2

I have used the find command for this, but it doesnt return any message when a file is not found.

And I want the search to be recursive and return a message "not found" when a file is not found.

Here's the code I have done so far. Here "input.txt" contains the list of files to be searched.

set `cat input.txt`
echo $@
for i in $@
do
find $HOME -name $i
done

5 Answers 5

1

Try this:

listfile=input.txt
exec 3>&1
find | \
  grep  -f <( sed 's|.*|/&$|' "$listfile" ) | \
  tee /dev/fd/3 | \
  sed 's|.*/\([^/]*\)$|\1|' | \
  grep  -v -f - "$listfile" | \
  sed 's/$/ Not found/'
exec 3>&-
  • open file descriptor 3
  • find the files
  • see if they're on the list (use sed to
  • send a copy of the found ones to file descriptor 3
  • strip off the directory name
  • get a list of the ones that don't appear
  • add the "Not found" message
  • close file descriptor 3

Output looks like:

/path/to/file1
/path/somewhere/file2
foo Not found
bar Not found

No loops necessary.

1
  • Great answer! Depending on your implementation of find, you may require a path (such as .) as a parameter: find . | \ [...].
    – johnsyweb
    Nov 22, 2010 at 9:44
1

Whats wrong with using a script. I hope this will do.

#!/bin/bash -f
for i in $@
do
  var=`find $HOME -name $i`
  if [ -z "$var"]
  then
     var="File not found"
  fi
  echo $var
done
2
  • hey, this is considering only the last read file and not all the files
    – abhijithln
    Nov 19, 2010 at 13:20
  • what does the "if [ x"$var" == x ]" do? i mean, what does it compare? In the version of unix i am using, == is an unknown operator and therefore i am having trouble in running the script
    – abhijithln
    Nov 22, 2010 at 7:16
0

You can use the shell builtin 'test' to test the existence of a file. There is also an alternative syntax using square brackets:

if [ -f $a ]; then     # Don't forget the semicolon.
    echo $a
else
    echo 'Not Found'
fi
1
  • Except this won't test recursively whether the file exists, which was a requirement.
    – johnsyweb
    Nov 22, 2010 at 9:35
0

Here is one way - create a list of all the files to grep against. If your implementation supports grep -q otherwise use grep [pattern] 2&>1 >/dev/null....

find $HOME -type f |
while read fname
do
    echo "$(basename $fname)  $fname"
done > /tmp/chk.lis
while read fname
do
   grep -q "^$fname" /tmp/chk.lis 
   [ $? -eq 0 ] && echo "$fname found" || echo "$fname not found"
done < /tmp/chk.lis

All of this is needed because POSIX find does not return an error when a file is not found

1
  • You could pipe the first while into the second and eliminate the temporary file. This will fail if filenames contain spaces, though. You could eliminate the basename part and change your grep to `grep -q "/$fname\$". The real problem with this is that you're checking whether a list contains its own members. Nov 19, 2010 at 16:14
0
perl -nlE'say-f$_?$_:"not found: $_"' file

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.