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ls -l | grep " $USER " | grep '\.txt$'
NUMGZ="$(ls -l *.gz | wc -l)"
find ./*.txt -user "$USER" # Using the names of the files
gz_files=(*.gz)
numgz=${#gz_files[@]} # Sometimes, you just need a count
ls
is only intended for human consumption: it has a loose, non-standard format and may "clean up" filenames to make output easier to read.
Here's an example:
$ ls -l
total 0
-rw-r----- 1 me me 0 Feb 5 20:11 foo?bar
-rw-r----- 1 me me 0 Feb 5 2011 foo?bar
-rw-r----- 1 me me 0 Feb 5 20:11 foo?bar
It shows three seemingly identical filenames, and did you spot the time format change? How it formats and what it redacts can differ between locale settings, ls
version, and whether output is a tty.
(Note that -maxdepth
is not POSIX, but can be simulated by having the expression call -prune
on all directories it finds, e.g. find ./* -prune -print
)
ls
can usually be replaced by find
if it's just the filenames, or a count of them, that you're after. Note that if you are using ls
to get at the contents of a directory, a straight substitution of find
may not yield the same results as ls
. Here is an example:
$ ls -c1 .snapshot
rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-01_1605
rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-01_2005
rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0005
rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0405
rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0805
rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_1205
snapmirror.1501b4aa-3f82-11e8-9c31-00a098cef13d_2147868328.2019-04-01_190000
versus
$ find .snapshot -maxdepth 1
.snapshot
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0005
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0405
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0805
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-01_1605
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-01_2005
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_1205
.snapshot/snapmirror.1501b4aa-3f82-11e8-9c31-00a098cef13d_2147868328.2019-04-01_190000
You can see two differences here. The first is that the find
output has the full paths to the found files, relative to the current working directory from which find
was run whereas ls
only has the filenames. You may have to adjust your code to not add the directory to the filenames as you process them when moving from ls
to find
, or (with GNU find) use -printf '%P\n'
to print just the filename.
The second difference in the two outputs is that the find
command includes the searched directory as an entry. This can be eliminated by also using -mindepth 1
to skip printing the root path, or using a negative name option for the searched directory:
$ find .snapshot -maxdepth 1 ! -name .snapshot
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0005
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0405
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0805
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-01_1605
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-01_2005
.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_1205
.snapshot/snapmirror.1501b4aa-3f82-11e8-9c31-00a098cef13d_2147868328.2019-04-01_190000
Note: If the directory argument to find
is a fully expressed path (/home/somedir/.snapshot
), then you should use basename
on the -name
filter:
$ theDir="$HOME/.snapshot"
$ find "$theDir" -maxdepth 1 ! -name "$(basename $theDir)"
/home/matt/.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0005
/home/matt/.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0405
/home/matt/.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_0805
/home/matt/.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-01_1605
/home/matt/.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-01_2005
/home/matt/.snapshot/rnapdev1-svm_4_05am_6every4hours.2019-04-02_1205
/home/matt/.snapshot/snapmirror.1501b4aa-3f82-11e8-9c31-00a098cef13d_2147868328.2019-04-01_190000
If trying to parse out any other fields, first see whether stat
(GNU, OS X, FreeBSD) or find -printf
(GNU) can give you the data you want directly. When trying to determine file size, try: wc -c
. This is more portable as wc
is a mandatory unix command, unlike stat
and find -printf
. It may be slower as unoptimized wc -c
may read the entire file rather than just checking its properties. On some systems, wc -c
adds whitespace to the file size which can be trimmed by double expansion: $(( $(wc -c < "filename") ))
If the information is intended for the user and not for processing (ls -l ~/dir | nl; echo "Ok to delete these files?"
) you can ignore this error with a directive.