Following are some bunch of commands that might be useful if you want to find files in unix/linux.
Large Files
Find files larger than 10MB in the current directory downwards…Find files larger than 100MB…Code language: Bash (bash)find . -size +10000000c -ls
Code language: Bash (bash)find . -size +100000000c -ls
Old Files
Find files last modified over 30days ago…find . -type f -mtime 30 -ls
Code language: Bash (bash)
Find files last modified over 365days ago…find . -type f -mtime 365 -ls
Code language: Bash (bash)
Find files last accessed over 30days ago…find . -type f -atime 30 -ls
Code language: Bash (bash)
Find files last accessed over 365days ago…find . -type f -atime 365 -ls
Code language: Bash (bash)
Find Recently Updated Files
There have been instances where a runaway process is seemingly using up any and all space left on a partition. Finding the culprit file is always useful. If the file is being updated at the current time then we can use find to find files modified in the last day…find . -type f -mtime -1 -ls
Code language: Bash (bash)
Better still, if we know a file is being written to now, we can touch a file and ask the find command to list any files updated after the timestamp of that file, which will logically then list the rogue file in question.touch testfile
find . -type f -newer testfile -ls
Code language: Bash (bash)
Finding tar Files
A clean up of redundant tar (backup) files, after completing a piece of work say, is sometimes forgotten. Conversely, if tar files are needed, they can be identified and duly compressed (using compress or gzip) if not already done so, to help save space. Either way, the following lists all tar files for review.find . -type f -name "*.tar" -ls
find . -type f -name "*.tar.Z" -ls
Code language: Bash (bash)
Large Directories
List, in order, the largest sub-directories (units are in Kb)…Sometimes it is useful to then cd into that suspect directory and re-run the du command until the large files are found.Code language: Bash (bash)du -sk * | sort -n
Removing Files using Find
The above find commands can be edited to remove the files found rather than list them. The “-ls” switch can be changed for “-exec rm {}\;”=. e.g.find . -type f -mtime 365 -exec rm {} \;
Code language: Bash (bash)
Running the command with the “-ls” switch first, is always prudent to see what will be removed. The “-ls” switch prints out summary information about the file (like owner and permissions). If just the filename is required then swap “-ls” switch for “-print”. Are you using different commands to find a file? Please share it using below comment form. :)
to find text inside files (in current directory and also subdirectories), grep can be used recursively:
grep -r "findthistext" *
if text is to be searched in only a type of files e.g. text files or shell scripts:
grep -r "findthistex" *.txt
grep -r "findthistex" *.sh