5

If I run this command:

sudo find . -name *.mp3

then I can get a listing of lots of mp3 files.

Now I want to do something with each mp3 file in a loop. For example, I could create a while loop, and inside assign the first file name to the variable file. Then I could do something with that file. Next I could assign the second file name to the variable file and do with that, etc.

How can I realize this using a linux shell command? Any help is appreciated, thanks!

3
  • 1
    All the solutions not involving -exec or xargs -0 are doomed to fall (and fail) under shell word splitting rules and/or reek of so-called “useless use of cat” issues.
    – jørgensen
    Feb 22, 2012 at 8:25
  • Excuse me, but why do not I see a word splitting problem in this, as you would say "doomed to fail", solution: echo -e 'hello.txt\nmy picture.jpg' | while read line; do echo reading line \"$line\"; done ?
    – dimir
    Feb 23, 2012 at 7:58
  • There are a variety of solutions explained on Unix & Linux Stack Exchange: unix.stackexchange.com/q/110402/62291 and unix.stackexchange.com/q/9496/62291
    – toxalot
    Mar 15, 2014 at 7:56

4 Answers 4

17

For this, use the read builtin:

sudo find . -name *.mp3 |
while read filename
do
    echo "$filename"    # ... or any other command using $filename
done

Provided that your filenames don't use the newline (\n) character, this should work fine.

3
  • 8
    You can use -print0 option for find and -d '' option for read to get around the \n issue. Also, use -r option for read so backslashes in the filename are not interpreted as escape sequences. Feb 22, 2012 at 15:15
  • 2
    Sorry but, why sudo? Apart from being useless, it is dangerous and may not work with user bound sound infrastructures (i.e. pulseaudio)
    – iMil
    Dec 15, 2014 at 9:08
  • 1
    @iMil: simply because it was given like that in the question. Dec 15, 2014 at 14:51
11

My favourites are

find . -name '*.mp3' -exec cmd {} \;

or

find . -name '*.mp3' -print0 | xargs -0 cmd

While Loop

As others have pointed out, you can frequently use a while read loop to read filenames line by line, it has the drawback of not allowing line-ends in filenames (who uses that?).

xargs vs. -exec cmd {} +

Summarizing the comments saying that -exec...+ is better, I prefer xargs because it is more versatile:

  • works with other commands than just find
  • allows 'batching' (grouping) in command lines, say xargs -n 10 (ten at a time)
  • allows parallellizing, say xargs -P4 (max 4 concurrent processes running at a time)
  • does privilige separation (such as in the OP's case, where he uses sudo find: using -exec would run all commands as the root user, whereas with xargs that isn't necessary:

    sudo find -name '*.mp3' -print0 | sudo xargs -0 require_root.sh
    sudo find -name '*.mp3' -print0 | xargs -0 nonroot.sh
    
  • in general, pipes are just more versatile (logging, sorting, remoting, caching, checking, parallelizing etc, you can do that)

6
  • {} + is better in relation to {} ;. {} ; is equivalent to xargs -n1. {} + can — like xargs, yes — pass in multiple files as arguments, but without having to spawn the extra xargs process, though on the counterside you don't get to change the symbol as you can with xargs -I. So there's that :)
    – jørgensen
    Feb 22, 2012 at 8:46
  • If using -exec, you should really place the {} inside double quotes in case the file name contains spaces or other special characters. Feb 22, 2012 at 9:34
  • @JoachimPileborg No: the (double) quotes never even reach find: the shell interprets them before that time. find -exec does the right thing anyway (it doesn't use the shell but something like execvp.
    – sehe
    Feb 22, 2012 at 9:36
  • Downvoting as no $file variable involved which was mentioned in the task.
    – dimir
    Feb 22, 2012 at 10:58
  • 1
    thx, -exec works perfect ,but i need a while loop to do with lots of codes :)
    – Searene
    Feb 23, 2012 at 8:13
2

How about using the -exec option to find?

find . -name '*.mp3' -exec mpg123 '{}' \;

That will call the command mpg123 for every file found, i.e. it will play all the files, in the order they are found.

-2
for file in $(sudo find . -name *.mp3);
do
    # do something with file
done
2
  • 1
    didn't downvote, but this works badly for filenames with special characters (like spaces)
    – sehe
    Feb 22, 2012 at 9:34
  • yes.. I usually use it with my files that never had special characters except underscores in the names.. Your solution is fool-proof. Thanks!
    – Mallik
    Feb 22, 2012 at 9:47

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