How to use '-prune' option of 'find' in sh?

derrdji picture derrdji · Sep 28, 2009 · Viewed 120.1k times · Source

I don't quite understand the example given from the man find, can anyone give me some examples and explanations? Can I combine regular expression in it?


The more detailed question is like this:

Write a shell script, changeall, which has an interface like changeall [-r|-R] "string1" "string2". It will find all files with an suffix of .h, .C, .cc, or .cpp and change all occurrences of string1 to string2. -r is option for staying in current dir only or including subdir's.

NOTE:

  1. For non-recursive case, ls is NOT allowed, we could only use find and sed.
  2. I tried find -depth but it was NOT supported. That's why I was wondering if -prune could help, but didn't understand the example from man find.

EDIT2: I was doing assignment, I didn't ask question in great details because I would like to finish it myself. Since I already done it and hand it in, now I can state the whole question. Also, I managed to finish the assignment without using -prune, but would like to learn it anyway.

Answer

Laurence Gonsalves picture Laurence Gonsalves · Sep 28, 2009

The thing I'd found confusing about -prune is that it's an action (like -print), not a test (like -name). It alters the "to-do" list, but always returns true.

The general pattern for using -prune is this:

find [path] [conditions to prune] -prune -o \
            [your usual conditions] [actions to perform]

You pretty much always want the -o (logical OR) immediately after -prune, because that first part of the test (up to and including -prune) will return false for the stuff you actually want (ie: the stuff you don't want to prune out).

Here's an example:

find . -name .snapshot -prune -o -name '*.foo' -print

This will find the "*.foo" files that aren't under ".snapshot" directories. In this example, -name .snapshot makes up the [conditions to prune], and -name '*.foo' -print is [your usual conditions] and [actions to perform].

Important notes:

  1. If all you want to do is print the results you might be used to leaving out the -print action. You generally don't want to do that when using -prune.

    The default behavior of find is to "and" the entire expression with the -print action if there are no actions other than -prune (ironically) at the end. That means that writing this:

     find . -name .snapshot -prune -o -name '*.foo'              # DON'T DO THIS
    

    is equivalent to writing this:

     find . \( -name .snapshot -prune -o -name '*.foo' \) -print # DON'T DO THIS
    

    which means that it'll also print out the name of the directory you're pruning, which usually isn't what you want. Instead it's better to explicitly specify the -print action if that's what you want:

     find . -name .snapshot -prune -o -name '*.foo' -print       # DO THIS
    
  2. If your "usual condition" happens to match files that also match your prune condition, those files will not be included in the output. The way to fix this is to add a -type d predicate to your prune condition.

    For example, suppose we wanted to prune out any directory that started with .git (this is admittedly somewhat contrived -- normally you only need to remove the thing named exactly .git), but other than that wanted to see all files, including files like .gitignore. You might try this:

    find . -name '.git*' -prune -o -type f -print               # DON'T DO THIS
    

    This would not include .gitignore in the output. Here's the fixed version:

    find . -name '.git*' -type d -prune -o -type f -print       # DO THIS
    

Extra tip: if you're using the GNU version of find, the texinfo page for find has a more detailed explanation than its manpage (as is true for most GNU utilities).