2175

How do I exclude a specific directory when searching for *.js files using find?

find . -name '*.js'
0

49 Answers 49

2688

If -prune doesn't work for you, this will:

find -name "*.js" -not -path "./directory/*"

Caveat: requires traversing all of the unwanted directories.

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  • 118
    One of the comments in the accepted answer points out the problem. -prune does not exclude the directory itself, it exclude its content, which means you are going to get an unwanted line in the output with the excluded directory.
    – GetFree
    Apr 1, 2013 at 8:20
  • 174
    Great answer. I'd add to this that you can exclude a directory at ANY level by changing the first . to *. so find -name "*.js" -not -path "*/omitme/*" would omit files from a directory named "omitme" at any level of depth.
    – DeeDee
    May 1, 2013 at 2:51
  • 109
    It still traverses all of the unwanted directory, though. I'm adding my own answer. :-) May 16, 2013 at 18:52
  • 27
    Note, however, that the prune option only doesn't work if you don't use -print explicitly. May 16, 2013 at 19:07
  • 42
    It would be better to say "This is an alternative to using -prune". The answers suggesting -prune are clearly not wrong, they just aren't the way you would do it.
    – Jimbo
    Aug 16, 2013 at 8:27
1762

Use the -prune primary. For example, if you want to exclude ./misc:

find . -path ./misc -prune -o -name '*.txt' -print

To exclude multiple directories, OR them between parentheses.

find . -type d \( -path ./dir1 -o -path ./dir2 -o -path ./dir3 \) -prune -o -name '*.txt' -print

And, to exclude directories with a specific name at any level, use the -name primary instead of -path.

find . -type d -name node_modules -prune -o -name '*.json' -print
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  • 28
    This didn't work for me until I prefixed my local path wih ./, e.g. ./.git. This distinction for find might not be obvious to the occasional find user.
    – sebkraemer
    Dec 17, 2021 at 9:56
  • 37
    Since this is the accepted answer, I feel it should be mentioned here that the reason -print must be added to the end is to prevent the default behavior, which is to also print the names of the pruned directories. @cycollins explains this well in another answer.
    – Thomas
    Jan 6, 2022 at 21:16
  • 15
    If u wanna skip the exclude dir in the result file lists, just add -false after -prune. like find . -path ./misc -prune -false -o -name '*.txt' -print Jun 4, 2022 at 13:13
  • 1
    why do we need to specify -o?
    – Kasra
    Dec 19, 2023 at 22:47
  • 2
    @Kasra it's the or operator, it acts as a join between two sets of files. So in the first command line, it joins an empty list (none of the files in ./misc) with all the files ending with .txt. Without the -o it would try to get all the files in ./misc ending with .txt and prune them (i.e. you'll get an empty list all the time)
    – Creak
    Jan 3 at 19:22
622

I find the following easier to reason about than other proposed solutions:

find build -not \( -path build/external -prune \) -name \*.js
# you can also exclude multiple paths
find build -not \( -path build/external -prune \) -not \( -path build/blog -prune \) -name \*.js

Important Note: the paths you type after -path must exactly match what find would print without the exclusion. If this sentence confuses you just make sure to use full paths through out the whole command like this: find /full/path/ -not \( -path /full/path/exclude/this -prune \) .... See note [1] if you'd like a better understanding.

Inside \( and \) is an expression that will match exactly build/external (see important note above), and will, on success, avoid traversing anything below. This is then grouped as a single expression with the escaped parenthesis, and prefixed with -not which will make find skip anything that was matched by that expression.

One might ask if adding -not will not make all other files hidden by -prune reappear, and the answer is no. The way -prune works is that anything that, once it is reached, the files below that directory are permanently ignored.

This comes from an actual use case, where I needed to call yui-compressor on some files generated by wintersmith, but leave out other files that need to be sent as-is.


Note [1]: If you want to exclude /tmp/foo/bar and you run find like this "find /tmp \(..." then you must specify -path /tmp/foo/bar. If on the other hand you run find like this cd /tmp; find . \(... then you must specify -path ./foo/bar.

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  • 55
    Outstanding answer, thank you. This works and is scalable (readable) for multiple exclusions. You are a gentlemen and a scholar sir. Thank you for the example for multiple exclusions Aug 16, 2013 at 16:38
  • 10
    This does not work if I want to use -delete switch: find . -not \( -path ./CVS -prune \) -type f -mtime +100 -delete find: The -delete action atomatically turns on -depth, but -prune does nothing when -depth is in effect. If you want to carry on anyway, just explicitly use the -depth option. Dec 14, 2013 at 9:12
  • 22
    @Janis You can use -exec rm -rf {} \; instead of -delete. Dec 15, 2013 at 21:14
  • 14
    By examining the output of find, this is obvious really, but it tripped me up. If you are searching in the current directory (by specifying . as the search path, or not specifying one at all), you most likely want your pattern after -path to start with ./, e.g: find -not \( -path ./.git -prune \) -type f.
    – Zantier
    Oct 9, 2014 at 10:10
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    A more precise (and POSIX compatible) variation of this method: find searchdir \! \( -type d \( -path './excludedir/*' -o -path './excludedir2/*' -o -path './excludedir3/*' \) -prune \) followed by any conditions that should match what you are looking for.
    – Walf
    May 26, 2017 at 4:17
288

There is clearly some confusion here as to what the preferred syntax for skipping a directory should be.

GNU Opinion

To ignore a directory and the files under it, use -prune

From the GNU find man page

Reasoning

-prune stops find from descending into a directory. Just specifying -not -path will still descend into the skipped directory, but -not -path will be false whenever find tests each file.

Issues with -prune

-prune does what it's intended to, but are still some things you have to take care of when using it.

  1. find prints the pruned directory.

    • TRUE That's intended behavior, it just doesn't descend into it. To avoid printing the directory altogether, use a syntax that logically omits it.
  2. -prune only works with -print and no other actions.

    • NOT TRUE. -prune works with any action except -delete. Why doesn't it work with delete? For -delete to work, find needs to traverse the directory in DFS order, since -deletewill first delete the leaves, then the parents of the leaves, etc... But for specifying -prune to make sense, find needs to hit a directory and stop descending it, which clearly makes no sense with -depth or -delete on.

Performance

I set up a simple test of the three top upvoted answers on this question (replaced -print with -exec bash -c 'echo $0' {} \; to show another action example). Results are below

----------------------------------------------
# of files/dirs in level one directories
.performance_test/prune_me     702702    
.performance_test/other        2         
----------------------------------------------

> find ".performance_test" -path ".performance_test/prune_me" -prune -o -exec bash -c 'echo "$0"' {} \;
.performance_test
.performance_test/other
.performance_test/other/foo
  [# of files] 3 [Runtime(ns)] 23513814

> find ".performance_test" -not \( -path ".performance_test/prune_me" -prune \) -exec bash -c 'echo "$0"' {} \;
.performance_test
.performance_test/other
.performance_test/other/foo
  [# of files] 3 [Runtime(ns)] 10670141

> find ".performance_test" -not -path ".performance_test/prune_me*" -exec bash -c 'echo "$0"' {} \;
.performance_test
.performance_test/other
.performance_test/other/foo
  [# of files] 3 [Runtime(ns)] 864843145

Conclusion

Both f10bit's syntax and Daniel C. Sobral's syntax took 10-25ms to run on average. GetFree's syntax, which doesn't use -prune, took 865ms. So, yes this is a rather extreme example, but if you care about run time and are doing anything remotely intensive you should use -prune.

Note Daniel C. Sobral's syntax performed the better of the two -prune syntaxes; but, I strongly suspect this is the result of some caching as switching the order in which the two ran resulted in the opposite result, while the non-prune version was always slowest.

Test Script

#!/bin/bash

dir='.performance_test'

setup() {
  mkdir "$dir" || exit 1
  mkdir -p "$dir/prune_me/a/b/c/d/e/f/g/h/i/j/k/l/m/n/o/p/q/r/s/t/u/w/x/y/z" \
    "$dir/other"

  find "$dir/prune_me" -depth -type d -exec mkdir '{}'/{A..Z} \;
  find "$dir/prune_me" -type d -exec touch '{}'/{1..1000} \;
  touch "$dir/other/foo"
}

cleanup() {
  rm -rf "$dir"
}

stats() {
  for file in "$dir"/*; do
    if [[ -d "$file" ]]; then
      count=$(find "$file" | wc -l)
      printf "%-30s %-10s\n" "$file" "$count"
    fi
  done
}

name1() {
  find "$dir" -path "$dir/prune_me" -prune -o -exec bash -c 'echo "$0"'  {} \;
}

name2() {
  find "$dir" -not \( -path "$dir/prune_me" -prune \) -exec bash -c 'echo "$0"' {} \;
}

name3() {
  find "$dir" -not -path "$dir/prune_me*" -exec bash -c 'echo "$0"' {} \;
}

printf "Setting up test files...\n\n"
setup
echo "----------------------------------------------"
echo "# of files/dirs in level one directories"
stats | sort -k 2 -n -r
echo "----------------------------------------------"

printf "\nRunning performance test...\n\n"

echo \> find \""$dir"\" -path \""$dir/prune_me"\" -prune -o -exec bash -c \'echo \"\$0\"\'  {} \\\;
name1
s=$(date +%s%N)
name1_num=$(name1 | wc -l)
e=$(date +%s%N)
name1_perf=$((e-s))
printf "  [# of files] $name1_num [Runtime(ns)] $name1_perf\n\n"

echo \> find \""$dir"\" -not \\\( -path \""$dir/prune_me"\" -prune \\\) -exec bash -c \'echo \"\$0\"\' {} \\\;
name2
s=$(date +%s%N)
name2_num=$(name2 | wc -l)
e=$(date +%s%N)
name2_perf=$((e-s))
printf "  [# of files] $name2_num [Runtime(ns)] $name2_perf\n\n"

echo \> find \""$dir"\" -not -path \""$dir/prune_me*"\" -exec bash -c \'echo \"\$0\"\' {} \\\;
name3
s=$(date +%s%N)
name3_num=$(name3 | wc -l)
e=$(date +%s%N)
name3_perf=$((e-s))
printf "  [# of files] $name3_num [Runtime(ns)] $name3_perf\n\n"

echo "Cleaning up test files..."
cleanup
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    Thank you for a very good analysis. Regarding "I strongly suspect this is the result of some caching" you can run this command: sudo sh -c "free && sync && echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches && free" to clear the cache (see unix.stackexchange.com/questions/87908/…).
    – ndemou
    Nov 19, 2014 at 9:40
  • After few tests on those two with -prune I can tell there is rarely any difference. Do keep in mind that which command start first will benefit from cpu performance, the later cpu warm up > performance drop cause minor slow down (I did purge cache before each command as @ndemou suggestion)
    – Aura
    Sep 28, 2017 at 17:35
  • Try switch number among name1() name2() name3() in @BroSlow test script above to change execute order to get a visual about what I said. In real life, it is unnoticeable between those two though.
    – Aura
    Sep 28, 2017 at 17:47
  • You should not be -o which means or. so you are pruning in the first step and then forgetting all about it in the next.
    – mjs
    Nov 30, 2019 at 15:12
  • This is the best answer, IMHO. The bash script is also super recommended to look at as a good design example. Just one question though, why do you use command date (and subtract the numbers it returns), instead of using time command? Jul 26, 2022 at 19:12
244

This is the only one that worked for me.

find / -name MyFile ! -path '*/Directory/*'

Searching for "MyFile" excluding "Directory". Give emphasis to the stars * .

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    This method works on macOS while the accepted answer doesn't. I know original question is for Linux. Oct 3, 2018 at 7:27
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    Note that you can add multiple ! -path '*/Directory/*' to your command in succession to ignore multiple directories
    – Aclwitt
    Oct 21, 2019 at 17:09
  • 1
    In a docker container only works with sh -c "find..." Jan 16, 2020 at 0:35
  • 3
    Worked great for me to locate native package.json files: find . -name package.json ! -path '*/node_modules/*' Mar 19, 2021 at 18:46
  • 1
    Nice and concise. Works on Ubuntu 20.0.4 LTS May 14, 2021 at 9:14
98

Tested in Linux Ubuntu 18.04, 20.04, and 22.04.

find is incredibly important and powerful, but it is so nuanced and confusing!

How do I exclude a specific directory when searching for *.js files using find?

Quick example: exclude all directories with a given prefix

This is a really useful example that doesn't answer the OP's question directly, but is even more useful in my opinion:

@Kamil Dziedzic asked in a comment below my answer (corrected for grammar and punctuation):

How can I ignore directories with a given prefix? For example, I would like to exclude directories starting with _.

Here is how:

# Ignore all directories (and their contents, via `-prune`) beginning with
# prefix "prefix" at the lowest level of the specified directory (`.`). 
find . -not \( -path "./prefix*" -type d -prune \) | sort -V

# Ignore all directories (and their contents, via `-prune`) beginning with
# prefix "prefix" at any level recursively within the specified directory.
find . -not \( -path "*/prefix*" -type d -prune \) | sort -V

So, for a directory prefix of _, use whichever of these you want:

find . -not \( -path "./_*" -type d -prune \) | sort -V
find . -not \( -path "*/_*" -type d -prune \) | sort -V

Explanation:

  1. . means "current directory"
  2. * is a find wildcard, matching any number of any character (like the regular expression .*)
  3. \( and \) are escaped parenthesis. They must be escaped with the backslash so that they get passed to find as parameters to find rather than getting processed by your shell interpreter itself (such as bash or sh or whatever shell you use)
  4. -not \( \) says to ignore files which match the conditions within those parenthesis.
  5. -path "./prefix*" says to match all paths which begin with ./prefix, meaning all paths which are at the lowest level of the . directory you specified in your find command. -path "*/prefix*" will match all paths which begin with anything, followed by /prefix, meaning any path beginning with prefix at any level within any dir in your search path.
  6. -type d says to only match directories. This gets "and"ed with the -path just specified, making it match only files which begin with your specified prefix and are of type "directory".
  7. -prune says to not traverse into matching directories. From man find: "if the file is a directory, do not descend into it." Therefore, without the -prune option, the directory ./prefixWhateverDir itself would be excluded, but files ./prefixWhateverDir/file1.c and ./prefixWhateverDir/file2.c within that directory would NOT be excluded (even ./prefixWhateverDir/prefixFile1.c and ./prefixWhateverDir/prefixFile2.c would not be excluded--also since they are not of -type d). Adding -prune avoids traversing into the excluded directory, thereby excluding files within that directory as well. This might seem weird, but keep in mind in Linux and Unix systems, directories are "files" too, just special types of files which can be a prefix in the path to other files is all. So, with that in mind, having to use -prune makes more sense.
  8. Piping to sort -V with | sort -V just sorts the output to be nice and alphabetical is all.

If you think that -not or -prune is required, but not both, that is incorrect. See the new section I just added below called "Addressing other comments" to see a detailed example of running the above commands with both -not and -prune, only -not, and only -prune. They are not the same thing.

Quick summary and answer to the OP's question:

This answers the OP's question directly.

Follow these patterns. See also my comment here. These are the best and most-effective patterns I have found, period. The escaped parenthesis (\( and \)) and the -prune option are very important for speed. Read below to find out why.

Best patterns to use:

Remove the -name '*.js' part of each command below, of course, if you are looking for a generic answer and not trying to solve the OP's original question, which involved also finding only files with extension .js in their name.

# Exclude one path, and its contents, saving time by *not* recursing down the
# excluded path at all.
find . -name '*.js' -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude" -prune \)

# Add the wildcard asterisk (`*`) to the end of the match pattern, as
# in "./dir_to_exclude*", to exclude all files & folders beginning with the
# name `./dir_to_exclude`. Prune to save time by *not* recursing down the
# excluded paths at all.
# - You can add the asterisk to the end of the pattern to apply this pattern to
#   all examples below as well, if desired.
# - This example pattern would exclude "./dir_to_exclude", "./dir_to_exclude1",
#   "./dir_to_exclude2", "./dir_to_exclude99", "./dir_to_exclude_some_long_name",
#   "./dir_to_exclude_another_long_name", etc., as well as exclude all **files**
#   beginning with this match pattern but not otherwise in an excluded dir.
find . -name '*.js' -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude*" -prune \)

# Exclude multiple paths and their contents, saving time by *not* recursing down
# the excluded paths at all.
find . -name '*.js' \
    -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude1" -prune \) \
    -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude2" -prune \) \
    -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude3" -prune \)


# If you change your "starting point" path from `.` to something else, be sure
# to update the beginning of your `-path` with that as well, like this:

find "some_dir" -name '*.js' -not \( -path "some_dir/dir_to_exclude" -prune \)

find "some_dir" -name '*.js' \
    -not \( -path "some_dir/dir_to_exclude1" -prune \) \
    -not \( -path "some_dir/dir_to_exclude2" -prune \) \
    -not \( -path "some_dir/dir_to_exclude3" -prune \)

The above patterns are the best because when the -prune option is on with escaped parenthesis as shown above, and when you specify the folder name like that (nothing after the folder name in this case), it excludes both the folder and its contents.

If you remove the parenthesis and the -prune option, -not -path "./dir_to_exclude" will undesirably exclude only the directory name, but not its contents. If you don't follow my recommended patterns above, you'd have to use -not -path "./dir_to_exclude" to exclude only the folder name, and -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" to exclude only the folder contents, and -not -path "./dir_to_exclude" -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" to exclude both.

Additionally, removing the parenthesis and -prune option from my examples above takes 2x~100x longer. That's a HUGE speed difference! Using the parenthesis and -prune option causes find to NOT recurse down the excluded directories, whereas find . -not -path "./dir_to_exclude" -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" would still waste vast amounts of time recursing down the excluded directory.

Discussion of nuances and rules of thumb

When using find:

  1. You must include either a wildcard (*) or the "starting point" path in the -path you are trying to match. Examples:

    1. Match exact paths relative to the "starting point" path by prefixing your -path to match with the "starting point" path:

      # 1. with the "starting point" being the current directory, `.`
      find . -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*"
      # or (same thing)
      find -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*"
      
      # 2. with the "starting point" being the root dir, `/`
      find / -not -path "/dir_to_exclude/*"
      
      # 3. with the "starting point" being "some_dir"
      find "some_dir" -not -path "some_dir/dir_to_exclude/*"
      

      Again, notice that in all -path matches above, you must explicitly prefix the path with the "starting point" path. Otherwise, you can use a wildcard:

    2. Match wildcard paths to find your -path at any level or sub-directory within your search path. ie: prefix your -path with *. Examples:

      # match "./dir_to_exclude/file1" as well as 
      #       "./another_dir/dir_to_exclude/file1"
      find . -not -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*"
      
      # match "/dir_to_exclude/file1" as well as 
      #       "/another_dir/dir_to_exclude/file1"
      find / -not -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*"
      
      # match "some_dir/dir_to_exclude/file1" as well as 
      #       "some_dir/another_dir/dir_to_exclude/file1"
      find "some_dir" -not -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*"
      

      Again, notice that in all -path matches above, I explictly prefixed the path with the * wildcard char to match at any level.

  2. Use -ipath to do case-insensitive path matches. From man find:

    -ipath pattern
           Like -path.  but the match is case insensitive.
    

    Examples:

    # exclude "./dir_to_exclude/*", as well as "./DIR_TO_EXCLUDE/*", and 
    # "./DiR_To_eXcluDe/*", etc.
    find . -not -ipath "./dir_to_exclude/*"
    
  3. When not using the escaped parenthesis and the -prune option, find will still recurse down the excluded paths, making it as slow as mud. ☹️

  4. When not using the escaped parenthesis and the -prune option, find . -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" excludes only the contents of the excluded dir, but NOT the excluded dir itself, and find . -not -path "./dir_to_exclude" excluded only the directory name itself, but NOT the contents (files and folders) within that directory! Use both to exclude both. Examples:

    # exclude the files and folders within the excluded dir, but
    # leaving "./dir_to_exclude" itself
    find . -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*"
    
    # exclude the dir name only, but leaving (NOT excluding) all files and
    # folders within that dir!
    find . -not -path "./dir_to_exclude"
    
    # exclude both the folder itself, as well as its contents
    find . \
        -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" \
        -not -path "./dir_to_exclude"
    
  5. All of the above examples in this "rules of thumb" section are pure garbage 🧻 and trash 🗑 ☹️. I'm kidding and exaggerating, but the point is: I think they are not nearly as good, for the reasons explained. You should wrap every single one of them with the escaped parenthesis and the -prune option, like this 😀:

    find .          -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    find            -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    find /          -not \( -path "/dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    find "some_dir" -not \( -path "some_dir/dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    
    find .          -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    find /          -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    find "some_dir" -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    
    find .          -not \( -ipath "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    
    find .          -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    find .          -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude" -prune \)
    find . \
        -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \) \
        -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude" -prune \)
    

    The -prune option is really important. Here is what it means, from man find (emphasis added):

    -prune True; if the file is a directory, do not descend into it. If -depth is given, then -prune has no effect. Because -delete implies -depth, you cannot usefully use -prune and -delete together.

    For example, to skip the directory src/emacs and all files and directories under it, and print the names of the other files found, do something like this:

    find . -path ./src/emacs -prune -o -print
    

The above content is my latest information as of 4 Sept. 2022. The below content is my older answer, which still has a ton of useful information, but doesn't cover the nuances as well as what I've presented above. Read it to gain more knowledge and see some more examples, applying what you learned above to what I present below.

Generic examples

Notice that the ./ (or */, see below) before and the /* (or *, but see the caveat below) after the folder name to exclude are required in order to exclude dir_to_exclude, and anything within it!

Also, for speed, and to not traverse excluded directories, notice the really important escaped grouping parenthesis and the -prune option. Ex: find -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \).

To see examples of these escaped grouping parenthesis in the manual pages, run man find, and then press / to search. Search for the pattern \(, for instance, using the regular expression pattern \\\(. Press Enter to begin searching the man pages. Press N for "next match" while searching.

Summary

These work:

# [my favorite #1] exclude contents of `dir_to_exclude` at the search root
find -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/*"

# exclude all files & folders beginning with the name `dir_to_exclude` at the
# search root   
find -not -path "./dir_to_exclude*"

# [my favorite #2] exclude contents of `dir_to_exclude` at any level within your
# search path
find -not -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*"

# exclude all files & folders beginning with the name `dir_to_exclude` at any
# level within your search path
find -not -path "*/dir_to_exclude*"

# To exclude multiple matching patterns, use `-not -path "*/matching pattern/*"`
# multiple times, like this
find -not -path "*/dir_to_exclude1/*" -not -path "*/dir_to_exclude2/*"

[USE THESE] These work too, and are BETTER because they cause find to NOT unnecessarily traverse down excluded paths!:
(This makes a huge difference in speed (is 2x~100x faster)! See here and here. You can also search the man find pages locally for the strings \( and \) with the escaped search strings \\\( and \\\), respectively).

find -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude" -prune \)  # works to exclude *both* the 
                                                 # directory *and* its contents
                                                 # here, here but does *not*
                                                 # exclude the contents as well
                                                 # when the directory name is
                                                 # written like this in the
                                                 # examples above
find -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude*" -prune \)
find -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
find -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude" -prune \)  # same note as just above
find -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude*" -prune \)
find -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)

# To exclude multiple matching patterns at once, use the `-not \( ... \)` 
# pattern multiple times, like this
find -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude1/*" -prune \) \
     -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude2/*" -prune \)

...but these do NOT work:

# These do NOT work!
find -not -path "dir_to_exclude"
find -not -path "dir_to_exclude/*"
find -not -path "./dir_to_exclude"
find -not -path "./dir_to_exclude/"

The key is that generally, to make it work, you must begin each matching pattern with either ./ or */, and end each matching pattern with either /* or *, depending on what you're trying to achieve. I say "generally", because there are two noted exceptions in the -not \( ... \)-style section above. You can identify these two exceptions by the comments to the right of them which say: # works here but not above.

Further Explanation:

  1. [BEST, depending on what you want] This WORKS! Exclude all files and folders inside dir_to_exclude at the root of where you are searching. Note that this excludes all subfiles and subfolders inside dir_to_exclude, but it does NOT exclude the dir_to_exclude dir itself.
    find -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    
  2. Also exclude the dir_to_exclude dir itself (and any file or folder with a name which begins with these characters). Caveat: this also excludes dir_to_exclude1, dir_to_exclude2, dir_to_exclude_anyTextHere, etc. It excludes ANY file or folder which merely begins with the text dir_to_exclude and is in the root directory of where you're searching.
    find -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude*" -prune \)
    
  3. [BEST, depending on what you want] to recursively exclude a dir by this name at any level in your search path. Simply add a wildcard * to the front of the path too, rather than using the . to indicate the search root directory.
    find -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \)
    
  4. Recursively exclude any file or folder with a name which begins with the characters dir_to_exclude at any level in your search path. (See also the caveat above).
    find -not \( -path "*/dir_to_exclude*" -prune \)
    

Summary:

In ./, the . at the beginning means "start in the current directory" (or in */, the * is a wildcard to pick up any characters up to this point), and in /* at the end, the * is a wildcard to pick up any characters in the path string after the / character. That means the following:

  1. "./dir_to_exclude/*" matches all subfiles and subfolders within dir_to_exclude in the root search directory (./), but does NOT match the directory itself.
  2. "./dir_to_exclude*" matches all files and folders within the root search directory (./), including dir_to_exclude, as well as all contents within it, but also with the caveat it will match any file or folder name beginning with the characters dir_to_exclude.
  3. "*/dir_to_exclude/*" matches all subfiles and subfolders within dir_to_exclude in any directory at any level in your search path (*/), but does NOT match the directory itself.
  4. "*/dir_to_exclude*" matches all files and folders at any level (*/) within your search path with a name which begins with dir_to_exclude.

Going further

From there, I like to pipe to grep to search for certain matching patterns in the paths of interest. Ex: search for any path that is NOT inside the dir_to_exclude directory, and which has desired_file_name.txt in it:

# Case-sensitive; notice I use `\.` instead of `.` when grepping, in order to
# search for the literal period (`.`) instead of the regular expression
# wildcard char, which is also a period (`.`).
find -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \) \
    | grep "desired_file_name\.txt"

# Case-INsensitive (use `-i` with your `grep` search)
find -not \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \) \
    | grep -i "desired_file_name\.txt"

# To make `dir_to_exclude` also case INsensitive, use the `find` `-ipath` option
# instead of `-path`:
find -not -ipath \( -path "./dir_to_exclude/*" -prune \) \
    | grep -i "desired_file_name\.txt"

To exclude multiple matching patterns, simply use -not \( -path "*/matching pattern/*" -prune \) multiple times. Ex:

# Exclude all ".git" and "..git" dirs at any level in your search path
find -not \( -path "*/.git/*" -prune \) -not \( -path "*/..git/*" -prune \)

I use the above example as part of my sublf alias here (update: that alias is being expanded and moved into a sublf.sh script in this folder here instead). This alias allows me to use the fzf fuzzy finder to quickly search for and open multiple files in Sublime Text. See the links above for the latest version of it.

alias sublf='FILES_SELECTED="$(find -not \( -path "*/.git/*" -prune \) \
-not \( -path "*/..git/*" -prune \) \
| fzf -m)" \
&& echo "Opening these files in Sublime Text:" \
&& echo "$FILES_SELECTED" \
&& subl $(echo "$FILES_SELECTED")'

Addressing other comments

1. Both -prune and -not are required to get the desired effect

Comment from @Ritin (fixed for formatting/wording):

@Gabriel Staples, both -not and -prune are not required. use either -prune or -not: find . \( -path '*frontend*' -o -path '*/\.*' -o -path "*node_modules*" \) -prune -o -type f |sort -V

My response:

@Ritin, that's incorrect. To get the effect I want, both -not and -prune are required. This is exactly what I'm talking about when I said at the beginning of my answer:

find is incredibly important and powerful, but it is so nuanced and confusing!

Run the following examples in my eRCaGuy_hello_world/cpp/ folder to see the difference:

  1. both -not and -prune:

    Command and output:

    eRCaGuy_hello_world/cpp$ find . -not \( -path "./template*" -type d -prune \) | sort -V | grep -i '\./template'
    ./template_non_type_template_params_print_int_TODO.cpp
    

    As you can see, this command leaves only the one file: ./template_non_type_template_params_print_int_TODO.cpp. It strips all directories which begin with ./template in their path, as well as all contents (files and folders) within them. That's the effect I want.

  2. -not only:

    Command and output:

    eRCaGuy_hello_world/cpp$ find . -not \( -path "./template*" -type d \) | sort -V | grep -i '\./template'
    ./template_function_sized_array_param/print_array_calls_by_array_size.ods
    ./template_function_sized_array_param/readme.md
    ./template_function_sized_array_param/regular_func
    ./template_function_sized_array_param/regular_func.cpp
    ./template_function_sized_array_param/template_func
    ./template_function_sized_array_param/template_func.cpp
    ./template_non_type_template_params_print_int_TODO.cpp
    ./template_practice/explicit_template_specialization.cpp
    ./template_practice/research/Buckys C++ Programming Tutorials - 61 - Template Specializations - YouTube.desktop
    ./template_practice/research/Link to explicit (full) template specialization - cppreference.com%%%%%+.desktop
    ./template_practice/research/Link to template c++ - Google Search%%%%%.desktop
    ./template_practice/research/Link to template specialization - Google Search [videos]%%%%%.desktop
    ./template_practice/research/Link to template specialization - Google Search%%%%%.desktop
    ./template_practice/research/Template (C++) - Wikipedia.desktop
    ./template_practice/research/Template (C++) - Wikipedia.pdf
    ./template_practice/research/Template (C++) - Wikipedia_GS_edit.pdf
    ./template_practice/research/partial template specialization - cppreference.com.desktop
    ./template_practice/research/(7) Template Specialization In C++ - YouTube.desktop
    ./template_practice/run_explicit_template_specialization.sh
    

    As you can see, this command strips out the two folders beginning with ./template, namely: ./template_function_sized_array_param and ./template_practice. It still recurses into those directories, however, leaving all of the contents (files and folders) within those directories. The file ./template_non_type_template_params_print_int_TODO.cpp is also present, as before.

  3. -prune only:

    Command and output:

    eRCaGuy_hello_world/cpp$ find . \( -path "./template*" -type d -prune \) | sort -V | grep -i '\./template'
    ./template_function_sized_array_param
    ./template_practice
    

    As you can see, this command only finds the ./template_function_sized_array_param and ./template_practice folders themselves, but the -prune option says to not recurse down into those directories, so it finds none of their contents (files and folders) within them. It also erroneously strips out the ./template_non_type_template_params_print_int_TODO.cpp file, which I don't want. Using -prune only appears to be the exact opposite of using -not only.

Using both -not and -prune together produces the effect I want.

References:

  1. [the main answer to this question] How do I exclude a directory when using `find`?
  2. https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/350085/is-it-possible-to-exclude-a-directory-from-the-find-command/350172#350172
  3. https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/32155/find-command-how-to-ignore-case/32158#32158

See also:

  1. My answer: Unix & Linux: All about finding, filtering, and sorting with find, based on file size
  2. [I still need to study and read this] https://www.baeldung.com/linux/find-exclude-paths
  3. [my answer] How to store the output of find (a multi-line string list of files) into a bash array
16
  • Doesn't work on mac
    – holms
    Nov 24, 2021 at 16:27
  • @holms, I don't have a Mac, but the MacOs manual for find shows that -not and -path are both supported, so any idea why it's not working, or how to make it work on Mac? Nov 24, 2021 at 16:38
  • 1
    The situation where I encountered it was when piping file names to tar. With the dir_to_exclude still in the output, even if there are no files, the dir and its contents get compressed and added to the archive nonetheless. I agree with your concerns, but there are cases when you have to exclude the directory as well or the desired action fails.
    – emk2203
    Jan 3, 2022 at 21:12
  • 1
    @KamilDziedzic, it took some effort for me to figure out, but the answer is: find . -not \( -path "./_*" -type d -prune \) | sort -V or find . -not \( -path "*/_*" -type d -prune \) | sort -V, depending on what you want to do. See the top of my answer. I just added an entire section dedicated just to you. Jan 3, 2023 at 18:12
  • 1
    @Gabriel Staples, must have missed your desired effect. Great explanation though. Thanks.
    – Ritin
    Jan 5, 2023 at 15:05
81

One option would be to exclude all results that contain the directory name with grep. For example:

find . -name '*.js' | grep -v excludeddir
17
  • 72
    This will make your search very slow
    – Dorian
    Feb 19, 2013 at 12:01
  • 7
    This one worked for me, others (which use -prune) - doesn't.
    – Andron
    Mar 28, 2013 at 11:03
  • 7
    Slow in large results, but useful in smaller sets. But how to exclude multiple directories using grep? Of course this way: find . -name '*.js' | grep -v excludeddir | grep -v excludedir2 | grep -v excludedir3 but there may be some one grep way. May 1, 2013 at 9:47
  • 8
    If you want to perform multiple greps then you would be better off writing it as regular expressions: egrep -v '(dir1|dir2|dir3)'. However, in this specific case study, it would be better to exclude directories within find itself.
    – Laurence
    Nov 10, 2014 at 9:58
  • 1
    yes, and you don't need parentheses and it would be better to use ^ to ensure it matches directoryname at the start of the string eg: find . -name '*.js' | egrep -v "^\./excludeddir1|^\./excludeddir2"
    – Sofija
    Sep 3, 2015 at 11:14
49

I prefer the -not notation ... it's more readable:

find . -name '*.js' -and -not -path directory
8
  • 6
    Sorry, it doesn't work. The man page for find says: "To ignore a directory and the files under it, use -prune". Aug 25, 2012 at 20:25
  • 11
    This is wrong. It doesn't prevent find from entering the directory and traversing all the files inside.
    – GetFree
    Apr 1, 2013 at 1:37
  • find . -iname '*' -and -not -path './somePath' doesn't prevent it from entering said directory.
    – Lemmings19
    May 30, 2013 at 0:00
  • This helped me with .git path find . -iname '*' -not -path './.git/*' Sep 27, 2013 at 20:01
  • 11
    @rane: More specifically find . -not -path "*/.git*" would be what you want.
    – Jess
    Nov 28, 2013 at 17:50
39

Use the -prune option. So, something like:

find . -type d -name proc -prune -o -name '*.js'

The '-type d -name proc -prune' only look for directories named proc to exclude.
The '-o' is an 'OR' operator.

3
  • 4
    This is the only pure-"find" solution that worked for me. The directories I wished to exclude are NOT immediately below the current working directory.
    – Lambart
    Apr 15, 2013 at 23:06
  • 10
    However, adding -print to the end may improve results. find . -type d -name .hg -prune -o -name data ignored the contents of the (multiple) .hg directories, but listed the .hg directories themselves. With -print, it only listed the "data" directories I was seeking.
    – Lambart
    Nov 4, 2013 at 19:39
  • yeah, significantly better explained than the accepted answer. and it works. Here's a flavor that finds markdowns, except those under /node_modules/ : find . -name node_modules -prune -o -name '*.md' Nothing wrong with wanting to add extra stuff like -print, but at least lets have something basic that works first.
    – JL Peyret
    Jun 18, 2020 at 19:14
26

-prune definitely works and is the best answer because it prevents descending into the dir that you want to exclude. -not -path which still searches the excluded dir, it just doesn't print the result, which could be an issue if the excluded dir is mounted network volume or you don't permissions.

The tricky part is that find is very particular about the order of the arguments, so if you don't get them just right, your command may not work. The order of arguments is generally as such:

find {path} {options} {action}

{path}: Put all the path related arguments first, like . -path './dir1' -prune -o

{options}: I have the most success when putting -name, -iname, etc as the last option in this group. E.g. -type f -iname '*.js'

{action}: You'll want to add -print when using -prune

Here's a working example:

# setup test
mkdir dir1 dir2 dir3
touch dir1/file.txt; touch dir1/file.js
touch dir2/file.txt; touch dir2/file.js
touch dir3/file.txt; touch dir3/file.js

# search for *.js, exclude dir1
find . -path './dir1' -prune -o -type f -iname '*.js' -print

# search for *.js, exclude dir1 and dir2
find . \( -path './dir1' -o -path './dir2' \) -prune -o -type f -iname '*.js' -print
1
  • +1 on this. Consider these statements: find / -type f -not \( -path "/proc" -prune \) -not \( -path "/proc/*" -prune \) -print | more and find / -not \( -path "/proc" -prune \) -not \( -path "/proc/*" -prune \) -type f -print | more. The output is different simply when `-type f' is moved from front to back. The second form has the correct result : the folders are eliminated before it checks for files. In the first form, it looks for files first, and filenames don't match the path filter. (Ubuntu 20)
    – TonyG
    Aug 31, 2022 at 16:03
20

There are plenty of good answers, it just took me some time to understand what each element of the command was for and the logic behind it.

find . -path ./misc -prune -o -name '*.txt' -print

find will start finding files and directories in the current directory, hence the find ..

The -o option stands for a logical OR and separates the two parts of the command :

[ -path ./misc -prune ] OR [ -name '*.txt' -print ]

Any directory or file that is not the ./misc directory will not pass the first test -path ./misc. But they will be tested against the second expression. If their name corresponds to the pattern *.txt they get printed, because of the -print option.

When find reaches the ./misc directory, this directory only satisfies the first expression. So the -prune option will be applied to it. It tells the find command to not explore that directory. So any file or directory in ./misc will not even be explored by find, will not be tested against the second part of the expression and will not be printed.

1
  • 5
    Everyone's got a solution but yours explained it the best. I was adamant to have -name be used first rather than -path. Your explanation was adequate to arrive at what I wanted. find . -name "*.txt" -print -o -path ./misc -prune
    – Vendetta V
    Apr 24, 2020 at 17:27
18

This is the format I used to exclude some paths:

$ find ./ -type f -name "pattern" ! -path "excluded path" ! -path "excluded path"

I used this to find all files not in ".*" paths:

$ find ./ -type f -name "*" ! -path "./.*" ! -path "./*/.*"
1
  • 2
    I tried this and it still descends into the directories, so speed is definitely not improved.
    – Br.Bill
    Aug 29, 2018 at 18:37
16

The -path -prune approach also works with wildcards in the path. Here is a find statement that will find the directories for a git server serving multiple git repositiories leaving out the git internal directories:

find . -type d \
   -not \( -path */objects -prune \) \
   -not \( -path */branches -prune \) \
   -not \( -path */refs -prune \) \
   -not \( -path */logs -prune \) \
   -not \( -path */.git -prune \) \
   -not \( -path */info -prune \) \
   -not \( -path */hooks -prune \)  
15

a good trick for avoiding printing the pruned directories is to use -print (works for -exec as well) after the right side of the -or after -prune. For example, ...

find . -path "*/.*" -prune -or -iname "*.j2"

will print the path of all files beneath the current directory with the `.j2" extension, skipping all hidden directories. Neat. But it will also print the print the full path of each directory one is skipping, as noted above. However, the following does not, ...

find . -path "*/.*" -prune -or -iname "*.j2" -print

because logically there's a hidden -and after the -iname operator and before the -print. This binds it to the right part of the -or clause due to boolean order of operations and associativity. But the docs say there's a hidden -print if it (or any of its cousins ... -print0, etc) is not specified. So why isn't the left part of the -or printing? Apparently (and I didn't understand this from my first reading the man page), that is true if there there is no -print -or -exec ANYWHERE, in which case, -print is logically sprinkled around such that everything gets printed. If even ONE print-style operation is expressed in any clause, all those hidden logical ones go away and you get only what you specify. Now frankly, I might have preferred it the other way around, but then a find with only descriptive operators would apparently do nothing, so I guess it makes sense as it is. As mentioned above, this all works with -exec as well, so the following gives a full ls -la listing for each file with the desired extension, but not listing the first level of each hidden directory, ...

find . -path "*/.*" -prune -or -iname "*.j2" -exec ls -la -- {} +

For me (and others on this thread), find syntax gets pretty baroque pretty quickly, so I always throw in parens to make SURE I know what binds to what, so I usually create a macro for type-ability and form all such statements as ...

find . \( \( ... description of stuff to avoid ... \) -prune \) -or \
\( ... description of stuff I want to find ... [ -exec or -print] \)

It's hard to go wrong by setting up the world into two parts this way. I hope this helps, though it seems unlikely for anyone to read down to the 30+th answer and vote it up, but one can hope. :-)

14

If you are looking for a high-performance answer, then it is:

find . -type d -name node_modules -prune -false -o -type f

Use -false to exclude node_modules itself.

It will be 3x faster than -not -path approach in a directory with 10000 files in node_modules.

find . -type f -not -path '*node_modules*'

And if node_modules has more files, you shall get a much higher performance.

4
  • (shoot me now), is there a way to exclude from the exclusion? i.e. skip all hidden folders */.* except */.vscode?
    – Frank N
    Jun 29, 2022 at 7:34
  • @FrankNocke try something like find . \( -type d -name '.?*' ! -name '.vscode' \) -prune -false -o -name '*.json' Jul 1, 2022 at 5:59
  • Wow. this is a wonderful use of -prune!
    – alxndr
    Aug 23, 2022 at 18:37
  • 1
    I think this is the best solution but it would be better to explain why it works so well. The part -prune -false -o is probably the hardest part to understand. It basically say that when the path mathes, do action -prune, then evaluate the current status as -false (which logically prevents showing the directory that triggered the prune action). For everything else (-o = "or"), do the rest of the command, namely check if the type is file and then do implicit action -print because no action has been defined here. 2 days ago
12

To exclude multiple directories:

find . -name '*.js' -not \( -path "./dir1" -o -path "./dir2/*" \)

To add directories, add -o -path "./dirname/*":

find . -name '*.js' -not \( -path "./dir1" -o -path "./dir2/*" -o -path "./dir3/*"\)

But maybe you should use a regular expression, if there are many directories to exclude.

12

If anyone's researching on how to ignore multiple paths at once. You can use bash arrays (works perfectly on GNU bash, version 4.4.20(1)-release)

#!/usr/bin/env bash

# This script helps ignore unnecessary dir paths while using the find command

EXCLUDE_DIRS=(
    "! -path /*.git/*"
    "! -path /*go/*"
    "! -path /*.bundle/*"
    "! -path /*.cache/*"
    "! -path /*.local/*"
    "! -path /*.themes/*"
    "! -path /*.config/*"
    "! -path /*.codeintel/*"
    "! -path /*python2.7/*"
    "! -path /*python3.6/*"
    "! -path /*__pycache__/*"
)
find $HOME -type f ${EXCLUDE_DIRS[@]}

# if you like fzf

find $HOME -type f ${EXCLUDE_DIRS[@]} | fzf --height 40% --reverse

Also for some reason, you won't be able to ignore /bin/ directory paths.

3
  • I love that this works without using -prune!
    – alec
    Aug 19, 2021 at 20:22
  • For __pycache__ to be ignored (in any nested directory as well as all it's contents) I needed to replace /*__pycache__/* with ./*__pycache__/*.
    – ideasman42
    Oct 17, 2021 at 23:15
  • What also works is to store the arguments of excluded dirs without the quotes in a file, one for each line, and then call it with find $HOME -type f $(< ~/excludelist). File has first line with ! -path /*.git/*, second line with ! -path /*.mozilla/* and so forth.
    – emk2203
    Oct 19, 2021 at 9:20
8

For a working solution (tested on Ubuntu 12.04 (Precise Pangolin))...

find ! -path "dir1" -iname "*.mp3"

will search for MP3 files in the current folder and subfolders except in dir1 subfolder.

Use:

find ! -path "dir1" ! -path "dir2" -iname "*.mp3"

...to exclude dir1 AND dir2

1
  • Doesn't work for me. Neither do any of the above answers. RedHat.
    – Chozang
    Jan 14, 2020 at 19:45
7
find -name '*.js' -not -path './node_modules/*' -not -path './vendor/*'

seems to work the same as

find -name '*.js' -not \( -path './node_modules/*' -o -path './vendor/*' \)

and is easier to remember IMO.

7
find . \( -path '.**/.git' -o -path '.**/.hg' \) -prune -o -name '*.js' -print

The example above finds all *.js files under the current directory, excluding folders .git and .hg, does not matter how deep these .git and .hg folders are.

Note: this also works:

find . \( -path '.*/.git' -o -path '.*/.hg' \) -prune -o -name '*.js' -print

but I prefer the ** notation for consistency with some other tools which would be off topic here.

6

TLDR: understand your root directories and tailor your search from there, using the -path <excluded_path> -prune -o option. Do not include a trailing / at the end of the excluded path.

Example:

find / -path /mnt -prune -o -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -print


To effectively use the find I believe that it is imperative to have a good understanding of your file system directory structure. On my home computer I have multi-TB hard drives, with about half of that content backed up using rsnapshot (i.e., rsync). Although backing up to to a physically independent (duplicate) drive, it is mounted under my system root (/) directory: /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups/:

/mnt/Backups/
└── rsnapshot_backups/
    ├── hourly.0/
    ├── hourly.1/
    ├── ...
    ├── daily.0/
    ├── daily.1/
    ├── ...
    ├── weekly.0/
    ├── weekly.1/
    ├── ...
    ├── monthly.0/
    ├── monthly.1/
    └── ...

The /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups/ directory currently occupies ~2.9 TB, with ~60M files and folders; simply traversing those contents takes time:

## As sudo (#), to avoid numerous "Permission denied" warnings:

time find /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups | wc -l
60314138    ## 60.3M files, folders
34:07.30    ## 34 min

time du /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups -d 0
3112240160  /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups    ## 3.1 TB
33:51.88    ## 34 min

time rsnapshot du    ## << more accurate re: rsnapshot footprint
2.9T    /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups/hourly.0/
4.1G    /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups/hourly.1/
...
4.7G    /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups/weekly.3/
2.9T    total    ## 2.9 TB, per sudo rsnapshot du (more accurate)
2:34:54          ## 2 hr 35 min

Thus, anytime I need to search for a file on my / (root) partition, I need to deal with (avoid if possible) traversing my backups partition.


EXAMPLES

Among the approached variously suggested in this thread (How to exclude a directory in find . command), I find that searches using the accepted answer are much faster -- with caveats.

Solution 1

Let's say I want to find the system file libname-server-2.a, but I do not want to search through my rsnapshot backups. To quickly find a system file, use the exclude path /mnt (i.e., use /mnt, not /mnt/, or /mnt/Backups, or ...):

## As sudo (#), to avoid numerous "Permission denied" warnings:

time find / -path /mnt -prune -o -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -print
/usr/lib/libname-server-2.a
real    0m8.644s              ## 8.6 sec  <<< NOTE!
user    0m1.669s
 sys    0m2.466s

## As regular user (victoria); I also use an alternate timing mechanism, as
## here I am using 2>/dev/null to suppress "Permission denied" warnings:

$ START="$(date +"%s")" && find 2>/dev/null / -path /mnt -prune -o \
    -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -print; END="$(date +"%s")"; \
    TIME="$((END - START))"; printf 'find command took %s sec\n' "$TIME"
/usr/lib/libname-server-2.a
find command took 3 sec     ## ~3 sec  <<< NOTE!

... finds that file in just a few seconds, while this take much longer (appearing to recurse through all of the "excluded" directories):

## As sudo (#), to avoid numerous "Permission denied" warnings:

time find / -path /mnt/ -prune -o -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -print
find: warning: -path /mnt/ will not match anything because it ends with /.
/usr/lib/libname-server-2.a
real    33m10.658s            ## 33 min 11 sec (~231-663x slower!)
user    1m43.142s
 sys    2m22.666s

## As regular user (victoria); I also use an alternate timing mechanism, as
## here I am using 2>/dev/null to suppress "Permission denied" warnings:

$ START="$(date +"%s")" && find 2>/dev/null / -path /mnt/ -prune -o \
    -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -print; END="$(date +"%s")"; \
    TIME="$((END - START))"; printf 'find command took %s sec\n' "$TIME"
/usr/lib/libname-server-2.a
find command took 1775 sec    ## 29.6 min

Solution 2

The other solution offered in this thread (SO#4210042) also performs poorly:

## As sudo (#), to avoid numerous "Permission denied" warnings:

time find / -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -not -path "/mnt"
/usr/lib/libname-server-2.a
real    33m37.911s            ## 33 min 38 sec (~235x slower)
user    1m45.134s
 sys    2m31.846s

time find / -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -not -path "/mnt/*"
/usr/lib/libname-server-2.a
real    33m11.208s            ## 33 min 11 sec
user    1m22.185s
 sys    2m29.962s

SUMMARY | CONCLUSIONS

Use the approach illustrated in "Solution 1"

find / -path /mnt -prune -o -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -print

i.e.

... -path <excluded_path> -prune -o ...

noting that whenever you add the trailing / to the excluded path, the find command then recursively enters (all those) /mnt/* directories -- which in my case, because of the /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups/* subdirectories, additionally includes ~2.9 TB of files to search! By not appending a trailing / the search should complete almost immediately (within seconds).

"Solution 2" (... -not -path <exclude path> ...) likewise appears to recursively search through the excluded directories -- not returning excluded matches, but unnecessarily consuming that search time.


Searching within those rsnapshot backups:

To find a file in one of my hourly/daily/weekly/monthly rsnapshot backups):

$ START="$(date +"%s")" && find 2>/dev/null /mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups/daily.0 -name '*04t8ugijrlkj.jpg'; END="$(date +"%s")"; TIME="$((END - START))"; printf 'find command took %s sec\n' "$TIME"
/mnt/Backups/rsnapshot_backups/daily.0/snapshot_root/mnt/Vancouver/temp/04t8ugijrlkj.jpg
find command took 312 sec   ## 5.2 minutes: despite apparent rsnapshot size
                            ## (~4 GB), it is in fact searching through ~2.9 TB)

Excluding a nested directory:

Here, I want to exclude a nested directory, e.g. /mnt/Vancouver/projects/ie/claws/data/* when searching from /mnt/Vancouver/projects/:

$ time find . -iname '*test_file*'
./ie/claws/data/test_file
./ie/claws/test_file
0:01.97

$ time find . -path '*/data' -prune -o -iname '*test_file*' -print
./ie/claws/test_file
0:00.07

Aside: Adding -print at the end of the command suppresses the printout of the excluded directory:

$ find / -path /mnt -prune -o -name "*libname-server-2.a*"
/mnt
/usr/lib/libname-server-2.a

$ find / -path /mnt -prune -o -name "*libname-server-2.a*" -print
/usr/lib/libname-server-2.a
3
  • It's not the size of the files that slows find, it's the number of directory entries it must examine. So it's much worse if you have many, many small files (especially if they are all multiply linked!) than if you just have a handful of multi-gigabyte files. Oct 2, 2018 at 9:44
  • @TobySpeight: good point. I mentioned the search space size to indicate scale, which also contains many files. A quick search of root (/) with sudo ls -R / | wc -l indicates ~76.5M files (most of which are backed up except "non-config" system files); /mnt/Vancouver/ with ls -R | wc -l indicates ~2.35M files; /home/victoria/ contains 0.668M files. Oct 2, 2018 at 15:51
  • None of the examples here works for me to actually NOT descend into a directory with "-prune" (I am trying to avoid searching under ~/Library): ``` find . -not ( -path ./Library/ -prune ) -name IMG_3968* ./Pictures/2021/TX/Galveston/IMG_3968.jpeg find: ./Library/Application Support/com.expressvpn.ExpressVPN/data: Permission denied find: ./Library/Saved Application State/com.installbuilder.appinstaller.savedState: Permission denied ./tmp/wd/Heroes/2021-01-25/IMG_3968.jpeg ``` As you see, it actually goes quite deeply into ./Library.
    – Vlad K.
    Jul 25, 2022 at 18:36
6

You can also use regular expressions to include / exclude some files /dirs your search using something like this:

find . -regextype posix-egrep -regex ".*\.(js|vue|s?css|php|html|json)$" -and -not -regex ".*/(node_modules|vendor)/.*" 

This will only give you all js, vue, css, etc files but excluding all files in the node_modules and vendor folders.

5

None of previous answers is good on Ubuntu. Try this:

find . ! -path "*/test/*" -type f -name "*.js" ! -name "*-min-*" ! -name "*console*"

I have found this here

2
  • I don't see any reason why any of the answers with more than 100 points shouldn't work on Ubuntu. Sep 2, 2015 at 0:10
  • find is everywhere the same implementation on all Linux distributions — the one from the GNU Project. The only difference might be the versions. But the changes in the past decade were not that invasive, except maybe for permission matching. Apr 3, 2020 at 9:21
5

You can use the prune option to achieve this. As in for example:

find ./ -path ./beta/* -prune -o -iname example.com -print

Or the inverse grep “grep -v” option:

find -iname example.com | grep -v beta

You can find detailed instructions and examples in Linux find command exclude directories from searching.

6
  • The grep solution is the only one that excludes all directories by the same name. When trying to exclude "node_modules" that is quite useful. May 8, 2017 at 3:40
  • 3
    @bmacnaughton - not true! I came here specifically looking to exclude "node_modules" and after reading many fine answers I settled on find . -type f -print -o -path "*/node_modules" -prune ... using the wildcard this skips "node_modules" at any level; using -print on the first alternative -type f -print makes only that part print, so the "node_modules" directories themselves are not listed. (it can also be reversed: find . -path "*/node_modules" -prune -o -type f -print)
    – Stephen P
    Feb 22, 2018 at 20:34
  • what is */ doing there. What is the exact file you want to exclude.Are ypu using it as wildcard?
    – Siju V
    Feb 23, 2018 at 0:37
  • 1
    @StephenP, thanks for pointing this out; I learned the difference between using ./node_modules and */node_modules from it. For my case, where node_modules only exists in the the directory I start the search in (and under that node_modules directory), I can use find . -type f -print -o -path "./node_modules" -prune because there won't be a node_modules directory under any other directory. Feb 25, 2018 at 15:31
  • 1
    @SijuV - in the directory where I was searching there was a node_modules subdirectory, but there were also subdirectories that had their own node_modules ... using ./node_modules matches only the subdirectory node_modules under the current directory . and prunes it; using */node_modules matches and prunes the directory at any depth, because the * as a glob matches any leading path prefix, such as ./test5/main/node_modules, not only the ./ prefix. The * is a wildcard, but as a glob not as a regex.
    – Stephen P
    Feb 26, 2018 at 17:53
5
find . -name '*.js' -\! -name 'glob-for-excluded-dir' -prune
2
  • 1
    Can't get this one to work. find ~/Projects -name '*.js' -\! -name 'node_modules' -prune is still turning up files with node_modules in their path
    – mpen
    May 2, 2017 at 16:17
  • 3
    @mpen , From stackoverflow.com/questions/4210042/…, I learned that the syntax you want is find ~/Projects -path ~/Projects/node_modules -prune -o -name '*.js' -print. The name of that path must match exactly what find would print if it were going to print the directory.
    – PatS
    Aug 5, 2019 at 18:00
5

The following commands works:

find . -path ./.git -prune -o -print

If You have a problem with find, use the -D tree option to view the expression analysis information.

find -D tree . -path ./.git -prune -o -print

Or the -D all, to see all the execution information.

find -D all . -path ./.git -prune -o -print
4

This is suitable for me on a Mac:

find . -name *.php -or -path "./vendor" -prune -or -path "./app/cache" -prune

It will exclude vendor and app/cache dir for search name which suffixed with php.

1
  • Better put single quotes around '*.php' or you're not going to find what you're looking for.
    – Br.Bill
    Aug 29, 2018 at 18:42
3

I was using find to provide a list of files for xgettext, and wanted to omit a specific directory and its contents. I tried many permutations of -path combined with -prune but was unable to fully exclude the directory which I wanted gone.

Although I was able to ignore the contents of the directory which I wanted ignored, find then returned the directory itself as one of the results, which caused xgettext to crash as a result (doesn't accept directories; only files).

My solution was to simply use grep -v to skip the directory that I didn't want in the results:

find /project/directory -iname '*.php' -or -iname '*.phtml' | grep -iv '/some/directory' | xargs xgettext

Whether or not there is an argument for find that will work 100%, I cannot say for certain. Using grep was a quick and easy solution after some headache.

3

For those of you on older versions of UNIX who cannot use -path or -not

Tested on SunOS 5.10 bash 3.2 and SunOS 5.11 bash 4.4

find . -type f -name "*" -o -type d -name "*excluded_directory*" -prune -type f
1
  • Could pass more than the specified directory. Mar 23, 2018 at 9:44
3

You can also use

find  -type f -not -name .directoryname -printf "%f\n"

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