source: vendor/bash/3.1-p17/examples/functions/recurse

Last change on this file was 3228, checked in by bird, 18 years ago

bash 3.1

File size: 1.7 KB
Line 
1#!/bin/bash
2
3#From: kaz@ashi.footprints.net (Kaz Kylheku)
4#Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.misc
5#Subject: Re: bash question: subdirectories
6#Message-ID: <slrn8a0gu9.v5n.kaz@ashi.FootPrints.net>
7#Date: Tue, 08 Feb 2000 16:24:35 GMT
8
9#Actually it can be made to. That is to say, it is possible to code a recursive
10#descender function in the bash language. Here is an example.
11#
12#What is nice about this is that you can embed the function into your shell
13#script. The function changes the current working directory as it descends.
14#So it can handle arbitrarily deep paths. Whereas paths generated by the
15#find command can cause a problem when they get too long; the kernel has a
16#hard limit on the length of the string passed to the open() and other
17#system calls.
18
19#There are races; what if the directory tree is blown away during the traversal?
20#The function won't be able to crawl back up using the .. link and will just
21#bail.
22
23# Recursive Directory Traverser
24# Author: Kaz Kylheku
25# Date: Feb 27, 1999
26# Copyright 1999
27
28# Function parameter usage:
29# $1 directory to search
30# $2 pattern to search for
31# $3 command to execute
32# $4 secret argument for passing down path
33
34function recurse
35{
36 local file
37 local path
38
39 if [ "$4" = "" ] ; then
40 path="${1%/}/"
41 else
42 path="$4$1/"
43 fi
44
45 if cd "$1" ; then
46 for file in $2; do
47 if [ -f "$file" ] || [ -d "$file" ]; then
48 eval "$3"
49 fi
50 done
51 for file in .* * ; do
52 if [ "$file" = "." ] || [ "$file" = ".." ] ; then
53 continue
54 fi
55 if [ -d "$file" ] && [ ! -L "$file" ]; then
56 recurse "$file" "$2" "$3" "$path"
57 fi
58 done
59 cd ..
60 fi
61}
62
63recurse "$1" "$2" 'echo "$path$file"'
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