I have all my music in a folder /media/kalenpw/MyBook/Music/ABunchOfOtherFoldersWithFilesInside
. I want to copy all of the mp3s to /media/kalenpw/HDD/Music
so I used:
cp -R /media/kalenpw/MyBook/Music/*.mp3 /media/kalenpw/HDD/Music
however this only copied the mp3s in the root music folder and did not open any of the artist subdirectories and copy those files.
I was under the impression -R
would recursively copy all the files. How can I achieve said goal?
Use:
The reason for your command not working is that names containing wildcards (
*.mp3
) are expanded before the command is run, so if you had three files (01.mp3
,02.mp3
,03.mp3
) your effective command was:As you can see
-R
has no effect in this case.You have specifically mentioned the files(s)/directory(ies) to be copied as using
*.mp3
i.e. any file/directory name ending in.mp3
.So any file ending in
.mp3
in/media/kalenpw/MyBook/Music/
directory and similarly, any directory ending in.mp3
in/media/kalenpw/MyBook/Music/
will be copied, recursively. If there is no such matched file/directory, nothing will be copied.Now to copy all
.mp3
files from/media/kalenpw/MyBook/Music/
recursivley to directory/media/kalenpw/HDD/Music/
:Using
bash
:Using
find
:The simplest way to do this would be to use a copy command with no wildcards and only directory names:
If the current directory didn't already have a directory named Music, this would create a new Music directory in the current directory. If you already have a directory named Music, It would copy the contents of it to the existing Music directory. This, of course, would get all the files, not just the .mp3 files, so it might not give you the flexibility you need.
Suppose that you have a bunch of
.docx
,.mp3
,.txt
and.xlsx
files stored in this directory structure:...and you want to recurse into all such directories in order to copy all found
.mp3
files to/home/me/music/
but you do not want to preserve such directory tree in the destination (i.e. you want all found.mp3
files to be copied to/home/me/music/
instead of copied to respective directories such as/home/me/music/dir1/
,/home/me/music/dir1/dir11/
et cetera).In such case, at the shell terminal (bash) first run this command in order to access the root of your file search:
...and then run this command:
In case you do want to preserve the source's directory tree in the destination, run this command instead (after running
cd /files
):On the above commands, the search is case-insensitive (i.e. matches
.mp3
,.MP3
,.mP3
and.Mp3
). Use-name
instead of-iname
if you want the search to be case-sensitive (e.g. using-name
for the.mp3
string of characters will match files ending with.mp3
but not those ending with.MP3
,.mP3
nor.Mp3
).It's also important to point out that, in the case of the command that preserves the source directory tree/structure, those folders whose content doesn't match the search criteria won't be copied to the destination. Hence, if e.g. no
.mp3
file is found in/files/dir5/
, then no/home/me/music/dir5
directory will be created, but if at least one.mp3
file is found in/files/dir5/
, then/home/me/music/dir5
will be created so such.mp3
file(s) can be stored inside of it.You can also use cpr:
Note that without
-p
cpr will preserve complete directory paths on copied filenames.-r
can be used (instead of-p
) to preserve the path under '/media.../Music/'.Also
cpr
will take care that no file is overwritten, appending a number starting at '0001' to any repeated filename copied.