ZSH
I know the question was marked for bash; but, just for reference, for zsh users:
Test for non-empty directory
To check if foo
is non-empty:
$ for i in foo(NF) ; do ... ; done
where, if foo
is non-empty, the code in the for
block will be executed.
Test for empty directory
To check if foo
is empty:
$ for i in foo(N/^F) ; do ... ; done
where, if foo
is empty, the code in the for
block will be executed.
Notes
We did not need to quote the directory foo
above, but we can do so if we need to:
$ for i in 'some directory!'(NF) ; do ... ; done
We can also test more than one object, even if it is not a directory:
$ mkdir X # empty directory
$ touch f # regular file
$ for i in X(N/^F) f(N/^F) ; do echo $i ; done # echo empty directories
X
Anything that is not a directory will just be ignored.
Extras
Since we are globbing, we can use any glob (or brace expansion):
$ mkdir X X1 X2 Y Y1 Y2 Z
$ touch Xf # create regular file
$ touch X1/f # directory X1 is not empty
$ touch Y1/.f # directory Y1 is not empty
$ ls -F # list all objects
X/ X1/ X2/ Xf Y/ Y1/ Y2/ Z/
$ for i in {X,Y}*(N/^F); do printf "$i "; done; echo # print empty directories
X X2 Y Y2
We can also examine objects that are placed in an array. With the directories as above, for example:
$ ls -F # list all objects
X/ X1/ X2/ Xf Y/ Y1/ Y2/ Z/
$ arr=(*) # place objects into array "arr"
$ for i in ${^arr}(N/^F); do printf "$i "; done; echo
X X2 Y Y2 Z
Thus, we can test objects that may already be set in an array parameter.
Note that the code in the for
block is, obviously, executed on every directory in turn. If this is not desirable then you can simply populate an array parameter and then operate on that parameter:
$ for i in *(NF) ; do full_directories+=($i) ; done
$ do_something $full_directories
Explanation
For zsh users there is the (F)
glob qualifier (see man zshexpn
), which matches "full" (non-empty) directories:
$ mkdir X Y
$ touch Y/.f # Y is now not empty
$ touch f # create a regular file
$ ls -dF * # list everything in the current directory
f X/ Y/
$ ls -dF *(F) # will list only "full" directories
Y/
The qualifier (F)
lists objects that match: is a directory AND is not empty. So, (^F)
matches: not a directory OR is empty. Thus, (^F)
alone would also list regular files, for example. Thus, as explained on the zshexp
man page, we also need the (/)
glob qualifier, which lists only directories:
$ mkdir X Y Z
$ touch X/f Y/.f # directories X and Y now not empty
$ for i in *(/^F) ; do echo $i ; done
Z
Thus, to check if a given directory is empty, you can therefore run:
$ mkdir X
$ for i in X(/^F) ; do echo $i ; done ; echo "finished"
X
finished
and just to be sure that a non-empty directory would not be captured:
$ mkdir Y
$ touch Y/.f
$ for i in Y(/^F) ; do echo $i ; done ; echo "finished"
zsh: no matches found: Y(/^F)
finished
Oops! Since Y
is not empty, zsh finds no matches for (/^F)
("directories that are empty") and thus spits out an error message saying that no matches for the glob were found. We therefore need to suppress these possible error messages with the (N)
glob qualifier:
$ mkdir Y
$ touch Y/.f
$ for i in Y(N/^F) ; do echo $i ; done ; echo "finished"
finished
Thus, for empty directories we need the qualifier (N/^F)
, which you can read as: "don't warn me about failures, directories that are not full".
Similarly, for non-empty directories we need the qualifier (NF)
, which we can likewise read as: "don't warn me about failures, full directories".