9

I'm trying to remove all thumbs.db files in a Windows partition using find command in Ubuntu:

find . -iname "*.db"|while read junk;do rm -rfv $junk;done

But it's not working for me and nothing happens! I think I found the problem, the white spaces in directory names!

I did this trick to remove my junk files before on previous version of Ubuntu but now on latest version of Ubuntu I can't.

Is there any bug in my command?

3
  • does find . -iname "*.db" return anything?
    – Mat
    Jun 5, 2011 at 9:24
  • This question really belongs on superuser.com
    – johnsyweb
    Jun 5, 2011 at 12:23
  • @mat: yes it returns path of founded Thumbs.db files. But I think I found the problem, the white spaces in directory names! Jun 7, 2011 at 7:36

5 Answers 5

39

I'd do it this way:

find . -iname 'thumbs.db' -exec rm -rfv {} +

This way, it still works even if your directories contain whitespace in their names.

2
  • Thanks Chris, I think my problem also was white space in directories names. Jun 7, 2011 at 7:46
  • In Windows Thumbs.db is with a capital T: find . -iname 'Thumbs.db' -exec rm -rfv {} + also useful: find . -iname 'desktop.ini' -exec rm -rfv {} +
    – rubo77
    Sep 4, 2019 at 9:56
35

just to throw this out there

find . -name "*.pyc" -delete
2
  • 2
    One day i will win this contest of highest up-voted answer ;) Sep 25, 2014 at 22:07
  • This is nice for directories with spaces in them. find . -type d \( -name bin -o -name target \) -delete
    – MIS
    Mar 15, 2022 at 0:34
7

I'm not sure why you're using while.

find . -iname 'thumbs.db' -exec rm -rfv {} \;

...should suffice (and only delete the files you want to, not any BDB files that may be laying around).

1

The code looks good and works on arch and debian. Maybe there are no files matching "*.db"?

As a sidenote: I might not be a good idea to delete all files with the suffix ".db", because you can accidently delete other files than "Thumbs.db"

0

First check if the first part of your command, that is:

find . -iname "*.db"

is returning anything.

If it does then you can use xargs as follows to accomplish your task:

find . -iname "*.db" | xargs rm -rfv

UPDATE: From comments, this is unsafe, specially if there are spaces in directory/file names. You will need to use -print0 / xargs -0 to make it safe.

4
  • 4
    that's dangerous if files or directories have spaces in them. you'll need the -print0/xargs -0 combination to make it safe (or use the -exec method)
    – Mat
    Jun 5, 2011 at 9:40
  • 1
    @Mat: For mine and other learning sake can you please write here what is unsafe about it? Thanks. Jun 5, 2011 at 10:13
  • 2
    Try this in an empty directory: mkdir -p "a/b c" ; touch b ; touch c ; find . -iname 'b*' | xargs -n 1 echo. You'll see c printed out in its own line. If you replace echo with an rm variant, it will remove the file called c when you asked for -iname 'b*'.
    – Mat
    Jun 5, 2011 at 10:19
  • @Mat: Thanks a lot for this note, I think this is an important notice about this command to prevent deleting wrong files. Jun 13, 2011 at 4:43

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