Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
phk
e51263b8a6 They add the following commands:
-anewer
   -cnewer
   -mnewer
   -okdir
   -newer[acm][acmt]

 With it, you can form queries like

     find . -newerct '1 minute ago' -print

 As an extra bonus, the program is ANSI-fied - the original version
 relies on some obscure features of K&R C.

(This PR was submitted in 1999, and the submittor has kept the patch
updated ever since, hats off for him guys, and how about you close a PR ??)

PR:		9374
Submitted by:	Martin Birgmeier <Martin.Birgmeier@aon.at>
2001-05-03 18:05:35 +00:00
knu
caa8a14382 Implement the following options and primaries:
-E      Interpret regular expressions followed by -regex and -iregex op-
             tions as extended (modern) regular expressions rather than basic
             regular expressions (BRE's).  The re_format(7) manual page fully
             describes both formats.

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

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

     -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/''.

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

These are meant to be compatible with other find(1) implementations
such as GNU's or NetBSD's except regexp library differences.

Reviewed by:	sobomax, dcs, and some other people on -current
2001-02-23 16:20:55 +00:00
peter
7eafba69d5 Add the -empty flag, from OpenBSD. It returns true if the directory
is empty.  There doesn't appear to be another easy way to do this.

mobile# mkdir foo
mobile# mkdir foo/bar
mobile# mkdir bar
mobile# find . -empty
./foo/bar
./bar
2001-01-23 11:16:50 +00:00
roberto
c88f0b2a32 This patch adds the -mindepth and -maxdepth options to find(1), which
behave as in GNU find (and of course as described in the manual page
    diff included).  I think these options would be useful for some people.

    Some missing $FreeBSD$ tags are also added.

    The patch was slightly modified (send-pr mangling of TABS).

PR:		bin/18941
Submitted by:	Ben Smithurst <ben@scientia.demon.co.uk>
2000-06-12 11:12:41 +00:00
roberto
58b687c462 Second part of bin/3648: add -flags to search for specific flags.
I added $FreeBSD$ whicle I was here. The patch wasn't usable anymore
due to its age so I adapted it.

PR:		bin/3648
Submitted by:	Martin Birgmeier <mbirg@austria.ds.philips.com>
1999-12-19 15:43:19 +00:00
peter
3b842d34e8 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:08:13 +00:00
jb
76bf3c3e0e A partial frontal lobotomy for find if using the NetBSD libc which
doesn't know about getvfsbyname() and the vfsconf structure. This
disables the -fstype option if compiled with a pre-processor that
defines __NetBSD__. With the FreeBSD built pre-processor, find can only
be built with the FreeBSD libc. So when running with a NetBSD kernel,
FreeBSD's libc will have to return ENOSYS for things that NetBSD
doesn't support. That's life in a hybrid world.
1998-01-10 21:36:34 +00:00
steve
1fbed7c94f Sort option list so that -amin works.
PR:		5171
Submitted by:	Dmitrij Tejblum <tejblum@arc.hq.cti.ru>
1997-11-28 15:48:08 +00:00
wosch
167c2cb9c3 Add the primaries -mmin, -amin, -cmin to find, similar to the GNU find. 1997-10-13 21:06:22 +00:00
imp
56b404f656 Add -execdir which will execute the exec command in the dir of the file
in question.  This change and the fts changes should be merged into 2.2-stable
as soon as they are vetted in -current.  This should allow cleaning of files
in /tmp to be reneabled.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
1997-08-29 23:09:45 +00:00
peter
342c1e0794 Implement a -delete option to find. The code is extremely paranoid and
goes to a fair degree of trouble to enable something like this to
be safe:  cd /tmp && find . -mtime +7 -delete

It removes both files and directories.  It does not attempt to remove
immutable files (an earlier version I showed to a few people did a chflags
and tried to blow away even immutable files.  Too risky..)

It is thought to be safe because it forces the fts(3) driven descent to
only do "minimal risk" stuff.  specifically, -follow is disabled, it does
checking to see that it chdir'ed to the directory it thought it was
going to, it will *not* pass a pathname with a '/' character in it to
unlink(), so it should be totally immune to symlink tree races.  If it runs
into something "fishy", it bails out rather than blunder ahead.. It's better
to do that if somebody is trying to compromise security rather than risk
giving them an opportunity.  Since the unlink()/rmdir() is being called
from within the current working directory during the tree descent, there
are no fork/exec overheads or races.

As a side effect of this paranoia, you cannot do a
"find /somewhere/dir -delete", as the last argument to rmdir() is
"/somewhere/dir", and the checking won't allow it.  Besides, one would use
rm -rf for that case anyway. :-)

Reviewed by: pst (some time ago, but I've removed the immutable file
deletion code that he complained about since he last saw it)
1996-10-04 12:54:07 +00:00
wollman
715c2b0756 Add GNU-style `-print0' primary. This exists so that one can safely
do `find some-nasty-expression -print0 | perl -n0e unlink' and have all
the files actuallly get deleted.  (Using `xargs' and `rm' is not safe.)
1995-05-09 19:02:06 +00:00
rgrimes
f9ab90d9d6 BSD 4.4 Lite Usr.bin Sources 1994-05-27 12:33:43 +00:00