14

I try to replace many files at once with sed using * as filename. However it tries to process directories too, and gives error and terminates. Is there a simple way to overcome this?

2 Answers 2

14

I'm not sure exactly how you're using sed here but the normal way to process only regular files in UNIX is with the find command, something like:

find . -type f -exec sed 's/Hello/Goodbye/g' {} ';'

The type restricts you to regular files, not directories or FIFOs or any other sort of filesystem magic.

If you run man find on your system, you will see a plethora of other options you can use.

2
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    I'm still pretty new to linux/unix shell commands, why is it that when I run this it spams my screen with the contents of many files but never changes anything? Aug 10, 2017 at 15:33
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    @TheUnholy, that's correct. The intent of this answer was to show how to use find to process files and not directories. The 'payload' of the find command (which is a simple sed command in this case) can be modified to suit your needs.
    – paxdiablo
    Aug 10, 2017 at 20:57
0

To springboard on paxdiablo's answer, I cobbled this alias together, and added it to my bash aliases as 'recursive sed': rsed :

rsed() {
  [[ -z $2 ]] && echo "usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} oldtext newtext" && return
  command find . -type f -exec sed -i "s/${1}/${2}/g" {} \;
}

Result:

> cat test/file
Hello how are you?
> rsed "Hello how are you?" "Fine thanks"
> cat test/file
Fine thanks

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