, it's just that the
2635 @code{bigram} program has not been updated to support lists of file
2636 names separated by nulls.
2638 So, if you are using the new database format (this is the default) and
2639 your system uses GNU @code{sort}, newlines will be correctly handled
2640 at all times. Otherwise, newlines may not be correctly handled.
2642 @node File Permissions, Reference, Databases, Top
2643 @chapter File Permissions
2647 @node Reference, Common Tasks, File Permissions, Top
2650 Below are summaries of the command line syntax for the programs
2651 discussed in this manual.
2656 * Invoking updatedb::
2658 * Regular Expressions::
2659 * Environment Variables::
2662 @node Invoking find, Invoking locate, , Reference
2663 @section Invoking @code{find}
2666 find @r{[-H] [-L] [-P]} @r{[}@var{file}@dots{}@r{]} @r{[}@var{expression}@r{]}
2669 @code{find} searches the directory tree rooted at each file name
2670 @var{file} by evaluating the @var{expression} on each file it finds in
2673 The options @samp{-H}, @samp{-L} or @samp{-P} may be specified at the
2674 start of the command line (if none of these is specified, @samp{-P} is
2675 assumed). If you specify more than one of these options, the last one
2676 specified takes effect (but note that the @samp{-follow} option is
2677 equivalent to @samp{-L}). The arguments after these are a list of
2678 files or directories that should be searched.
2680 This list of files to search is followed by a list of expressions
2681 describing the files we wish to search for. The first part of the
2682 expression is recognised by the fact that it begins with @samp{-},
2683 @samp{(}, @samp{)}, @samp{,}, or @samp{!}. Any arguments after it are
2684 the rest of the expression. If no files are given, the current
2685 directory is used. If no expression is given, the expression
2686 @samp{-print} is used.
2688 @code{find} exits with status zero if all files matched are processed
2689 successfully, greater than 0 if errors occur.
2691 Three options can precede the list of files. They determine the
2692 way that symbolic links are handled.
2696 Never follow symbolic links (this is the default), except in the case
2697 of the @samp{-xtype} predicate.
2699 Always follow symbolic links, except in the case of the @samp{-xtype}
2702 Follow symbolic links specified in the list of files to search, or
2703 which are otherwise specified on the command line.
2706 If @code{find} would follow a symbolic link, but cannot for any reason
2707 (for example, because it has insufficient permissions or the link is
2708 broken), it falls back on using the properties of the symbolic link
2709 itself. @ref{Symbolic Links} for a more complete description of how
2710 symbolic links are handled.
2712 @xref{Primary Index}, for a summary of all of the tests, actions, and
2713 options that the expression can contain. If the expression is
2714 missing, @samp{-print} is assumed.
2717 @code{find} also recognises two options for administrative use:
2721 Print a summary of the command line usage and exit.
2724 Print the version number of @code{find} and exit.
2729 * Warning Messages::
2733 @node Warning Messages,,, Invoking find
2734 @subsection Warning Messages
2736 If there is an error on the @code{find} command line, an error message
2737 is normally issued. However, there are some usages that are
2738 inadvisable but which @code{find} should still accept. Under these
2739 circumstances, @code{find} may issue a warning message. By default,
2740 warnings are enabled only if @code{find} is being run interactively
2741 (specifically, if the standard input is a terminal). Warning messages
2742 can be controlled explicitly by the use of options on the command
2747 Issue warning messages where appropriate.
2749 Do not issue warning messages.
2752 These options take effect at the point on the command line where they
2753 are specified. Therefore if you specify @samp{-nowarn} at the end of
2754 the command line, you will not see warning messages for any problems
2755 occurring before that. The warning messages affected by the above
2756 options are triggered by:
2760 Use of the @samp{-d} option which is deprecated; please use
2761 @samp{-depth} instead, since the latter is POSIX-compliant.
2763 Use of the @samp{-ipath} option which is deprecated; please use
2764 @samp{-iwholename} instead.
2766 Specifying an option (for example @samp{-mindepth}) after a non-option
2767 (for example @samp{-type} or @samp{-print}) on the command line.
2771 The default behaviour above is designed to work in that way so that
2772 existing shell scripts which use such constructs don't generate
2773 spurious errors, but people will be made aware of the problem.
2775 Some warning messages are issued for less common or more serious
2776 problems, and consequently cannot be turned off:
2780 Use of an unrecognised backslash escape sequence with @samp{-fprintf}
2782 Use of an unrecognised formatting directive with @samp{-fprintf}
2785 @node Invoking locate, Invoking updatedb, Invoking find, Reference
2786 @section Invoking @code{locate}
2789 locate @r{[}@var{option}@dots{}@r{]} @var{pattern}@dots{}
2792 For each @var{pattern} given @code{locate} searches one or more file
2793 name databases returning each match of @var{pattern}.
2795 For each @var{pattern} given @code{locate} searches one or more file
2796 name databases returning each match of @var{pattern}.
2801 Print only names which match all non-option arguments, not those
2802 matching one or more non-option arguments.
2806 The specified pattern is matched against just the last component of
2807 the name of a file in the @code{locate} database. This last
2808 component is also called the ``base name''. For example, the base
2809 name of @file{/tmp/mystuff/foo.old.c} is @file{foo.old.c}. If the
2810 pattern contains metacharacters, it must match the base name exactly.
2811 If not, it must match part of the base name.
2815 Instead of printing the matched file names, just print the total
2816 number of matches found, unless @samp{--print} (@samp{-p}) is also
2820 @item --database=@var{path}
2821 @itemx -d @var{path}
2822 Instead of searching the default @code{locate} database, @code{locate} search the file
2823 name databases in @var{path}, which is a colon-separated list of
2824 database file names. You can also use the environment variable
2825 @code{LOCATE_PATH} to set the list of database files to search. The
2826 option overrides the environment variable if both are used. Empty
2827 elements in @var{path} (that is, a leading or trailing colon, or two
2828 colons in a row) are taken to stand for the default database.
2829 A database can be supplied on stdin, using @samp{-} as an element
2830 of @samp{path}. If more than one element of @samp{path} is @samp{-},
2831 later instances are ignored (but a warning message is printed).
2835 Only print out such names which currently exist (instead of such names
2836 which existed when the database was created). Note that this may slow
2837 down the program a lot, if there are many matches in the database.
2838 The way in which broken symbolic links are treated is affected by the
2839 @samp{-L}, @samp{-P} and @samp{-H} options. Please note that it is
2840 possible for the file to be deleted after @code{locate} has checked
2841 that it exists, but before you use it.
2843 @item --non-existing
2845 Only print out such names which currently do not exist (instead of
2846 such names which existed when the database was created). Note that
2847 this may slow down the program a lot, if there are many matches in the
2848 database. The way in which broken symbolic links are treated is
2849 affected by the @samp{-L}, @samp{-P} and @samp{-H} options. Please
2850 note that @code{locate} checks that the file does not exist, but a
2851 file of the same name might be created after @code{locate}'s check but
2852 before you read @code{locate}'s output.
2856 If testing for the existence of files (with the @samp{-e} or @samp{-E}
2857 options), consider broken symbolic links to be non-existing. This is
2858 the default behaviour.
2863 If testing for the existence of files (with the @samp{-e} or @samp{-E}
2864 options), treat broken symbolic links as if they were existing files.
2865 The @samp{-H} form of this option is provided purely for similarity
2866 with @code{find}; the use of @samp{-P} is recommended over @samp{-H}.
2870 Ignore case distinctions in both the pattern and the file names.
2874 Limit the number of results printed to N. When used with the
2875 @samp{--count} option, the value printed will never be larger than
2880 Accepted but does nothing. The option is supported only to provide
2881 compatibility with BSD's @code{locate}.
2885 Results are separated with the ASCII NUL character rather than the
2886 newline character. To get the full benefit of the use of this option,
2887 use the new @code{locate} database format (that is the default
2892 Print search results when they normally would not, because of the
2893 presence of @samp{--statistics} (@samp{-S}) or @samp{--count}
2898 The specified pattern is matched against the whole name of the file in
2899 the @code{locate} database. If the pattern contains metacharacters,
2900 it must match exactly. If not, it must match part of the whole file
2901 name. This is the default behaviour.
2905 Instead of using substring or shell glob matching, the pattern
2906 specified on the command line is understood to be a regular
2907 expression. GNU Emacs-style regular expressions are assumed unless
2908 the @samp{--regextype} option is also given. File names from the
2909 @code{locate} database are matched using the specified regular
2910 expression. If the @samp{-i} flag is also given, matching is
2911 case-insensitive. Matches are performed against the whole path name,
2912 and so by default a pathname will be matched if any part of it matches
2913 the specified regular expression. The regular expression may use
2914 @samp{^} or @samp{$} to anchor a match at the beginning or end of a
2918 This option changes the regular expression syntax and behaviour used
2919 by the @samp{--regex} option. @ref{Regular Expressions} for more
2920 information on the regular expression dialects understood by GNU
2925 Accepted but does nothing. The option is supported only to provide
2926 compatibility with BSD's @code{locate}.
2930 Print some summary information for each @code{locate} database. No
2931 search is performed unless non-option arguments are given.
2934 Print a summary of the command line usage for @code{locate} and exit.
2937 Print the version number of @code{locate} and exit.
2940 @node Invoking updatedb, Invoking xargs, Invoking locate, Reference
2941 @section Invoking @code{updatedb}
2944 updatedb @r{[}@var{option}@dots{}@r{]}
2947 @code{updatedb} creates and updates the database of file names used by
2948 @code{locate}. @code{updatedb} generates a list of files similar to
2949 the output of @code{find} and then uses utilities for optimizing the
2950 database for performance. @code{updatedb} is often run periodically
2951 as a @code{cron} job and configured with environment variables or
2952 command options. Typically, operating systems have a shell script
2953 that ``exports'' configurations for variable definitions and uses
2954 another schell script that ``sources'' the configuration file into the
2955 environment and then executes @code{updatedb} in the environment.
2957 @code{updatedb} creates and updates the database of file names used by
2958 @code{locate}. @code{updatedb} generates a list of files similar to
2959 the output of @code{find} and then uses utilities for optimizing the
2960 database for performance. @code{updatedb} is often run periodically
2961 as a @code{cron} job and configured with environment variables or
2962 command options. Typically, operating systems have a shell script
2963 that ``exports'' configurations for variable definitions and uses
2964 another schell script that ``sources'' the configuration file into the
2965 environment and then executes @code{updatedb} in the environment.
2968 @item --findoptions='@var{OPTION}@dots{}'
2969 Global options to pass on to @code{find}.
2970 The environment variable @code{FINDOPTIONS} also sets this value.
2973 @item --localpaths='@var{path}@dots{}'
2974 Non-network directories to put in the database.
2975 Default is @file{/}.
2977 @item --netpaths='@var{path}@dots{}'
2978 Network (NFS, AFS, RFS, etc.) directories to put in the database.
2979 The environment variable @code{NETPATHS} also sets this value.
2982 @item --prunepaths='@var{path}@dots{}'
2983 Directories to omit from the database, which would otherwise be
2984 included. The environment variable @code{PRUNEPATHS} also sets this
2985 value. Default is @file{/tmp /usr/tmp /var/tmp /afs}. The paths are
2986 used as regular expressions (with @code{find ... -regex}, so you need
2987 to specify these paths in the same way that @code{find} will encounter
2988 them. This means for example that the paths must not include trailing
2991 @item --prunefs='@var{path}@dots{}'
2992 Filesystems to omit from the database, which would otherwise be
2993 included. Note that files are pruned when a filesystem is reached;
2994 Any filesystem mounted under an undesired filesystem will be ignored.
2995 The environment variable @code{PRUNEFS} also sets this value. Default
2996 is @file{nfs NFS proc}.
2998 @item --output=@var{dbfile}
2999 The database file to build. Default is system-dependent, but
3000 typically @file{/usr/local/var/locatedb}.
3002 @item --localuser=@var{user}
3003 The user to search the non-network directories as, using @code{su}.
3004 Default is to search the non-network directories as the current user.
3005 You can also use the environment variable @code{LOCALUSER} to set this user.
3007 @item --netuser=@var{user}
3008 The user to search network directories as, using @code{su}. Default
3009 @code{user} is @code{daemon}. You can also use the environment variable
3010 @code{NETUSER} to set this user.
3013 Generate a @code{locate} database in the old format, for compatibility
3014 with versions of @code{locate} other than GNU @code{locate}. Using
3015 this option means that @code{locate} will not be able to properly
3016 handle non-ASCII characters in file names (that is, file names
3017 containing characters which have the eighth bit set, such as many of
3018 the characters from the ISO-8859-1 character set).
3020 Print a summary of the command line usage and exit.
3022 Print the version number of @code{updatedb} and exit.
3025 @node Invoking xargs, Regular Expressions, Invoking updatedb, Reference
3026 @section Invoking @code{xargs}
3029 xargs @r{[}@var{option}@dots{}@r{]} @r{[}@var{command} @r{[}@var{initial-arguments}@r{]}@r{]}
3032 @code{xargs} exits with the following status:
3038 if any invocation of the command exited with status 1-125
3040 if the command exited with status 255
3042 if the command is killed by a signal
3044 if the command cannot be run
3046 if the command is not found
3048 if some other error occurred.
3051 Exit codes greater than 128 are used by the shell to indicate that
3052 a program died due to a fatal signal.
3055 @item --arg-file@r{=@var{inputfile}}
3056 @itemx -a o@r{@var{inputfile}}
3057 Read names from the file @var{inputfile} instead of standard input.
3058 If you use this option, the standard input stream remains unchanged
3059 when commands are run. Otherwise, stdin is redirected from
3064 Input file names are terminated by a null character instead of by
3065 whitespace, and any quotes and backslash characters are not considered
3066 special (every character is taken literally). Disables the end of
3067 file string, which is treated like any other argument.
3069 @item --delimiter @var{delim}
3070 @itemx -d @var{delim}
3072 Input file names are terminated by the specified character @var{delim}
3073 instead of by whitespace, and any quotes and backslash characters are
3074 not considered special (every character is taken literally). Disables
3075 the end of file string, which is treated like any other argument.
3077 The specified delimiter may be a single character, a C-style character
3078 escape such as @samp{\n}, or an octal or hexadecimal escape code.
3079 Octal and hexadecimal escape codes are understood as for the
3080 @code{printf} command. Multibyte characters are not supported.
3083 @item -E @var{eof-str}
3084 @itemx --eof@r{[}=@var{eof-str}@r{]}
3085 @itemx -e@r{[}@var{eof-str}@r{]}
3086 Set the end of file string to @var{eof-str}. If the end of file
3087 string occurs as a line of input, the rest of the input is ignored.
3088 If @var{eof-str} is omitted (@samp{-e}) or blank (either @samp{-e} or
3089 @samp{-E}), there is no end of file string. The @samp{-e} form of
3090 this option is deprecated in favour of the POSIX-compliant @samp{-E}
3091 option, which you should use instead. As of GNU xargs version 4.2.9,
3092 the default behaviour of xargs is not to have a logical end-of-file
3093 marker. The POSIX standard (IEEE Std 1003.1, 2004 Edition) allows
3097 Print a summary of the options to @code{xargs} and exit.
3099 @item -I @var{replace-str}
3100 @itemx --replace@r{[}=@var{replace-str}@r{]}
3101 @itemx -i@r{[}@var{replace-str}@r{]}
3102 Replace occurrences of @var{replace-str} in the initial arguments with
3103 names read from standard input. Also, unquoted blanks do not
3104 terminate arguments; instead, the input is split at newlines only. If
3105 @var{replace-str} is omitted (omitting it is allowed only for
3106 @samp{-i}), it defaults to @samp{@{@}} (like for @samp{find -exec}).
3107 Implies @samp{-x} and @samp{-l 1}. The @samp{-i} option is deprecated
3108 in favour of the @samp{-I} option.
3110 @item -L @var{max-lines}
3111 @itemx --max-lines@r{[}=@var{max-lines}@r{]}
3112 @itemx -l@r{[}@var{max-lines}@r{]}
3113 Use at most @var{max-lines} non-blank input lines per command line.
3114 For @samp{-l}, @var{max-lines} defaults to 1 if omitted. For
3115 @samp{-L}, the argument is mandatory. Trailing blanks cause an input
3116 line to be logically continued on the next input line, for the purpose
3117 of counting the lines. Implies @samp{-x}. The @samp{-l} form of this
3118 option is deprecated in favour of the POSIX-compliant @samp{-L}
3121 @item --max-args=@var{max-args}
3122 @itemx -n @var{max-args}
3123 Use at most @var{max-args} arguments per command line. Fewer than
3124 @var{max-args} arguments will be used if the size (see the @samp{-s}
3125 option) is exceeded, unless the @samp{-x} option is given, in which
3126 case @code{xargs} will exit.
3130 Prompt the user about whether to run each command line and read a line
3131 from the terminal. Only run the command line if the response starts
3132 with @samp{y} or @samp{Y}. Implies @samp{-t}.
3134 @item --no-run-if-empty
3136 If the standard input is completely empty, do not run the
3137 command. By default, the command is run once even if there is no
3140 @item --max-chars=@var{max-chars}
3141 @itemx -s @var{max-chars}
3142 Use at most @var{max-chars} characters per command line, including the
3143 command, initial arguments and any terminating nulls at the ends of
3144 the argument strings.
3147 Display the limits on the command-line length which are imposed by the
3148 operating system, @code{xargs}' choice of buffer size and the
3149 @samp{-s} option. Pipe the input from @file{/dev/null} (and perhaps
3150 specify @samp{--no-run-if-empty}) if you don't want @code{xargs} to do
3155 Print the command line on the standard error output before executing
3159 Print the version number of @code{xargs} and exit.
3163 Exit if the size (see the @samp{-s} option) is exceeded.
3166 @item --max-procs=@var{max-procs}
3167 @itemx -P @var{max-procs}
3168 Run simultaneously up to @var{max-procs} processes at once; the default is 1. If
3169 @var{max-procs} is 0, @code{xargs} will run as many processes as
3170 possible simultaneously.
3174 @node Regular Expressions, Environment Variables, Invoking xargs, Reference
3175 @section Regular Expressions
3177 The @samp{-regex} and @samp{-iregex} tests of @code{find} allow
3178 matching by regular expression, as does the @samp{--regex} option of
3179 @code{locate}. There are many different types of Regular Expression,
3180 but the type used by @code{find} and @code{locate} is the same as is
3181 used in GNU Emacs. Both programs provide an option which allows you
3182 to select an alternative regular expression syntax; for @code{find}
3183 this is the @samp{-regextype} option, and for @code{locate} this is
3184 the @samp{--regextype} option.
3186 These options take a single argument, which indicates the specific
3187 regular expression syntax and behaviour that should be used. This
3188 should be one of the following:
3190 @include regexprops.texi
3192 @node Environment Variables,, Regular Expressions, Reference
3193 @section Environment Variables
3196 Provides a default value for the internationalisation variables that
3199 If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the
3200 other internationalisation variables.
3202 The POSIX standard specifies that this variable affects the pattern
3203 matching to be used for the `\-name' option. GNU find uses the
3204 GNU version of the @code{fnmatch} library function.
3206 POSIX also specifies that the `LC_COLLATE' environment
3207 variable affects the interpretation of the user's response to the
3208 query issued by `\-ok', but this is not the case for GNU find.
3210 This variable affects the treatment of character classes used with
3211 the @samp{-name} test, if the system's
3212 @code{fnmatch} library function supports this. It has no effect on the behaviour
3213 of the @samp{-ok} expression.
3215 Determines the locale to be used for internationalised messages.
3217 Determines the location of the internationalisation message catalogues.
3219 Affects the directories which are searched to find the executables
3220 invoked by @samp{-exec}, @samp{-execdir} @samp{-ok} and @samp{-okdir}.
3221 If the @var{PATH} environment variable includes the current directory
3222 (by explicitly including @samp{.} or by having an empty element), and
3223 the find command line includes @samp{-execdir} or @samp{-okdir},
3224 @code{find} will refuse to run. @xref{Security Considerations}, for a
3225 more detailed discussion of security matters.
3227 @item POSIXLY_CORRECT
3228 Determines the block size used by @samp{-ls} and @samp{-fls}.
3229 If @var{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is set, blocks are units of 512 bytes. Otherwise
3230 they are units of 1024 bytes.
3233 Affects the time zone used for some of the time-related format
3234 directives of @samp{-printf} and @samp{-fprintf}.
3239 @node Common Tasks, Worked Examples, Reference, Top
3240 @chapter Common Tasks
3242 The sections that follow contain some extended examples that both give
3243 a good idea of the power of these programs, and show you how to solve
3244 common real-world problems.
3247 * Viewing And Editing::
3250 * Strange File Names::
3251 * Fixing Permissions::
3252 * Classifying Files::
3255 @node Viewing And Editing
3256 @section Viewing And Editing
3258 To view a list of files that meet certain criteria, simply run your
3259 file viewing program with the file names as arguments. Shells
3260 substitute a command enclosed in backquotes with its output, so the
3261 whole command looks like this:
3264 less `find /usr/include -name '*.h' | xargs grep -l mode_t`
3268 You can edit those files by giving an editor name instead of a file
3272 emacs `find /usr/include -name '*.h' | xargs grep -l mode_t`
3275 Because there is a limit to the length of any individual command line,
3276 there is a limit to the number of files that can be handled in this
3277 way. We can get around this difficulty by using xargs like this:
3280 find /usr/include -name '*.h' | xargs grep -l mode_t > todo
3281 xargs --arg-file=todo emacs
3284 Here, @code{xargs} will run @code{emacs} as many times as necessary to
3285 visit all of the files listed in the file @file{todo}.
3290 You can pass a list of files produced by @code{find} to a file
3291 archiving program. GNU @code{tar} and @code{cpio} can both read lists
3292 of file names from the standard input---either delimited by nulls (the
3293 safe way) or by blanks (the lazy, risky default way). To use
3294 null-delimited names, give them the @samp{--null} option. You can
3295 store a file archive in a file, write it on a tape, or send it over a
3296 network to extract on another machine.
3298 One common use of @code{find} to archive files is to send a list of
3299 the files in a directory tree to @code{cpio}. Use @samp{-depth} so if
3300 a directory does not have write permission for its owner, its contents
3301 can still be restored from the archive since the directory's
3302 permissions are restored after its contents. Here is an example of
3303 doing this using @code{cpio}; you could use a more complex @code{find}
3304 expression to archive only certain files.
3307 find . -depth -print0 |
3308 cpio --create --null --format=crc --file=/dev/nrst0
3311 You could restore that archive using this command:
3314 cpio --extract --null --make-dir --unconditional \
3315 --preserve --file=/dev/nrst0
3318 Here are the commands to do the same things using @code{tar}:
3321 find . -depth -print0 |
3322 tar --create --null --files-from=- --file=/dev/nrst0
3324 tar --extract --null --preserve-perm --same-owner \
3328 @c Idea from Rick Sladkey.
3329 Here is an example of copying a directory from one machine to another:
3332 find . -depth -print0 | cpio -0o -Hnewc |
3333 rsh @var{other-machine} "cd `pwd` && cpio -i0dum"
3337 @section Cleaning Up
3339 @c Idea from Jim Meyering.
3340 This section gives examples of removing unwanted files in various
3341 situations. Here is a command to remove the CVS backup files created
3342 when an update requires a merge:
3345 find . -name '.#*' -print0 | xargs -0r rm -f
3348 The command above works, but the following is safer:
3351 find . -name '.#*' -depth -delete
3354 @c Idea from Franc,ois Pinard.
3355 You can run this command to clean out your clutter in @file{/tmp}.
3356 You might place it in the file your shell runs when you log out
3357 (@file{.bash_logout}, @file{.logout}, or @file{.zlogout}, depending on
3358 which shell you use).
3361 find /tmp -depth -user "$LOGNAME" -type f -delete
3364 If your @code{find} command removes directories, you may find that
3365 you get a spurious error message when @code{find} tries to recurse
3366 into a directory that has now been removed. Using the @samp{-depth}
3367 option will normally resolve this problem.
3369 @c Idea from Noah Friedman.
3370 To remove old Emacs backup and auto-save files, you can use a command
3371 like the following. It is especially important in this case to use
3372 null-terminated file names because Emacs packages like the VM mailer
3373 often create temporary file names with spaces in them, like
3374 @file{#reply to David J. MacKenzie<1>#}.
3377 find ~ \( -name '*~' -o -name '#*#' \) -print0 |
3378 xargs --no-run-if-empty --null rm -vf
3381 Removing old files from @file{/tmp} is commonly done from @code{cron}:
3383 @c Idea from Kaveh Ghazi.
3385 find /tmp /var/tmp -not -type d -mtime +3 -delete
3386 find /tmp /var/tmp -depth -mindepth 1 -type d -empty -delete
3389 The second @code{find} command above uses @samp{-depth} so it cleans
3390 out empty directories depth-first, hoping that the parents become
3391 empty and can be removed too. It uses @samp{-mindepth} to avoid
3392 removing @file{/tmp} itself if it becomes totally empty.
3394 @node Strange File Names
3395 @section Strange File Names
3398 @c From: tmatimar@isgtec.com (Ted Timar)
3399 @c Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions,comp.unix.shell,comp.answers,news.answers
3400 @c Subject: Unix - Frequently Asked Questions (2/7) [Frequent posting]
3401 @c Subject: How do I remove a file with funny characters in the filename ?
3402 @c Date: Thu Mar 18 17:16:55 EST 1993
3403 @code{find} can help you remove or rename a file with strange
3404 characters in its name. People are sometimes stymied by files whose
3405 names contain characters such as spaces, tabs, control characters, or
3406 characters with the high bit set. The simplest way to remove such
3410 rm -i @var{some*pattern*that*matches*the*problem*file}
3413 @code{rm} asks you whether to remove each file matching the given
3414 pattern. If you are using an old shell, this approach might not work
3415 if the file name contains a character with the high bit set; the shell
3416 may strip it off. A more reliable way is:
3419 find . -maxdepth 1 @var{tests} -okdir rm '@{@}' \;
3423 where @var{tests} uniquely identify the file. The @samp{-maxdepth 1}
3424 option prevents @code{find} from wasting time searching for the file
3425 in any subdirectories; if there are no subdirectories, you may omit
3426 it. A good way to uniquely identify the problem file is to figure out
3427 its inode number; use
3433 Suppose you have a file whose name contains control characters, and
3434 you have found that its inode number is 12345. This command prompts
3435 you for whether to remove it:
3438 find . -maxdepth 1 -inum 12345 -okdir rm -f '@{@}' \;
3441 If you don't want to be asked, perhaps because the file name may
3442 contain a strange character sequence that will mess up your screen
3443 when printed, then use @samp{-execdir} instead of @samp{-okdir}.
3445 If you want to rename the file instead, you can use @code{mv} instead
3449 find . -maxdepth 1 -inum 12345 -okdir mv '@{@}' @var{new-file-name} \;
3452 @node Fixing Permissions
3453 @section Fixing Permissions
3455 Suppose you want to make sure that everyone can write to the
3456 directories in a certain directory tree. Here is a way to find
3457 directories lacking either user or group write permission (or both),
3458 and fix their permissions:
3461 find . -type d -not -perm -ug=w | xargs chmod ug+w
3465 You could also reverse the operations, if you want to make sure that
3466 directories do @emph{not} have world write permission.
3468 @node Classifying Files
3469 @section Classifying Files
3472 @c From: martin@mwtech.UUCP (Martin Weitzel)
3473 @c Newsgroups: comp.unix.wizards,comp.unix.questions
3474 @c Subject: Advanced usage of 'find' (Re: Unix security automating script)
3475 @c Date: 22 Mar 90 15:05:19 GMT
3476 If you want to classify a set of files into several groups based on
3477 different criteria, you can use the comma operator to perform multiple
3478 independent tests on the files. Here is an example:
3481 find / -type d \( -perm -o=w -fprint allwrite , \
3482 -perm -o=x -fprint allexec \)
3484 echo "Directories that can be written to by everyone:"
3487 echo "Directories with search permissions for everyone:"
3491 @code{find} has only to make one scan through the directory tree
3492 (which is one of the most time consuming parts of its work).
3494 @node Worked Examples, Security Considerations, Common Tasks, Top
3495 @chapter Worked Examples
3497 The tools in the findutils package, and in particular @code{find},
3498 have a large number of options. This means that quite often,
3499 there is more than one way to do things. Some of the options
3500 and facilities only exist for compatibility with other tools, and
3501 findutils provides improved ways of doing things.
3503 This chapter describes a number of useful tasks that are commonly
3504 performed, and compares the different ways of achieving them.
3508 * Updating A Timestamp File::
3511 @node Deleting Files
3512 @section Deleting Files
3514 One of the most common tasks that @code{find} is used for is locating
3515 files that can be deleted. This might include:
3519 Files last modified more than 3 years ago which haven't been accessed
3520 for at least 2 years
3522 Files belonging to a certain user
3524 Temporary files which are no longer required
3527 This example concentrates on the actual deletion task rather than on
3528 sophisticated ways of locating the files that need to be deleted.
3529 We'll assume that the files we want to delete are old files underneath
3530 @file{/var/tmp/stuff}.
3532 @subsection The Traditional Way
3534 The traditional way to delete files in @file{var/tmp/stuff} that have
3535 not been modified in over 90 days would have been:
3538 find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -exec /bin/rm @{@} \;
3541 The above command uses @samp{-exec} to run the @code{/bin/rm} command
3542 to remove each file. This approach works and in fact would have
3543 worked in Version 7 Unix in 1979. However, there are a number of
3544 problems with this approach.
3547 The most obvious problem with the approach above is that it causes
3548 @code{find} to fork every time it finds a file that needs to delete,
3549 and the child process then has to use the @code{exec} system call to
3550 launch @code{/bin/rm}. All this is quite inefficient. If we are
3551 going to use @code{/bin/rm} to do this job, it is better to make it
3552 delete more than one file at a time.
3554 The most obvious way of doing this is to use the shell's command
3558 /bin/rm `find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -print`
3560 or you could use the more modern form
3562 /bin/rm $(find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -print)
3565 The commands above are much more efficient than the first attempt.
3566 However, there is a problem with them. The shell has a maximum
3567 command length which is imposed by the operating system (the actual
3568 limit varies between systems). This means that while the command
3569 expansion technique will usually work, it will suddenly fail when
3570 there are lots of files to delete. Since the task is to delete
3571 unwanted files, this is precisely the time we don't want things to go
3574 @subsection Making Use of xargs
3576 So, is there a way to be more efficient in the use of @code{fork()}
3577 and @code{exec()} without running up against this limit?
3578 Yes, we can be almost optimally efficient by making use
3579 of the @code{xargs} command. The @code{xargs} command reads arguments
3580 from its standard input and builds them into command lines. We can
3584 find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -print | xargs /bin/rm
3587 For example if the files found by @code{find} are
3588 @file{/var/tmp/stuff/A},
3589 @file{/var/tmp/stuff/B} and
3590 @file{/var/tmp/stuff/C} then @code{xargs} might issue the commands
3593 /bin/rm /var/tmp/stuff/A /var/tmp/stuff/B
3594 /bin/rm /var/tmp/stuff/C
3597 The above assumes that @code{xargs} has a very small maximum command
3598 line length. The real limit is much larger but the idea is that
3599 @code{xargs} will run @code{/bin/rm} as many times as necessary to get
3600 the job done, given the limits on command line length.
3602 This usage of @code{xargs} is pretty efficient, and the @code{xargs}
3603 command is widely implemented (all modern versions of Unix offer it).
3604 So far then, the news is all good. However, there is bad news too.
3606 @subsection Unusual characters in filenames
3608 Unix-like systems allow any characters to appear in file names with
3609 the exception of the ASCII NUL character and the backslash.
3610 Backslashes can occur in path names (as the directory separator) but
3611 not in the names of actual directory entries. This means that the
3612 list of files that @code{xargs} reads could in fact contain white space
3613 characters --- spaces, tabs and newline characters. Since by default,
3614 @code{xargs} assumes that the list of files it is reading uses white
3615 space as an argument separator, it cannot correctly handle the case
3616 where a filename actually includes white space. This makes the
3617 default behaviour of @code{xargs} almost useless for handling
3620 To solve this problem, GNU findutils introduced the @samp{-print0}
3621 action for @code{find}. This uses the ASCII NUL character to separate
3622 the entries in the file list that it produces. This is the ideal
3623 choice of separator since it is the only character that cannot appear
3624 within a path name. The @samp{-0} option to @code{xargs} makes it
3625 assume that arguments are separated with ASCII NUL instead of white
3626 space. It also turns off another misfeature in the default behaviour
3627 of @code{xargs}, which is that it pays attention to quote characters
3628 in its input. Some versions of @code{xargs} also terminate when they
3629 see a lone @samp{_} in the input, but GNU @code{find} no longer does
3630 that (since it has become an optional behaviour in the Unix standard).
3632 So, putting @code{find -print0} together with @code{xargs -0} we get
3636 find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -print0 | xargs -0 /bin/rm
3639 The result is an efficient way of proceeding that
3640 correctly handles all the possible characters that could appear in the
3641 list of files to delete. This is good news. However, there is, as
3642 I'm sure you're expecting, also more bad news. The problem is that
3643 this is not a portable construct; although other versions of Unix
3644 (notable BSD-derived ones) support @samp{-print0}, it's not
3645 universal. So, is there a more universal mechanism?
3647 @subsection Going back to -exec
3649 There is indeed a more universal mechanism, which is a slight
3650 modification to the @samp{-exec} action. The normal @samp{-exec}
3651 action assumes that the command to run is terminated with a semicolon
3652 (the semicolon normally has to be quoted in order to protect it from
3653 interpretation as the shell command separator). The SVR4 edition of
3654 Unix introduced a slight variation, which involves terminating the
3655 command with @samp{+} instead:
3658 find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -exec /bin/rm @{@} \+
3661 The above use of @samp{-exec} causes @code{find} to build up a long
3662 command line and then issue it. This can be less efficient than some
3663 uses of @code{xargs}; for example @code{xargs} allows new command
3664 lines to be built up while the previous command is still executing, and
3665 allows you to specify a number of commands to run in parallel.
3666 However, the @code{find @dots{} -exec @dots{} +} construct has the advantage
3667 of wide portability. GNU findutils did not support @samp{-exec @dots{} +}
3668 until version 4.2.12; one of the reasons for this is that it already
3669 had the @samp{-print0} action in any case.
3672 @subsection A more secure version of -exec
3674 The command above seems to be efficient and portable. However,
3675 within it lurks a security problem. The problem is shared with
3676 all the commands we've tried in this worked example so far, too. The
3677 security problem is a race condition; that is, if it is possible for
3678 somebody to manipulate the filesystem that you are searching while you
3679 are searching it, it is possible for them to persuade your @code{find}
3680 command to cause the deletion of a file that you can delete but they
3683 The problem occurs because the @samp{-exec} action is defined by the
3684 @acronym{POSIX} standard to invoke its command with the same working directory
3685 as @code{find} had when it was started. This means that the arguments
3686 which replace the @{@} include a relative path from @code{find}'s
3687 starting point down the file that needs to be deleted. For example,
3690 find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -exec /bin/rm @{@} \+
3693 might actually issue the command:
3696 /bin/rm /var/tmp/stuff/A /var/tmp/stuff/B /var/tmp/stuff/passwd
3699 Notice the file @file{/var/tmp/stuff/passwd}. Likewise, the command:
3702 cd /var/tmp && find stuff -mtime +90 -exec /bin/rm @{@} \+
3705 might actually issue the command:
3708 /bin/rm stuff/A stuff/B stuff/passwd
3711 If an attacker can rename @file{stuff} to something else (making use
3712 of their write permissions in @file{/var/tmp}) they can replace it
3713 with a symbolic link to @file{/etc}. That means that the
3714 @code{/bin/rm} command will be invoked on @file{/etc/passwd}. If you
3715 are running your @code{find} command as root, the attacker has just managed
3716 to delete a vital file. All they needed to do to achieve this was
3717 replace a subdirectory with a symbolic link at the vital moment.
3719 There is however, a simple solution to the problem. This is an action
3720 which works a lot like @code{-exec} but doesn't need to traverse a
3721 chain of directories to reach the file that it needs to work on. This
3722 is the @samp{-execdir} action, which was introduced by the BSD family
3723 of operating systems. The command,
3726 find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -execdir /bin/rm @{@} \+
3729 might delete a set of files by performing these actions:
3733 Change directory to /var/tmp/stuff/foo
3735 Invoke @code{/bin/rm ./file1 ./file2 ./file3}
3737 Change directory to /var/tmp/stuff/bar
3739 Invoke @code{/bin/rm ./file99 ./file100 ./file101}
3742 This is a much more secure method. We are no longer exposed to a race
3743 condition. For many typical uses of @code{find}, this is the best
3744 strategy. It's reasonably efficient, but the length of the command
3745 line is limited not just by the operating system limits, but also by
3746 how many files we actually need to delete from each directory.
3748 Is it possible to do any better? In the case of general file
3749 processing, no. However, in the specific case of deleting files it is
3750 indeed possible to do better.
3752 @subsection Using the -delete action
3754 The most efficient and secure method of solving this problem is to use
3755 the @samp{-delete} action:
3758 find /var/tmp/stuff -mtime +90 -delete
3761 This alternative is more efficient than any of the @samp{-exec} or
3762 @samp{-execdir} actions, since it entirely avoids the overhead of
3763 forking a new process and using @code{exec} to run @code{/bin/rm}. It
3764 is also normally more efficient than @code{xargs} for the same
3765 reason. The file deletion is performed from the directory containing
3766 the entry to be deleted, so the @samp{-delete} action has the same
3767 security advantages as the @samp{-execdir} action has.
3769 The @samp{-delete} action was introduced by the BSD family of
3772 @subsection Improving things still further
3774 Is it possible to improve things still further? Not without either
3775 modifying the system library to the operating system or having more specific
3776 knowledge of the layout of the filesystem and disk I/O subsystem, or
3779 The @code{find} command traverses the filesystem, reading
3780 directories. It then issues a separate system call for each file to
3781 be deleted. If we could modify the operating system, there are
3782 potential gains that could be made:
3786 We could have a system call to which we pass more than one filename
3789 Alternatively, we could pass in a list of inode numbers (on GNU/Linux
3790 systems, @code{readdir()} also returns the inode number of each
3791 directory entry) to be deleted.
3794 The above possibilities sound interesting, but from the kernel's point
3795 of view it is difficult to enforce standard Unix access controls for
3796 such processing by inode number. Such a facility would probably
3797 need to be restricted to the superuser.
3799 Another way of improving performance would be to increase the
3800 parallelism of the process. For example if the directory hierarchy we
3801 are searching is actually spread across a number of disks, we might
3802 somehow be able to arrange for @code{find} to process each disk in
3803 parallel. In practice GNU @code{find} doesn't have such an intimate
3804 understanding of the system's filesystem layout and disk I/O
3807 However, since the system administrator can have such an understanding
3808 they can take advantage of it like so:
3811 find /var/tmp/stuff1 -mtime +90 -delete &
3812 find /var/tmp/stuff2 -mtime +90 -delete &
3813 find /var/tmp/stuff3 -mtime +90 -delete &
3814 find /var/tmp/stuff4 -mtime +90 -delete &
3818 In the example above, four separate instances of @code{find} are used
3819 to search four subdirectories in parallel. The @code{wait} command
3820 simply waits for all of these to complete. Whether this approach is
3821 more or less efficient than a single instance of @code{find} depends
3822 on a number of things:
3826 Are the directories being searched in parallel actually on separate
3827 disks? If not, this parallel search might just result in a lot of
3828 disk head movement and so the speed might even be slower.
3830 Other activity - are other programs also doing things on those disks?
3834 @subsection Conclusion
3836 The fastest and most secure way to delete files with the help of
3837 @code{find} is to use @samp{-delete}. Using @code{xargs -0 -P N} can
3838 also make effective use of the disk, but it is not as secure.
3840 In the case where we're doing things other than deleting files, the
3841 most secure alternative is @samp{-execdir @dots{} +}, but this is not as
3842 portable as the insecure action @samp{-exec @dots{} +}.
3844 The @samp{-delete} action is not completely portable, but the only
3845 other possibillity which is as secure (@samp{-execdir}) is no more
3846 portable. The most efficient portable alternative is @samp{-exec
3847 @dots{}+}, but this is insecure and isn't supported by versions of GNU
3848 findutils prior to 4.2.12.
3851 @node Updating A Timestamp File
3852 @section Updating A Timestamp File
3854 Suppose we have a directory full of files which is maintained with a
3855 set of automated tools; perhaps one set of tools updates them and
3856 another set of tools uses the result. In this situation, it might be
3857 useful for the second set of tools to know if the files have recently
3858 been changed. It might be useful, for example, to have a 'timestamp'
3859 file which gives the timestamp on the newest file in the collection.
3861 We can use @code{find} to achieve this, but there are several
3862 different ways to do it.
3864 @subsection Updating the Timestamp The Wrong Way
3866 The obvious but wrong answer is just to use @samp{-newer}:-
3869 find subdir -newer timestamp -exec touch -r @{@} timestamp \;
3872 This does the right sort of thing but has a bug. Suppose that two
3873 files in the subdirectory have been updated, and that these are called
3874 @file{file1} and @file{file2}. The command above will update
3875 @file{timestamp} with the modification time of @file{file1} or that of
3876 @file{file2}, but we don't know which one. Since the timestamps on
3877 @file{file1} and @file{file2} will in general be different, this could
3878 well be the wrong value.
3880 One solution to this problem is to modify @code{find} to recheck the
3881 modification time of @file{timestamp} every time a file is to be
3882 compared against it, but that will reduce the performance of
3885 @subsection Using the test utility to compare timestamps
3887 The @code{test} command can be used to compare timestamps:
3890 find subdir -exec test @{@} -nt timestamp \; -exec touch -r @{@} timestamp \;
3893 This will ensure that any changes made to the modification time of
3894 @file{timestamp} that take place during the execution of @code{find}
3895 are taken into account. This resolves our earlier problem, but
3896 unfortunately this runs much more slowly.
3898 @subsection A combined approach
3900 We can of course still use @samp{-newer} to cut down on the number of
3901 calls to @code{test}:
3904 find subdir -newer timestamp -a \
3905 -exec test @{@} -nt timestamp \; -a \
3906 -exec touch -r @{@} timestamp \;
3909 Here, the @samp{-newer} test excludes all the files which are
3910 definitely older than the timestamp, but all the files which are newer
3911 than the old value of the timestamp are compared against the current
3914 This is indeed faster in general, but the speed difference will depend
3915 on how many updated files there are.
3917 @subsection Using -printf and sort to compare timestamps
3919 It is possible to use the @samp{-printf} action to abandon the use of
3920 @code{test} entirely:
3923 newest=$(find subdir -newer timestamp -printf "%A@:%p\n" |
3927 touch -r "$@{newest:-timestamp@}" timestamp
3930 The command above works by generating a list of the timestamps and
3931 names of all the files which are newer than the timestamp. The
3932 @code{sort}, @code{tail} and @code{cut} commands simply pull out the
3933 name of the file with the largest timestamp value (that is, the latest
3934 file). The @code{touch} command is then used to update the timestamp,
3936 The @code{"$@{newest:-timestamp@}"} expression simply expands to the
3937 value of @code{$newest} if that variable is set, but to
3938 @file{timestamp} otherwise. This ensures that an argument is always
3939 given to the @samp{-r} option of the @code{touch} command.
3941 This approach seems quite efficient, but unfortunately it has a bug.
3942 Many operating systems now keep file modification time information at
3943 a granularity which is finer than one second. Unfortunately the
3944 @samp{%A@@} format for @samp{-printf} only prints a whole-number value
3945 currently; that is, these values are at a one-second granularity.
3946 This means that in our example above, @samp{$newest} will be the name
3947 of a file which is no more than one second older than the newest file,
3948 but may indeed be older.
3950 It would be possible to solve this problem with some kind of loop:
3954 newest=$(find subdir -newer timestamp -printf "%A@@:%p\n" |
3958 if test -z "$newest" ; then
3961 touch -r "$newest" timestamp
3966 A better fix for this problem would be to allow the @samp{%A@@} format
3967 to produce a result having a fractional part, too. While this is
3968 planned for GNU @code{find}, it hasn't been done yet.
3970 @subsection Coping with sub-second timestamp resolution
3972 Another tool which often works with timestamps is @code{make}. We can
3973 use @code{find} to generate a @file{Makefile} file on the fly and then
3974 use @code{make} to update the timestamps:
3981 -printf "timestamp:: %p\n\ttouch -r %p timestamp\n\n" > "$makefile"
3986 Unfortunately although the solution above is quite elegant, it fails
3987 to cope with white space within file names, and adjusting it to do so
3988 would require a rather complex shell script.
3991 @subsection Coping with odd filenames too
3993 We can fix both of these problems (looping and problems with white
3994 space), and do things more efficiently too. The following command
3995 works with newlines and doesn't need to sort the list of filenames.
3998 find subdir -newer timestamp -printf "%A@@:%p\0" |
4000 xargs --no-run-if-empty --null -i \
4001 find @{@} -maxdepth 0 -newer timestamp -exec touch -r @{@} timestamp \;
4004 The first @code{find} command generates a list of files which are
4005 newer than the original timestamp file, and prints a list of them with
4006 their timestamps. The @file{newest.pl} script simply filters out all
4007 the filenames which have timestamps which are older than whatever the
4014 my $latest_stamp = undef;
4016 my ($stamp, $name) = split(/:/);
4017 if (!defined($latest_stamp) || ($tstamp > $latest_stamp)) {
4018 $latest_stamp = $stamp;
4021 if ($tstamp >= $latest_stamp) {
4022 push @newest, $name;
4025 print join("\0", @newest);
4029 This prints a list of zero or more files, all of which are newer than
4030 the original timestamp file, and which have the same timestamp as each
4031 other, to the nearest second. The second @code{find} command takes
4032 each resulting file one at a time, and if that is newer than the
4033 timestamp file, the timestamp is updated.
4035 @node Security Considerations, Error Messages, Worked Examples, Top
4036 @chapter Security Considerations
4038 Security considerations are important if you are using @code{find} or
4039 @code{xargs} to search for or process files that don't belong to you
4040 or which other people have control. Security considerations
4041 relating to @code{locate} may also apply if you have files which you
4042 do not want others to see.
4044 The most severe forms of security problems affecting
4045 @code{find} and related programs are when third parties bring
4046 about a situation allowing them to do something
4047 they would normally not be able to accomplish. This is called @emph{privilege
4048 elevation}. This might include deleting files they would not normally
4049 be able to delete. It is common for the operating system to periodically
4050 invoke @code{find} for self-maintenance purposes. These invocations of
4051 @code{find} are particularly problematic from a security point of view
4052 as these are often invoked by the superuser and search the entire
4053 filesystem hierarchy. Generally, the severity of any associated problem depends
4054 on what the system is going to do with the files found by @code{find}.
4057 * Levels of Risk:: What is your level of exposure to security problems?
4058 * Security Considerations for find:: Security problems with find
4059 * Security Considerations for xargs:: Security problems with xargs
4060 * Security Considerations for locate:: Security problems with locate
4061 * Security Summary:: That was all very complex, what does it boil down to?
4065 @node Levels of Risk
4066 @section Levels of Risk
4068 There are some security risks inherent in the use of @code{find},
4069 @code{xargs} and (to a lesser extent) @code{locate}. The severity of
4070 these risks depends on what sort of system you are using:
4074 Multi-user systems where you do not control (or trust) the other
4075 users, and on which you execute @code{find}, including areas where
4076 those other users can manipulate the filesystem (for example beneath
4077 @file{/home} or @file{/tmp}).
4080 Systems where the actions of other users can create file names chosen
4081 by them, but to which they don't have access while @code{find} is
4082 being run. This access might include leaving programs running (shell
4083 background jobs, @code{at} or @code{cron} tasks, for example). On
4084 these sorts of systems, carefully written commands (avoiding use of
4085 @samp{-print} for example) should not expose you to a high degree of
4086 risk. Most systems fall into this category.
4089 Systems to which untrusted parties do not have access, cannot create
4090 file names of their own choice (even remotely) and which contain no
4091 security flaws which might enable an untrusted third party to gain
4092 access. Most systems do not fall into this category because there are
4093 many ways in which external parties can affect the names of files that
4094 are created on your system. The system on which I am writing this for
4095 example automatically downloads software updates from the Internet;
4096 the names of the files in which these updates exist are chosen by
4097 third parties@footnote{Of course, I trust these parties to a large
4098 extent anyway, because I install software provided by them; I choose
4099 to trust them in this way, and that's a deliberate choice}.
4102 In the discussion above, ``risk'' denotes the likelihood that someone
4103 can cause @code{find}, @code{xargs}, @code{locate} or some other
4104 program which is controlled by them to do something you did not
4105 intend. The levels of risk suggested do not take any account of the
4106 consequences of this sort of event. That is, if you operate a ``low
4107 risk'' type system, but the consequences of a security problem are
4108 disastrous, then you should still give serious thought to all the
4109 possible security problems, many of which of course will not be
4110 discussed here -- this section of the manual is intended to be
4111 informative but not comprehensive or exhaustive.
4113 If you are responsible for the operation of a system where the
4114 consequences of a security problem could be very important, you should
4118 @item Define a security policy which defines who is allowed to do what
4120 @item Seek competent advice on how to enforce your policy, detect
4121 breaches of that policy, and take account of any potential problems
4122 that might fall outside the scope of your policy.
4126 @node Security Considerations for find
4127 @section Security Considerations for @code{find}
4130 Some of the actions @code{find} might take have a direct effect;
4131 these include @code{-exec} and @code{-delete}. However, it is also
4132 common to use @code{-print} explicitly or implicitly, and so if
4133 @code{find} produces the wrong list of file names, that can also be a
4134 security problem; consider the case for example where @code{find} is
4135 producing a list of files to be deleted.
4137 We normally assume that the @code{find} command line expresses the
4138 file selection criteria and actions that the user had in mind -- that
4139 is, the command line is ``trusted'' data.
4141 From a security analysis point of view, the output of @code{find}
4142 should be correct; that is, the output should contain only the names
4143 of those files which meet the user's criteria specified on the command
4144 line. This applies for the @code{-exec} and @code{-delete} actions;
4145 one can consider these to be part of the output.
4147 On the other hand, the contents of the filesystem can be manipulated
4148 by other people, and hence we regard this as ``untrusted'' data. This
4149 implies that the @code{find} command line is a filter which converts
4150 the untrusted contents of the filesystem into a correct list of output
4153 The filesystem will in general change while @code{find} is searching
4154 it; in fact, most of the potential security problems with @code{find}
4155 relate to this issue in some way.
4157 @dfn{Race conditions} are a general class of security problem where the
4158 relative ordering of actions taken by @code{find} (for example) and
4159 something else are critically important in getting the correct and expected result@footnote{This is more or less the
4160 definition of the term ``race condition''} .
4162 For @code{find}, an attacker might move or rename files or directories in
4163 the hope that an action might be taken against a file which was not
4164 normally intended to be affected. Alternatively, this sort of attack
4165 might be intended to persuade @code{find} to search part of the
4166 filesystem which would not normally be included in the search
4167 (defeating the @code{-prune} action for example).
4170 * Changing the Current Working Directory::
4171 * Race Conditions with -exec::
4172 * Race Conditions with -print and -print0::
4176 @node Changing the Current Working Directory
4177 @subsection Changing the Current Working Directory
4179 As @code{find} searches the filesystem, it finds subdirectories and
4180 then searches within them by changing its working directory. First,
4181 @code{find} reaches and recognises a subdirectory. It then decides if that
4182 subdirectory meets the criteria for being searched; that is, any
4183 @samp{-xdev} or @samp{-prune} expressions are taken into account. The
4184 @code{find} program will then change working directory and proceed to
4185 search the directory.
4187 A race condition attack might take the form that once the checks
4188 relevant to @samp{-xdev} and @samp{-prune} have been done, an attacker
4189 might rename the directory that was being considered, and put in its
4190 place a symbolic link that actually points somewhere else.
4192 The idea behind this attack is to fool @code{find} into going into the
4193 wrong directory. This would leave @code{find} with a working
4194 directory chosen by an attacker, bypassing any protection apparently
4195 provided by @samp{-xdev} and @samp{-prune}, and any protection
4196 provided by being able to @emph{not} list particular directories on
4197 the @code{find} command line. This form of attack is particularly
4198 problematic if the attacker can predict when the @code{find} command
4199 will be run, as is the case with @code{cron} tasks for example.
4201 GNU @code{find} has specific safeguards to prevent this general class
4202 of problem. The exact form of these safeguards depends on the
4203 properties of your system.
4206 * O_NOFOLLOW:: Safely changing directory using fchdir().
4207 * Systems without O_NOFOLLOW:: Checking for symbolic links after chdir().
4211 @subsubsection O_NOFOLLOW
4213 If your system supports the O_NOFOLLOW flag @footnote{GNU/Linux
4214 (kernel version 2.1.126 and later) and FreeBSD (3.0-CURRENT and later)
4215 support this} to the @code{open(2)} system call, @code{find} uses it
4216 when safely changing directory. The target directory is first opened
4217 and then @code{find} changes working directory with the
4218 @code{fchdir()} system call. This ensures that symbolic links are not
4219 followed, preventing the sort of race condition attack in which use
4220 is made of symbolic links.
4222 If for any reason this approach does not work, @code{find} will fall
4223 back on the method which is normally used if O_NOFOLLOW is not
4226 You can tell if your system supports O_NOFOLLOW by running
4232 This will tell you the version number and which features are enabled.
4233 For example, if I run this on my system now, this gives:
4235 GNU find version 4.2.18-CVS
4236 Features enabled: D_TYPE O_NOFOLLOW(enabled)
4239 Here, you can see that I am running a version of @code{find} which was
4240 built from the development (CVS) code prior to the release of
4241 findutils-4.2.18, and that the D_TYPE and O_NOFOLLOW features are
4242 present. O_NOFOLLOW is qualified with ``enabled''. This simply means
4243 that the current system seems to support O_NOFOLLOW. This check is
4244 needed because it is possible to build @code{find} on a system that
4245 defines O_NOFOLLOW and then run it on a system that ignores the
4246 O_NOFOLLOW flag. We try to detect such cases at startup by checking
4247 the operating system and version number; when this happens you will
4248 see ``O_NOFOLLOW(disabled)'' instead.
4250 @node Systems without O_NOFOLLOW
4251 @subsubsection Systems without O_NOFOLLOW
4253 The strategy for preventing this type of problem on systems that lack
4254 support for the O_NOFOLLOW flag is more complex. Each time
4255 @code{find} changes directory, it examines the directory it is about
4256 to move to, issues the @code{chdir()} system call, and then checks
4257 that it has ended up in the subdirectory it expected. If all is as
4258 expected, processing continues as normal. However, there are two main
4259 reasons why the directory might change: the use of an automounter and
4260 the someone removing the old directory and replacing it with something
4261 else while @code{find} is trying to descend into it.
4263 Where a filesystem ``automounter'' is in use it can be the case that
4264 the use of the @code{chdir()} system call can itself cause a new
4265 filesystem to be mounted at that point. On systems that do not
4266 support O_NOFOLLOW, this will cause @code{find}'s security check to
4269 However, this does not normally represent a security problem, since
4270 the automounter configuration is normally set up by the system
4271 administrator. Therefore, if the @code{chdir()} sanity check fails,
4272 @code{find} will make one more attempt. If that succeeds, execution
4273 carries on as normal. This is the usual case for automounters.
4275 Where an attacker is trying to exploit a race condition, the problem
4276 may not have gone away on the second attempt. If this is the case,
4277 @code{find} will issue a warning message and then ignore that
4278 subdirectory. When this happens, actions such as @samp{-exec} or
4279 @samp{-print} may already have taken place for the problematic
4280 subdirectory. This is because @code{find} applies tests and actions
4281 to directories before searching within them (unless @samp{-depth} was
4284 Because of the nature of the directory-change operation and security
4285 check, in the worst case the only things that @code{find} would have
4286 done with the directory are to move into it and back out to the
4287 original parent. No operations would have been performed within that
4290 @node Race Conditions with -exec
4291 @subsection Race Conditions with -exec
4293 The @samp{-exec} action causes another program to be run. It passes
4294 to the program the name of the file which is being considered at the
4295 time. The invoked program will typically then perform some action
4296 on that file. Once again, there is a race condition which can be
4297 exploited here. We shall take as a specific example the command
4300 find /tmp -path /tmp/umsp/passwd -exec /bin/rm
4303 In this simple example, we are identifying just one file to be deleted
4304 and invoking @code{/bin/rm} to delete it. A problem exists because
4305 there is a time gap between the point where @code{find} decides that
4306 it needs to process the @samp{-exec} action and the point where the
4307 @code{/bin/rm} command actually issues the @code{unlink()} system
4308 call to delete the file from the filesystem. Within this time period, an attacker can rename the
4309 @file{/tmp/umsp} directory, replacing it with a symbolic link to
4310 @file{/etc}. There is no way for @code{/bin/rm} to determine that it
4311 is working on the same file that @code{find} had in mind. Once the
4312 symbolic link is in place, the attacker has persuaded @code{find} to
4313 cause the deletion of the @file{/etc/passwd} file, which is not the
4314 effect intended by the command which was actually invoked.
4316 One possible defence against this type of attack is to modify the
4317 behaviour of @samp{-exec} so that the @code{/bin/rm} command is run
4318 with the argument @file{./passwd} and a suitable choice of working
4319 directory. This would allow the normal sanity check that @code{find}
4320 performs to protect against this form of attack too. Unfortunately,
4321 this strategy cannot be used as the POSIX standard specifies that the
4322 current working directory for commands invoked with @samp{-exec} must
4323 be the same as the current working directory from which @code{find}
4324 was invoked. This means that the @samp{-exec} action is inherently
4325 insecure and can't be fixed.
4327 GNU @code{find} implements a more secure variant of the @samp{-exec}
4328 action, @samp{-execdir}. The @samp{-execdir} action
4329 ensures that it is not necessary to dereference subdirectories to
4330 process target files. The current directory used to invoke programs
4331 is the same as the directory in which the file to be processed exists
4332 (@file{/tmp/umsp} in our example, and only the basename of the file to
4333 be processed is passed to the invoked command, with a @samp{./}
4334 prepended (giving @file{./passwd} in our example).
4336 The @samp{-execdir} action refuses to do anything if the current
4337 directory is included in the @var{$PATH} environment variable. This
4338 is necessary because @samp{-execdir} runs programs in the same
4339 directory in which it finds files -- in general, such a directory
4340 might be writable by untrusted users. For similar reasons,
4341 @samp{-execdir} does not allow @samp{@{@}} to appear in the name of
4342 the command to be run.
4344 @node Race Conditions with -print and -print0
4345 @subsection Race Conditions with -print and -print0
4347 The @samp{-print} and @samp{-print0} actions can be used to produce a
4348 list of files matching some criteria, which can then be used with some
4349 other command, perhaps with @code{xargs}. Unfortunately, this means
4350 that there is an unavoidable time gap between @code{find} deciding
4351 that one or more files meet its criteria and the relevant command
4352 being executed. For this reason, the @samp{-print} and @samp{-print0}
4353 actions are just as insecure as @samp{-exec}.
4355 In fact, since the construction
4358 find @dots{} -print | xargs @enddots{}
4361 does not cope correctly with newlines or other ``white space'' in
4362 file names, and copes poorly with file names containing quotes, the
4363 @samp{-print} action is less secure even than @samp{-print0}.
4366 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
4367 @comment @node Security Considerations for xargs
4368 @node Security Considerations for xargs
4369 @section Security Considerations for @code{xargs}
4371 The description of the race conditions affecting the @samp{-print}
4372 action of @code{find} shows that @code{xargs} cannot be secure if it
4373 is possible for an attacker to modify a filesystem after @code{find}
4374 has started but before @code{xargs} has completed all its actions.
4376 However, there are other security issues that exist even if it is not
4377 possible for an attacker to have access to the filesystem in real
4378 time. Firstly, if it is possible for an attacker to create files with
4379 names of their choice on the filesystem, then @code{xargs} is
4380 insecure unless the @samp{-0} option is used. If a file with the name
4381 @file{/home/someuser/foo/bar\n/etc/passwd} exists (assume that
4382 @samp{\n} stands for a newline character), then @code{find @dots{} -print}
4383 can be persuaded to print three separate lines:
4386 /home/someuser/foo/bar
4391 If it finds a blank line in the input, @code{xargs} will ignore it.
4392 Therefore, if some action is to be taken on the basis of this list of
4393 files, the @file{/etc/passwd} file would be included even if this was
4394 not the intent of the person running find. There are circumstances in
4395 which an attacker can use this to their advantage. The same
4396 consideration applies to file names containing ordinary spaces rather
4397 than newlines, except that of course the list of file names will no
4398 longer contain an ``extra'' newline.
4400 This problem is an unavoidable consequence of the default behaviour of
4401 the @code{xargs} command, which is specified by the POSIX standard.
4402 The only ways to avoid this problem are either to avoid all use of
4403 @code{xargs} in favour for example of @samp{find -exec} or (where
4404 available) @samp{find -execdir}, or to use the @samp{-0} option, which
4405 ensures that @code{xargs} considers file names to be separated by
4406 ASCII NUL characters rather than whitespace. However, useful as this
4407 option is, the POSIX standard does not make it mandatory.
4409 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
4410 @node Security Considerations for locate
4411 @section Security Considerations for @code{locate}
4413 It is fairly unusual for the output of @code{locate} to be fed into
4414 another command. However, if this were to be done, this would raise
4415 the same set of security issues as the use of @samp{find @dots{} -print}.
4416 Although the problems relating to whitespace in file names can be
4417 resolved by using @code{locate}'s @samp{-0} option, this still leaves
4418 the race condition problems associated with @samp{find @dots{} -print0}.
4419 There is no way to avoid these problems in the case of @code{locate}.
4421 @node Security Summary
4424 Where untrusted parties can create files on the system, or affect the
4425 names of files that are created, all uses for @code{find},
4426 @code{locate} and @code{xargs} have known security problems except the
4430 @item Informational use only
4431 Uses where the programs are used to prepare lists of file names upon
4432 which no further action will ever be taken.
4434 @item @samp{-delete}
4435 Use of the @samp{-delete} action with @code{find} to delete files
4436 which meet specified criteria
4438 @item @samp{-execdir}
4439 Use of the @samp{-execdir} action with @code{find} where the
4440 @env{PATH} environment variable contains directories which contain
4441 only trusted programs.
4444 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
4445 @node Error Messages, Primary Index, Security Considerations, Top
4446 @chapter Error Messages
4448 This section describes some of the error messages sometimes made by
4449 @code{find}, @code{xargs}, or @code{locate}, explains them and in some
4450 cases provides advice as to what you should do about this.
4452 This manual is written in English. The GNU findutils software
4453 features translations of error messages for many languages. For this
4454 reason the error messages produced by
4455 the programs are made to be as self-explanatory as possible. This approach avoids leaving people to
4456 figure out which test an English-language error message
4457 corresponds to. Error messages which are self-explanatory
4458 will not normally be mentioned in this document. For
4459 those messages mentioned in this document, only the
4460 English-language version of the message will be listed.
4463 * Error Messages From find::
4464 * Error Messages From xargs::
4465 * Error Messages From locate::
4466 * Error Messages From updatedb::
4469 @node Error Messages From find, Error Messages From xargs, , Error Messages
4470 @section Error Messages From @code{find}
4473 @item invalid predicate `-foo'
4474 This means that the @code{find} command line included something that
4475 started with a dash or other special character. The @code{find}
4476 program tried to interpret this as a test, action or option, but
4477 didn't recognise it. If it was intended to be a test, check what was
4478 specified against the documentation. If, on the other hand, the
4479 string is the name of a file which has been expanded from a wildcard
4480 (for example because you have a @samp{*} on the command line),
4481 consider using @samp{./*} or just @samp{.} instead.
4483 @item unexpected extra predicate
4484 This usually happens if you have an extra bracket on the command line
4485 (for example @samp{find . -print \)}).
4487 @item Warning: filesystem /path/foo has recently been mounted
4488 @itemx Warning: filesystem /path/foo has recently been unmounted
4489 These messages might appear when @code{find} moves into a directory
4490 and finds that the device number and inode are different to what it
4491 expected them to be. If the directory @code{find} has moved into is
4492 on an network filesystem (NFS), it will not issue this message, because
4493 @code{automount} frequently mounts new filesystems on directories as
4494 you move into them (that is how it knows you want to use the
4495 filesystem). So, if you do see this message, be wary ---
4496 @code{automount} may not have been responsible. Consider the
4497 possibility that someone else is manipulating the filesystem while
4498 @code{find} is running. Some people might do this in order to mislead
4499 @code{find} or persuade it to look at one set of files when it thought
4500 it was looking at another set.
4502 @item /path/foo changed during execution of find (old device number 12345, new device number 6789, filesystem type is <whatever>) [ref XXX]
4503 This message is issued when @code{find} moves into a directory and ends up
4504 somewhere it didn't expect to be. This happens in one of two
4505 circumstances. Firstly, this happens when @code{automount} intervenes
4506 on a system where @code{find} doesn't know how to determine what
4507 the current set of mounted filesystems is.
4509 Secondly, this can happen when the device number of a directory
4510 appears to change during a change of current directory, but
4511 @code{find} is moving up the filesystem hierarchy rather than down into it.
4512 In order to prevent @code{find} wandering off into some unexpected
4513 part of the filesystem, we stop it at this point.
4515 @item Don't know how to use getmntent() to read `/etc/mtab'. This is a bug.
4516 This message is issued when a problem similar to the above occurs on a
4517 system where @code{find} doesn't know how to figure out the current
4518 list of mount points. Ask for help on @email{bug-findutils@@gnu.org}.
4520 @item /path/foo/bar changed during execution of find (old inode number 12345, new inode number 67893, filesystem type is <whatever>) [ref XXX]"),
4521 This message is issued when @code{find} moves into a directory and
4522 discovers that the inode number of that directory
4523 is different from the inode number that it obtained when it examined the
4524 directory previously. This usually means that while
4525 @code{find} was deep in a directory hierarchy doing a
4526 time consuming operation, somebody has moved one of the parent directories to
4527 another location in the same filesystem. This may or may not have been done
4528 maliciously. In any case, @code{find} stops at this point
4529 to avoid traversing parts of the filesystem that it wasn't
4530 intended. You can use @code{ls -li} or @code{find /path -inum
4531 12345 -o -inum 67893} to find out more about what has happened.
4533 @item sanity check of the fnmatch() library function failed.
4534 Please submit a bug report. You may well be asked questions about
4535 your system, and if you compiled the @code{findutils} code yourself,
4536 you should keep your copy of the build tree around. The likely
4537 explanation is that your system has a buggy implementation of
4538 @code{fnmatch} that looks enough like the GNU version to fool
4539 @code{configure}, but which doesn't work properly.
4542 This normally happens if you use the @code{-exec} action or
4543 something similar (@code{-ok} and so forth) but the system has run out
4544 of free process slots. This is either because the system is very busy
4545 and the system has reached its maximum process limit, or because you
4546 have a resource limit in place and you've reached it. Check the
4547 system for runaway processes (with @code{ps}, if possible). Some process
4548 slots are normally reserved for use by @samp{root}.
4550 @item some-program terminated by signal 99
4551 Some program which was launched with @code{-exec} or similar was killed
4552 with a fatal signal. This is just an advisory message.
4556 @node Error Messages From xargs, Error Messages From locate, Error Messages From find, Error Messages
4557 @section Error Messages From xargs
4560 @item environment is too large for exec
4561 This message means that you have so many environment variables set (or
4562 such large values for them) that there is no room within the
4563 system-imposed limits on program command line argument length to
4564 invoke any program. This is an unlikely situation and is more likely
4565 result of an attempt to test the limits of @code{xargs}, or break it.
4566 Please try unsetting some environment variables, or exiting the
4567 current shell. You can also use @samp{xargs --show-limits} to
4568 understand the relevant sizes.
4570 @item can not fit single argument within argument list size limit
4571 You are using the @samp{-I} option and @code{xargs} doesn't have
4572 enough space to build a command line because it has read a really
4573 large item and it doesn't fit. You can probably work around this
4574 problem with the @samp{-s} option, but the default size is pretty
4575 large. This is a rare situation and is more likely an attempt to test
4576 the limits of @code{xargs}, or break it. Otherwise, you will need to
4577 try to shorten the problematic argument or not use @code{xargs}.
4580 See the description of the similar message for @code{find}.
4582 @item <program>: exited with status 255; aborting
4583 When a command run by @code{xargs} exits with status 255, @code{xargs}
4584 is supposed to stop. If this is not what you intended, wrap the
4585 program you are trying to invoke in a shell script which doesn't
4588 @item <program>: terminated by signal 99
4589 See the description of the similar message for @code{find}.
4592 @node Error Messages From locate, Error Messages From updatedb, Error Messages From xargs, Error Messages
4593 @section Error Messages From @code{locate}
4596 @item warning: database `/usr/local/var/locatedb' is more than 8 days old
4597 The @code{locate} program relies on a database which is periodically
4598 built by the @code{updatedb} program. That hasn't happened in a long
4599 time. To fix this problem, run @code{updatedb} manually. This can
4600 often happen on systems that are generally not left on, so the
4601 periodic ``cron'' task which normally does this doesn't get a chance
4604 @item locate database `/usr/local/var/locatedb' is corrupt or invalid
4605 This should not happen. Re-run @code{updatedb}. If that works, but
4606 @code{locate} still produces this error, run @code{locate --version}
4607 and @code{updatedb --version}. These should produce the same output.
4608 If not, you are using a mixed toolset; check your @samp{$PATH}
4609 environment variable and your shell aliases (if you have any). If
4610 both programs claim to be GNU versions, this is a bug; all versions of
4611 these programs should interoperate without problem. Ask for help on
4612 @email{bug-findutils@@gnu.org}.
4616 @node Error Messages From updatedb, , Error Messages From locate, Error Messages
4617 @section Error Messages From updatedb
4619 The @code{updatedb} program (and the programs it invokes) do issue
4620 error messages, but none seem to be candidates for guidance. If
4621 you are having a problem understanding one of these, ask for help on
4622 @email{bug-findutils@@gnu.org}.
4625 @node Primary Index, , Error Messages, Top
4626 @unnumbered @code{find} Primary Index
4628 This is a list of all of the primaries (tests, actions, and options)
4629 that make up @code{find} expressions for selecting files. @xref{find
4630 Expressions}, for more information on expressions.
4636 @comment texi related words used by Emacs' spell checker ispell.el
4638 @comment LocalWords: texinfo setfilename settitle setchapternewpage
4639 @comment LocalWords: iftex finalout ifinfo DIR titlepage vskip pt
4640 @comment LocalWords: filll dir samp dfn noindent xref pxref
4641 @comment LocalWords: var deffn texi deffnx itemx emph asis
4642 @comment LocalWords: findex smallexample subsubsection cindex
4643 @comment LocalWords: dircategory direntry itemize
4645 @comment other words used by Emacs' spell checker ispell.el
4646 @comment LocalWords: README fred updatedb xargs Plett Rendell akefile
4647 @comment LocalWords: args grep Filesystems fo foo fOo wildcards iname
4648 @comment LocalWords: ipath regex iregex expr fubar regexps
4649 @comment LocalWords: metacharacters macs sr sc inode lname ilname
4650 @comment LocalWords: sysdep noleaf ls inum xdev filesystems usr atime
4651 @comment LocalWords: ctime mtime amin cmin mmin al daystart Sladkey rm
4652 @comment LocalWords: anewer cnewer bckw rf xtype uname gname uid gid
4653 @comment LocalWords: nouser nogroup chown chgrp perm ch maxdepth
4654 @comment LocalWords: mindepth cpio src CD AFS statted stat fstype ufs
4655 @comment LocalWords: nfs tmp mfs printf fprint dils rw djm Nov lwall
4656 @comment LocalWords: POSIXLY fls fprintf strftime locale's EDT GMT AP
4657 @comment LocalWords: EST diff perl backquotes sprintf Falstad Oct cron
4658 @comment LocalWords: eg vmunix mkdir afs allexec allwrite ARG bigram
4659 @comment LocalWords: bigrams cd chmod comp crc CVS dbfile dum eof
4660 @comment LocalWords: fileserver filesystem fn frcode Ghazi Hnewc iXX
4661 @comment LocalWords: joeuser Kaveh localpaths localuser LOGNAME
4662 @comment LocalWords: Meyering mv netpaths netuser nonblank nonblanks
4663 @comment LocalWords: ois ok Pinard printindex proc procs prunefs
4664 @comment LocalWords: prunepaths pwd RFS rmadillo rmdir rsh sbins str
4665 @comment LocalWords: su Timar ubins ug unstripped vf VM Weitzel
4666 @comment LocalWords: wildcard zlogout basename execdir wholename iwholename
4667 @comment LocalWords: timestamp timestamps Solaris FreeBSD OpenBSD POSIX