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I have some folders in unix, lets say aa, ab, ac and so on. I have subfolders inside these folders. They are numbered like 100, 200 and so on. I want to delete some sub folders in each of these main folders. The sub folders to be deleted must be greater than a specific number(say anything above 700) How can I do this using a script? Please help.

3 Answers 3

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I would use the find command. You can do something like this:

find . -name '[7-9][0-9][0-9]' -execdir echo 'rm -vr' {} +

Of course, you may need to tweak the pattern to hit the right names, but I would need more information to help with that.

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  • this won't work with directory names with more than 3 digits e.g. 9999
    – dogbane
    Mar 2, 2011 at 15:33
  • @dogbane hence my comment about needing more detail to tweak the pattern name ;)
    – kojiro
    Mar 2, 2011 at 15:34
0
#!/bin/bash

if [ $# -ne 2 ]
then
  echo Usage: $0 searchdir limit
  exit 1
fi

searchdir="$1"
limit="$2"
find $searchdir -type d |
egrep "/[0-9]+$" |
while read dirname
do
  let num=`basename "$dirname"`
 if [ $num -ge $limit ]
 then
    echo rm -rf "$dirname"
 fi
done

Run with: ./script.sh dirtosearch thresholdfordelete

When you're sure it's ok, remove the echo before rm -rf

0

You can do it all using find.

In the following command, find passes the files to sh which checks if they are >700 and if so echoes out a delete. (You can obviously remove the echo if you really want to delete.)

find . -type d -regex "^.*/[0-9]+$" -exec sh -c 'f="{}";[ $(basename "$f") -gt 700 ] && echo "rm -rf $f"' \;

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