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Delete files recursively matching a name on the command line (OS X)
I want to remove all files with extension .orig from my tree. The tree is deep. Is there an easy way to do that?
I will probably have to do this many times a day, with different trees. So ease is important.
03 Answers
Use the find tool:
find /path -name '*.orig' -deleteNote that the wildcard must be quoted (either as "*.orig" or '*.orig' or \*.orig), as you want it to be only handled by 'find' but not by the shell.
Some operating systems might not have the -delete option, in which case make it invoke rm:
find /path -name "*.orig" -exec rm -i {} \; 2 I prefer this method (very similar to @grawity) but with the type of file included:
find /path . -name '*.orig' -type f -delete
Can you execute shell commands in bash? This would do the trick:
find /path/to/your/tree | egrep .orig$ | xargs rm