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How could I write a script which would recursively go through a directory (Or using the find command), looking for any characters which windows will not accept in a file name, and then changing them to an underscore?

This is so that when I reboot, I do not have chkdsk delete all of the files that I recently added with filenames that windows does not like.

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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
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  • I tested your first command line with the following files: a<, b>, c:, d", e\, f|, g? and h* but it did not work. Find displays a warning because / cannot be in Linux filenames. Then sh displays Syntax error: redirection unexpected for each file.
    – Futal
    Apr 26, 2014 at 22:46
  • Thanks @Futal, you're right about the /, I updated my post to reflect that. When you say it didn't work, what happened exactly? It may have been because I was using sh in the -exec command. I changed it to bash now, because it uses the <<< operator which is bash specific, and may have been the cause of the error in your case.
    – janos
    Apr 26, 2014 at 22:54
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Check out the tr shell command (linux) and combine it with find.

Note that use should run this from Linux. Windows can't distinguish between soft links to directories and real directories so can end up in an endless loop.

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  • Of course, if I boot into windows chkdsk deletes all the files I wanted to say or marks the file system as bad. Dec 24, 2013 at 20:52
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I found an answer with this one liner:

find . -name "*[<>:\\|?*]*" -exec bash -c 'x="{}"; y=$(sed "s/[<>:\\|?*]\+/-/g" <<< "$x") && mv "$x" "$y" ' \;

Source

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    You've asked a question, spent a few minutes writing it. 8 minutes later you've found the answer and posted it. Good for you. Maybe next time try searching first. Please.
    – egur
    Dec 24, 2013 at 20:59

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