If I want to find a file by name, I do the following:
find -name app
If I want to find a file by type, I do the following:
find -name app -type d
However, because app is such a generic name, many results show up. I would like to find a directory named app, which was created today. Is there a flag or command to achieve this?
To search the whole filesystem (
/
) for-type d
),app
(-name app
),-mtime 0
),...Use:
Source:
man find
.In particular see the explanation of the
-mtime
flag and the "find $HOME -mtime 0
" example:(Thus the time in days since the file was modified is rounded down to the nearest integer for purposes of being matched by
-mtime
.)Creation is considered a form of modification for the purpose of file timestamps, so this will work even if the file's contents weren't altered after it was created. It will also match folders with modification timestamps in the last day that were created earlier, but you probably don't have many such folders whose exact name is
app
.When a file was created is not typically stored in the filesystem. But the time at which its metadata were last changed (e.g., name/location, ownership, permissions) is stored. If you prefer to go by that to when the file's contents were modified, use
-ctime
in place of-mtime
:For both
-mtime
and-ctime
, the original creation of the file qualifies as a modification / status change.Get all modified file between the date:
2020-02-28
to2020-03-28
Command find options:
If you need a specific date range many days ago.
Example find files modified between Feb/1/2013 and Feb/1/2014, in /data/docs directory:
You can save list to a text file called findlist.txt as follows:
You can use the modification time, either
(modified less that 1 x 24 hours ago) or