- Find all files with name containing string [closed]
- 8 Answers 8
- How to Find Files Containing Specific Text String in Linux
- On this page
- Search Specific Text in Linux Using Catfish GUI Tool
- Install Catfish Search Tool on Linux
- Search File Contents Using Catfish
- Search Specific Text in Linux Using Grep Command
- Search for Particular Text in Files
- Find File Names That Contains a Given String
- Print File Names and Line Numbers That Contains a Given String
- Search for Specific Text in Specific File Types
- Search Specific Text In Linux Using MC (Midnight Commander)
- Install Midnight Commander on Linux
- Search File Contents Using Midnigh Commander
- How to Find All Files Containing Specific Text on Linux
- Use the grep command
- Use the ripgrep command
- Use the ack command
- Use the find command
Find all files with name containing string [closed]
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
I have been searching for a command that will return files from the current directory which contain a string in the filename. I have seen locate and find commands that can find files beginning with something first_word* or ending with something *.jpg . How can I return a list of files which contain a string in the filename? For example, if 2012-06-04-touch-multiple-files-in-linux.markdown was a file in the current directory. How could I return this file and others containing the string touch ? Using a command such as find ‘/touch/’
8 Answers 8
find . -maxdepth 1 -name «*string*» -print
It will find all files in the current directory (delete maxdepth 1 if you want it recursive) containing «string» and will print it on the screen.
If you want to avoid file containing ‘:’, you can type:
find . -maxdepth 1 -name «*string*» ! -name «*:*» -print
If you want to use grep (but I think it’s not necessary as far as you don’t want to check file content) you can use:
But, I repeat, find is a better and cleaner solution for your task.
@Dru, if you want it ‘shorter’ you can avoid -print as this is the default behaviour and . as this is the default folder where it checks.
Awesome. I see myself using this a lot. I will take your -print and . removal suggestions, make it a command, and try to pass *string* in as a command line argument.
find . -name «*string*» Works great too. Removing . throws an error on my end. Thanks again @Zagorax.
Just an observation, the above command complained about the position of -maxdepth argument better to move it before -name as @Sunil Dias mentioned
I have find *.jpg -name «*from*» -print which works for a given directory. How can I make search recursively? I’ve tried -maxdepth .
-R means recurse. If you would rather not go into the subdirectories, then skip it.
-i means «ignore case». You might find this worth a try as well.
Great. I noticed that some file contents follow a : . Is there anyway to withhold that? Using an option perhaps?
That seems to only produce the contents of the files. You essentially answered my question though, I can try to do some digging for withholding the contents.
Ah. you only need the file names? Run : grep -R «touch» . | cut -d «:» -f 1 (sorry must have misread you).
Thanks @carlspring this is interesting. grep either returns files with contents and filenames containing touch or contents containing touch , I’m not sure which is the case, yet. Of the list of files returned, half contain touch in the title and the other half conatains touch in the body, not the title. Just realized this.
The -maxdepth option should be before the -name option, like below.,
find . -maxdepth 1 -name "string" -print
find $HOME -name "hello.c" -print
This will search the whole $HOME (i.e. /home/username/ ) system for any files named “hello.c” and display their pathnames:
/Users/user/Downloads/hello.c /Users/user/hello.c
However, it will not match HELLO.C or HellO.C . To match is case insensitive pass the -iname option as follows:
find $HOME -iname "hello.c" -print
/Users/user/Downloads/hello.c /Users/user/Downloads/Y/Hello.C /Users/user/Downloads/Z/HELLO.c /Users/user/hello.c
Pass the -type f option to only search for files:
find /dir/to/search -type f -iname "fooBar.conf.sample" -print find $HOME -type f -iname "fooBar.conf.sample" -print
The -iname works either on GNU or BSD (including OS X) version find command. If your version of find command does not supports -iname , try the following syntax using grep command:
find $HOME | grep -i "hello.c" find $HOME -name "*" -print | grep -i "hello.c"
find $HOME -name '[hH][eE][lL][lL][oO].[cC]' -print
/Users/user/Downloads/Z/HELLO.C /Users/user/Downloads/Z/HEllO.c /Users/user/Downloads/hello.c /Users/user/hello.c
If the string is at the beginning of the name, you can do this
$ compgen -f .bash .bashrc .bash_profile .bash_prompt
compgen is not an appropriate hammer for this nail. This little-used tool is designed to list available commands, and as such, it lists files in the current directory (which could be scripts) and it can neither recurse nor look past the beginning of a file name nor search file contents, making it mostly useless.
An alternative to the many solutions already provided is making use of the glob ** . When you use bash with the option globstar ( shopt -s globstar ) or you make use of zsh , you can just use the glob ** for this.
does a recursive directory search for files named bar (potentially including the file bar in the current directory). Remark that this cannot be combined with other forms of globbing within the same path segment; in that case, the * operators revert to their usual effect.
Note that there is a subtle difference between zsh and bash here. While bash will traverse soft-links to directories, zsh will not. For this you have to use the glob ***/ in zsh .
How to Find Files Containing Specific Text String in Linux
Almost all file managers for Linux like Nemo and Thunar by default provide an option to search for files. But if you want to search for a string inside a file’s content using file manager, the majority of them do not let you do so.
In this article, I’ll discuss different ways that you can use on any Linux distribution to find all files containing specific text strings or words by recursively digging through all sub-directories.
On this page
Search Specific Text in Linux Using Catfish GUI Tool
I’ll start with the easiest way that can work for all including beginners to advance Linux users. Catfish is a simple and lightweight GUI-based file search tool for Linux desktops. Along with searching for files on your system, you can also use it to find all files that contain a particular word.
Install Catfish Search Tool on Linux
The Catfish package is already available on the primary Debian and Ubuntu repositories. Hence, If you’re using Debian or Ubuntu-based distributions, you can simply install it by running the command:
$ sudo apt install catfish [On Debian/Ubuntu & Mint]
On other Linux distributions, you can install it from the default repositories using your package manager.
$ sudo yum install catfish [On CentOS/RHEL 7] $ sudo dnf install catfish [On CentOS/RHEL 8 & Fedora] $ sudo pacman -S catfish [On Arch Linux] $ sudo pkg_add -v catfish [On FreeBSD]
If the package is not available, you can download the latest release file, extract the downloaded tar.bz2 file, and run the following command:
$ sudo python3 setup.py install
Search File Contents Using Catfish
Once installed, you only need to do is enable “Search file contents”, select directories from the top-left dropdown option, and type the text you want to search for. It will list down all files containing text along with file size and location.
You can also use file type and modified date filter from the left panel to reduce the search scope. You can even add a directory path where you don’t want to search.
Search Specific Text in Linux Using Grep Command
Beside the GUI way, grep is one of the popular command line tools that can be used to search inside file content. Since almost all unix-like operating systems ship grep utility by default, you don’t need to install it.
Search for Particular Text in Files
Now to search and find all files for a given text string in a Linux terminal, you can run the following command. Here, the ‘-r’ or ‘-R’ flag recursively searches through the all subdirectories inside the specified directory.
$ grep -r “linuxshelltips” /home/sarvottam/
Find File Names That Contains a Given String
If you want to print only file names and hide the text from the output, you can use the ‘-l’ flag.
$ grep -rl “linuxshelltips” /home/sarvottam/
Print File Names and Line Numbers That Contains a Given String
Furthermore, you can also tweak the output using the following options available for grep:
$ sudo grep -rnwi “linuxshelltips” /home/sarvottam/
It is also worth mentioning that if you search through directories that require root permissions, you need to use the sudo command.
Search for Specific Text in Specific File Types
To further reduce the search scope, you can also specifically mention the type of file and directories to only look for while searching. “—include” , “—exclude” , and “—exclude-dir” are the options available to add file type and directory filter.
$ grep --include=\*.txt --exclude=\*. --exclude-dir=\bin -rnwi "linuxshelltips" /home/sarvottam/
Search Specific Text In Linux Using MC (Midnight Commander)
If you live in a terminal and still want to search text using GUI way, you can also try Terminal User Interface (TUI) based file manager tool, mc (midnight commander) – is a visual file manager that is used to search for files.
Install Midnight Commander on Linux
The Midnight Commander is available to install from the default repositories in the most of the Linux distributions.
$ sudo apt install mc [On Debian/Ubuntu & Mint] $ sudo yum install mc [On CentOS/RHEL 7] $ sudo dnf install mc [On CentOS/RHEL 8 & Fedora] $ sudo pacman -S mc [On Arch Linux] $ sudo pkg_add -v mc [On FreeBSD]
Search File Contents Using Midnigh Commander
Inside the terminal, mc provides a visual representation of the filesystem in which you can navigate either through keyboard or mouse. To search file content, you can open a search dialog using ALT+SHIFT+? and enter the text in the “Content:” section.
As you can see in the above picture, you can also use filters like ignore case, whole words, and regular expression by just checking and unchecking it.
Conclusion
All the above-mentioned applications are beginner’s friendly, free-to-use and open source to add your own enhancements. Alternatively, you can also try other free tools like Ack, The Silver Searcher, Ripgrep, and find command.
How to Find All Files Containing Specific Text on Linux
Many recent file managers support file searching directly in the file list. Anyway, most of them do not let you search inside the contents of a file. Here are some methods you can use to search for file contents on Linux using the command line. In this snippet, we’ll present the «grep», «ripgrep», «ack» and «find» commands.
Use the grep command
The best way of finding files that contain a specific text is by using the grep command. It is designed to find the files containing the necessary text according to patterns in the entire data streams. You need to use the following command:
grep -rnw '/path/to/somewhere/' -e 'pattern'
Here, r stands for recursive, n refers to a line number, w is used to match the whole word, ‘/path/to/somewhere/’ is the directory, and ‘pattern’ is the text you’re looking for in files.
To make your search more effective, you can also add such optional settings as —exclude, —include, —exclude-dir.
grep --include=\*. -rnw '/path/to/somewhere/' -e "pattern"
grep --exclude=*.o -rnw '/path/to/somewhere/' -e "pattern"
grep --exclude-dir=.dst> -rnw '/path/to/somewhere/' -e "pattern"
You can also run another command line with grep:
Here i stands for ignoring the case, R stands for recursive, I is used to display the file name, not the result itself, and ./ stands for starting at the root of your machine.
Use the ripgrep command
An alternative use for grep is ripgrep. If you’re working on large projects or big files, you had better use ripgrep. It will look like this:
Use the ack command
This command will allow you to search in the entire file system or the needed path. It can be easier to use than grep.
For ripgrep and ack commands, use regular expressions to specify the file type.
Use the find command
You can also combine the find and grep commands to search for text strings in many files more effectively.
# find / -exec grep -l "your-text-to-find" <> ;
To search in specific file extension files, like search ‘your-text’ in all php files only, use the following command:
# find / -name '*.php' -exec grep -l "your-text" <> ;