556

In a directory, I have a bunch of *.html files. I'd like to rename them all to *.txt

How can I do that? I use the bash shell.

Ellie Kesselman
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bmw0128
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28 Answers28

767

If using bash, there's no need for external commands like sed, basename, rename, expr, etc.

for file in *.html
do
  mv "$file" "${file%.html}.txt"
done
Matthias Braun
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ghostdog74
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    And if you don't know the file extension you can use `"${file%.*}.txt"`, but this could be dangerous for files w/o an extension at all. – Jess Dec 17 '13 at 19:03
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    Note to anyone having trouble getting this working like I had: notice that there is no `$` inside the curly braces! – doug65536 Feb 09 '14 at 03:19
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    I need a way to permanently favorite/bookmark this answer, I never remember the exact syntax and I end up googling for it – boliva Feb 12 '14 at 01:32
  • Is there a way to make this work recursively, i.e. even if the files to rename are not directly located in the current working dir but in its various direct and indirect child directories? – antred May 23 '14 at 12:17
  • I'm not sure how this is working? Can you explain the logic of the mv command? – johnlemon Jun 20 '14 at 07:20
  • If you google "linux rename multiple extension" you don't find this answer, you find some unsatisfying answers on unix.stackexchange and end up spending some time figuring out the correct one because you know how `mv file{1,2}` works leading to [this answer](http://unix.stackexchange.com/a/169051/3547). Googling "linux batch rename" would have led me here directly... – Maxime R. Nov 20 '14 at 19:12
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    @danip The percent-sign-within-bracket construct strips characters off the end. There is also a hash-within-bracket construct that strips characters off the beginning. Check it: http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/parameter-substitution.html#PSUB2 –  Jan 11 '15 at 17:14
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    Another Stack exchange answer (that I can't find!) suggested this, but also using the `--` "operator": mv -- "$file" "${file%.html}.txt" That operator prevents file names that start with a '-' from being parsed by mv as arguments. – rcreswick Jul 09 '15 at 08:54
417

For an better solution (with only bash functionality, as opposed to external calls), see one of the other answers.


The following would do and does not require the system to have the rename program (although you would most often have this on a system):

for file in *.html; do
    mv "$file" "$(basename "$file" .html).txt"
done

EDIT: As pointed out in the comments, this does not work for filenames with spaces in them without proper quoting (now added above). When working purely on your own files that you know do not have spaces in the filenames this will work but whenever you write something that may be reused at a later time, do not skip proper quoting.

Mikael Auno
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    An alternative, without basename & with quotes: mv "${file}" "${file/%.html/.txt}" (see man bash, Parameter Expansion for details) – Rodrigo Queiro Aug 03 '09 at 21:57
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    Only good if the files are all in the current directory, of course, because basename strips off the pathname part. Just a 'beware'! – Jonathan Leffler Aug 03 '09 at 22:15
  • if there are many html files, use bash's internal string functions instead of basename. – ghostdog74 Aug 04 '09 at 00:14
  • +1 for use of basename; although the question specifies it is for the bash shell, portability is good! – akent Aug 04 '09 at 01:13
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    This solution is bad, not only because it is slow but because it does not work with filenames with spaces in them. You should ALWAYS do proper quotation in bash scripts. mv "$file" "$(basename "$file" .html)".txt would be much better. But still, mv "$files" "${files%.html}.txt" is much better. – Balázs Pozsár Aug 04 '09 at 08:39
  • I agree with Pozsar. If you are not careful, this can really make for a bad day. Just a warning. – Jim Aug 04 '09 at 18:20
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    in windows you just do `ren *.a *.b` – Muhammad Umer Jan 27 '15 at 19:39
  • all my files (which has a space in them) vanished except for the last one file which remains as .txt :( – Anand Rockzz Jun 12 '16 at 03:36
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    At minimum, use POSIX-specified `$()` instead of legacy backtick syntax. Improves readability, and makes syntax much less ambiguous when you have characters that would need to be backslash-escaped to be literal inside the command substitution with the latter. – Charles Duffy Sep 10 '17 at 13:50
  • @MuhammadUmer Thanks! Worked! (Just when thought you couldn't do batch commands in windows...) – Zeta.Investigator Aug 05 '18 at 09:43
206
rename 's/\.html$/\.txt/' *.html

does exactly what you want.

Amber
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  • I don't think you can use a literal regex in bash like you suggest - which shell are you using? – DaveR Aug 03 '09 at 21:48
  • Here's the man page for the version of rename on Ubuntu: http://unixhelp.ed.ac.uk/CGI/man-cgi?rename – Amber Aug 03 '09 at 21:54
  • rename is a command on some systems. I have a Perl script (originally from the first Camel book) that does the job. There's also a GNU program of the same name that does roughly the same job. My Mac doesn't have a system-provided 'rename' command - or it isn't on my PATH (which is moderately comprehensive). – Jonathan Leffler Aug 03 '09 at 22:14
  • There is a rename formula in Homebrew. – revprez Apr 29 '16 at 04:22
  • I like your answer. But in fact i will just use `rename 's/jpg/png/' *.jpg`, this is easier to remember and type. It may cause error if there is a filename contains jpg, so I will check it first before typing. – ramwin May 09 '18 at 02:56
151

This worked for me on OSX from .txt to .txt_bak

find . -name '*.txt' -exec sh -c 'mv "$0" "${0%.txt}.txt_bak"' {} \;
Steven Lizarazo
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    Works fine in linux too. – Diziet Mar 30 '15 at 23:16
  • It's besides the point, but to go from `.txt` to `.txt_bak` you just have to concatenate `_bak` ;) – corwin.amber Jul 06 '16 at 01:21
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    This is nice for renaming recursively – leachryanb Dec 02 '16 at 17:56
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    Great! (under Ubuntu 16.04) My practical use case, renaming all `.scss` to `.sass` (after in-place conversion…): `find . -name '*.scss' -exec sh -c 'mv "$0" "${0%.scss}.sass"' {} \;` – Frank N Jul 04 '18 at 11:25
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    this worked with +6000 files, rename reported "argument list was too long" – Tony Cronin Dec 01 '18 at 11:05
  • I used it in windows in GIT hooks (which means the shell (Linux))- it works nice. I wanted to remove the .tmp extension, so that I used it a little bit modified: find . -name '*.txt' -exec sh -c 'mv "$0" "${0%.tmp}"' {} \; (in case somebody wants to rename the extension with nothing (remove the .tmp extension of the files) Thnx @Steven – Teo Jan 08 '20 at 15:42
102

You want to use rename :

rename -S <old_extension> <new_extension> <files>

rename -S .html .txt *.html

This does exactly what you want - it will change the extension from .html to .txt for all files matching *.html.

Note: Greg Hewgill correctly points out this is not a bash builtin; and is a separate Linux command. If you just need something on Linux this should work fine; if you need something more cross-platform then take a look at one of the other answers.

maxcnunes
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DaveR
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36

On a Mac...

  1. Install rename if you haven't: brew install rename
  2. rename -S .html .txt *.html
izilotti
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16

For Ubuntu Users :

rename 's/\.html$/\.txt/' *.html
Bheru Lal Lohar
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16

This is the slickest solution I've found that works on OSX and Linux, and it works nicely with git too!

find . -name "*.js" -exec bash -c 'mv "$1" "${1%.js}".tsx' - '{}' \;

and with git:

find . -name "*.js" -exec bash -c 'git mv "$1" "${1%.js}".tsx' - '{}' \;

bdombro
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  • Not really slick, since it starts a new bash for every single file. Quite slow, actually. Use pipe and xargs, please. – Holger Jakobs Nov 10 '20 at 17:51
  • I suppose that's true. I can't imagine many cases where you're naming so many files that performance would matter. This method can rename hundreds within seconds. So yeah, I guess maybe it's not great performance, but it's a slick solution if you don't... – bdombro Dec 03 '20 at 03:57
  • There is another limitation here compared to the xargs solution: You can't easily parallelize it. With `xargs` you can simply add `-P 10` and it will fork you command with up to 10 concurrent processes. Really good for handling large directories. Use of `ls -1` was just an example of how to feed `xargs` - you could use it with find too – Christian Bongiorno Jan 18 '23 at 17:33
10

This question explicitly mentions Bash, but if you happen to have ZSH available it is pretty simple:

zmv '(*).*' '$1.txt'

If you get zsh: command not found: zmv then simply run:

autoload -U zmv

And then try again.

Thanks to this original article for the tip about zmv.

Michael Leonard
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8

Here is an example of the rename command:

rename -n ’s/\.htm$/\.html/’ *.htm

The -n means that it's a test run and will not actually change any files. It will show you a list of files that would be renamed if you removed the -n. In the case above, it will convert all files in the current directory from a file extension of .htm to .html.

If the output of the above test run looked ok then you could run the final version:

rename -v ’s/\.htm$/\.html/’ *.htm

The -v is optional, but it's a good idea to include it because it is the only record you will have of changes that were made by the rename command as shown in the sample output below:

$ rename -v 's/\.htm$/\.html/' *.htm
3.htm renamed as 3.html
4.htm renamed as 4.html
5.htm renamed as 5.html

The tricky part in the middle is a Perl substitution with regular expressions, highlighted below:

rename -v ’s/\.htm$/\.html/’ *.htm
A.A
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7

One line, no loops:

ls -1 | xargs -L 1 -I {} bash -c 'mv $1 "${1%.*}.txt"' _ {}

Example:

$ ls
60acbc4d-3a75-4090-85ad-b7d027df8145.json  ac8453e2-0d82-4d43-b80e-205edb754700.json
$ ls -1 | xargs -L 1 -I {} bash -c 'mv $1 "${1%.*}.txt"' _ {}
$ ls
60acbc4d-3a75-4090-85ad-b7d027df8145.txt  ac8453e2-0d82-4d43-b80e-205edb754700.txt
Pablo Bianchi
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Christian Bongiorno
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7

In Linux or window git bash or window's wsl, try below command to change every file's extension in current directory or sub-directories or even their sub-directories with just one line of code

find . -depth -name "*.html" -exec sh -c 'mv "$1" "${1%.html}.txt"' _ {} \;
Harat
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5

The command mmv seems to do this task very efficiently on a huge number of files (tens of thousands in a second). For example, to rename all .xml files to .html files, use this:

mmv ";*.xml" "#1#2.html"

the ; will match the path, the * will match the filename, and these are referred to as #1 and #2 in the replacement name.

Answers based on exec or pipes were either too slow or failed on a very large number of files.

Roko Mijic
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5

Rename file extensions for all files under current directory and sub directories without any other packages (only use shell script):

  1. Create a shell script rename.sh under current directory with the following code:

    #!/bin/bash
    
    for file in $(find . -name "*$1"); do
      mv "$file" "${file%$1}$2"
    done
    
  2. Run it by ./rename.sh .old .new.

    Eg. ./rename.sh .html .txt

Pablo Bianchi
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Neo Liu
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  • This suffers from the same problem as the find solution above: You can't parallelize it as easily. Sure, you can add `&` to your `mv`, but then you could have 100s or 1000s of spawned processes. Using `xargs` you can assure yourself that `-P 20` will allow a max of 20 forked processes. – Christian Bongiorno Jan 18 '23 at 17:35
4

Try this

rename .html .txt *.html 

usage:

rename [find] [replace_with] [criteria]
kleopatra
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P Sreedhar
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4

After someone else's website crawl, I ended up with thousands of files missing the .html extension, across a wide tree of subdirectories.

To rename them all in one shot, except the files already having a .html extension (most of them had none at all), this worked for me:

cd wwwroot
find . -xtype f \! -iname *.html   -exec mv -iv "{}"  "{}.html"  \;  # batch rename files to append .html suffix IF MISSING

In the OP's case I might modify that slightly, to only rename *.txt files, like so:

find . -xtype f  -iname *.txt   -exec filename="{}"  mv -iv ${filename%.*}.{txt,html}  \; 

Broken down (hammertime!):

-iname *.txt
- Means consider ONLY files already ending in .txt

mv -iv "{}.{txt,html}" - When find passes a {} as the filename, ${filename%.*} extracts its basename without any extension to form the parameters to mv. bash takes the {txt,html} to rewrite it as two parameters so the final command runs as: mv -iv "filename.txt" "filename.html"

Fix needed though: dealing with spaces in filenames

Marcos
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4

This is a good way to modify multiple extensions at once:

for fname in *.{mp4,avi}
do
   mv -v "$fname" "${fname%.???}.mkv"
done

Note: be careful at the extension size to be the same (the ???)

Nick De Greek
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3

A bit late to the party. You could do it with xargs:

ls *.html | xargs -I {} sh -c 'mv $1 `basename $1 .html`.txt' - {}

Or if all your files are in some folder

ls folder/*.html | xargs -I {} sh -c 'mv $1 folder/`basename $1 .html`.txt' - {}
esp
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    No. [Don't parse `ls`](http://mywiki.wooledge.org/ParsingLs). This command is ridiculous: it uselessly uses a glob with `ls`, instead of directly using the glob. This will break with filenames containing spaces, quotes and (due to the lack of quotes) glob characters. – gniourf_gniourf Jun 27 '16 at 12:07
  • FYI, your linked article contains an updated note that says newer LS 'correctly "shell escapes" files if printed to the terminal.' Your point is still a good rule of thumb though. – Katastic Voyage Mar 27 '18 at 09:24
3

Similarly to what was suggested before, this is how I did it:

find . -name '*OldText*' -exec sh -c 'mv "$0" "${0/OldText/NewText}"' {} \;

I first validated with

find . -name '*OldText*' -exec sh -c 'echo mv "$0" "${0/OldText/NewText}"' {} \;
Carl Bosch
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2

If you prefer PERL, there is a short PERL script (originally written by Larry Wall, the creator of PERL) that will do exactly what you want here: tips.webdesign10.com/files/rename.pl.txt.

For your example the following should do the trick:

rename.pl 's/html/txt/' *.html
Pablo Bianchi
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dudusan
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    This question has already been answered and accepted a long time ago and it doesn't seem that your answer bring anything more than what has already been said. – ChristopheLec Jun 28 '13 at 12:36
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    +1 since it was a Larry Wall script (modified by Robin Barker). The last available url is this: http://tips.webdesign10.com/files/rename.pl.txt – loretoparisi Jun 16 '16 at 16:15
2

Nice & simple!

find . -iname *.html  -exec mv {} "$(basename {} .html).text"  \;
Deano
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2

The easiest way is to use rename.ul it is present in most of the Linux distro

rename.ul -o -v [oldFileExtension] [newFileExtension] [expression to search for file to be applied with]

rename.ul -o -v .oldext .newext *.oldext

Options:

-o: don't overwrite preexisting .newext

-v: verbose

-n: dry run

CreatorGhost
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1

Unfortunately it's not trivial to do portably. You probably need a bit of expr magic.

for file in *.html; do echo mv -- "$file" "$(expr "$file" : '\(.*\)\.html').txt"; done

Remove the echo once you're happy it does what you want.

Edit: basename is probably a little more readable for this particular case, although expr is more flexible in general.

CB Bailey
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  • While this may not be the best answer for the question, it was for me! I needed a way to rename only in string a whole path, not just a the file name. Thanks for posting! – donut Apr 10 '19 at 14:22
1

Here is what i used to rename .edge files to .blade.php

for file in *.edge; do     mv "$file" "$(basename "$file" .edge).blade.php"; done

Works like charm.

Nixon Kosgei
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1

You can also make a function in Bash, add it to .bashrc or something and then use it wherever you want.

change-ext() {
    for file in *.$1; do mv "$file" "$(basename "$file" .$1).$2"; done
}

Usage:

change-ext css scss

Source of code in function: https://stackoverflow.com/a/1224786/6732111

J Kluseczka
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0

Here is a solution, using AWK. Make sure the files are present in the working directory. Else, cd to the directory where the html files are located and then execute the below command:

for i in $(ls | grep .html); do j=$(echo $i | grep -oh "^\w*." | awk '{print $1"txt"}'); mv $i $j; done
Rohith
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0

I wrote this code in my .bashrc

alias find-ext='read -p "Path (dot for current): " p_path; read -p "Ext (unpunctured): " p_ext1; find $p_path -type f -name "*."$p_ext1'
alias rename-ext='read -p "Path (dot for current): " p_path; read -p "Ext (unpunctured): " p_ext1; read -p "Change by ext. (unpunctured): " p_ext2; echo -en "\nFound files:\n"; find $p_path -type f -name "*.$p_ext1"; find $p_path -type f -name "*.$p_ext1" -exec sh -c '\''mv "$1" "${1%.'\''$p_ext1'\''}.'\''$p_ext2'\''" '\'' _ {} \;; echo -en "\nChanged Files:\n"; find $p_path -type f -name "*.$p_ext2";'

In a folder like "/home/<user>/example-files" having this structure:

  • /home/<user>/example-files:
    • file1.txt
    • file2.txt
    • file3.pdf
    • file4.csv

The commands would behave like this:

~$ find-text
Path (dot for current): example-files/
Ext (unpunctured): txt

example-files/file1.txt
example-files/file2.txt


~$ rename-text
Path (dot for current): ./example-files
Ext (unpunctured): txt
Change by ext. (unpunctured): mp3

Found files:
./example-files/file1.txt
./example-files/file1.txt

Changed Files:
./example-files/file1.mp3
./example-files/file1.mp3
~$
Pyetro
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0

You could use a tool designed for renaming files in bulk, e.g. renamer.

To rename all file extensions in the current folder:

$ renamer --find ".html" --replace ".txt" --dry-run * 

Many more usage examples here.

Lloyd
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