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I currently have this script to compress log files:

find . -name '*.log' -print0 | xargs -0 tar zcf $file

Currently finds and compress all the *.log files. I would like to modify it to include also all the ".txt" files but I don't know how, this should be fairly simple right?

1 Answer 1

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find . -type f \( -name "*.log" -o -name "*.txt" \) -exec tar zcf "$file" {} +

Alternatively:

find . -type f -regex ".*\.\(txt\|log\)$" -exec tar zcf "$file" {} +

No need for xargs if your version of find is POSIX compliant and can have it's -exec command terminated with a + (most can)

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  • I got: find: missing argument to -exec'` I think I did that, but I needed to preserver the directory structure.
    – OscarRyz
    Jan 4, 2011 at 21:44
  • @OscarRyz I forgot to add the $file variable (fixed) but from your output it looks like you put the {} before "$file" rather than after. The directory structure will be preserved
    – SiegeX
    Jan 4, 2011 at 21:56
  • The first version only collect .txt files, the 2nd work though. Could you leave the second only?
    – OscarRyz
    Jan 4, 2011 at 22:01
  • @Oscar fixed it =). You need to group the two -name options to enforce order of precedence.
    – SiegeX
    Jan 4, 2011 at 22:07
  • I'm still getting the missing argument :( . Anyway, I manage to modify it to this: find . -regex '.*\.\(log\|txt\)' -print0 | xargs -0 tar zcf $file
    – OscarRyz
    Jan 4, 2011 at 22:13

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