The solution you linked is pretty nice, but not exhaustive enough:
- It missed some characters from the complete list:
"
(/
is also on the list, but it doesn't matter because it cannot part of a filename in Linux either)
- It doesn't address the case of multiple levels of sub-directories with special characters in the names
- It doesn't address the case of paths with long names
To handle all forbidden characters the command becomes a bit more complex because of the quoting:
find /path/to -name '*[<>:"\\|?*]*' -exec bash -c "n=\$(sed 's/[<>:\"\\|?*]/_/g' <<< '{}'); echo '{}' \"\$n\"" \;
To handle multiple levels of directories, run commands separately for directories first and then for files:
find /path/to -type d ...
find /path/to -type f ...
If any of the directories has a special character that is renamed, you will need to rerun the first command multiple times, until there are no more renames.
To find files that are longer than a certain length, you can use a command like this:
find /path/to/ -name '?????*'
This is an example of finding files/directories with at least 5 characters in the name. I don't know what is the limit in windows, but there is a limit, so you might want to check on that, and use a pattern that's long enough.
Finally, absolute paths that are too long can also give problems. You can find the longest absolute path like this:
find /path/to | awk '{print length($0)}' | sort -nr | head -n1