Why doesn't while work in the same shell script as find?












1















I have the following code, it needs to find all the files greater the 10 kilobytes and move them into another directory:



read mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k > size.txt
while read line
do
mv "$line" /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1
done < size.txt









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  • 1





    Welcome! You can improve this question by adding what you expect to happen, what you observe happening, and what you have tried so far. This will both make the question more helpful to others as well as increase the chances that you get a helpful answer yourself.

    – user1794469
    24 mins ago











  • Expanding on @user1794469's comments, if you to want know why your script didn't work, make sure you include enough information so others can reproduce the problem you had. Simply saying that something "doesn't work" is not sufficient. We need to know exactly what happened including all error messages.

    – John1024
    21 mins ago











  • actually i coped the whole script into another .sh file and it worked after that, i don't know what could be the problem before. The error was that it just printed the files was bigger then 10 kilobytes

    – Norbi
    18 mins ago
















1















I have the following code, it needs to find all the files greater the 10 kilobytes and move them into another directory:



read mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k > size.txt
while read line
do
mv "$line" /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1
done < size.txt









share|improve this question









New contributor




Norbi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1





    Welcome! You can improve this question by adding what you expect to happen, what you observe happening, and what you have tried so far. This will both make the question more helpful to others as well as increase the chances that you get a helpful answer yourself.

    – user1794469
    24 mins ago











  • Expanding on @user1794469's comments, if you to want know why your script didn't work, make sure you include enough information so others can reproduce the problem you had. Simply saying that something "doesn't work" is not sufficient. We need to know exactly what happened including all error messages.

    – John1024
    21 mins ago











  • actually i coped the whole script into another .sh file and it worked after that, i don't know what could be the problem before. The error was that it just printed the files was bigger then 10 kilobytes

    – Norbi
    18 mins ago














1












1








1








I have the following code, it needs to find all the files greater the 10 kilobytes and move them into another directory:



read mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k > size.txt
while read line
do
mv "$line" /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1
done < size.txt









share|improve this question









New contributor




Norbi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I have the following code, it needs to find all the files greater the 10 kilobytes and move them into another directory:



read mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k > size.txt
while read line
do
mv "$line" /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1
done < size.txt






linux bash shell ubuntu






share|improve this question









New contributor




Norbi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Norbi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 25 mins ago









user1794469

1,5451822




1,5451822






New contributor




Norbi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 35 mins ago









NorbiNorbi

82




82




New contributor




Norbi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Norbi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Norbi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 1





    Welcome! You can improve this question by adding what you expect to happen, what you observe happening, and what you have tried so far. This will both make the question more helpful to others as well as increase the chances that you get a helpful answer yourself.

    – user1794469
    24 mins ago











  • Expanding on @user1794469's comments, if you to want know why your script didn't work, make sure you include enough information so others can reproduce the problem you had. Simply saying that something "doesn't work" is not sufficient. We need to know exactly what happened including all error messages.

    – John1024
    21 mins ago











  • actually i coped the whole script into another .sh file and it worked after that, i don't know what could be the problem before. The error was that it just printed the files was bigger then 10 kilobytes

    – Norbi
    18 mins ago














  • 1





    Welcome! You can improve this question by adding what you expect to happen, what you observe happening, and what you have tried so far. This will both make the question more helpful to others as well as increase the chances that you get a helpful answer yourself.

    – user1794469
    24 mins ago











  • Expanding on @user1794469's comments, if you to want know why your script didn't work, make sure you include enough information so others can reproduce the problem you had. Simply saying that something "doesn't work" is not sufficient. We need to know exactly what happened including all error messages.

    – John1024
    21 mins ago











  • actually i coped the whole script into another .sh file and it worked after that, i don't know what could be the problem before. The error was that it just printed the files was bigger then 10 kilobytes

    – Norbi
    18 mins ago








1




1





Welcome! You can improve this question by adding what you expect to happen, what you observe happening, and what you have tried so far. This will both make the question more helpful to others as well as increase the chances that you get a helpful answer yourself.

– user1794469
24 mins ago





Welcome! You can improve this question by adding what you expect to happen, what you observe happening, and what you have tried so far. This will both make the question more helpful to others as well as increase the chances that you get a helpful answer yourself.

– user1794469
24 mins ago













Expanding on @user1794469's comments, if you to want know why your script didn't work, make sure you include enough information so others can reproduce the problem you had. Simply saying that something "doesn't work" is not sufficient. We need to know exactly what happened including all error messages.

– John1024
21 mins ago





Expanding on @user1794469's comments, if you to want know why your script didn't work, make sure you include enough information so others can reproduce the problem you had. Simply saying that something "doesn't work" is not sufficient. We need to know exactly what happened including all error messages.

– John1024
21 mins ago













actually i coped the whole script into another .sh file and it worked after that, i don't know what could be the problem before. The error was that it just printed the files was bigger then 10 kilobytes

– Norbi
18 mins ago





actually i coped the whole script into another .sh file and it worked after that, i don't know what could be the problem before. The error was that it just printed the files was bigger then 10 kilobytes

– Norbi
18 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














You don't need a shell script. A single find command will both search for files and move them:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv {} /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 ;


The words between -exec and ; are a command that is executed for every file found where {} is replaced by the name of the found file.



In a Linux system, such as your Ubuntu, or any system that uses GNU tools, a more efficient version of this command is:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv -t /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 +


This is more efficient because it moves several files using one invocation of mv.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    thank you for you fast answer, yeah maybe i should read the man a bit more carefully next time :D

    – Norbi
    12 mins ago











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














You don't need a shell script. A single find command will both search for files and move them:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv {} /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 ;


The words between -exec and ; are a command that is executed for every file found where {} is replaced by the name of the found file.



In a Linux system, such as your Ubuntu, or any system that uses GNU tools, a more efficient version of this command is:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv -t /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 +


This is more efficient because it moves several files using one invocation of mv.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    thank you for you fast answer, yeah maybe i should read the man a bit more carefully next time :D

    – Norbi
    12 mins ago
















0














You don't need a shell script. A single find command will both search for files and move them:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv {} /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 ;


The words between -exec and ; are a command that is executed for every file found where {} is replaced by the name of the found file.



In a Linux system, such as your Ubuntu, or any system that uses GNU tools, a more efficient version of this command is:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv -t /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 +


This is more efficient because it moves several files using one invocation of mv.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    thank you for you fast answer, yeah maybe i should read the man a bit more carefully next time :D

    – Norbi
    12 mins ago














0












0








0







You don't need a shell script. A single find command will both search for files and move them:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv {} /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 ;


The words between -exec and ; are a command that is executed for every file found where {} is replaced by the name of the found file.



In a Linux system, such as your Ubuntu, or any system that uses GNU tools, a more efficient version of this command is:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv -t /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 +


This is more efficient because it moves several files using one invocation of mv.






share|improve this answer













You don't need a shell script. A single find command will both search for files and move them:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv {} /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 ;


The words between -exec and ; are a command that is executed for every file found where {} is replaced by the name of the found file.



In a Linux system, such as your Ubuntu, or any system that uses GNU tools, a more efficient version of this command is:



read -r mam
find "$mam" -type f -size +10k -exec mv -t /home/patakinorbert/Desktop/prk1 +


This is more efficient because it moves several files using one invocation of mv.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 29 mins ago









John1024John1024

46.2k4107122




46.2k4107122








  • 1





    thank you for you fast answer, yeah maybe i should read the man a bit more carefully next time :D

    – Norbi
    12 mins ago














  • 1





    thank you for you fast answer, yeah maybe i should read the man a bit more carefully next time :D

    – Norbi
    12 mins ago








1




1





thank you for you fast answer, yeah maybe i should read the man a bit more carefully next time :D

– Norbi
12 mins ago





thank you for you fast answer, yeah maybe i should read the man a bit more carefully next time :D

– Norbi
12 mins ago










Norbi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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