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The directory structure is as follows.

├── input
│   ├── config.ac
│   ├── dir1
│   │   ├── image2.png
│   │   └── image3.jpg
│   ├── dir2
│   └── image1.png
├── main.sh
└── output

Essentially, I am trying to run the following ./main.sh input output which I want to produce the following:

├── input
│   ├── config.ac
│   ├── dir1
│   │   ├── image2.png
│   │   └── image3.jpg
│   ├── dir2
│   └── image1.png
├── main.sh
└── output
    ├── dir1
    │   └── image2.png
    ├── dir2
    └── image1.png

After trying several thing such as find -exec, I went through it step by step. I'm trying to copy the internal directory structure of input into output while at the same time only copying .png files and nothing else. Here is what I have tried:

for DIR in $1/; do
       mkdir $2/$DIR
       cp $1/$DIR*.png $1/$DIR $2/$DIR
done

Here is my logic, the for loop will go through every directory structure in the source directory($1), it will then make the exact same directory in the destination directory($2). Now, it looks for any .png files in the current directory it is in and copies it to the exact same corresponding directory that was just created in the destination. Note, I do plan on doing some conversions to the files later on in the for loop

This doesn't seem to work at all. I get the following errors:

cp: cannot stat 'input/input/*.png': No such file or directory
cp: cannot stat 'input/input/': No such file or directory
4
  • Just noticed the note about 'planning to do processing in the for loop' - I'd suggest to do it afterwards, eg like find output -name '*.png' | parallel "convert-to-jpg {} > {.}.jpg".
    – liborm
    Apr 9, 2017 at 18:04
  • I think I'm just going to do it afterwards in a different loop.
    – FShiwani
    Apr 9, 2017 at 18:06
  • Do you want output/dir2, even though it's empty? Apr 10, 2017 at 20:15
  • I've sorted it out now. Thanks
    – FShiwani
    Apr 10, 2017 at 22:23

3 Answers 3

2

Change to the directory you are copying from

Then

tar cf - .| ( cd /other directory; tar xf -)
1
  • Old school - like me :-) I prefer cd /other && tar xf - though. +1 Apr 10, 2017 at 20:20
1

You'll be probably happy with rsync:

rsync -a --include '*/' --include '*.png' --exclude '*' input/ output

This should copy all directories AND png files. If you want to see what would be copied, add -nv options.

(See the notes on rsync versions here.)

4
  • That works, however, the output directory now has a sub folder called /input/
    – FShiwani
    Apr 9, 2017 at 17:53
  • Sorry, my bad - you need to use trailing / for the input - fixed in the answer.
    – liborm
    Apr 9, 2017 at 17:57
  • That works! I appreciate it. I'm just curious, is it possible to do the same with my method above or perhaps using find with an -exec ?
    – FShiwani
    Apr 9, 2017 at 18:05
  • I'm not a fan of bash loops (so I'm not good at using them). If I wanted to take the 'hard way', I would do something like find input -type d | sed 's/^input/output/' | xargs mkdir -p...
    – liborm
    Apr 9, 2017 at 21:26
1

My favorite for copying directory trees (using your input/output structure):

cd input
find . | cpio -pdm ../output

Adjust the 'find' options as required.

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