Web16 hours ago · Closed 8 mins ago. Improve this question. I want du find duplicate files within each subfolder. fdupes -r . searches over all subfolders, but I want to seach automatically in each subfolder for duplicates, beacause in my case duplicates can only be within a subfolder. I have lots of subfolders with pictures in one main "Pictures" folder. Webfindstr /C:"the string" /S *.h However, in Linux (say, Ubuntu) I have found no other way than some piped command involving find, xargs, and grep (an example is at this page: How can I recursively grep through sub-directories? ).
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WebApr 6, 2011 · To find all files whose file status was last changed N minutes ago: find -cmin -N For example: find -cmin -5 Use -ctime instead of -cmin for days: find -ctime -3 On FreeBSD and MacOS: You can also use -ctime n [smhdw] for seconds, minutes, hours, days, and weeks. Days is the default if no unit is provided. Examples: WebJul 12, 2010 · I often need to find the biggest directories, so to get a sorted list containing the 20 biggest dirs I do this: du -m /some/path sort -nr head -n 20 In this case the sizes will be reported in megabytes. Share Improve this answer Follow edited Feb 26, 2014 at 17:14 Brad Koch 151 9 answered Jul 29, 2010 at 12:07 Janne Pikkarainen 7,635 1 30 32 … medication to stimulate hunger
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WebDec 8, 2013 · In Linux, how can I find all *.js files in a directory recursively? The output should be an absolute path (like /pub/home/user1/folder/jses/file.js) this answer worked for me: find $PWD -name '*.js' > out.txt It finds all *.js files, output absolute path, writes the results into out.txt. linux find Share Improve this question Follow WebSep 1, 2024 · Finding a file on Linux The locate command The locate command works similarly to find, but it’s not installed by default on every Linux distro. It searches the file system and stores a list of file names … WebJan 21, 2010 · All answers so far use find, so here's one with just the shell. No need for external tools in your case: for dir in /tmp/*/ # list directories in the form "/tmp/dirname/" do dir=$ {dir%*/} # remove the trailing "/" echo "$ {dir##*/}" # print everything after the final "/" done Share Improve this answer edited Feb 26, 2024 at 8:49 Andreas Louv medication to stay awake nuvaring