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I was trying to clean out some spam email and ran into an issue. The amount of files in queue, were so large that my usual command was unable to process. It would give me an error about too many arguments.

I usually do this

grep -i [email protected] 1US* | awk -F: '{print $1}' | xargs rm

1US* can be anything between 1US[a-zA-Z]. The only thing I could make work was running this horrible contraption. Its one file, with 1USa, 1USA, 1USb etc, through the entire alphabet. I know their has to be a way to run this more efficiently.

grep -s $SPAMMER /var/mailcleaner/spool/exim_stage1/input/1USa* | awk -F: '{print $1}' | xargs rm
grep -s $SPAMMER /var/mailcleaner/spool/exim_stage1/input/1USA* | awk -F: '{print $1}' | xargs rm
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5 Answers 5

4

you can use find to find all files which name's starting with the pattern '1US'. Then you can pipe the output to xargs which will take care, that the argument list will not growing to much and handle the grep call. Note that I've used a nullbyte to separate filenames for xargs. This avoids problems with problematic file names. ;)

find -maxdepth 1 -name '1US*' -printf '%f\0' | xargs -0 grep -u user@domain | awk ...
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  • 3
    -print0 is a shortcut for -printf '%f\0'.
    – chepner
    Apr 18, 2013 at 15:52
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Run several instances of grep. Instead of

grep -i [email protected] 1US* | awk '{...}' | xargs rm

do

(for i in 1US*; do grep -li user@domain "$i"; done) | xargs rm

Note the -l flag, since we only want the file name of the match. This will both speed up grep (terminate on first match) and makes your awk script unrequired. This could be improved by checking the return status of grep and calling rm, not using xargs (xargs is very fragile, IMO). I'll give you the better version if you ask.

Hope it helps.

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  • This just shifts the too-long argument list from the grep to the for statement.
    – chepner
    Apr 18, 2013 at 15:58
  • But those are not actual arguments, they're inner to bash. I just made a folder with 1M files and tested: guido@solid:~/a$ ls * -bash: /bin/ls: Argument list too long guido@solid:~/a$ for i in *; do ls $i; done 1 10 100 ....
    – Guido
    Apr 18, 2013 at 16:02
  • How would I get around xargs?
    – Justin S
    Apr 19, 2013 at 11:29
  • 1
    (for i in 1US*; do if grep -qi user@domain "$i"; then rm "$i"; fi; done). This would check the return value from grep to see if there was a match and delete the file if so. Also added the -q option to supress output of grep (we don't need to pipe it and we don't want it). If you ever get a 'too many arguments' error again (I tried with a million files with no problem, but just in case) you'd be better off using find to delete the files.
    – Guido
    Apr 20, 2013 at 20:52
1

The -exec argument to find is useful here, I've used this myself in similar situations.

E.g.

# List the files that match
find /path/to/input/ -type f -exec grep -qiF [email protected] \{\} \; -print
# Once you're sure you've got it right
find /path/to/input/ -type f -exec grep -qiF [email protected] \{\} \; -delete
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Using xargs is more efficient than using "find ... -exec grep" because you have less process creations etc.

One way to go about this would be:

ls 1US* | xargs grep -i [email protected] | awk -F: '{print $1}' | xargs rm

But easier would be:

find . -iname "1US*" -exec rm {} \;
0

Use find and a loop instead of xargs.

find . -name '1US*' | \
while read x; do grep -iq user@domain "$x" && rm "$x"; done

This uses pipes and loops instead of arguments (both for grep and rm) and prevents issues related with limits on arguments.

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