Difference between revisions of "Find"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
== Related commands == | == Related commands == | ||
− | * [[df]] | + | * <code>[[df]]</code> |
− | * [[du]]: <code>du -sh -- *</code> | + | * <code>[[du]]</code>: <code>du -sh -- *</code> |
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 11:10, 12 January 2020
find
[1] is a command-line utility that searches for files in one or more directory trees of a file system. Available in Linux, included in findutils
packages, and in Windows.
Linux Example commands
- Search files between a size range:
find . -size +10G
find . -size +100k -a -size -500k
- Search empty files:
find . -size 0k
- Search non-empty files:
find . ! -size 0k
- One line listing with sizes using ls and find:
ls -ldh $(find /path/to/search/)
- One line filename and directory listing with full path:
find . -name "*"
- One line filename and NOT directory . listing with full path:
find . -type f -exec ls \{\} \;
- Search for hard links:
find /path/to/search -samefile /path/to/your/file
[2] (See also:stat
) - Order by size:
Activities
- Identify differences between
find
andls
Related commands
See also
- File systems:
ext4
,XFS
,ZFS
,btrfs
,wipefs
,findfs
,HDFS
,overlay
,aufs
,virt-filesystems
, Windows: (FAT, NTFS, ReFS), GPFS, squashfs, Ecryptfs, Encfs, FUSE, VMFS, Comparison of distributed file systems, Userspace filesystem, Resize filesystem size - File system,
du, df, find, ls, mkdir, touch, locate
- wikipedia:Find_(Windows)
- File systems:
mount
,umount
,findmnt
,find
,swapon
,swapoff
,UUID, blkid
, mount options:/etc/fstab
,udisksctl mount
,guestmount
,/proc/mounts
,fstrim
,systemd-mount
,defaults
- No space left on device
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Source: https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Linux/Basic_commands/find
Advertising: