26

Is there a way to use shell globbing to identify nested directories?

so if I have dir/dir1/dir2/dir3/dir4/dir5/.. and I have files under all of them, what is the equivalent globbing pattern to match all files under all directories, similar to - for example - ls -R

codeforester
  • 39,467
  • 16
  • 112
  • 140
Samer Buna
  • 8,821
  • 9
  • 38
  • 55

6 Answers6

27

In Bash 4, with shopt -s globstar, and zsh you can use **/* which will include everything except hidden files. You can do shopt -s dotglob in Bash 4 or setopt dotglob in zsh to cause hidden files to be included.

In ksh, set -o globstar enables it. I don't think there's a way to include dot files implicitly, but I think **/{.[^.],}* works.

Dennis Williamson
  • 346,391
  • 90
  • 374
  • 439
6

Specifically about git (gitignore, gitattributes, and commands that take filenames): if the pattern contains no slash, * wildcards will match deep. If it does contain a slash, git will call fnmatch with the FNM_PATHNAME flag, and simple wildcards won't match slashes. ** to match deep isn't supported. Maybe this kind of deep matching could be more widely supported with a new FNM_STARSTAR flag, and an implementation in glibc, gnulib and other places.

Tobu
  • 24,771
  • 4
  • 91
  • 98
2

If you want to act on all the files returned by find, rather than just list them, you can pipe them to xargs:

find <directory> -type f | xargs ls

But this is only for commands that don't have a recursive flag.

Brent Newey
  • 4,479
  • 3
  • 29
  • 33
1

You may try:

**/*.*

However it'll ignore hidden files (such as .git files). Sometimes it's a life-saver.

Read more at: What expands to all files in current directory recursively? at SO

Community
  • 1
  • 1
kenorb
  • 155,785
  • 88
  • 678
  • 743
0

There is no way to do this with vanilla Bash, however most commands accept a -R or --recursive option to tell them to descend into directories.

If you simply want to list all files located anywhere within a directory or its sub-directories, you can use find.

To recursively find files (-type f) with a given directory:

find <directory> -type f
Matt K
  • 13,370
  • 2
  • 32
  • 51
user229044
  • 232,980
  • 40
  • 330
  • 338
0

You can use tree, it will show all folders recursively.

tree <path>
Fatih Arslan
  • 16,499
  • 9
  • 54
  • 55