Linux command find
with argument exec
does a GREAT job executing commands on files/folders regardless whether they contain spaces and special characters. For example:
find . -type f -exec md5sum {} \;
Works great to run md5sum
on each file in a directory tree, but executes in a random order. Find does not sort the results, and requires piping to sort
to get results in a more human-readable ordering. However, piping to sort
eliminates the benefits of exec
.
This does not work:
find . -type f | sort | md5sum
Because some filenames contain spaces and special characters.
Also does not work:
find . -type f | sort | sed 's/ /\\ /g' | md5sum
Still does not recognize spaces are part of the filename.
I suppose I can always sort the final result later, but wonder if someone knows an easy way to avoid that extra step by sorting within find
?
md5sum
, reading from stdin, doesn't expect a list of filenames, but a single stream to be hashed.find
? BSD find can do internal sorting; GNU find cannot (but the GNU toolchain is powerful enough to offer other approaches).find . -type f | sort | xargs -d $'\n' md5sum
would work. I hesitate to make that an answer, because having known bugs (in this case, the literal-newline case) isn't good practice -- even if a bug represents an obscure corner case, sometimes an attacker can make a security hole of such a corner-case.