10

I have a directories that look like this

fool@brat:/mydir/ucsc_mm8> tar -xvf *.tar 
1/chr1.fa.masked
1/chr1_random.fa.masked
2/chr2.fa.masked
3/chr3.fa.masked
4/chr4.fa.masked
5/chr5.fa.masked
5/chr5_random.fa.masked
19/chr19.fa.masked
Un/chrUn_random.fa.masked

What I want to do is to move out all the "*.masked" files in the subdirectories /1 upto /Un. Is there a compact way to do it in Linux/Unix?

3 Answers 3

16

The typical way of moving files all files matching a particular expression is

mv 1/*.masked targetDir

where targetDir could be ..

If you want to move it from directories 1,2,3 then you can do something like

mv */*.masked targetDir

Or, if you want to specifically move it from numbered directories, you can just run something like

mv [0-9][0-9]/*.masked targetDir
1
  • The target directory of .. will move files one step above the current working directory. Not what the OP wants. They want to move it one step above with respect to the actual source files.
    – Amin Ya
    Oct 14, 2020 at 3:17
6
mv */*.masked .
5

Many unix shells support the * operator in the directory portion of the path as well. The following works in at least bash and zsh:

ls */*.masked

This will return all of the files that end in .masked one directory deeper.

So to move them:

mv */*.masked destination

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.