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Perform an action in every sub-directory using Bash

I am working on a script that needs to per开发者_StackOverflow中文版form an action in every sub-directory of a specific folder.

What is the most efficient way to write that?


A version that avoids creating a sub-process:

for D in *; do
    if [ -d "${D}" ]; then
        echo "${D}"   # your processing here
    fi
done

Or, if your action is a single command, this is more concise:

for D in *; do [ -d "${D}" ] && my_command; done

Or an even more concise version (thanks @enzotib). Note that in this version each value of D will have a trailing slash:

for D in */; do my_command; done


for D in `find . -type d`
do
    //Do whatever you need with D
done


The simplest non recursive way is:

for d in */; do
    echo "$d"
done

The / at the end tells, use directories only.

There is no need for

  • find
  • awk
  • ...


Use find command.

In GNU find, you can use -execdir parameter:

find . -type d -execdir realpath "{}" ';'

or by using -exec parameter:

find . -type d -exec sh -c 'cd -P "$0" && pwd -P' {} \;

or with xargs command:

find . -type d -print0 | xargs -0 -L1 sh -c 'cd "$0" && pwd && echo Do stuff'

Or using for loop:

for d in */; { echo "$d"; }

For recursivity try extended globbing (**/) instead (enable by: shopt -s extglob).


For more examples, see: How to go to each directory and execute a command? at SO


Handy one-liners

for D in *; do echo "$D"; done
for D in *; do find "$D" -type d; done ### Option A

find * -type d ### Option B

Option A is correct for folders with spaces in between. Also, generally faster since it doesn't print each word in a folder name as a separate entity.

# Option A
$ time for D in ./big_dir/*; do find "$D" -type d > /dev/null; done
real    0m0.327s
user    0m0.084s
sys     0m0.236s

# Option B
$ time for D in `find ./big_dir/* -type d`; do echo "$D" > /dev/null; done
real    0m0.787s
user    0m0.484s
sys     0m0.308s


find . -type d -print0 | xargs -0 -n 1 my_command


This will create a subshell (which means that variable values will be lost when the while loop exits):

find . -type d | while read -r dir
do
    something
done

This won't:

while read -r dir
do
    something
done < <(find . -type d)

Either one will work if there are spaces in directory names.


You could try:

#!/bin/bash
### $1 == the first args to this script
### usage: script.sh /path/to/dir/

for f in `find . -maxdepth 1 -mindepth 1 -type d`; do
  cd "$f"
  <your job here>
done

or similar...

Explanation:

find . -maxdepth 1 -mindepth 1 -type d : Only find directories with a maximum recursive depth of 1 (only the subdirectories of $1) and minimum depth of 1 (excludes current folder .)


the accepted answer will break on white spaces if the directory names have them, and the preferred syntax is $() for bash/ksh. Use GNU find -exec option with +; eg

find .... -exec mycommand +; #this is same as passing to xargs

or use a while loop

find .... | while read -r D
do
    # use variable `D` or whatever variable name you defined instead here
done 


if you want to perform an action INSIDE the folder and not ON folder.

Explanation: You have many pdfs and you would like to concetrate them inside a single folder. my folders

   AV 001/
   AV 002/
  • for D in *; do cd "$D"; # VERY DANGEROUS COMMAND - DONT USE #-- missing "", it will list files too. It can go up too.
  • for d in */; do cd "$d"; echo $d; cd ..; done; # works succesfully
  • for D in "$(ls -d */)"; do cd "$D"; done; # bash: cd: $'Athens Voice 001/\nAthens Voice 002/' - there is no such folder
  • for D in "$(*/)"; do cd "$D"; done; # bash: Athens Voice 001/: is folder
  • for D in "$(`find . -type d`)"; do cd $D; done; # bash: ./Athens: there is no such folder or file
  • for D in *; do if [ -d "${D}" ] then cd ${D}; done; # many arguments
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