16

This question is a generalized version of the Output of ZipArchive() in tree format question.


Just before I am wasting time on writing this (*nix command line) utility, it will be a good idea to find out if someone already wrote it. I would like a utility that will get as its' standard input a list such as the one returned by find(1) and will output something similar to the one by tree(1)

E.g.:

Input:

/fruit/apple/green
/fruit/apple/red
/fruit/apple/yellow
/fruit/banana/green
/fruit/banana/yellow
/fruit/orange/green
/fruit/orange/orange
/i_want_my_mommy
/person/men/bob
/person/men/david
/person/women/eve

Output

/
|-- fruit/
|   |-- apple/
|   |   |-- green
|   |   |-- red
|   |   `-- yellow
|   |-- banana/
|   |   |-- green
|   |   `-- yellow
|   `-- orange/
|       |-- green
|       `-- orange
|-- i_want_my_mommy
`-- person/
    |-- men/
    |   |-- bob
    |   `-- david
    `-- women/
        `-- eve

Usage should be something like:

list2tree --delimiter="/" < Input > Output

Edit0: It seems that I was not clear about the purpose of this exercise. I like the output of tree, but I want it for arbitrary input. It might not be part of any file system name-space.

Edit1: Fixed person branch on the output. Thanks, @Alnitak.

3
  • The output won't be reliable unless you arrange for the input file to have trailing / on directories. Without that, the filter won't be able to tell the difference between an empty directory and a file. p.s. you've messed up the person branch of the tree...
    – Alnitak
    Dec 12, 2010 at 8:54
  • What's wrong with tree (eg tree -F)?
    – Déjà vu
    Dec 12, 2010 at 9:02
  • To clarify on @ring0's excellent comment: mama.indstate.edu/users/ice/tree
    – nc3b
    Dec 12, 2010 at 9:04

5 Answers 5

14

In my Debian 10 I have tree v1.8.0. It supports --fromfile.

--fromfile
Reads a directory listing from a file rather than the file-system. Paths provided on the command line are files to read from rather than directories to search. The dot (.) directory indicates that tree should read paths from standard input.

This way I can feed tree with output from find:

find /foo | tree -d --fromfile .

Problems:

  • If tree reads /foo/whatever or foo/whatever then foo will be reported as a subdirectory of .. Similarly with ./whatever: . will be reported as an additional level named . under the top level .. So the results may not entirely meet your formal expectations, there will always be a top level . entry. It will be there even if find finds nothing or throws an error.

  • Filenames with newlines will confuse tree. Using find -print0 is not an option because there is no corresponding switch for tree.

5

I whipped up a Perl script that splits the paths (on "/"), creates a hash tree, and then prints the tree with Data::TreeDumper. Kinda hacky, but it works:

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;

use Data::TreeDumper;

my %tree;
while (<>) {
    my $t = \%tree;
    foreach my $part (split m!/!, $_) {
        next if $part eq '';
        chomp $part;
        $t->{$part} ||= {};
        $t = $t->{$part};
    }
}
sub check_tree {
    my $t = shift;
    foreach my $hash (values %$t) {
        undef $hash unless keys %$hash;
        check_tree($hash);
    }    
}
check_tree(\%tree);
my $output = DumpTree(\%tree);
$output =~ s/ = undef.*//g;
$output =~ s/ \[H\d+\].*//g;
print $output;

Here's the output:

$ perl test.pl test.data

|- fruit 
|  |- apple 
|  |  |- green
|  |  |- red
|  |  `- yellow
|  |- banana 
|  |  |- green
|  |  `- yellow
|  `- orange 
|     |- green
|     `- orange
|- i_want_my_mommy
`- person 
   |- men 
   |  |- bob
   |  `- david
   `- women 
      `- eve
2

An other tool is treeify written in Rust.

Assuming you have Rust installed get it with:

$ cargo install treeify
1

So, I finally wrote what I hope will become the python tree utils. Find it at http://pytree.org

0

I would simply use tree myself but here's a simple thing that I wrote a few days ago that prints a tree of a directory. It doesn't expect input from find (which makes is different from your requirements) and doesn't do the |- display (which can be done with some small modifications). You have to call it like so tree <base_path> <initial_indent>. intial_indent is the number of characters the first "column" is indented.

function tree() {
    local root=$1
    local indent=$2
    cd $root
    for i in *
    do
    for j in $(seq 0 $indent)
    do 
        echo -n " "
    done
    if [ -d $i ]
    then
        echo "$i/"
        (tree $i $(expr $indent + 5))
    else
        echo $i
    fi
    done
}
1
  • Sorry I was not clear. Please see the "Edit:" in the question. I am not looking for the tree utility itself. find and tree are only there to illustrate the form of input and output, not its' content.
    – Chen Levy
    Dec 12, 2010 at 9:31

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