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Hi all,
Started to learn some shell scripting. I have a perl script that runs on one file. How would I write a shell script to run the perl script a bunch of times on all files with keyword "filename" in it?

So in English,

for /filename/ in filenames  
    perl myscript.pl completefilename

Thanks,
Michael

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8 Answers

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find . -name "filename*" -exec perl myscript.pl '{}' \;

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In bash:

files=`ls -1 *`
for $file in $files;
do
    perl myscript.pl $file;
done
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This only works as long as there are no filenames with spaces in them. – hillu Jul 6 at 16:39
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FILES="keyword"

for f in "$FILES" do perl myscript.pl $f done

From http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-loop-over-file/

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But $f pulls up the keyword, whereas I would like the entire filename (that includes the keyword). – Michael Jul 6 at 16:31
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find . -path "*filename*" -exec perl myscript.pl {} \;

edit: escaped stars, didn't want the markup here

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for i in $(\ls -d filenames)
do
    perl myscript.pl $i
done

The backslash in front of the 'ls' command is to temporarily disable any aliases.

HTH

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One liner:

$ for file in filename1 filename2 filename3; do perl myscript $file; done

Instead of the space separated list of filenames you can also use wildcards, for instance:

$ for file in *.txt *.csv; do perl myscript $file; done

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And if you have spaces in your filenames, use the old standby

find . -maxdepth 1 -print0 | xargs -0 perl myscript.pl
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I personally use the zsh shell, which gives you a very nice way to run a command recursively on a set of subdirectories. It also allows you to change the suffix of the file, which is handly when using lame to create MP3 files of .wav files:

for i in */.wav; lame $i $i:r.mp3

You can also pipe the output of one command to another, which I something I use frequently when I'm downloading a number of bittorrent files and want to see the percentage that each download has completed:

for i in */.txt; grep -H percent $i | tail -1

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