110

I am having files like a_dbg.txt, b_dbg.txt ... in a Suse 10 system. I want to write a bash shell script which should rename these files by removing "_dbg" from them.

Google suggested me to use rename command. So I executed the command rename _dbg.txt .txt *dbg* on the CURRENT_FOLDER

My actual CURRENT_FOLDER contains the below files.

CURRENT_FOLDER/a_dbg.txt
CURRENT_FOLDER/b_dbg.txt
CURRENT_FOLDER/XX/c_dbg.txt
CURRENT_FOLDER/YY/d_dbg.txt

After executing the rename command,

CURRENT_FOLDER/a.txt
CURRENT_FOLDER/b.txt
CURRENT_FOLDER/XX/c_dbg.txt
CURRENT_FOLDER/YY/d_dbg.txt

Its not doing recursively, how to make this command to rename files in all subdirectories. Like XX and YY I will be having so many subdirectories which name is unpredictable. And also my CURRENT_FOLDER will be having some other files also.

2
  • 8
    I get Bareword "..." not allowed while "strict subs" in use at (eval 1) line 1. Dec 16, 2015 at 11:21
  • 6
    Why does not JUST rename -r exist and make our lives easier instead of bulky workarounds?
    – neverMind9
    Apr 14, 2018 at 17:33

13 Answers 13

164

You can use find to find all matching files recursively:

find . -iname "*dbg*" -exec rename _dbg.txt .txt '{}' \;

EDIT: what the '{}' and \; are?

The -exec argument makes find execute rename for every matching file found. '{}' will be replaced with the path name of the file. The last token, \; is there only to mark the end of the exec expression.

All that is described nicely in the man page for find:

 -exec utility [argument ...] ;
         True if the program named utility returns a zero value as its
         exit status.  Optional arguments may be passed to the utility.
         The expression must be terminated by a semicolon (``;'').  If you
         invoke find from a shell you may need to quote the semicolon if
         the shell would otherwise treat it as a control operator.  If the
         string ``{}'' appears anywhere in the utility name or the argu-
         ments it is replaced by the pathname of the current file.
         Utility will be executed from the directory from which find was
         executed.  Utility and arguments are not subject to the further
         expansion of shell patterns and constructs.
12
  • 2
    i checked it and it works only on files not on directories. Feb 25, 2016 at 16:17
  • 18
    For those getting Bareword "..." not allowed while "strict subs" in use at ..., try: find . -iname "*BUILD*" -exec rename 's/_dbg.txt/.txt/' '{}' \;
    – jsand
    Feb 23, 2018 at 22:52
  • 1
    from manual find. -iname pattern. Like -name, but the match is case insensitive. For example, the patterns fo*' and F??' match the file names Foo', FOO', foo', fOo', etc. The pattern *foo* will also match a file called '.foobar'.
    – user43326
    Feb 29, 2020 at 10:07
  • 11
    I get find: rename: No such file or directory Aug 2, 2020 at 16:25
  • 5
    @BartekPacia rename is a unix util (check gnu.org/software/gnulib/manual/html_node/rename.html). The error suggests it is not installed on your machine. For macOS (which is typically the case) you can address this with brew install rename.
    – vervas
    Jul 15, 2021 at 8:05
31

For renaming recursively I use the following commands:

find -iname \*.* | rename -v "s/ /-/g"
7
  • Also useful to restore backup files. find -iname \*.* | rename -v -f "s/\.bak//g"
    – Paolo
    Dec 7, 2017 at 19:55
  • My rename does not have -v. Are you on Mac OS X? I'm Ubuntu 16. Mar 27, 2018 at 8:21
  • -v is equivalent to --verbose on my release of the 'rename' tool; not important regarding the result. Please enter 'man rename' for further clarification.
    – Gantan
    Mar 28, 2018 at 8:58
  • 5
    This does not work for me on Ubuntu 18.10 because rename tries to rename the entire path and fails if a parent directory would be changed. You must instead operate on basenames only as shown at: stackoverflow.com/questions/16541582/… and go depth first with -depth. Apr 25, 2019 at 6:54
  • 1
    @CiroSantilliПутлерКапут六四事 exactly that.
    – MrR
    Apr 26, 2022 at 20:00
22

small script i wrote to replace all files with .txt extension to .cpp extension under /tmp and sub directories recursively

#!/bin/bash

for file in $(find /tmp -name '*.txt')
do
  mv $file $(echo "$file" | sed -r 's|.txt|.cpp|g')
done
1
16

with bash:

shopt -s globstar nullglob
rename _dbg.txt .txt **/*dbg*
2
  • 5
    Great solution. I had to enable those bash options with shopt -s globstar nullstar. For the rename tool that is installed via brew install rename on MacOS, I had to do rename -s oldStuff newStuff **/* Mar 4, 2015 at 21:44
  • great solution when you don't have the perl version of rename. I had to run it twice since one thing needing to be renamed was a folder, which prevented the remaining renames inside it from completing.
    – DLAN
    Sep 18, 2023 at 19:32
13

find -execdir rename also works for non-suffix replacements on basenames

https://stackoverflow.com/a/16541670/895245 works directly only for suffixes, but this will work for arbitrary regex replacements on basenames:

PATH=/usr/bin find . -depth -execdir rename 's/_dbg.txt$/_.txt' '{}' \;

or to affect files only:

PATH=/usr/bin find . -type f -execdir rename 's/_dbg.txt$/_.txt' '{}' \;

-execdir first cds into the directory before executing only on the basename.

Tested on Ubuntu 20.04, find 4.7.0, rename 1.10.

Convenient and safer helper for it

find-rename-regex() (
  set -eu
  find_and_replace="$1"
  PATH="$(echo "$PATH" | sed -E 's/(^|:)[^\/][^:]*//g')" \
    find . -depth -execdir rename "${2:--n}" "s/${find_and_replace}" '{}' \;
)

GitHub upstream.

Sample usage to replace spaces ' ' with hyphens '-'.

Dry run that shows what would be renamed to what without actually doing it:

find-rename-regex ' /-/g'

Do the replace:

find-rename-regex ' /-/g' -v

Command explanation

The awesome -execdir option does a cd into the directory before executing the rename command, unlike -exec.

-depth ensure that the renaming happens first on children, and then on parents, to prevent potential problems with missing parent directories.

-execdir is required because rename does not play well with non-basename input paths, e.g. the following fails:

rename 's/findme/replaceme/g' acc/acc

The PATH hacking is required because -execdir has one very annoying drawback: find is extremely opinionated and refuses to do anything with -execdir if you have any relative paths in your PATH environment variable, e.g. ./node_modules/.bin, failing with:

find: The relative path ‘./node_modules/.bin’ is included in the PATH environment variable, which is insecure in combination with the -execdir action of find. Please remove that entry from $PATH

See also: https://askubuntu.com/questions/621132/why-using-the-execdir-action-is-insecure-for-directory-which-is-in-the-path/1109378#1109378

-execdir is a GNU find extension to POSIX. rename is Perl based and comes from the rename package.

Rename lookahead workaround

If your input paths don't come from find, or if you've had enough of the relative path annoyance, we can use some Perl lookahead to safely rename directories as in:

git ls-files | sort -r | xargs rename 's/findme(?!.*\/)\/?$/replaceme/g' '{}'

I haven't found a convenient analogue for -execdir with xargs: https://superuser.com/questions/893890/xargs-change-working-directory-to-file-path-before-executing/915686

The sort -r is required to ensure that files come after their respective directories, since longer paths come after shorter ones with the same prefix.

Tested in Ubuntu 18.10.

5
  • 5
    Works for me. This solution should be voted higher. Dec 9, 2019 at 16:09
  • One improvement: do not attempt a rename if the file doesn't match - i.e. pass the "match" part as a separate parameter and use it as a param to find with -iname
    – MrR
    Apr 26, 2022 at 21:21
  • 1
    Great answer! It handles also directory renaming properly. I just would like to suggest a way to avoid setting the PATH=/usr/bin workaround. Just give the full path when calling rename: find . -depth -name "cnn4*" -execdir /usr/bin/rename 's/cnn4/cnn5/' '{}' \; Aug 20, 2022 at 17:40
  • @HelderDaniel the PATH hacking is a workaround for people having relative paths on their PATH (arguably a bad idea, but was my case) see node_modules mention. It is hard to decide sometimes if one should give the "works no matter what" or "works in sane conditions" version of commands more proeminenty. Aug 20, 2022 at 19:20
  • 1
    @CiroSantilliПутлерКапут六四事, Yeah, I got it. I was just suggesting another way to deal with problems with the path. If we specify the full path we do not need to worry about the value of the PATH env var. But ok, it is the same actually. We have the specify the full path whether in the PATH var or before the command Aug 26, 2022 at 11:32
6

Script above can be written in one line:

find /tmp -name "*.txt" -exec bash -c 'mv $0 $(echo "$0" | sed -r \"s|.txt|.cpp|g\")' '{}' \;
2
  • 1
    @steven try using this find . -name "*.txt" -exec bash -c 'mv $0 $(echo "$0" | sed -r "s/.txt/.cpp/g")' '{}' \;
    – xxbinxx
    Sep 20, 2017 at 6:11
  • 1
    Opening / executing a new shell for every file is extremely expensive (slow), so I usually don't do that.
    – Binarus
    Jan 6, 2019 at 9:47
4

If you just want to rename and don't mind using an external tool, then you can use rnm. The command would be:

#on current folder
rnm -dp -1 -fo -ssf '_dbg' -rs '/_dbg//' *

-dp -1 will make it recursive to all subdirectories.

-fo implies file only mode.

-ssf '_dbg' searches for files with _dbg in the filename.

-rs '/_dbg//' replaces _dbg with empty string.

You can run the above command with the path of the CURRENT_FOLDER too:

rnm -dp -1 -fo -ssf '_dbg' -rs '/_dbg//' /path/to/the/directory
3
  • Super fast! You saved my day. Thanks alot! "226785 files renamed in 26.9568 seconds."
    – EyesBear
    Jul 4, 2021 at 0:00
  • @EyesBear : You can make it faster with -q flag if you want performance without seeing output in terminal.
    – Jahid
    Jul 4, 2021 at 13:22
  • this, is, just SUPER! Thank you for the introduction!
    – taiyodayo
    Oct 29, 2021 at 5:31
1

You can use this below.

rename --no-act 's/\.html$/\.php/' *.html */*.html
2
  • My rename doesn't have --no-act, Ubuntu 16. Are you on Mac OS X? Mar 27, 2018 at 8:21
  • me too. Unknown option: no-act on Ubuntu 17.10.I don't use Mac OS.no-act is dry-run option. Mar 27, 2018 at 8:58
1

This command worked for me. Remember first to install the perl rename package:

find -iname \*.* | grep oldname | rename -v "s/oldname/newname/g
1

In case anyone is comfortable with fd and rnr, the command is:

fd -t f -x rnr '_dbg.txt' '.txt'

rnr only command is:

rnr -f -r '_dbg.txt' '.txt' *

rnr has the benefit of being able to undo the command.

0

To expand on the excellent answer @CiroSantilliПутлерКапут六四事 : do not match files in the find that we don't have to rename.

I have found this to improve performance significantly on Cygwin.

Please feel free to correct my ineffective bash coding.

FIND_STRING="ZZZZ"
REPLACE_STRING="YYYY"

FIND_PARAMS="-type d"

find-rename-regex() (
  set -eu
  find_and_replace="${1}/${2}/g"
  echo "${find_and_replace}"
  find_params="${3}"
  mode="${4}"
  if [ "${mode}" = 'real' ]; then
    PATH="$(echo "$PATH" | sed -E 's/(^|:)[^\/][^:]*//g')" \
      find . -depth -name "*${1}*" ${find_params} -execdir rename -v "s/${find_and_replace}" '{}' \;
  elif [ "${mode}" = 'dryrun' ]; then
    echo "${mode}"
    PATH="$(echo "$PATH" | sed -E 's/(^|:)[^\/][^:]*//g')" \
      find . -depth -name "*${1}*" ${find_params} -execdir rename -n "s/${find_and_replace}" '{}' \;
  fi
)

find-rename-regex "${FIND_STRING}" "${REPLACE_STRING}" "${FIND_PARAMS}" "dryrun"
# find-rename-regex "${FIND_STRING}" "${REPLACE_STRING}" "${FIND_PARAMS}" "real"
0

On Ubuntu (after installing rename), this simpler solution worked the best for me. This replaces space with underscore, but can be modified as needed.

find . -depth | rename -d -v -n "s/ /_/g"

The -depth flag is telling find to traverse the depth of a directory first, which is good because I want to rename the leaf nodes first.

The -d flag on rename tells it to only rename the filename component of the path. I don't know how general the behavior is but on my installation (Ubuntu 20.04), it could be the file or the directory as long as it is the leaf node of the path.

I recommend the -n (no action) flag first along with -v, so you can see what would get renamed and how.

Using the two flags together, it renames all the files in a directory first and then the directory itself. Working backwards. Which is exactly what I needed.

1
  • For what it's worth, there are multiple utilities called rename, with different features and different syntax. The Ubuntu rename package is the "Perl" one. (This is thus basically a duplicate of earlier answers with the same recommendation.)
    – tripleee
    Mar 13, 2023 at 6:22
-4

classic solution:

for f in $(find . -name "*dbg*"); do mv $f $(echo $f | sed 's/_dbg//'); done
8
  • 4
    This is completely broken. Please, don't do this. Sep 17, 2015 at 18:15
  • ~/tmp$ mkdir a && cd a/ && touch 1_dbg.txt && cd .. ~/tmp$ for f in $(find . -name "*dbg*"); do mv $f $(echo $f | sed 's/_dbg//'); done ~/tmp$ cd a/ ~/tmp/a$ l total 8 drwxrwxr-x 2 repu1sion repu1sion 4096 Sep 17 21:17 . drwxrwxr-x 3 repu1sion repu1sion 4096 Sep 17 21:17 .. -rw-rw-r-- 1 repu1sion repu1sion 0 Sep 17 21:17 1.txt
    – pulse
    Sep 17, 2015 at 18:19
  • 1
    Maybe it seems to work, but it breaks with filenames that contain spaces or glob characters. You say it's a classic solution, but it's more likely the solution you came up with, yet it shows terrible mistakes (sorry to be harsh, but your line could be included in textbooks as an example of what not to do; exercise: count the number of mistakes). Sep 17, 2015 at 18:23
  • 1
    for f in $(find ....): don't do this! it breaks with filenames containing spaces or glob characters; besides, find has the -exec option that can very likely be used instead; or for f in *_dbg*; do or if you want a recursive glob, for f in **/*_dbg; do with shopt -s globstar. Sep 17, 2015 at 18:27
  • 2
    Finally, a much better solution is: shopt -s globstar nullglob; for f in **/*_dbg*; do mv -- "$f" "${f/_dbg}"; done. Sep 17, 2015 at 18:31

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