224

I am trying to write a simple bash script that will copy the entire contents of a folder including hidden files and folders into another folder, but I want to exclude certain specific folders. How could I achieve this?

6
  • 2
    I imagine something like find . -name * piped to grep /v "exclude-pattern" to filter the ones you don't want and then piped to cp to do the copy.
    – i_am_jorf
    Feb 3, 2010 at 16:43
  • 2
    I was trying to do something like that, but couldnt figure out how to use cp with a pipe
    – trobrock
    Feb 3, 2010 at 16:45
  • 2
    This should probably go to super user. The command you're looking for is xargs. You could also do something like two tar's connected by a pipe.
    – Kyle Butt
    Feb 3, 2010 at 16:48
  • 3
    Maybe its late and it doesnt answer the question accurately but here's a tip: If you want to exclude only immediate children of the directory you could take advantage of bash pattern matching, e.g. cp -R !(dir1|dir2) path/to/destination Aug 14, 2014 at 18:02
  • 2
    Note that the !(dir1|dir2) pattern requires extglob to be turned on (shopt -s extglob to turn it on). Aug 20, 2014 at 19:07

10 Answers 10

379

Use rsync:

rsync -av --exclude='path1/to/exclude' --exclude='path2/to/exclude' source destination

Note that using source and source/ are different. A trailing slash means to copy the contents of the folder source into destination. Without the trailing slash, it means copy the folder source into destination.

Alternatively, if you have lots of directories (or files) to exclude, you can use --exclude-from=FILE, where FILE is the name of a file containing files or directories to exclude.

--exclude may also contain wildcards, such as --exclude=*/.svn*

15
  • 16
    I suggest to add the --dry-run in order to check which files are going to be copied. Sep 20, 2013 at 10:14
  • 2
    @AmokHuginnsson - What systems are you using? Rsync is included by default in all mainstream Linux distros I know of, including RHEL, CentOS, Debian, and Ubuntu, and I believe it's in FreeBSD as well. Jan 30, 2015 at 19:50
  • 2
    For RHEL derived distros: yum install rsync, or on Debian-based releases: apt-get install rsync . Unless you're building your server from absolute base on your own hardware, this is a non-issue. rsync is installed by default on my Amazon EC2 boxes, as well and my boxes from ZeroLag and RackSpace. Feb 2, 2015 at 14:09
  • 3
    rsync seems to be extremely slow compared to cp ? At least this was my experience.
    – Kojo
    Aug 29, 2016 at 15:07
  • 5
    For example to ignore the git dir: rsync -av --exclude='.git/' ../old-repo/ .
    – nycynik
    Apr 5, 2017 at 18:28
52

Use tar along with a pipe.

cd /source_directory
tar cf - --exclude=dir_to_exclude . | (cd /destination && tar xvf - )

You can even use this technique across ssh.

5
  • This approach unnecessarily first tars the target source (and exludes particular directories in the archive) and then untars it at the target. Not recommended!
    – Waldheri
    Jan 14, 2016 at 9:45
  • 7
    @Waldheri you are wrong. This is the best solution. It does exactly what OP requested and it works on default install of most of the *nix like OSes. Taring and untaring is done on the fly with no file system artefact (in memory), cost of this tar+untar is negligible. Feb 8, 2016 at 18:42
  • @WouterDonders Tar is minimal overhead. It doesn't apply compression.
    – Kyle Butt
    Apr 27, 2020 at 23:19
  • 4
    This is perfect when rsync is not available in your container and you don't want to bother with installing it. Oct 19, 2021 at 9:17
  • rsync went unavailable for us. So i updated the above tar a bit and this is what i came up with. tar -cf - --exclude='./folder' --exclude='./file.tar' ./source_directory | tar -xf - -C ./destination_directory
    – Panduka
    May 4, 2022 at 17:20
12

You can use find with the -prune option.

An example from man find:

       cd /source-dir
       find . -name .snapshot -prune -o \( \! -name *~ -print0 \)|
       cpio -pmd0 /dest-dir

       This command copies the contents of /source-dir to /dest-dir, but omits
       files  and directories named .snapshot (and anything in them).  It also
       omits files or directories whose name ends in ~,  but  not  their  con‐
       tents.  The construct -prune -o \( ... -print0 \) is quite common.  The
       idea here is that the expression before -prune matches things which are
       to  be  pruned.  However, the -prune action itself returns true, so the
       following -o ensures that the right hand side  is  evaluated  only  for
       those  directories  which didn't get pruned (the contents of the pruned
       directories are not even visited, so their  contents  are  irrelevant).
       The  expression on the right hand side of the -o is in parentheses only
       for clarity.  It emphasises that the -print0 action  takes  place  only
       for  things  that  didn't  have  -prune  applied  to them.  Because the
       default `and' condition between tests binds more tightly than -o,  this
       is  the  default anyway, but the parentheses help to show what is going
       on.
2
  • Props for locating a highly relevant example directly from a manpage.
    – David M
    Oct 27, 2016 at 19:29
  • Looks good indeed! This is also available in the online docs. Unfortunately cpio hasn't been packaged for MSYS2 yet. Apr 9, 2018 at 12:22
7

Quick Start

Run:

rsync -av --exclude='path1/in/source' --exclude='path2/in/source' [source]/ [destination]

Notes

  • -avr will create a new directory named [destination].
  • source and source/ create different results:
    • source — copy the contents of source into destination.
    • source/ — copy the folder source into destination.
  • To exclude many files:
    • --exclude-from=FILEFILE is the name of a file containing other files or directories to exclude.
  • --exclude may also contain wildcards:
    • e.g. --exclude=*/.svn*

Modified from: https://stackoverflow.com/a/2194500/749232


Example

Starting folder structure:

.
├── destination
└── source
    ├── fileToCopy.rtf
    └── fileToExclude.rtf

Run:

rsync -av --exclude='fileToCopy.rtf' source/ destination

Ending folder structure:

.
├── destination
│   └── fileToExclude.rtf
└── source
    ├── fileToCopy.rtf
    └── fileToExclude.rtf
3
  • 1
    [REVIEW] nice layout Jack.. but the code was already submitted above 10 years ago :d so I have to downvote, despite the creative icons you have posted !
    – Goodies
    Aug 21, 2020 at 0:09
  • 1
    @Goodies when I read the original post, I was confused by the layout and explanation so that's why I reformatted it (thanks for appreciating the icons and layout!) . If I wanted to improve the original answer, should I try to edit it (the one from ten years ago)? I just find edits take a while to be approved and I thought my submission was unique enough to be considered different.
    – Jack
    Sep 10, 2020 at 6:14
  • right.. upvote your comment.. btw I am a beginner mod.. I can edit things, but I only do that with recent titles. Better keep questions and answers layout intact, unless there is really an error.
    – Goodies
    Sep 12, 2020 at 17:30
4

you can use tar, with --exclude option , and then untar it in destination. eg

cd /source_directory
tar cvf test.tar --exclude=dir_to_exclude *
mv test.tar /destination 
cd /destination  
tar xvf test.tar

see the man page of tar for more info

3

Similar to Jeff's idea (untested):

find . -name * -print0 | grep -v "exclude" | xargs -0 -I {} cp -a {} destination/
1
  • Sorry, but I really don't get why 5 people upvoted this when it was admittedly untested and doesn't seem to work on a simple test: I tried this in a subdir of /usr/share/icons and immediately got find: paths must precede expression: 22x22 where the latter is one of the subdirs therein. My command was find . -name * -print0 | grep -v "scalable" | xargs -0 -I {} cp -a {} /z/test/ (admittedly, I'm on MSYS2, so really in /mingw64/share/icons/Adwaita, but I can't see how this is MSYS2's fault) Apr 9, 2018 at 12:16
2

Simple solution (but I would still prefer the bash pattern matching from the top comments):

touch /path/to/target/.git
cp -n -ax * /path/to/target/
rm /path/to/target/.git

This exploits the -n option of cp, which forces cp to not overwrite existing targets.

Drawback: Works with GNU cp. If you don't have GNU cp, then the cp operation might return an error code (1), which is annoying because then you can't tell if it was a real failure.

1

inspired by @SteveLazaridis's answer, which would fail, here is a POSIX shell function - just copy and paste into a file named cpx in yout $PATH and make it executible (chmod a+x cpr). [Source is now maintained in my GitLab.

#!/bin/sh

# usage: cpx [-n|--dry-run] "from_path" "to_path" "newline_separated_exclude_list"
# limitations: only excludes from "from_path", not it's subdirectories

cpx() {
# run in subshell to avoid collisions
  (_CopyWithExclude "$@")
}

_CopyWithExclude() {
  case "$1" in
    -n|--dry-run) { DryRun='echo'; shift; } ;;
  esac

  from="$1"
  to="$2"
  exclude="$3"

  $DryRun mkdir -p "$to"

  if [ -z "$exclude" ]; then
      cp "$from" "$to"
      return
  fi

  ls -A1 "$from" \
    | while IFS= read -r f; do
        unset excluded
        if [ -n "$exclude" ]; then
          for x in $(printf "$exclude"); do
          if [ "$f" = "$x" ]; then
              excluded=1
              break
          fi
          done
        fi
        f="${f#$from/}"
        if [ -z "$excluded" ]; then
          $DryRun cp -R "$f" "$to"
        else
          [ -n "$DryRun" ] && echo "skip '$f'"
        fi
      done
}

# Do not execute if being sourced
[ "${0#*cpx}" != "$0" ] && cpx "$@"

Example usage

EXCLUDE="
.git
my_secret_stuff
"
cpr "$HOME/my_stuff" "/media/usb" "$EXCLUDE"
4
  • It seems unhelpful to say that someone's answer "would fail" without explaining what is wrong with it and how you fix that... Apr 9, 2018 at 11:47
  • @underscore_d : true, in hindsight, esp as I can't now remember what failed :-(
    – go2null
    May 14, 2018 at 21:10
  • Multiple things: (1) it copies files multiple times and (2) the logic still copies files to be excluded. Run through the loops using i=foo: it will be copied 3 times instead of 4 for any other file e.g. i=test.txt. Nov 30, 2018 at 12:04
  • 2
    thanks @EricBringley for clarifying the shortcomings of Steve's answer. (He did say it was untested though.)
    – go2null
    Mar 1, 2019 at 13:13
0
EXCLUDE="foo bar blah jah"                                                                             
DEST=$1

for i in *
do
    for x in $EXCLUDE
    do  
        if [ $x != $i ]; then
            cp -a $i $DEST
        fi  
    done
done

Untested...

1
  • 2
    This is incorrect. A few problems: As written, it will copy a file that is not supposed to be excluded multiple times (the number of items to be excluded which in this case is 4). Even if you do attempt to copy 'foo', the first item in the exclude list, it will still be copied over when you get to x=bar and i is still foo. If you insist on doing this without pre-existing tools (e.g. rsync), move the copy to an if statement outside the 'for x in...' loop and make the 'for x...' loop change the logical statement in the if(true) copy file. This will stop you from copying multiple times. Nov 30, 2018 at 12:01
0

If there is no way to use rsync, you can use this (if you are in the directory being copied):

cp -R $(ls -a | grep -v '\.$' | grep -v exclude_directory) directory_to_copy

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