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Linux: Copy all files by extension to single dirrectory

Writer Olivia Zamora

I am trying to copy all *.tif files from ./old to the ./new. In ./old i have lots of subdirs with different files, and in ./new i need only TIF files, without folder tree. So, I had tried cp -vR ./old/*.TIF ./new and got an error:

No such file file or dirrectory "./old/*.TIF"

What I'm doing wrong?

3 Answers

Use find for this find . -name "*.TIF" -exec cp {} new \;

So find is used to find files. The command is saying find files starting from here . where the name of the file -name ends in .tif remember the double quotes for shell expansion. So to find all the tif files is simply.

find . -name "*.tif"
./2/3/3.tif
./2/2.tif
./1.tif

We then use -exec to do something with files in this case cp found files {} to the target directory new followed by an escaped semicolon \;

0

It should be like this. You have to enter old directory:

cd old
cp -R *.tif ../new

in old directory (direct) you might not be having any .tif files.

moreover you can get a list of files and copy them using a simple script

find /old -type f | xargs grep *.tif will give you the list

you can do like

for i in `find /old -type f | xargs grep *.tif`
do
cp $i /new
done;

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