vote up 0 vote down star

I have not found a reason why Mac's find does not have the option -printf. Apple normally decides to take options out which are not orthogonal to the other commands?

How can you reach the same result as the following command in Mac without coreutils?

find . -printf "%i \n"         // command in Ubuntu
flag

3 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

It's not that Apple removes options, it's that OS X's UNIX underpinnings are mostly derived (circuitously) from FreeBSD, many parts of which can be traced back to the original UNIX... as opposed to the GNU utilities, which are re-implementations with many features added.

In this case, FreeBSD's find(1) doesn't support -printf, so I wouldn't expect OS X's to either. Instead, this should work on a BSD-ish system:

find . -print0 | xargs -0 stat -f '%i '

It'll fail on a GNU-userland system, though, where you'd write xargs -0 -r stat -c '%i ' because xargs(1) and stat(1) behavior is different.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Well, ephemient and bendin nailed the cause.

I'd add that there is nothing stopping you from installing GNU find (from the findutils) if you need it. If you use fink there is a findutils package. MacPorts has it too.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Ubuntu ships with the GNU version of find, which is more featureful than Mac OS X's find, which is of BSD lineage.

In fact, most of the Ubuntu's user-land utilities are from the GNU project. (Thus you'll sometimes hear Linux-based systems referred to as "GNU/Linux".)

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.