127

I want to recursively iterate through a directory and change the extension of all files of a certain extension, say .t1 to .t2. What is the bash command for doing this?

3
  • 14
    imho this is not a duplicate question - the other question is not recursive Jun 24, 2016 at 4:37
  • @AmalAntony : If you don't have rename, write a shell script, which renames a single file (trivial to do in your simple case), and then use find to apply this script to all files with the offending extension. Nov 23, 2020 at 14:20

6 Answers 6

247

Use:

find . -name "*.t1" -exec bash -c 'mv "$1" "${1%.t1}".t2' - '{}' +

If you have rename available then use one of these:

find . -name '*.t1' -exec rename .t1 .t2 {} +
find . -name "*.t1" -exec rename 's/\.t1$/.t2/' '{}' +

For a single file use the + delimiter and for renaming all files at once use the ; delimiter. Example: For a single file

find . -name "*.t1" -exec bash -c 'mv "$1" "${1%.t1}".t2' - '{}' +

And for all files in the scope of the find command:

find . -name "*.t1" -exec bash -c 'mv "$1" "${1%.t1}".t2' - '{}' \;
12
  • 21
    find . -name '*.t1' -exec rename .t1 .t2 {} + Dec 9, 2015 at 0:00
  • 2
    (My version of rename doesn't allow the sed style substitution expression. Gotta love Linux. I used to have to install TotalCommander for Windows to do stuff like this.) Dec 9, 2015 at 0:03
  • 7
    In case anyone is wondering what the "${1%.t1}".t2 part does, like I did: It uses bash string manipulation to do the following: 1/ Take the first positional parameter $1 and truncate the .t1 string literal from its end (percentage sign % operator). 2/ Append the .t2 string literal to the result.
    – Zack
    Jul 21, 2017 at 1:55
  • 5
    prefer to user find . -type f -name '*.t1' to avoid folders Jan 15, 2019 at 11:44
  • 16
    Delimiter argument should be ; instead of + if renaming all at once is required like this find . -name "*.t1" -exec bash -c 'mv "$1" "${1%.t1}".t2' - '{}' \;. Otherwise with the + only one file will be renamed at a time. Ref
    – S.aad
    Jan 20, 2022 at 14:09
59

None of the suggested solutions worked for me on a fresh install of debian 11. This should work on any Posix/MacOS

find ./ -depth -name "*.t1" -exec sh -c 'mv "$1" "${1%.t1}.t2"' _ {} \;

All credits to: https://askubuntu.com/questions/35922/how-do-i-change-extension-of-multiple-files-recursively-from-the-command-line

4
  • 2
    Thanks for this. The rename stuff in the selected answer doesn't work on Ubuntu 20 Nov 6, 2022 at 21:17
  • This is the only one worked for me. None of the accepted answer methods worked. I am on Ubuntu so probably a Debian/CentOs whatever thing. cheers
    – Neo
    Nov 17, 2022 at 19:35
  • 1
    What? Debian 14? Are you from the future? Dec 30, 2022 at 13:07
  • ty, this worked great. It would be great to include a short explanation for some of the pieces of the command that aren't intuitive to beginners (ex. _ {} \;)
    – aspen100
    Dec 14, 2023 at 16:43
17

If your version of bash supports the globstar option (version 4 or later):

shopt -s globstar
for f in **/*.t1; do
    mv "$f" "${f%.t1}.t2"
done 
0
11

I would do this way in bash :

for i in $(ls *.t1); 
do
    mv "$i" "${i%.t1}.t2" 
done

EDIT : my mistake : it's not recursive, here is my way for recursive changing filename :

for i in $(find `pwd` -name "*.t1"); 
do 
    mv "$i" "${i%.t1}.t2"
done
1
5

Or you can simply install the mmv command and do:

mmv '*.t1' '#1.t2'

Here #1 is the first glob part i.e. the * in *.t1 .

Or in pure bash stuff, a simple way would be:

for f in *.t1; do
    mv "$f" "${f%.t1}.t2"
done

(i.e.: for can list files without the help of an external command such as ls or find)

HTH

2
  • 8
    I assume the OP's use of "recursively" refers to renaming files in subdirectories of the directory as well.
    – chepner
    Feb 27, 2014 at 0:59
  • 1
    it's the first glob part i.e. the * in *.t1
    – zmo
    Jun 2, 2017 at 21:58
1

My lazy copy-pasting of one of these solutions didn't work, but I already had fd-find installed, so I used that:

fd --extension t1 --exec mv {} {.}.t2

From fd's manpage, when executing a command (using --exec):

          The following placeholders are substituted by a
          path derived from the current search result:

          {}     path
          {/}    basename
          {//}   parent directory
          {.}    path without file extension
          {/.}   basename without file extension

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