Difference between revisions of "cmd/find"

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: <syntaxhighlight lang=bash>find . -name "*.log" | xargs tail -f</syntaxhighlight>
 
: <syntaxhighlight lang=bash>find . -name "*.log" | xargs tail -f</syntaxhighlight>
 
(This is useful for monitoring web server (e.g. [[Apache web server|Apache]]) activity.)
 
(This is useful for monitoring web server (e.g. [[Apache web server|Apache]]) activity.)
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Note that <code>-name</code> is case-sensitive; use <code>-iname</code> for case-agnostic.
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==Links==
 
==Links==
 
===Reference===
 
===Reference===
 
* {{l/manpage}}
 
* {{l/manpage}}

Latest revision as of 22:24, 13 November 2022

About

The find Linux command searches directory trees for files whose directory information meets particular criteria.

To search by content, use grep.

Examples

Find a file or folder named "kate" somewhere under the current folder:

find -name kate

Find all files or folders with the extension ".txt":

find -name *.txt

View, in realtime, all additions to any file whose extension is ".log":

find . -name "*.log" | xargs tail -f

(This is useful for monitoring web server (e.g. Apache) activity.)

Note that -name is case-sensitive; use -iname for case-agnostic.

Links

Reference