Using find . -print0 seems to be the only safe way of obtaining a list of files in bash due to the possibility of filenames containing spaces, newlines, quotation marks etc.

However, I'm having a hard time actually making find's output useful within bash or with other command line utilities. The only way I have managed to make use of the output is by piping it to perl, and changing perl's IFS to null:

find . -print0 | perl -e '$/="\0"; @files=<>; print $#files;'

This example prints the number of files found, avoiding the danger of newlines in filenames corrupting the count, as would occur with:

find . | wc -l

As most command line programs do not support null-delimited input, I figure the best thing would be to capture the output of find . -print0 in a bash array, like I have done in the perl snippet above, and then continue with the task, whatever it may be.

How can I do this?

This doesn't work:

find . -print0 | ( IFS=$'\0' ; array=( $( cat ) ) ; echo ${#array[@]} )

A much more general question might be: How can I do useful things with lists of files in bash?

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What do you mean by doing useful things? – Balázs Pozsár Jul 12 '09 at 22:04
Oh, you know, the usual things arrays are useful for: finding out their size; iterating over their contents; printing them out backwards; sorting them. That kind of thing. There are a wealth of utilities in unix for doing these things with data: wc, bash's for-loops, tac and sort respectively; but these all seem useless when dealing with lists which might have spaces or newlines in them. I.e. filenames. Piping data around with null valued input-field-separators seems to be the solution, but very few utilities can handle this. – Idris Jul 12 '09 at 23:14
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10 Answers

up vote 21 down vote accepted

Shamelessly stolen from Greg's BashFAQ:

unset a i
while IFS= read -r -d $'\0' file; do
    a[i++]="$file"        # or however you want to process each file
done < <(find /tmp -type f -print0)

Note that the redirection construct used here (cmd1 < <(cmd2)) is similar to, but not quite the same as the more usual pipeline (cmd2 | cmd1) -- if the commands are shell builtins (e.g. while), the pipeline version executes them in subshells, and any variables they set (e.g. the array a) are lost when they exit. cmd1 < <(cmd2) only runs cmd2 in a subshell, so the array lives past its construction. Warning: this form of redirection is only available in bash, not even bash in sh-emulation mode; you must start your script with #!/bin/bash.

Also, because the file processing step (in this case, just a[i++]="$file", but you might want to do something fancier directly in the loop) has its input redirected, it cannot use any commands that might read from stdin. To avoid this limitation, I tend to use:

unset a i
while IFS= read -r -u3 -d $'\0' file; do
    a[i++]="$file"        # or however you want to process each file
done 3< <(find /tmp -type f -print0)

...which passes the file list via unit 3, rather than stdin.

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Ahhh almost there... this is the best answer yet. However, I've just tried it on a directory containing a file with a newline in its name, and upon inspecting that element using echo ${a[1]}, the newline seems to have become a space (0x20). Any idea why this is happening? – Idris Jul 14 '09 at 0:40
What version of bash are you running? I've had trouble with older versions (unfortunately I don't remember precisely which) not dealing with newlines and deletes (\177) in strings. IIRC, even x="$y" wouldn't always work right with these characters. I just tested with bash 2.05b.0 and 3.2.17 (the oldest and newest I have handy); both handled newlines properly, but v2.05b.0 ate the delete character. – Gordon Davisson Jul 14 '09 at 7:34
I've tried it on 3.2.17 on osx, 3.2.39 on linux and 3.2.48 on netBSD; all turn newline into space. – Idris Jul 14 '09 at 13:09
Very strange; I was testing 2.05b.0 and 3.2.17 under OS X, and I just tried 3.2.0 under NetBSD; all worked (except v2.05b.0 eating delete). How're you checking the contents of the array? Try ls -Bd "${a[@]}"; that should display the newline as \012, or give a "No such file or directory" error if it gets mangled in any way. – Gordon Davisson Jul 14 '09 at 15:58
3  
-d '' is equivalent to -d $'\0'. – l0b0 Oct 31 '11 at 13:38
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Maybe you are looking for xargs:

find . -print0 | xargs -r0 do_something_useful

The option -L 1 could be useful for you too, which makes xargs exec do_something_useful with only 1 file argument.

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1  
This isn't quite what I was after, because there is no opportunity to do array-like things with the list, such as sorting: you must use each element as and when it appears out of the find command. If you could elaborate on this example, with the "do_something_useful" part being a bash array-push operation, then this might be what I'm after. – Idris Jul 13 '09 at 12:33
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Here's an essay on how to properly handle filenames in shell, with lots of specifics:

http://www.dwheeler.com/essays/filenames-in-shell.html

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You can safely do the count with this:

find . -exec echo ';' | wc -l

(It prints a newline for every file/dir found, and then count the newlines printed out...)

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I am new but I believe that this an answer; hope it helps someone:

STYLE="$HOME/.fluxbox/styles/"

declare -a array1

LISTING=`find $HOME/.fluxbox/styles/ -print0 -maxdepth 1 -type f`


echo $LISTING
array1=( `echo $LISTING`)
TAR_SOURCE=`echo ${array1[@]}`

#tar czvf ~/FluxieStyles.tgz $TAR_SOURCE
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I think more elegant solutions exists, but I'll toss this one in. This will also work for filenames with spaces and/or newlines:

i=0;
for f in *; do
  array[$i]="$f"
  ((i++))
done

You can then e.g. list the files one by one (in this case in reverse order):

for ((i = $i - 1; i >= 0; i--)); do
  ls -al "${array[$i]}"
done

This page gives a nice example, and for more see Chapter 26 in the Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide.

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This (and other similar examples below) is almost what I'm after - but with a big problem: it only works for globs of the current directory. I would like to be able to manipulate completely arbitrary lists of files; the output of "find" for example, which lists directories recursively, or any other list. What if my list was: ( /tmp/foo.jpg | /home/alice/bar.jpg | /home/bob/my holiday/baz.jpg | /tmp/new\nline/grault.jpg ), or any other totally arbitrary list of files (of course, potentially with spaces and newlines in them)? – Idris Jul 13 '09 at 12:40
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This is similar to Stephan202's version, but the files (and directories) are put into an array all at once. The for loop here is just to "do useful things":

files=(*)                        # put files in current directory into an array
i=0
for file in "${files[@]}"
do
    echo "File ${i}: ${file}"    # do something useful 
    let i++
done

To get a count:

echo ${#files[@]}
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Yet another way of counting files:

find /DIR -type f -print0 | tr -dc '\0' | wc -c
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Avoid xargs if you can:

man ruby | less -p 777 
IFS=$'\777' 
#array=( $(find ~ -maxdepth 1 -type f -exec printf "%s\777" '{}' \; 2>/dev/null) ) 
array=( $(find ~ -maxdepth 1 -type f -exec printf "%s\777" '{}' + 2>/dev/null) ) 
echo ${#array[@]} 
printf "%s\n" "${array[@]}" | nl 
echo "${array[0]}" 
IFS=$' \t\n'
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The main problem is, that the delimiter NUL (\0) is useless here, because it isn't possible to assign IFS a NUL-value. So as good programmers we take care, that the input for our program is something it is able to handle.

First we create a little program, which does this part for us:

#!/bin/bash
printf "%s" "$@" | base64

...and call it base64str (don't forget chmod +x)

Second we can now use a simple and straightforward for-loop:

for i in `find -type f -exec base64str '{}' \;`
do 
  file="`echo -n "$i" | base64 -d`"
  # do something with file
done

So the trick is, that a base64-string has no sign which causes trouble for bash - of course a xxd or something similar can also do the job.

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