[SOLVED]
Bing ChatGPT is THE sh*t man! It got this right in a few secs!!! WOW! Thank you to everyone who answered me, it’s due to your help that I was able to solve it through Bing. But holy F, am I impressed with Bing!
I hate MS and I hated bing,BUT they have got something real good here.
find /home/$USER -maxdepth 1 -type f -executable -exec sh -c 'head -n 1 "$1" | grep -q "^#!/bin/bash" && cp "$1" /home/bob/Documents/Linux/Regularly_Copied_files_crontab' sh {} \;
edit: I just want to copy scripts in /home/$USER
folder, not all the other subfolders.
edit 2: I think the better approach here would be to have two conditions.
- The file is in /home/$USER/ and not in it’s subfolders.
- The file’s first line should be
I don’t actually need all executable files, I just want my bash scripts, but unfortunately, I don’t have the good habit of giving the .sh extensions to all of them. These files are all executable, they all have a shebang line (`#!/bin/bash) as their first line, how can I copy them elsewhere? I mean, I know how the copy commands work, but I don’t know if I can specify the pattern here.
How would I specify a cp
command to only copy bash scripts
to my docs folder
?
Intended Use case: I am trying to create a command to copy all the bash scripts
I have created in my home folder to my Documents
folder. My docs folder is synced everyday, so I won’t ever lose my scripts as they would be stored in the cloud.
find ~ -type f -executable
find /home/user -type f -perm /u+x -not -path “/home/user/Documents” -exec cp {} ~/Documents ;
___
find /home/user -type f -perm /u+x -not -path "/home/user/Documents" -exec cp {} ~/Documents \;
Run it without exec -parameter to get a list of files affected, I’d guess that that will catch more than you want as it only checks that it’s a normal file and has the excecutable -bit on. To get only bash-scripts you’d first need to get a list of files with find and then check if it’s a script with something (grep or maybe file should work) and copy based on that result, but it shouldn’t be too difficult to write a script for it.
grep -rl '#!/bin/bash' . | xargs -I {} cp {} /path/to/destination/
One problem, I think it’s copying all the files inside folder
/home/$USER
whereas I just want the bash files which are in/home/$USER
exlcluding all the subfolders. The commandgrep -rl '#!/bin/bash' . | xargs -I {} cp {} /path/to/destination/
won’t exclude subfolders.deleted by creator
grep -l ‘#!/bin/bash’ . | xargs -I {} cp {} /path/to/destination/
grep -l '#!/bin/bash' . | xargs -I {} cp {} /home/$USER/Documents/Linux/Regularly_Copied_files_crontab grep: .: Is a directory
I don’t know what’s happening here
deleted by creator
find ~ -type f -executable
will give you a list of all executable files You can probably use find’s -exec to move them all.
This is the right answer. OP got quite the command from Bing 😉
assuming you have a GNU toolchain you can use the
find
command like so:find . -type f -executable -exec sh -c ' case $( file "$1" ) in (*Bourne-Again*) exit 0; esac exit 1' sh {} \; -print0 | xargs -0 -I{} cp {} target/
This first finds all executable files in the current directory (change the “.” arg in find to search other dirs), uses the
file
command to test if it’s a bash file, and if it is, pipes the file name toxargs
which callscp
on each file.note: if “target” is inside the search directory you’ll get output from
cp
that it skipped copying identical files. this is becausefind
will find them a free you copy them so be careful!note 2: this doesn’t preserve the directory structure of the files, so if your scripts are nested and might have duplicate names, you’ll get errors.
identify
find DIR -executable
copy
find DIR -executable -exec cp {} TARGETDIR \;
find DIR -executable
unfortunately, this would list all the executables. I only want the executables in
/home/$USER
not it’s subfolders