13

I'd like to recursively rename all directories containing the string foo by replacing that part of the string with Bar. I've got something like this so far, but it doesn't quite work. I'd also like foo to be searched case-insensitive.

find . -type d -exec bash -c 'mv "$1" "${1//foo/Bar}"' -- {} \;

Are there any elegant one-liners that might be better than this attempt? I've actually tried a few but thought I'd defer to the experts. Note: i'm doing this on a Mac OS X system, and don't have tools like rename installed.

1
  • If it is a one-timer it doesn't need to be a one-liner :) Oct 18, 2012 at 1:57

5 Answers 5

16

Try the following code using parameter expansion

find . -type d -iname '*foo*' -depth -exec bash -c '
    echo mv "$1" "${1//[Ff][Oo][Oo]/BAr}"
' -- {} \;

But your best bet will be using Perl's rename (usable in any OS):

find . -type d -iname '*foo*' -depth -exec rename 's@Foo@Bar@gi' {} +

And if you are using bash4 or zsh (** mean recursive):

shopt -s globstar
rename -n 's@Foo@Bar@gi' **/*foo*/

If it fit your needs, remove the -n (dry run) switch to rename for real.

SOME DOC

rename was originally written by Perl's dad, Larry Wall himself.

10
  • @sputnick - I'll happily upvote this if you remove the sed version. :-)
    – ghoti
    Oct 18, 2012 at 2:38
  • Added -depth to process the subdir first Oct 18, 2012 at 2:44
  • I may have to look at installing rename for OS X. I like that 2nd option but can't run it yet.
    – Poe
    Oct 18, 2012 at 2:48
  • @Poe : rename is a simple Perl script, so you can using it without any install. Oct 18, 2012 at 2:50
  • @Poe - Rename is indeed powerful. And if you're already using macports or homebrew, using your package manager to manage software installs won't get you fired.
    – ghoti
    Oct 18, 2012 at 2:51
7

I suspect the problem is getting it to work with mkdir -p foo/foo/foo.

In this regard, I think a solution based on find will likely not work because the list of paths is probably predetermined.

The following is in no way elegant, and stretches the definition of a one-liner, but works for the above test.

$ mkdir -p foo/foo/foo

$ (shopt -s nullglob && _() { for P in "$1"*/; do Q="${P//[Ff][Oo][Oo]/bar}"; mv  -- "$P" "$Q"; _ "$Q"; done } && _ ./)

$ find
.
./bar
./bar/bar
./bar/bar/bar
1
  • 1
    +1 - Excellent point. Arcane use of bash. Nice work. :)
    – ghoti
    Oct 18, 2012 at 2:36
5
find . -type d -iname '*foo*' -exec bash -O nocasematch -c \
    '[[ $1 =~ (foo) ]] && mv "$1" "${1//${BASH_REMATCH[1]}/Bar}"' -- {} \;

Pro: Avoids sed.
Con: Will not find all matches if there are multiple in different cases.
Con: Is ridiculous.

4
  • OP needs a case insensitive substitution. Oct 18, 2012 at 2:04
  • And -name will not match "FOO" Oct 18, 2012 at 2:12
  • +1 - Edited, this looks like it would work. And yes, it's a little ridiculous. :-)
    – ghoti
    Oct 18, 2012 at 2:33
  • You should add -depth switch ;) Oct 18, 2012 at 3:06
2

Thanks @Gilles Quenot and Wenli: The following worked for me. I based it on both of your solutions.

find . -depth -type d -name 'ReplaceMe*'  -execdir bash -c 'mv "$1" "${1/ReplaceMe/ReplaceWith}"' -- {} \;

The -execdir seems to be key on linux Red hat 7.6

1

I've been searching similar answers and this one worked:

find . -depth -name 'foo' -execdir bash -c 'mv "$0" ${0//foo/Bar}"' {} \;

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