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I have the following alias gi grep -i

and I want to look for foo case-insensitively in all the files that have the string bar in their name:

find -name \*bar\* | xargs gi foo

This is what I get:

xargs: gi: No such file or directory

Is there any way to use aliases in xargs, or do I have to use the full version:

   find -name \*bar\* | xargs grep -i foo

Note: This is a simple example. Besides gi I have some pretty complicated aliases that I can't expand manually so easily.

Edit: I used tcsh, so please specify if an answer is shell-specific.

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4 Answers

vote up 3 vote down

Turn "gi" into a script instead

eg, in /home/$USER/bin/gi:

#!/bin/sh
exec /bin/grep -i "$@"

don't forget to mark the file executable.

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vote up 1 vote down

The suggestion here is to avoid xargs and use a "while read" loop.

find -name \*bar\* | while read file; do gi foo "$i"; done

See the accepted answer in the link above for refinements to deal with spaces or newlines in filenames.

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If file names have blanks or newlines in them, this is not as good as xargs with -0 option (and find with -print0). – Jonathan Leffler Jun 11 at 6:10
Thanks, I edited to point that out. – Pete TerMaat Jun 11 at 14:05
vote up 3 vote down

Aliases are shell-specific - in this case, most likely bash-specific. To execute an alias, you need to execute bash, but aliases are only loaded for interactive shells (more precisely, .bashrc will only be read for an interactive shell).

bash -i runs an interactive shell (and sources .bashrc). bash -c cmd runs cmd.

Put them together: bash -ic cmd runs cmd in an interactive shell, where cmd can be a bash function/alias defined in your .bashrc.

find -name \*bar\* | xargs bash -ic gi foo

should do what you want.

Edit: I see you've tagged the question as "tcsh", so the bash-specific solution is not applicable. With tcsh, you dont need the -i, as it appears to read .tcshrc unless you give -f.

Try this:

find -name \*bar\* | xargs tcsh -c gi foo

It worked for my basic testing.

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vote up 0 vote down

For tcsh (which does not have functions), you could use:

gi foo `find -name "*bar*"`

For bash/ksh/sh, you can create a function in the shell.

   function foobar 
   {
      gi $1 `find . -type f -name "*"$2"*"`
   }

   foobar foo bar

Remember that using backquotes in the shell is more advantageous than using xargs from multiple perspectives. Place the function in your .bashrc.

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