41

I'm trying to create a Bash script that will delete everything in my .waste directory. I have a basic script I wrote but I want it to first check if the .waste directory has contents, and if so, to echo out a simple "Folder already empty!" message. I'm not too savvy about if and if else statements, and I don't know what the [ ] equation needs to check for presence.

Basic code:

#! /bin/bash
echo "The files have been deleted:"
cd /home/user/bin/.waste/
ls
rm -rf /home/user/bin/.waste/*

(P.S. not sure if the asterisk is correct at the end, I did try the script with it and I recall it deleted everything in the bin directory as well)

0

3 Answers 3

51

You can check if a directory is empty using find, and processing its output:

#!/bin/sh
target=$1
if find "$target" -mindepth 1 -print -quit 2>/dev/null | grep -q .; then
    echo "Not empty, do something"
else
    echo "Target '$target' is empty or not a directory"
fi

That is:

  • Use find to find the first filesystem entry under $target (-mindepth 1), print it (-print), and stop processing (-quit)
    • Redirect stderr to suppress any error messages (= noise)
  • Check if the output of the find command is empty using grep -q .
    • grep -q . will exit after processing at most one character. If it sees a character it exits with success, if it doesn't (its input is empty) then it exits with failure.
  • If the output of the find command is not empty, then the directory is not empty, and grep -q . exits with success.
  • If the output of the find command is empty, then $target is either an empty directory, or not a directory (does not exist), and grep -q . exits with failure.

The reason we have to rely on the stdout of find rather than its own exit code directly is that there's no way to make the find command use distinguishable exit codes in case files were found or not.

Instead of piping to grep -q, another alternative would be to capture the output of find and check if it's an empty string or not.

#!/bin/sh
target=$1
if [ "$(find "$target" -mindepth 1 -print -quit 2>/dev/null)" ]; then
    echo "Not empty, do something"
else
    echo "Target '$target' is empty or not a directory"
fi

Capturing command output like this uses a sub-shell. I think the solution using grep is probably faster, but I haven't tested it.

11
  • @HermanTorjussen You probably didn't mean redirect the "output" but stderr. I put there two examples, one with the redirect and one without, on purpose. I'm hoping the OP can decide for himself if the error message is clutter or useful.
    – janos
    Dec 8, 2013 at 18:19
  • @evilotto You're partly right. But ls -U is not portable: it does different things in GNU and BSD systems. See my updated answer with a much better solution that's portable.
    – janos
    Aug 20, 2014 at 19:04
  • Alas, the find -quit option is not recognized on some Linux distros, such as Angstrom. I ended up having to write something like if [ -d "$target" ] && [ -z "$(ls -A "$target")" ]; then ...
    – Urhixidur
    Oct 2, 2014 at 20:35
  • 1
    It is sometimes useful to recall that rmdir will do no harm to a non-empty directory. So if the goal happens to be to remove a directory only if it is empty, then rmdir dir &>/dev/null may fill the bill, the exit status informing you whether it was empty (and is now gone) or not (and is still there).
    – Ron Burk
    May 9, 2016 at 17:59
  • 2
    @devstuff so basically you trade a pipe to a sub-shell. I would expect the pipe to be faster. For what it's worth, I completely rewrote my answer to make it cleaner, thanks for the extra push.
    – janos
    Jun 4, 2018 at 20:43
17

GNU find will let you do this

find . -maxdepth 0 -empty -exec echo {} is empty. \;

pretty quick and no pipes

2
  • My find on Solaris has no maxdepth option... how can I achieve the same?
    – dokaspar
    Nov 14, 2014 at 12:46
  • FYI, does not work on Ubuntu 16.04 server if the directory does not exist (returns error to terminal or exits script with standard "No such file or directory" error. Feb 4, 2019 at 18:14
6

Sorry, I don't have enough rep to answer Dominik's comment with a comment, so this is the best I can do...

My find on Solaris has no maxdepth option... how can I achieve the same? – Dominik Nov 14 at 12:46

I can't say for sure on earlier versions, but on Solaris 10 or better:

find . ! -name . -prune 
2
  • 2
    A simple bash snippet to do what you require: ``` #!/bin/bash if [ ! -d directory ] || [ $(ls -l directory | wc -l) -lt 2 ] then echo Folder was empty fi ```
    – oyelaking
    Oct 9, 2019 at 18:50
  • I would do: if [ ! -d directory ] || [ $(ls -A directory | wc -l) -eq 0 ] then echo Folder empty fi
    – Daenerys
    Oct 31, 2019 at 17:55

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