- Find Command in Linux (Find Files and Directories)
- find Command Syntax #
- Find Files by Name #
- Find Files by Extension #
- Find Files by Type #
- Find Files by Size #
- Find Files by Modification Date #
- Find Files by Permissions #
- Find Files by Owner #
- Find and Delete Files #
- Conclusion #
- How To Find Directory In Linux?
- Find Directories and Files with find Command
- Get Detailed Information about The Directories and Files
- Only List Directories
- Locate
Find Command in Linux (Find Files and Directories)
The find command is one of the most powerful tools in the Linux system administrators arsenal. It searches for files and directories in a directory hierarchy based on a user given expression and can perform user-specified action on each matched file.
You can use the find command to search for files and directories based on their permissions, type, date, ownership, size, and more. It can also be combined with other tools such as grep or sed .
find Command Syntax #
The general syntax for the find command is as follows:
find [options] [path. ] [expression]
- The options attribute controls the treatment of the symbolic links, debugging options, and optimization method.
- The path. attribute defines the starting directory or directories where find will search the files.
- The expression attribute is made up of options, search patterns, and actions separated by operators.
To search for files in a directory, the user invoking the find command needs to have read permissions on that directory.
Let’s take a look at the following example:
- The option -L (options) tells the find command to follow symbolic links.
- The /var/www (path…) specifies the directory that will be searched.
- The (expression) -name «*.js tells find to search files ending with .js (JavaScript files).
Find Files by Name #
Finding files by name is probably the most common use of the find command. To find a file by its name, use the -name option followed by the name of the file you are searching for.
For example, to search for a file named document.pdf in the /home/linuxize directory, you would use the following command:
find /home/linuxize -type f -name document.pdf
To run a case-insensitive search, change the -name option with -iname :
find /home/linuxize -type f -iname document.pdf
The command above will match “Document.pdf”, “DOCUMENT.pdf” ..etc.
Find Files by Extension #
Searching for files by extension is the same as searching for files by name. For example, to find all files ending with .log.gz inside the /var/log/nginx directory, you would type:
find /var/log/nginx -type f -name '*.log.gz'
It is important to mention that you must either quote the pattern or escape the asterisk * symbol with backslash \ so that it doesn’t get interpreted by the shell when you use the wildcard character.
To find all files that don’t match the regex *.log.gz you can use the -not option. For example, to find all files that don’t end in *.log.gz you would use:
find /var/log/nginx -type f -not -name '*.log.gz'
Find Files by Type #
Sometimes you might need to search for specific file types such as regular files, directories, or symlinks. In Linux, everything is a file.
To search for files based on their type, use the -type option and one of the following descriptors to specify the file type:
- f : a regular file
- d : directory
- l : symbolic link
- c : character devices
- b : block devices
- p : named pipe (FIFO)
- s : socket
For instance, to find all directories in the current working directory , you would use:
The common example would be to recursively change the website file permissions to 644 and directory permissions to 755 using the chmod command:
find /var/www/my_website -type d -exec chmod 0755 <> \;
find /var/www/my_website -type f -exec chmod 0644 <> \;
Find Files by Size #
To find files based on the file size, pass the -size parameter along with the size criteria. You can use the following suffixes to specify the file size:
- b : 512-byte blocks (default)
- c : bytes
- w : two-byte words
- k : Kilobytes
- M : Megabytes
- G : Gigabytes
The following command will find all files of exactly 1024 bytes inside the /tmp directory:
find /tmp -type f -size 1024c
The find command also allows you to search for files that are greater or less than a specified size.
In the following example, we search for all files less than 1MB inside the current working directory. Notice the minus — symbol before the size value:
If you want to search for files with a size greater than 1MB , then you need to use the plus + symbol:
You can even search for files within a size range. The following command will find all files between 1 and 2MB :
find . -type f -size +1M -size 21M
Find Files by Modification Date #
The find command can also search for files based on their last modification, access, or change time.
Same as when searching by size, use the plus and minus symbols for “greater than” or “less than”.
Let’s say that a few days ago, you modified one of the dovecot configuration files, but you forgot which one. You can easily filter all files under the /etc/dovecot/conf.d directory that ends with .conf and has been modified in the last five days:
find /etc/dovecot/conf.d -name "*.conf" -mtime 5
Here is another example of filtering files based on the modification date using the -daystart option. The command below will list all files in the /home directory that were modified 30 or more days ago:
find /home -mtime +30 -daystart
Find Files by Permissions #
The -perm option allows you to search for files based on the file permissions.
For example, to find all files with permissions of exactly 775 inside the /var/www/html directory, you would use:
You can prefix the numeric mode with minus — or slash / .
When slash / is used as the prefix, then at least one category (user, group, or others) must have at least the respective bits set for a file to match.
Consider the following example command:
The above command will match all the files with read permissions set for either user, group, or others.
If minus — is used as the prefix, then for the file to match, at least the specified bits must be set. The following command will search for files that have read and write permission for the owner and group and are readable by other users:
Find Files by Owner #
To find files owned by a particular user or group, use the -user and -group options.
For example, to search for all files and directories owned by the user linuxize , you would run:
Here is a real-world example. Let’s say you want to find all files owned by the user www-data and change the ownership of the matched files from www-data to nginx :
find / -user www-data -type f -exec chown nginx <> \;
Find and Delete Files #
To delete all matching files, append the -delete option to the end of the match expression.
Ensure you are using this option only when you are confident that the result matches the files you want to delete. It is always a good idea to print the matched files before using the -delete option.
For example, to delete all files ending with .temp from the /var/log/ , you would use:
find /var/log/ -name `*.temp` -delete
Use the -delete option with extreme caution. The find command is evaluated as an expression and if you add the -delete option first, the command will delete everything below the starting points you specified.
When it comes to directories, find can delete only empty directories, same as rmdir .
Conclusion #
We have shown you how to use the find command with various options and criteria.
This article should give you a fundamental understanding of how to locate files on your Linux systems. You may also visit the find man page and read about all other powerful options of the find command.
If you have any questions or remarks, please leave a comment below.
How To Find Directory In Linux?
Linux provides different ways to find directories. Here we will look at how to find directories in a recursive way. In this tutorial, we will use commands like find and locate .
Find Directories and Files with find Command
Find command is a popular command to used a lot of different purposes like find file and directory, take a backup, copy files. Actually find do not have these abilities it just runs commands over search results like copy and backup.
find LOCATION SEARCH_TERM ACTION
- `LOCATION` is the path or location we will search in
- `SEARCH_TERM` is the term which is the file or directory name we want to search
- `ACTION` is optional which can take actions like print, delete, rename in the search results
We will search for a directory bin in the root file system.
Get Detailed Information about The Directories and Files
We can get detailed information about found directories by using -ls parameter for the find command.
Here results will list the size of the directory permission of the directory, owner, last change date, etc.
Only List Directories
Up to now, we have searched for all files and directories. We can search for only directories by providing a type parameter with a directory specifier.
Locate
Locate command is a non-interactive alternative to find command. Also, locate have restricted capabilities. The advantage of the locate command is that it is fast because locate use database to search. Manually a database for file and directories is created. Manually this database is updated. The search is done directly in this database. Database is located at /var/lib/mlocate/mlocate.db .
We will update our database to search with locate command. To update the locate database we need root privileges.
We will search for files and directories ends with /bin . In this example, we will use the regex option of the locate to specify the end of the line.