Futilities/human/ff

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Revision as of 13:34, 22 October 2022 by Woozle (talk | contribs)
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FF: File Finder

About

Yes, I know, there's find and grep but I find those both opaque and difficult to use.

Options

name
standardlongshortmeaning
ff--case-sensitive -cs case must match (I think this is just filenames for now, but might also be content...)
ff--file-date= -fd= only include files created or edited on the given date
ff--list-matches -lm log matching files (same suboptions as -lf)
ff--show-commands -sc show any external commands used
spider--list-found=<params>-lf=<params> list all items found according to the rules in <params>, which is formatted like "<name>=<value>:<name>=<value>":
  • i=<what to include>: fi (file), fo (folder), or both
  • f=<filespec for output>
  • s: show on screen
base--config-file=<config spec>-cf=<config spec>name of config file to load instead of the default
base--show-progress-spupdate a line on the screen to show current activity

Examples

  • Find all files in my Downloads folder which were created or edited on August 26, 2022:
./ff -fd:2022-08-26 -sp "/home/woozle/Downloads/*.*"
Note that the quotes are necessary in order to prevent bash from automatically unglobbing the "*.*" into a list of filenames, which would hopelessly confuse things.
  • Look in my home folder and find all files with "signal" in the name, and log all folders searched:
./ff -sp -lf:i=fo:f=folders.ff.log "/home/woozle/*signal*"
Note that this won't identify folders with "signal" in the name, which is actually what I wanted. This suggests that some tweaking may be needed, since -lm:i=fo should accomplish this but I don't think it does (not tested). Also, it's implied that matches and "found" can be written to separate logfiles, but I don't think it actually works that way. TO FIX.