Current directory contains new logs that keep coming.
/tmp/logstash/ dir contains logs to which I will be comparing new ones
Conditions:
If the new log has the same name and the size that already exists in /tmp/logstash, I should get 'identical file already exists' msg.
Otherwise the script will move the new log to /tmp/logstash/.
Note, that if name is same but size is different, the script should still move new file to tmp/logstash/
My script is as follows and it's not working properly with with combining 'then && if', can you please help to fix it?
for file in *.log; do
new_filesize=$(du -b "$file" | cut -f 1)
if [[ -e /tmp/logstash/"$file" ]]
then
old_filesize=$(du -b /tmp/logstash/"$file" | cut -f 1) &&
if [[ "$new_filesize"="$old_filesize" ]]; then
echo "The file already exists"
fi
else mv $file /tmp/logstash
fi
done
You need spaces around the = in the conditional expression:
if [[ $new_filesize = $old_filesize ]]; then
Without the spaces, you're just testing whether the concatenated string "$new_filesize"="$old_filesize" is non-empty.
Test for Existence, if so Test Filesize, otherwise Copy
Per your request in the comments. The following tests whether old_file exists. If it does, it then checks whether the sizes between new_file and old_file differ. If they differ, then it moves new_file to /tmp/logstash/ replacing old_file. If old_file exists and the files sizes are equal, then it will echo "The file already exists". In the event old_file doesn't exist, then is simply copies new_file to /tmp/logstash/.
for file in *.log; do
if [ -e /tmp/logstash/"$file" ]; then
if [ $(stat %s "$file") -ne $(stat %s /tmp/logstash/"$file") ]
mv -f "$file" /tmp/logstash
else
echo "The file already exists"
fi
else
cp "$file" /tmp/logstash/"$file"
fi
done
Note: Remember quote your variables.
With Variables new_filesize and old_filesize
for file in *.log; do
new_filesize=$(stat %s "$file")
if [ -e /tmp/logstash/"$file" ]; then
old_filesize=$(stat %s /tmp/logstash/"$file")
if [ $new_filesize -ne $old_filesize ]
mv -f "$file" /tmp/logstash
else
echo "The file already exists"
fi
else
cp "$file" /tmp/logstash/"$file"
fi
done
Note: mv -f was added to all cases where old_file exists to prevent move failure due to existing file.
Related
This checks if a file exists:
#!/bin/bash
FILE=$1
if [ -f $FILE ]; then
echo "File $FILE exists."
else
echo "File $FILE does not exist."
fi
How do I only check if the file does not exist?
The test command (written as [ here) has a "not" logical operator, ! (exclamation mark):
if [ ! -f /tmp/foo.txt ]; then
echo "File not found!"
fi
Bash File Testing
-b filename - Block special file
-c filename - Special character file
-d directoryname - Check for directory Existence
-e filename - Check for file existence, regardless of type (node, directory, socket, etc.)
-f filename - Check for regular file existence not a directory
-G filename - Check if file exists and is owned by effective group ID
-G filename set-group-id - True if file exists and is set-group-id
-k filename - Sticky bit
-L filename - Symbolic link
-O filename - True if file exists and is owned by the effective user id
-r filename - Check if file is a readable
-S filename - Check if file is socket
-s filename - Check if file is nonzero size
-u filename - Check if file set-user-id bit is set
-w filename - Check if file is writable
-x filename - Check if file is executable
How to use:
#!/bin/bash
file=./file
if [ -e "$file" ]; then
echo "File exists"
else
echo "File does not exist"
fi
A test expression can be negated by using the ! operator
#!/bin/bash
file=./file
if [ ! -e "$file" ]; then
echo "File does not exist"
else
echo "File exists"
fi
Negate the expression inside test (for which [ is an alias) using !:
#!/bin/bash
FILE=$1
if [ ! -f "$FILE" ]
then
echo "File $FILE does not exist"
fi
The relevant man page is man test or, equivalently, man [ -- or help test or help [ for the built-in bash command.
Alternatively (less commonly used) you can negate the result of test using:
if ! [ -f "$FILE" ]
then
echo "File $FILE does not exist"
fi
That syntax is described in "man 1 bash" in sections "Pipelines" and "Compound Commands".
[[ -f $FILE ]] || printf '%s does not exist!\n' "$FILE"
Also, it's possible that the file is a broken symbolic link, or a non-regular file, like e.g. a socket, device or fifo. For example, to add a check for broken symlinks:
if [[ ! -f $FILE ]]; then
if [[ -L $FILE ]]; then
printf '%s is a broken symlink!\n' "$FILE"
else
printf '%s does not exist!\n' "$FILE"
fi
fi
It's worth mentioning that if you need to execute a single command you can abbreviate
if [ ! -f "$file" ]; then
echo "$file"
fi
to
test -f "$file" || echo "$file"
or
[ -f "$file" ] || echo "$file"
I prefer to do the following one-liner, in POSIX shell compatible format:
$ [ -f "/$DIR/$FILE" ] || echo "$FILE NOT FOUND"
$ [ -f "/$DIR/$FILE" ] && echo "$FILE FOUND"
For a couple of commands, like I would do in a script:
$ [ -f "/$DIR/$FILE" ] || { echo "$FILE NOT FOUND" ; exit 1 ;}
Once I started doing this, I rarely use the fully typed syntax anymore!!
To test file existence, the parameter can be any one of the following:
-e: Returns true if file exists (regular file, directory, or symlink)
-f: Returns true if file exists and is a regular file
-d: Returns true if file exists and is a directory
-h: Returns true if file exists and is a symlink
All the tests below apply to regular files, directories, and symlinks:
-r: Returns true if file exists and is readable
-w: Returns true if file exists and is writable
-x: Returns true if file exists and is executable
-s: Returns true if file exists and has a size > 0
Example script:
#!/bin/bash
FILE=$1
if [ -f "$FILE" ]; then
echo "File $FILE exists"
else
echo "File $FILE does not exist"
fi
You can do this:
[[ ! -f "$FILE" ]] && echo "File doesn't exist"
or
if [[ ! -f "$FILE" ]]; then
echo "File doesn't exist"
fi
If you want to check for file and folder both, then use -e option instead of -f. -e returns true for regular files, directories, socket, character special files, block special files etc.
You should be careful about running test for an unquoted variable, because it might produce unexpected results:
$ [ -f ]
$ echo $?
0
$ [ -f "" ]
$ echo $?
1
The recommendation is usually to have the tested variable surrounded by double quotation marks:
#!/bin/sh
FILE=$1
if [ ! -f "$FILE" ]
then
echo "File $FILE does not exist."
fi
In
[ -f "$file" ]
the [ command does a stat() (not lstat()) system call on the path stored in $file and returns true if that system call succeeds and the type of the file as returned by stat() is "regular".
So if [ -f "$file" ] returns true, you can tell the file does exist and is a regular file or a symlink eventually resolving to a regular file (or at least it was at the time of the stat()).
However if it returns false (or if [ ! -f "$file" ] or ! [ -f "$file" ] return true), there are many different possibilities:
the file doesn't exist
the file exists but is not a regular file (could be a device, fifo, directory, socket...)
the file exists but you don't have search permission to the parent directory
the file exists but that path to access it is too long
the file is a symlink to a regular file, but you don't have search permission to some of the directories involved in the resolution of the symlink.
... any other reason why the stat() system call may fail.
In short, it should be:
if [ -f "$file" ]; then
printf '"%s" is a path to a regular file or symlink to regular file\n' "$file"
elif [ -e "$file" ]; then
printf '"%s" exists but is not a regular file\n' "$file"
elif [ -L "$file" ]; then
printf '"%s" exists, is a symlink but I cannot tell if it eventually resolves to an actual file, regular or not\n' "$file"
else
printf 'I cannot tell if "%s" exists, let alone whether it is a regular file or not\n' "$file"
fi
To know for sure that the file doesn't exist, we'd need the stat() system call to return with an error code of ENOENT (ENOTDIR tells us one of the path components is not a directory is another case where we can tell the file doesn't exist by that path). Unfortunately the [ command doesn't let us know that. It will return false whether the error code is ENOENT, EACCESS (permission denied), ENAMETOOLONG or anything else.
The [ -e "$file" ] test can also be done with ls -Ld -- "$file" > /dev/null. In that case, ls will tell you why the stat() failed, though the information can't easily be used programmatically:
$ file=/var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
$ if [ ! -e "$file" ]; then echo does not exist; fi
does not exist
$ if ! ls -Ld -- "$file" > /dev/null; then echo stat failed; fi
ls: cannot access '/var/spool/cron/crontabs/root': Permission denied
stat failed
At least ls tells me it's not because the file doesn't exist that it fails. It's because it can't tell whether the file exists or not. The [ command just ignored the problem.
With the zsh shell, you can query the error code with the $ERRNO special variable after the failing [ command, and decode that number using the $errnos special array in the zsh/system module:
zmodload zsh/system
ERRNO=0
if [ ! -f "$file" ]; then
err=$ERRNO
case $errnos[err] in
("") echo exists, not a regular file;;
(ENOENT|ENOTDIR)
if [ -L "$file" ]; then
echo broken link
else
echo does not exist
fi;;
(*) syserror -p "can't tell: " "$err"
esac
fi
(beware the $errnos support was broken with some versions of zsh when built with recent versions of gcc).
There are three distinct ways to do this:
Negate the exit status with bash (no other answer has said this):
if ! [ -e "$file" ]; then
echo "file does not exist"
fi
Or:
! [ -e "$file" ] && echo "file does not exist"
Negate the test inside the test command [ (that is the way most answers before have presented):
if [ ! -e "$file" ]; then
echo "file does not exist"
fi
Or:
[ ! -e "$file" ] && echo "file does not exist"
Act on the result of the test being negative (|| instead of &&):
Only:
[ -e "$file" ] || echo "file does not exist"
This looks silly (IMO), don't use it unless your code has to be portable to the Bourne shell (like the /bin/sh of Solaris 10 or earlier) that lacked the pipeline negation operator (!):
if [ -e "$file" ]; then
:
else
echo "file does not exist"
fi
envfile=.env
if [ ! -f "$envfile" ]
then
echo "$envfile does not exist"
exit 1
fi
To reverse a test, use "!".
That is equivalent to the "not" logical operator in other languages. Try this:
if [ ! -f /tmp/foo.txt ];
then
echo "File not found!"
fi
Or written in a slightly different way:
if [ ! -f /tmp/foo.txt ]
then echo "File not found!"
fi
Or you could use:
if ! [ -f /tmp/foo.txt ]
then echo "File not found!"
fi
Or, presing all together:
if ! [ -f /tmp/foo.txt ]; then echo "File not found!"; fi
Which may be written (using then "and" operator: &&) as:
[ ! -f /tmp/foo.txt ] && echo "File not found!"
Which looks shorter like this:
[ -f /tmp/foo.txt ] || echo "File not found!"
The test thing may count too. It worked for me (based on Bash Shell: Check File Exists or Not):
test -e FILENAME && echo "File exists" || echo "File doesn't exist"
This code also working .
#!/bin/bash
FILE=$1
if [ -f $FILE ]; then
echo "File '$FILE' Exists"
else
echo "The File '$FILE' Does Not Exist"
fi
The simplest way
FILE=$1
[ ! -e "${FILE}" ] && echo "does not exist" || echo "exists"
This shell script also works for finding a file in a directory:
echo "enter file"
read -r a
if [ -s /home/trainee02/"$a" ]
then
echo "yes. file is there."
else
echo "sorry. file is not there."
fi
sometimes it may be handy to use && and || operators.
Like in (if you have command "test"):
test -b $FILE && echo File not there!
or
test -b $FILE || echo File there!
If you want to use test instead of [], then you can use ! to get the negation:
if ! test "$FILE"; then
echo "does not exist"
fi
You can also group multiple commands in the one liner
[ -f "filename" ] || ( echo test1 && echo test2 && echo test3 )
or
[ -f "filename" ] || { echo test1 && echo test2 && echo test3 ;}
If filename doesn't exit, the output will be
test1
test2
test3
Note: ( ... ) runs in a subshell, { ... ;} runs in the same shell.
I want to display a message when the variable fl is not a valid filename or directory.
Seems as though there is a problem with the construct below.
if [[ ! -f "$fl" || ! -d "$fl" ]]; then
printf '%s\n' "$fl: File or Directory does not exist"
fi
if [ ! -e $fl ]; then
printf '%s\n' "$fl: File or Directory does not exist"
fi
If you give it a filename remember to include the extension
This checks if a file exists:
#!/bin/bash
FILE=$1
if [ -f $FILE ]; then
echo "File $FILE exists."
else
echo "File $FILE does not exist."
fi
How do I only check if the file does not exist?
The test command (written as [ here) has a "not" logical operator, ! (exclamation mark):
if [ ! -f /tmp/foo.txt ]; then
echo "File not found!"
fi
Bash File Testing
-b filename - Block special file
-c filename - Special character file
-d directoryname - Check for directory Existence
-e filename - Check for file existence, regardless of type (node, directory, socket, etc.)
-f filename - Check for regular file existence not a directory
-G filename - Check if file exists and is owned by effective group ID
-G filename set-group-id - True if file exists and is set-group-id
-k filename - Sticky bit
-L filename - Symbolic link
-O filename - True if file exists and is owned by the effective user id
-r filename - Check if file is a readable
-S filename - Check if file is socket
-s filename - Check if file is nonzero size
-u filename - Check if file set-user-id bit is set
-w filename - Check if file is writable
-x filename - Check if file is executable
How to use:
#!/bin/bash
file=./file
if [ -e "$file" ]; then
echo "File exists"
else
echo "File does not exist"
fi
A test expression can be negated by using the ! operator
#!/bin/bash
file=./file
if [ ! -e "$file" ]; then
echo "File does not exist"
else
echo "File exists"
fi
Negate the expression inside test (for which [ is an alias) using !:
#!/bin/bash
FILE=$1
if [ ! -f "$FILE" ]
then
echo "File $FILE does not exist"
fi
The relevant man page is man test or, equivalently, man [ -- or help test or help [ for the built-in bash command.
Alternatively (less commonly used) you can negate the result of test using:
if ! [ -f "$FILE" ]
then
echo "File $FILE does not exist"
fi
That syntax is described in "man 1 bash" in sections "Pipelines" and "Compound Commands".
[[ -f $FILE ]] || printf '%s does not exist!\n' "$FILE"
Also, it's possible that the file is a broken symbolic link, or a non-regular file, like e.g. a socket, device or fifo. For example, to add a check for broken symlinks:
if [[ ! -f $FILE ]]; then
if [[ -L $FILE ]]; then
printf '%s is a broken symlink!\n' "$FILE"
else
printf '%s does not exist!\n' "$FILE"
fi
fi
It's worth mentioning that if you need to execute a single command you can abbreviate
if [ ! -f "$file" ]; then
echo "$file"
fi
to
test -f "$file" || echo "$file"
or
[ -f "$file" ] || echo "$file"
I prefer to do the following one-liner, in POSIX shell compatible format:
$ [ -f "/$DIR/$FILE" ] || echo "$FILE NOT FOUND"
$ [ -f "/$DIR/$FILE" ] && echo "$FILE FOUND"
For a couple of commands, like I would do in a script:
$ [ -f "/$DIR/$FILE" ] || { echo "$FILE NOT FOUND" ; exit 1 ;}
Once I started doing this, I rarely use the fully typed syntax anymore!!
To test file existence, the parameter can be any one of the following:
-e: Returns true if file exists (regular file, directory, or symlink)
-f: Returns true if file exists and is a regular file
-d: Returns true if file exists and is a directory
-h: Returns true if file exists and is a symlink
All the tests below apply to regular files, directories, and symlinks:
-r: Returns true if file exists and is readable
-w: Returns true if file exists and is writable
-x: Returns true if file exists and is executable
-s: Returns true if file exists and has a size > 0
Example script:
#!/bin/bash
FILE=$1
if [ -f "$FILE" ]; then
echo "File $FILE exists"
else
echo "File $FILE does not exist"
fi
You can do this:
[[ ! -f "$FILE" ]] && echo "File doesn't exist"
or
if [[ ! -f "$FILE" ]]; then
echo "File doesn't exist"
fi
If you want to check for file and folder both, then use -e option instead of -f. -e returns true for regular files, directories, socket, character special files, block special files etc.
You should be careful about running test for an unquoted variable, because it might produce unexpected results:
$ [ -f ]
$ echo $?
0
$ [ -f "" ]
$ echo $?
1
The recommendation is usually to have the tested variable surrounded by double quotation marks:
#!/bin/sh
FILE=$1
if [ ! -f "$FILE" ]
then
echo "File $FILE does not exist."
fi
In
[ -f "$file" ]
the [ command does a stat() (not lstat()) system call on the path stored in $file and returns true if that system call succeeds and the type of the file as returned by stat() is "regular".
So if [ -f "$file" ] returns true, you can tell the file does exist and is a regular file or a symlink eventually resolving to a regular file (or at least it was at the time of the stat()).
However if it returns false (or if [ ! -f "$file" ] or ! [ -f "$file" ] return true), there are many different possibilities:
the file doesn't exist
the file exists but is not a regular file (could be a device, fifo, directory, socket...)
the file exists but you don't have search permission to the parent directory
the file exists but that path to access it is too long
the file is a symlink to a regular file, but you don't have search permission to some of the directories involved in the resolution of the symlink.
... any other reason why the stat() system call may fail.
In short, it should be:
if [ -f "$file" ]; then
printf '"%s" is a path to a regular file or symlink to regular file\n' "$file"
elif [ -e "$file" ]; then
printf '"%s" exists but is not a regular file\n' "$file"
elif [ -L "$file" ]; then
printf '"%s" exists, is a symlink but I cannot tell if it eventually resolves to an actual file, regular or not\n' "$file"
else
printf 'I cannot tell if "%s" exists, let alone whether it is a regular file or not\n' "$file"
fi
To know for sure that the file doesn't exist, we'd need the stat() system call to return with an error code of ENOENT (ENOTDIR tells us one of the path components is not a directory is another case where we can tell the file doesn't exist by that path). Unfortunately the [ command doesn't let us know that. It will return false whether the error code is ENOENT, EACCESS (permission denied), ENAMETOOLONG or anything else.
The [ -e "$file" ] test can also be done with ls -Ld -- "$file" > /dev/null. In that case, ls will tell you why the stat() failed, though the information can't easily be used programmatically:
$ file=/var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
$ if [ ! -e "$file" ]; then echo does not exist; fi
does not exist
$ if ! ls -Ld -- "$file" > /dev/null; then echo stat failed; fi
ls: cannot access '/var/spool/cron/crontabs/root': Permission denied
stat failed
At least ls tells me it's not because the file doesn't exist that it fails. It's because it can't tell whether the file exists or not. The [ command just ignored the problem.
With the zsh shell, you can query the error code with the $ERRNO special variable after the failing [ command, and decode that number using the $errnos special array in the zsh/system module:
zmodload zsh/system
ERRNO=0
if [ ! -f "$file" ]; then
err=$ERRNO
case $errnos[err] in
("") echo exists, not a regular file;;
(ENOENT|ENOTDIR)
if [ -L "$file" ]; then
echo broken link
else
echo does not exist
fi;;
(*) syserror -p "can't tell: " "$err"
esac
fi
(beware the $errnos support was broken with some versions of zsh when built with recent versions of gcc).
There are three distinct ways to do this:
Negate the exit status with bash (no other answer has said this):
if ! [ -e "$file" ]; then
echo "file does not exist"
fi
Or:
! [ -e "$file" ] && echo "file does not exist"
Negate the test inside the test command [ (that is the way most answers before have presented):
if [ ! -e "$file" ]; then
echo "file does not exist"
fi
Or:
[ ! -e "$file" ] && echo "file does not exist"
Act on the result of the test being negative (|| instead of &&):
Only:
[ -e "$file" ] || echo "file does not exist"
This looks silly (IMO), don't use it unless your code has to be portable to the Bourne shell (like the /bin/sh of Solaris 10 or earlier) that lacked the pipeline negation operator (!):
if [ -e "$file" ]; then
:
else
echo "file does not exist"
fi
envfile=.env
if [ ! -f "$envfile" ]
then
echo "$envfile does not exist"
exit 1
fi
To reverse a test, use "!".
That is equivalent to the "not" logical operator in other languages. Try this:
if [ ! -f /tmp/foo.txt ];
then
echo "File not found!"
fi
Or written in a slightly different way:
if [ ! -f /tmp/foo.txt ]
then echo "File not found!"
fi
Or you could use:
if ! [ -f /tmp/foo.txt ]
then echo "File not found!"
fi
Or, presing all together:
if ! [ -f /tmp/foo.txt ]; then echo "File not found!"; fi
Which may be written (using then "and" operator: &&) as:
[ ! -f /tmp/foo.txt ] && echo "File not found!"
Which looks shorter like this:
[ -f /tmp/foo.txt ] || echo "File not found!"
The test thing may count too. It worked for me (based on Bash Shell: Check File Exists or Not):
test -e FILENAME && echo "File exists" || echo "File doesn't exist"
This code also working .
#!/bin/bash
FILE=$1
if [ -f $FILE ]; then
echo "File '$FILE' Exists"
else
echo "The File '$FILE' Does Not Exist"
fi
The simplest way
FILE=$1
[ ! -e "${FILE}" ] && echo "does not exist" || echo "exists"
This shell script also works for finding a file in a directory:
echo "enter file"
read -r a
if [ -s /home/trainee02/"$a" ]
then
echo "yes. file is there."
else
echo "sorry. file is not there."
fi
sometimes it may be handy to use && and || operators.
Like in (if you have command "test"):
test -b $FILE && echo File not there!
or
test -b $FILE || echo File there!
If you want to use test instead of [], then you can use ! to get the negation:
if ! test "$FILE"; then
echo "does not exist"
fi
You can also group multiple commands in the one liner
[ -f "filename" ] || ( echo test1 && echo test2 && echo test3 )
or
[ -f "filename" ] || { echo test1 && echo test2 && echo test3 ;}
If filename doesn't exit, the output will be
test1
test2
test3
Note: ( ... ) runs in a subshell, { ... ;} runs in the same shell.
I have a bash script:
echo " enter file name "
read $file
if [ -f "$file" ] && [ -s "$file" ]
then
echo " file does not exist, or is empty "
else
echo " file exists and is not empty "
fi
No matter what I enter as a $file, it gives me the false value. I can even enter a file that does not even exist; it still will give me the false value. Why is that?
It is enough to check for -s, because it says:
FILE exists and has a size greater than zero
http://unixhelp.ed.ac.uk/CGI/man-cgi?test
also your output is switched, so it outputs does not exists when a file exists, because -s will give TRUE if file exists AND has a size > 0.
So correctly you should use:
echo " enter file name "
read file
if [ -s "$file" ]
then
echo " file exists and is not empty "
else
echo " file does not exist, or is empty "
fi
This will give you the expected output.
Also it should be
read file
instead of
read $file
If you want further informations, I recommand reading man test and man read
Please note, that [ -f "$file" ] && [ -s "$file" ] will return true if file exists and is not empty.
Other option:
if [[ -f "/path/to/file" && -s "/path/to/file" ]]; then
echo "exist and not empty"
else
echo "not exist or empty";
fi
This is the true solution:
if [[ -f $file && -s $file ]]
With [[ the quotes are unnecessary because [[ handles empty strings and strings with whitespace more intuitively.
The solution that was proposed to you:
if [ -s "$file" ]
is wrong because it is instead equivalent to:
if [[ -e $file && -s $file ]]
which, in addition to the regular files dictated by the word -f, also looks for:
Directory
Symbolic Link
Block Special Device
Character Device
Unix Socket (local domain socket)
Named Pipe
I have a bunch of images that I need to rename, so I can use them and I was wondering how to do this.
The way they need to be is that first 5 will be kept and then for the 6th I would write a number from 1-3. I only know that the first 5 are static; on pics belonging to same "family" and can be used for comparison and the 6th char is not known.
Example:
12345random.jpg
12345randomer.jpg
0987654more_random.jpg
09876awesome.jpg
09876awesomer.jpg
09876awesomest.jpg
09876soawesomegalaxiesexplode.jpg
would become.
12345.jpg
123452.jpg
09876.jpg
098761.jpg
098762.jpg
It would be cool if it would only handle the loop so that 3 pics could be only renamed and rest skipped.
I found some stuff on removing letters to certain point, but nothing that use, since I am quite poor at bash scripting.
Here is my approach, but it kind of sucks, since I tried modifying scripts I found, but the idea is there
//I could not figure how to remove the chars after 5th not the other way around
for file in .....*; do echo mv $file `echo $file | cut -c6-`; done
done
//problem also is that once the names conflict it produces only 1 file named 12345.jpg 2nd one will not be created
//do not know how to read file names to array
name=somefile
if [[ -e $name.jpg]] ; then
i=0
while [[ -e $name-$i.jpg]] ; do
let i++
done
name=$name-$i
fi
touch $name.jpg
You can have:
new_file=${file%%[^0-9]*.jpg}.jpg
As a concept you can have this to rename files:
for file in *.jpg; do
[[ $file == [0-9]*[^0-9]*.jpg ]] || continue ## Just a simple check.
new_file=${file%%[^0-9]*.jpg}.jpg
[[ -e $new_file ]] || continue ## Do not overwrite. Delete line if not wanted.
echo "Renaming $file to $new_file." ## Optional message.
mv -- "$file" "$new_file" || echo "Failed to rename $file to $new_file."
done
If you're going to process files that also contain directory names, you'll need some more changes:
for file in /path/to/other/dirs/*.jpg *.jpg; do
base=${file##*/}
[[ $base == [0-9]*[^0-9]*.jpg ]] || continue
if [[ $file == */* ]]; then
new_file=${file%/*}/${base%%[^0-9]*.jpg}.jpg
else
new_file=${file%%[^0-9]*.jpg}.jpg
fi
[[ -e $new_file ]] || continue
echo "Renaming $file to $new_file."
mv -- "$file" "$new_file"
done
you can also try the following code
but be careful all the files should be in .jpg format and pass the name of folder as an argument
#!/bin/bash
a=`ls $1`
for b in $a
do
echo $b
if (( i<4 ))
then
c=`echo $b | cut -c1-5`
let i=i+1
c="$c$i.jpg"
echo $c
else
c=`echo $b | cut -c1-5`
c="$c.jpg"
break
fi
mv $1$b $1$c
done