I have a find command that I run to find files whose names contain foo.
I want to skip the .git directory. The command below works except it prints an
annoying .git any time it skips a .git directory:
find . ( -name .git ) -prune -o -name '*foo*'
How can I prevent开发者_如何学Go the skipped .git directories from
printing to the standard output?
So just for better visibility:
find -name '.git*' -prune -o -name '*foo*' -print
This also omits .gitignore files; note the trailing -print to omit printing, -prune stops descending into it but without -print prints it nevertheless. Twisted C;
find . -not -wholename "./.git*" -name "*foo*"
or, more strictly, if you don't want to see .git/ but do want to search in other dirs whose name also begins with .git (.git-foo/bar/...)
find . -not -wholename "./.git" -not -wholename "./.git/*" -name "*foo*"
If your .git/ directories may not always necessarily be located at the top-level of your search directory, you will want to use -not -wholename ".*/.git" and -not -wholename ".*/.git/*".
A bit odder but more efficient because it prunes the whole .git dir:
find . -not \( -wholename "./.git" -prune \) -name "*foo*"
Try this one:
find . -name '*foo*' | grep -v '\.git'
This will still traverse into the .git directories, but won't display them. Or you can combine with your version:
find . ( -name .git ) -prune -o -name '*foo*' | grep -v '\.git'
You can also do it without grep:
find . ( -name .git ) -prune -printf '' -o -name '*foo*' -print
加载中,请稍侯......
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