man find2perl (Commandes) - translate find command lines to Perl code

NAME

find2perl - translate find command lines to Perl code

SYNOPSIS

        find2perl [paths] [predicates] | perl

DESCRIPTION

find2perl is a little translator to convert find command lines to equivalent Perl code. The resulting code is typically faster than running find itself.

paths are a set of paths where find2perl will start its searches and predicates are taken from the following list. Negate the sense of the following predicate. The CW! must be passed as a distinct argument, so it may need to be surrounded by whitespace and/or quoted from interpretation by the shell using a backslash (just as with using CWfind(1)). Group the given PREDICATES. The parentheses must be passed as distinct arguments, so they may need to be surrounded by whitespace and/or quoted from interpretation by the shell using a backslash (just as with using CWfind(1)). True if _both_ PREDICATE1 and PREDICATE2 are true; PREDICATE2 is not evaluated if PREDICATE1 is false. True if either one of PREDICATE1 or PREDICATE2 is true; PREDICATE2 is not evaluated if PREDICATE1 is true. Follow (dereference) symlinks. The checking of file attributes depends on the position of the CW-follow option. If it precedes the file check option, an CWstat is done which means the file check applies to the file the symbolic link is pointing to. If CW-follow option follows the file check option, this now applies to the symbolic link itself, i.e. an CWlstat is done. Change directory traversal algorithm from breadth-first to depth-first. Do not descend into the directory currently matched. Do not traverse mount points (prunes search at mount-point directories). File name matches specified GLOB wildcard pattern. GLOB may need to be quoted to avoid interpretation by the shell (just as with using CWfind(1)). Like CW-name, but the match is case insensitive. Path name matches specified GLOB wildcard pattern. Like CW-path, but the match is case insensitive. Low-order 9 bits of permission match octal value PERM. The bits specified in PERM are all set in file's permissions. The file's type matches perl's CW-X operator. Filesystem of current path is of type TYPE (only NFS/non-NFS distinction is implemented). True if USER is owner of file. True if file's group is GROUP. True if file's owner is not in password database. True if file's group is not in group database. True file's inode number is INUM. True if (hard) link count of file matches N (see below). True if file's size matches N (see below) N is normally counted in 512-byte blocks, but a suffix of c specifies that size should be counted in characters (bytes) and a suffix of k specifes that size should be counted in 1024-byte blocks. True if last-access time of file matches N (measured in days) (see below). True if last-changed time of file's inode matches N (measured in days, see below). True if last-modified time of file matches N (measured in days, see below). True if last-modified time of file matches N. Print out path of file (always true). If none of CW-exec, CW-ls, CW-print0, or CW-ok is specified, then CW-print will be added implicitly. Like -print, but terminates with \0 instead of \n. exec() the arguments in OPTIONS in a subprocess; any occurrence of {} in OPTIONS will first be substituted with the path of the current file. Note that the command rm has been special-cased to use perl's unlink() function instead (as an optimization). The CW; must be passed as a distinct argument, so it may need to be surrounded by whitespace and/or quoted from interpretation by the shell using a backslash (just as with using CWfind(1)). Like -exec, but first prompts user; if user's response does not begin with a y, skip the exec. The CW; must be passed as a distinct argument, so it may need to be surrounded by whitespace and/or quoted from interpretation by the shell using a backslash (just as with using CWfind(1)). Has the perl script eval() the EXPR. Simulates CW-exec ls -dils {} ; Adds current output to tar-format FILE. Adds current output to old-style cpio-format FILE. Adds current output to new-style cpio-format FILE.

Predicates which take a numeric argument N can come in three forms:

   * N is prefixed with a +: match values greater than N
   * N is prefixed with a -: match values less than N
   * N is not prefixed with either + or -: match only values equal to N

SEE ALSO

find