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FIND(1)			  BSD General Commands Manual		       FIND(1)

NAME
     find -- walk a file hierarchy

SYNOPSIS
     find [-H |	-L | -P] [-EXdsx] [-f path] path ... [expression]
     find [-H |	-L | -P] [-EXdsx] -f path [path	...] [expression]

DESCRIPTION
     The find utility recursively descends the directory tree for each path
     listed, evaluating	an expression (composed	of the "primaries" and
     "operands"	listed below) in terms of each file in the tree.

     The options are as	follows:

     -E	     Interpret regular expressions followed by -regex and -iregex pri-
	     maries as extended	(modern) regular expressions rather than basic
	     regular expressions (BRE's).  The re_format(7) manual page	fully
	     describes both formats.

     -H	     Cause the file information	and file type (see stat(2)) returned
	     for each symbolic link specified on the command line to be	those
	     of	the file referenced by the link, not the link itself.  If the
	     referenced	file does not exist, the file information and type
	     will be for the link itself.  File	information of all symbolic
	     links not on the command line is that of the link itself.

     -L	     Cause the file information	and file type (see stat(2)) returned
	     for each symbolic link to be those	of the file referenced by the
	     link, not the link	itself.	 If the	referenced file	does not ex-
	     ist, the file information and type	will be	for the	link itself.

	     This option is equivalent to the deprecated -follow primary.

     -P	     Cause the file information	and file type (see stat(2)) returned
	     for each symbolic link to be those	of the link itself.  This is
	     the default.

     -X	     Permit find to be safely used in conjunction with xargs(1).  If a
	     file name contains	any of the delimiting characters used by
	     xargs(1), a diagnostic message is displayed on standard error,
	     and the file is skipped.  The delimiting characters include sin-
	     gle (" ' ") and double (" " ") quotes, backslash ("\"), space,
	     tab and newline characters.

	     However, you may wish to consider the -print0 primary in conjunc-
	     tion with "xargs -0" as an	effective alternative.

     -d	     Cause find	to perform a depth-first traversal.

	     This option is a BSD-specific equivalent of the -depth primary
	     specified by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 ("POSIX.1").  Refer to its de-
	     scription under PRIMARIES for more	information.

     -s	     Cause find	to traverse the	file hierarchies in lexicographical
	     order, i.e., alphabetical order within each directory.  Note:
	     `find -s' and `find | sort' may give different results.

     -x	     Prevent find from descending into directories that	have a device
	     number different than that	of the file from which the descent be-
	     gan.

	     This option is equivalent to the deprecated -xdev primary.

PRIMARIES
     All primaries which take a	numeric	argument allow the number to be	pre-
     ceded by a	plus sign ("+")	or a minus sign	("-").	A preceding plus sign
     means "more than n", a preceding minus sign means "less than n" and nei-
     ther means	"exactly n".

     -Bmin n
	     True if the difference between the	time of	a file's inode cre-
	     ation and the time	find was started, rounded up to	the next full
	     minute, is	n minutes.

     -Bnewer file
	     Same as -newerBm.

     -Btime n[smhdw]
	     If	no units are specified,	this primary evaluates to true if the
	     difference	between	the time of a file's inode creation and	the
	     time find was started, rounded up to the next full	24-hour	pe-
	     riod, is n	24-hour	periods.

	     If	units are specified, this primary evaluates to true if the
	     difference	between	the time of a file's inode creation and	the
	     time find was started is exactly n	units.	Please refer to	the
	     -atime primary description	for information	on supported time
	     units.

     -acl    May be used in conjunction	with other primaries to	locate files
	     with extended ACLs.  See acl(3) for more information.

     -amin n
	     True if the difference between the	file last access time and the
	     time find was started, rounded up to the next full	minute,	is n
	     minutes.

     -anewer file
	     Same as -neweram.

     -atime n[smhdw]
	     If	no units are specified,	this primary evaluates to true if the
	     difference	between	the file last access time and the time find
	     was started, rounded up to	the next full 24-hour period, is n
	     24-hour periods.

	     If	units are specified, this primary evaluates to true if the
	     difference	between	the file last access time and the time find
	     was started is exactly n units.  Possible time units are as fol-
	     lows:

	     s	     second
	     m	     minute (60	seconds)
	     h	     hour (60 minutes)
	     d	     day (24 hours)
	     w	     week (7 days)

	     Any number	of units may be	combined in one	-atime argument, for
	     example, "-atime -1h30m".	Units are probably only	useful when
	     used in conjunction with the + or - modifier.

     -cmin n
	     True if the difference between the	time of	last change of file
	     status information	and the	time find was started, rounded up to
	     the next full minute, is n	minutes.

     -cnewer file
	     Same as -newercm.

     -ctime n[smhdw]
	     If	no units are specified,	this primary evaluates to true if the
	     difference	between	the time of last change	of file	status infor-
	     mation and	the time find was started, rounded up to the next full
	     24-hour period, is	n 24-hour periods.

	     If	units are specified, this primary evaluates to true if the
	     difference	between	the time of last change	of file	status infor-
	     mation and	the time find was started is exactly n units.  Please
	     refer to the -atime primary description for information on	sup-
	     ported time units.

     -d	     Non-portable, BSD-specific	version	of depth.  GNU find implements
	     this as a primary in mistaken emulation of	FreeBSD	find.

     -delete
	     Delete found files	and/or directories.  Always returns true.
	     This executes from	the current working directory as find recurses
	     down the tree.  It	will not attempt to delete a filename with a
	     "/" character in its pathname relative to "." for security	rea-
	     sons.  Depth-first	traversal processing is	implied	by this	op-
	     tion.  Following symlinks is incompatible with this option.

     -depth  Always true; same as the non-portable -d option.  Cause find to
	     perform a depth-first traversal, i.e., directories	are visited in
	     post-order	and all	entries	in a directory will be acted on	before
	     the directory itself.  By default,	find visits directories	in
	     pre-order,	i.e., before their contents.  Note, the	default	is not
	     a breadth-first traversal.

	     The -depth	primary	can be useful when find	is used	with cpio(1)
	     to	process	files that are contained in directories	with unusual
	     permissions.  It ensures that you have write permission while you
	     are placing files in a directory, then sets the directory's per-
	     missions as the last thing.

     -depth n
	     True if the depth of the file relative to the starting point of
	     the traversal is n.

     -empty  True if the current file or directory is empty.

     -exec utility [argument ...] ;
	     True if the program named utility returns a zero value as its
	     exit status.  Optional arguments may be passed to the utility.
	     The expression must be terminated by a semicolon (";").  If you
	     invoke find from a	shell you may need to quote the	semicolon if
	     the shell would otherwise treat it	as a control operator.	If the
	     string "{}" appears anywhere in the utility name or the arguments
	     it	is replaced by the pathname of the current file.  Utility will
	     be	executed from the directory from which find was	executed.
	     Utility and arguments are not subject to the further expansion of
	     shell patterns and	constructs.

     -exec utility [argument ...] {} +
	     Same as -exec, except that	"{}" is	replaced with as many path-
	     names as possible for each	invocation of utility.	This behaviour
	     is	similar	to that	of xargs(1).

     -execdir utility [argument	...] ;
	     The -execdir primary is identical to the -exec primary with the
	     exception that utility will be executed from the directory	that
	     holds the current file.  The filename substituted for the string
	     "{}" is not qualified.

     -execdir utility [argument	...] {}	+
	     Same as -execdir, except that "{}"	is replaced with as many path-
	     names as possible for each	invocation of utility.	This behaviour
	     is	similar	to that	of xargs(1).

     -flags [-|+]flags,notflags
	     The flags are specified using symbolic names (see chflags(1)).
	     Those with	the "no" prefix	(except	"nodump") are said to be
	     notflags.	Flags in flags are checked to be set, and flags	in
	     notflags are checked to be	not set.  Note that this is different
	     from -perm, which only allows the user to specify mode bits that
	     are set.

	     If	flags are preceded by a	dash ("-"), this primary evaluates to
	     true if at	least all of the bits in flags and none	of the bits in
	     notflags are set in the file's flags bits.	 If flags are preceded
	     by	a plus ("+"), this primary evaluates to	true if	any of the
	     bits in flags is set in the file's	flags bits, or any of the bits
	     in	notflags is not	set in the file's flags	bits.  Otherwise, this
	     primary evaluates to true if the bits in flags exactly match the
	     file's flags bits,	and none of the	flags bits match those of
	     notflags.

     -fstype type
	     True if the file is contained in a	file system of type type.  The
	     lsvfs(1) command can be used to find out the types	of file	sys-
	     tems that are available on	the system.  In	addition, there	are
	     two pseudo-types, "local" and "rdonly".  The former matches any
	     file system physically mounted on the system where	the find is
	     being executed and	the latter matches any file system which is
	     mounted read-only.

     -gid gname
	     The same thing as -group gname for	compatibility with GNU find.
	     GNU find imposes a	restriction that gname is numeric, while find
	     does not.

     -group gname
	     True if the file belongs to the group gname.  If gname is numeric
	     and there is no such group	name, then gname is treated as a group
	     ID.

     -ignore_readdir_race
	     Ignore errors because a file or a directory is deleted after
	     reading the name from a directory.	 This option does not affect
	     errors occurring on starting points.

     -ilname pattern
	     Like -lname, but the match	is case	insensitive.  This is a	GNU
	     find extension.

     -iname pattern
	     Like -name, but the match is case insensitive.

     -inum n
	     True if the file has inode	number n.

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

     -iregex pattern
	     Like -regex, but the match	is case	insensitive.

     -iwholename pattern
	     The same thing as -ipath, for GNU find compatibility.

     -links n
	     True if the file has n links.

     -lname pattern
	     Like -name, but the contents of the symbolic link are matched in-
	     stead of the file name.  Note that	this only matches broken sym-
	     bolic links if symbolic links are being followed.	This is	a GNU
	     find extension.

     -ls     This primary always evaluates to true.  The following information
	     for the current file is written to	standard output: its inode
	     number, size in 512-byte blocks, file permissions,	number of hard
	     links, owner, group, size in bytes, last modification time, and
	     pathname.	If the file is a block or character special file, the
	     major and minor numbers will be displayed instead of the size in
	     bytes.  If	the file is a symbolic link, the pathname of the
	     linked-to file will be displayed preceded by "->".	 The format is
	     identical to that produced	by "ls -dgils".

     -maxdepth n
	     Always true; descend at most n directory levels below the command
	     line arguments.  If any -maxdepth primary is specified, it	ap-
	     plies to the entire expression even if it would not normally be
	     evaluated.	 "-maxdepth 0" limits the whole	search to the command
	     line arguments.

     -mindepth n
	     Always true; do not apply any tests or actions at levels less
	     than n.  If any -mindepth primary is specified, it	applies	to the
	     entire expression even if it would	not normally be	evaluated.
	     "-mindepth	1" processes all but the command line arguments.

     -mmin n
	     True if the difference between the	file last modification time
	     and the time find was started, rounded up to the next full
	     minute, is	n minutes.

     -mnewer file
	     Same as -newer.

     -mount  The same thing as -xdev, for GNU find compatibility.

     -mtime n[smhdw]
	     If	no units are specified,	this primary evaluates to true if the
	     difference	between	the file last modification time	and the	time
	     find was started, rounded up to the next full 24-hour period, is
	     n 24-hour periods.

	     If	units are specified, this primary evaluates to true if the
	     difference	between	the file last modification time	and the	time
	     find was started is exactly n units.  Please refer	to the -atime
	     primary description for information on supported time units.

     -name pattern
	     True if the last component	of the pathname	being examined matches
	     pattern.  Special shell pattern matching characters ("[", "]",
	     "*", and "?") may be used as part of pattern.  These characters
	     may be matched explicitly by escaping them	with a backslash
	     ("\").

     -newer file
	     True if the current file has a more recent	last modification time
	     than file.

     -newerXY file
	     True if the current file has a more recent	last access time
	     (X=a), inode creation time	(X=B), change time (X=c), or modifica-
	     tion time (X=m) than the last access time (Y=a), inode creation
	     time (Y=B), change	time (Y=c), or modification time (Y=m) of
	     file.  In addition, if Y=t, then file is instead interpreted as a
	     direct date specification of the form understood by cvs(1).  Note
	     that -newermm is equivalent to -newer.

     -nogroup
	     True if the file belongs to an unknown group.

     -noignore_readdir_race
	     Turn off the effect of -ignore_readdir_race.  This	is default be-
	     haviour.

     -noleaf
	     This option is for	GNU find compatibility.	 In GNU	find it	dis-
	     ables an optimization not relevant	to find, so it is ignored.

     -nouser
	     True if the file belongs to an unknown user.

     -ok utility [argument ...]	;
	     The -ok primary is	identical to the -exec primary with the	excep-
	     tion that find requests user affirmation for the execution	of the
	     utility by	printing a message to the terminal and reading a re-
	     sponse.  If the response is not affirmative (`y' in the "POSIX"
	     locale), the command is not executed and the value	of the -ok ex-
	     pression is false.

     -okdir utility [argument ...] ;
	     The -okdir	primary	is identical to	the -execdir primary with the
	     same exception as described for the -ok primary.

     -path pattern
	     True if the pathname being	examined matches pattern.  Special
	     shell pattern matching characters ("[", "]", "*", and "?")	may be
	     used as part of pattern.  These characters	may be matched explic-
	     itly by escaping them with	a backslash ("\").  Slashes ("/") are
	     treated as	normal characters and do not have to be	matched	ex-
	     plicitly.

     -perm [-|+]mode
	     The mode may be either symbolic (see chmod(1)) or an octal	num-
	     ber.  If the mode is symbolic, a starting value of	zero is	as-
	     sumed and the mode	sets or	clears permissions without regard to
	     the process' file mode creation mask.  If the mode	is octal, only
	     bits 07777	(S_ISUID | S_ISGID | S_ISTXT | S_IRWXU | S_IRWXG |
	     S_IRWXO) of the file's mode bits participate in the comparison.
	     If	the mode is preceded by	a dash ("-"), this primary evaluates
	     to	true if	at least all of	the bits in the	mode are set in	the
	     file's mode bits.	If the mode is preceded	by a plus ("+"), this
	     primary evaluates to true if any of the bits in the mode are set
	     in	the file's mode	bits.  Otherwise, this primary evaluates to
	     true if the bits in the mode exactly match	the file's mode	bits.
	     Note, the first character of a symbolic mode may not be a dash
	     ("-").

     -print  This primary always evaluates to true.  It	prints the pathname of
	     the current file to standard output.  If none of -exec, -ls,
	     -print0, or -ok is	specified, the given expression	shall be ef-
	     fectively replaced	by ( given expression )	-print.

     -print0
	     This primary always evaluates to true.  It	prints the pathname of
	     the current file to standard output, followed by an ASCII NUL
	     character (character code 0).

     -prune  This primary always evaluates to true.  It	causes find to not de-
	     scend into	the current file.  Note, the -prune primary has	no ef-
	     fect if the -d option was specified.

     -quit   Causes find to immediately	terminate.

     -regex pattern
	     True if the whole path of the file	matches	pattern	using regular
	     expression.  To match a file named	"./foo/xyzzy", you can use the
	     regular expression	".*/[xyz]*" or ".*/foo/.*", but	not "xyzzy" or
	     "/foo/".

     -samefile name
	     True if the file is a hard	link to	name.  If the command option
	     -L	is specified, it is also true if the file is a symbolic	link
	     and points	to name.

     -size n[ckMGTP]
	     True if the file's	size, rounded up, in 512-byte blocks is	n.  If
	     n is followed by a	c, then	the primary is true if the file's size
	     is	n bytes	(characters).  Similarly if n is followed by a scale
	     indicator then the	file's size is compared	to n scaled as:

	     k	     kilobytes (1024 bytes)
	     M	     megabytes (1024 kilobytes)
	     G	     gigabytes (1024 megabytes)
	     T	     terabytes (1024 gigabytes)
	     P	     petabytes (1024 terabytes)

     -type t
	     True if the file is of the	specified type.	 Possible file types
	     are as follows:

	     b	     block special
	     c	     character special
	     d	     directory
	     f	     regular file
	     l	     symbolic link
	     p	     FIFO
	     s	     socket

     -uid uname
	     The same thing as -user uname for compatibility with GNU find.
	     GNU find imposes a	restriction that uname is numeric, while find
	     does not.

     -user uname
	     True if the file belongs to the user uname.  If uname is numeric
	     and there is no such user name, then uname	is treated as a	user
	     ID.

     -wholename	pattern
	     The same thing as -path, for GNU find compatibility.

OPERATORS
     The primaries may be combined using the following operators.  The opera-
     tors are listed in	order of decreasing precedence.

     ( expression )
	     This evaluates to true if the parenthesized expression evaluates
	     to	true.

     ! expression
     -not expression
	     This is the unary NOT operator.  It evaluates to true if the ex-
	     pression is false.

     -false  Always false.
     -true   Always true.

     expression	-and expression
     expression	expression
	     The -and operator is the logical AND operator.  As	it is implied
	     by	the juxtaposition of two expressions it	does not have to be
	     specified.	 The expression	evaluates to true if both expressions
	     are true.	The second expression is not evaluated if the first
	     expression	is false.

     expression	-or expression
	     The -or operator is the logical OR	operator.  The expression
	     evaluates to true if either the first or the second expression is
	     true.  The	second expression is not evaluated if the first	ex-
	     pression is true.

     All operands and primaries	must be	separate arguments to find.  Primaries
     which themselves take arguments expect each argument to be	a separate ar-
     gument to find.

ENVIRONMENT
     The LANG, LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE, LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES and LC_TIME environ-
     ment variables affect the execution of the	find utility as	described in
     environ(7).

EXAMPLES
     The following examples are	shown as given to the shell:

     find / \! -name "*.c" -print
	     Print out a list of all the files whose names do not end in .c.

     find / -newer ttt -user wnj -print
	     Print out a list of all the files owned by	user "wnj" that	are
	     newer than	the file ttt.

     find / \! \( -newer ttt -user wnj \) -print
	     Print out a list of all the files which are not both newer	than
	     ttt and owned by "wnj".

     find / \( -newer ttt -or -user wnj	\) -print
	     Print out a list of all the files that are	either owned by	"wnj"
	     or	that are newer than ttt.

     find / -newerct '1	minute ago' -print
	     Print out a list of all the files whose inode change time is more
	     recent than the current time minus	one minute.

     find / -type f -exec echo {} \;
	     Use the echo(1) command to	print out a list of all	the files.

     find -L /usr/ports/packages -type l -exec rm -- {}	+
	     Delete all	broken symbolic	links in /usr/ports/packages.

     find /usr/src -name CVS -prune -o -depth +6 -print
	     Find files	and directories	that are at least seven	levels deep in
	     the working directory /usr/src.

     find /usr/src -name CVS -prune -o -mindepth 7 -print
	     Is	not equivalent to the previous example,	since -prune is	not
	     evaluated below level seven.

COMPATIBILITY
     The -follow primary is deprecated;	the -L option should be	used instead.
     See the STANDARDS section below for details.

SEE ALSO
     chflags(1), chmod(1), cvs(1), locate(1), lsvfs(1),	whereis(1), which(1),
     xargs(1), stat(2),	acl(3),	fts(3),	getgrent(3), getpwent(3), strmode(3),
     re_format(7), symlink(7)

STANDARDS
     The find utility syntax is	a superset of the syntax specified by the IEEE
     Std 1003.1-2001 ("POSIX.1") standard.

     All the single character options except -H	and -L as well as -amin,
     -anewer, -cmin, -cnewer, -delete, -empty, -fstype,	-iname,	-inum,
     -iregex, -ls, -maxdepth, -mindepth, -mmin,	-path, -print0,	-regex and all
     of	the -B*	birthtime related primaries are	extensions to IEEE Std
     1003.1-2001 ("POSIX.1").

     Historically, the -d, -L and -x options were implemented using the	pri-
     maries -depth, -follow, and -xdev.	 These primaries always	evaluated to
     true.  As they were really	global variables that took effect before the
     traversal began, some legal expressions could have	unexpected results.
     An	example	is the expression -print -o -depth.  As	-print always evalu-
     ates to true, the standard	order of evaluation implies that -depth	would
     never be evaluated.  This is not the case.

     The operator -or was implemented as -o, and the operator -and was imple-
     mented as -a.

     Historic implementations of the -exec and -ok primaries did not replace
     the string	"{}" in	the utility name or the	utility	arguments if it	had
     preceding or following non-whitespace characters.	This version replaces
     it	no matter where	in the utility name or arguments it appears.

     The -E option was inspired	by the equivalent grep(1) and sed(1) options.

HISTORY
     A find command appeared in	Version	1 AT&T UNIX.

BUGS
     The special characters used by find are also special characters to	many
     shell programs.  In particular, the characters "*", "[", "]", "?",	"(",
     ")", "!", "\" and ";" may have to be escaped from the shell.

     As	there is no delimiter separating options and file names	or file	names
     and the expression, it is difficult to specify files named	-xdev or !.
     These problems are	handled	by the -f option and the getopt(3) "--"	con-
     struct.

     The -delete primary does not interact well	with other options that	cause
     the file system tree traversal options to be changed.

     The -mindepth and -maxdepth primaries are actually	global options (as
     documented	above).	 They should probably be replaced by options which
     look like options.

BSD				January	5, 2014				   BSD

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | PRIMARIES | OPERATORS | ENVIRONMENT | EXAMPLES | COMPATIBILITY | SEE ALSO | STANDARDS | HISTORY | BUGS

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