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I have started learning powershell a couple of days ago, and I couldn't find anything on google that does what I need so please bear with my question.

I have been asked to replace some text strings into multiple files. I do not necessarily know the extension of the possible target files and I don't know their location either. So far I have managed to recursively browse into the directory (get-ChildItem -recurse) and find the string I was looking for with get-content and select-string:

Get-ChildItem -recurse | Get-Content | Select-String -pattern "dummy"

The problem is, I can see the occurences of the text I am looking for, but I don't know how to tell PS to return the path and the name for every matching files as well.

How can I get the name and location of the files that contains the expression I am looking for?

0

12 Answers 12

742

This should give the location of the files that contain your pattern:

Get-ChildItem -Recurse | Select-String "dummy" -List | Select Path
15
  • 3
    What if you want to also MOVE those files?... I'm getting an error with this where I can't join a | Move-Item to the end of that.
    – rud3y
    Commented Sep 5, 2012 at 12:57
  • 6
    Move-Item doesn't have name parameter. Try adding | %{Move-Item $_.name <destination>}
    – jon Z
    Commented Sep 5, 2012 at 16:48
  • 57
    Get-ChildItem -Recurse | Select-String "dummy" -List | Select Path returns only the first match for each file so may be a little more efficient and avoids the need to group them
    – ben
    Commented Apr 16, 2015 at 15:27
  • 18
    it's worth noticing that you can filter for only a certain file type, say txt files, if you use Get-ChildItem -Recurse -Filter *.txt instead
    – Girardi
    Commented Apr 20, 2018 at 15:47
  • 2
    @rud3y I highly suggest you write it out in a script using a foreach loop if you're doing large operations like that. It becomes very convoluted when you try to do all of that on one line and it is very easy to make a large mistake. I speak from experience Commented Sep 6, 2018 at 15:44
109

There are a variety of accurate answers here, but here is the most concise code for several different variations. For each variation, the top line shows the full syntax and the bottom shows terse syntax.

Item (2) is a more concise form of the answers from Jon Z and manojlds, while item (1) is equivalent to the answers from vikas368 and buygrush.

  1. List FileInfo objects for all files containing pattern:

    Get-ChildItem -Recurse filespec | Where-Object { Select-String pattern $_ -Quiet }
    ls -r filespec | ? { sls pattern $_ -q }
    
  2. List file names for all files containing pattern:

    Get-ChildItem -Recurse filespec | Select-String pattern | Select-Object -Unique Path
    ls -r filespec | sls pattern | select -u Path
    
  3. List FileInfo objects for all files not containing pattern:

    Get-ChildItem -Recurse filespec | Where-Object { !(Select-String pattern $_ -Quiet) }
    ls -r filespec | ? { !(sls pattern $_ -q) }
    
  4. List file names for all files not containing pattern:

    (Get-ChildItem -Recurse filespec | Where-Object { !(Select-String pattern $_ -Quiet) }).FullName
    (ls -r filespec | ? { !(sls pattern $_ -q) }).FullName
    
4
  • 1
    Also, if you are just looking for Files that contain the pattern anywhere, you can give up after finding the first instance by using the -List parameter of Select-String
    – KyleMit
    Commented Apr 17, 2015 at 13:54
  • 2
    I wish the OP had asked a slight variation of the question so that this would be the AA. #1 was very useful and it's obvious that @Michael Sorens groks PS!
    – cBlaine
    Commented Jul 22, 2015 at 20:53
  • Great answer. What is filespec?
    – joseville
    Commented Jul 22 at 16:03
  • 1
    @joseville filespec is typically a glob expression like *.txt or example.*, etc. Commented Jul 23 at 22:41
45

This is how I would do it, you don't need get-content:

ls -r | Select-String dummy | select line,path

or

ls -r | Select-String dummy | fl *

To see what the different properties are...

This is faster. The second argument is -filter:

ls -r . *.bat | select-string netsh

ls -r -path . -filter *.bat | select-string netsh

Weirdly, I've found the select-string pattern matches against directory names as well.

3
  • 3
    +1, This works perfectly for my case, however use select Pattern, LineNumber, Filename for more concise output. Line returns EVERYTHING on the line containing your pattern string. You can also easily output this to a csv if you'd wish.
    – Protonova
    Commented Jul 7, 2017 at 16:51
  • 3
    This should be the selected answer. It was about 4-5 times faster in my case. That makes a big difference when you have to repeat the command 600 times over many files.
    – sfarbota
    Commented Aug 29, 2020 at 18:32
  • 1
    select Path, LineNumber, Line is more concise. Pattern is redundant since you already know what it is
    – 9 Guy
    Commented May 27, 2022 at 16:50
27

This will display the path, filename and the content line it found that matched the pattern.

Get-ChildItem -Path d:\applications\*config -recurse |  Select-String -Pattern "dummy" 
1
  • 1
    If only a line could be added between results :)
    – cladelpino
    Commented Mar 13, 2019 at 20:29
19

Pipe the content of your

Get-ChildItem -recurse | Get-Content | Select-String -pattern "dummy"

to fl *

You will see that the path is already being returned as a property of the objects.

IF you want just the path, use select path or select -unique path to remove duplicates:

Get-ChildItem -recurse | Get-Content | Select-String -pattern "dummy" | select -unique path
3
  • 2
    Thanks to you both, this is exactly what I am looking for. Unfortunately, when there are many subdirectories involved in the path, then PS cuts the absolute path and adds three dots at the end of the line like \dir1\dir2\dir3\path... so I don't know which file is returned. Is there a way to tell PS to be less greedy on characters and bother showing up the full path ? :) Thanks a lot !
    – Bluz
    Commented Nov 18, 2011 at 12:07
  • 3
    You need to add the -File switch to Get-ChildItem or you end up with a never ending cascade of errors from trying to call Get-Content on directories.
    – RubberDuck
    Commented Feb 9, 2016 at 13:58
  • 1
    If you need the full path you can do this (Get-ChildItem -recurse | Get-Content | Select-String -pattern "dummy").FullName People seem to forget PowerShell is object oriented; when in doubt, look for a property Commented Sep 6, 2018 at 16:51
14

I modified one of the answers above to give me a bit more information. This spared me a second query later on. It was something like this:

Get-ChildItem `
        -Path "C:\data\path" -Filter "Example*.dat" -recurse | `
    Select-String -pattern "dummy" | `
    Select-Object -Property Path,LineNumber,Line | `
    Export-CSV "C:\ResultFile.csv"

I can specify the path and file wildcards with this structures, and it saves the filename, line number and relevant line to an output file.

1
  • 1
    Cool! Thanks for this additional solution :) However, could you please link to the answer that you based your solution on and name the author of that answer to give credit? Thanks! Commented Mar 28, 2019 at 0:54
10

With PowerShell, go to the path where your files are and then type this command and replace ENTER THE STRING YOU SEARCH HERE (but keep the double quotes):

findstr /S /I /M /C:"ENTER THE STRING YOU SEARCH HERE" *.*

Have a nice day 🙂

9
Get-ChildItem -r | ? {$_.psiscontainer -eq $false} | ? {gc $_.pspath |select-string -pattern "dummy"}

This will give you the full details of all files

1
  • Totally didn't know that -r worked. Figured you had to always do -Recurse Commented Sep 6, 2018 at 17:03
6

To keep the complete file details in resulting array you could use a slight modification of the answer posted by vikas368 (which didn't seem to work well with the ISE autocomplete):

Get-ChildItem -Recurse | Where-Object { $_ | Select-String -Pattern "dummy" }

or in short:

ls -r | ?{ $_ | Select-String -Pattern "dummy" }
5

If you search into one directory, you can do it:

select-string -Path "c:\temp\*.*" -Pattern "result"  -List | select Path
4

This will display a list of the full path to each file that contains the search string:

foreach ($file in Get-ChildItem | Select-String -pattern "dummy" | Select-Object -Unique path) {$file.path}

Note that it doesn't display a header above the results and doesn't display the lines of text containing the search string. All it tells you is where you can find the files that contain the string.

1
  • 2
    Any idea how to display line number where the pattern was find, together with file name?
    – Piotr L
    Commented May 4, 2016 at 7:26
-1

This Scrit worked to find a specific file in a 3 000 000

Param
(

     #Define o parametro do ano a eliminar "2020"
     $DateDel = '2019',
     
     #Define o parametro do registro do ficheiro "_800" ou "_800sm" ou "_200"
     $ResFile1 = '_200',
     $ResFile2 = '_800',
     $ResFile3 = '_800sm',

     #Define o parametro da terminacao do ficheiro "_800.jpg" ou "_800sm.jpg" ou "_200.jpg"
     $TypeFile = '.jpg',
     
     #Define o parametro de onde se localizado ficheiro "C:\users\Luis.Cunha\Desktop\LuisCunha\TarefaScript\TesteFinal\TesteScript1"
     $HomePath = 'C:\Users\Luis.Cunha\Desktop\LuisCunha\TarefaScript'   
)

 #Inicia transcriçao de toda informação para o ficheiro .log indicado
 Start-Transcript -Path $HomePath\CountDelItems.log -NoClobber -Append

 Get-ChildItem $HomePath -Recurse -File | Measure-Object | %{$_.Count}

 #o Get vai buscar o ficheiro com a data e a terminacao definidas no $homepath e $tipofich atraves do caminho indicado no $path
 #depois confirma os valores que foram removidos com o verbose
Get-Childitem -Path $HomePath -Recurse -force | Where-Object { !$_.PSIsContainer -and $_.name -like "????$DateDel*$ResFile1$TypeFile" } | Measure-Object | %{$_.Count}
    
 #Get-Childitem -Path $HomePath -Recurse -force | Where-Object { !$_.PSIsContainer -and $_.name -like "????$DateDel*$ResFile1$TypeFile" } | Remove-Item -Verbose -Force 

 Get-ChildItem $HomePath -Recurse -File | Measure-Object | %{$_.Count}


 #Termina transcrição
 Stop-Transcript 
1
  • This doesn't address the question, which is asking to retrieve the paths of files with matching contents, not the count of files with matching names as this is doing. Commented Sep 29, 2022 at 4:15

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