Provided by: fd-find_8.3.1-1ubuntu0.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       fd - find entries in the filesystem

SYNOPSIS

       fd  [-HIEsiaLp0hV]  [-d  depth] [-t filetype] [-e ext] [-E exclude] [-c when] [-j num] [-x
       cmd] [pattern] [path...]

DESCRIPTION

       fd is a simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to find(1).

OPTIONS

       -H, --hidden
              Include hidden files and directories in the search results (default:  hidden  files
              and directories are skipped). The flag can be overridden with '--no-hidden'.

       -I, --no-ignore
              Show search results from files and directories that would otherwise be ignored by

              • .gitignore.git/info/exclude

              • The global gitignore configuration (by default $HOME/.config/git/ignore)

              • .ignore.fdignore

              • The global fd ignore file (usually $HOME/.config/fd/ignore )

              The flag can be overridden with '--ignore'.

       -u, --unrestricted
              Alias  for  '--no-ignore'.  Can  be  repeated;  '-uu'  is an alias for '--no-ignore
              --hidden'.

       --no-ignore-vcs
              Show search results from files and directories that would otherwise be  ignored  by
              gitignore  files  including .gitignore, .git/info/exclude, and the global gitignore
              configuration    (core.excludesFile    git    setting,    which     defaults     to
              $HOME/.config/git/ignore).  The flag can be overridden with '--ignore-vcs'.

       --no-ignore-parent
              Show  search  results from files and directories that would otherwise be ignored by
              gitignore files in parent directories.

       -s, --case-sensitive
              Perform a case-sensitive search. By default,  fd  uses  case-insensitive  searches,
              unless the pattern contains an uppercase character (smart case).

       -i, --ignore-case
              Perform  a  case-insensitive search. By default, fd uses case-insensitive searches,
              unless the pattern contains an uppercase character (smart case).

       -g, --glob
              Perform a glob-based search instead of a regular expression  search.   If  combined
              with the '--full-path' option, '**' can be used to match multiple path components.

       --regex
              Perform  a  regular-expression based search (default). This can be used to override
              --glob.

       -F, --fixed-strings
              Treat the pattern as a literal string instead of a regular  expression.  Note  that
              this also performs substring comparison. If you want to match on an exact filename,
              consider using '--glob'.

       -a, --absolute-path
              Shows the full path starting from the root as opposed to relative paths.  The  flag
              can be overridden with '--relative-path'.

       -l, --list-details
              Use a detailed listing format like 'ls -l'. This is basically an alias for '--exec-
              batch ls -l' with some additional 'ls' options.  This  can  be  used  to  see  more
              metadata, to show symlink targets and to achieve a deterministic sort order.

       -L, --follow
              By  default,  fd  does  not  descend  into  symlinked directories. Using this flag,
              symbolic links are also traversed. The flag can be overridden with '--no-follow'.

       -p, --full-path
              By default, the search pattern is only matched against the filename  (or  directory
              name). Using this flag, the pattern is matched against the full path.

       -0, --print0
              Separate  search  results  by  the null character (instead of newlines). Useful for
              piping results to xargs.

       --max-results count
              Limit the number of search results to 'count' and quit immediately.

       -1     Limit the search to a single result and quit immediately.  This  is  an  alias  for
              '--max-results=1'.

       -q, --quiet
              When the flag is present, the program does not print anything and will instead exit
              with a code of 0 if there is at least one search result.  Otherwise, the exit  code
              will be 1.  This is mainly for usage in scripts and can be faster than checking for
              output  because  the  search  can  be  stopped  early  after   the   first   match.
              --has-results can be used as an alias.

       --show-errors
              Enable  the  display  of  filesystem  errors  for  situations  such as insufficient
              permissions or dead symlinks.

       --strip-cwd-prefix
              By default, relative paths are prefixed with './' when the output  goes  to  a  non
              interactive terminal (TTY). Use this flag to disable this behaviour.

       --one-file-system, --mount, --xdev
              By  default, fd will traverse the file system tree as far as other options dictate.
              With this flag, fd ensures that it does not descend into a  different  file  system
              than the one it started in. Comparable to the -mount or -xdev filters of find(1).

       -h, --help
              Print help information.

       -V, --version
              Print version information.

       -d, --max-depth d
              Limit  directory  traversal  to  at most d levels of depth. By default, there is no
              limit on the search depth.

       --min-depth d
              Only show search results starting at the given depth. See also:  '--max-depth'  and
              '--exact-depth'.

       --exact-depth d
              Only  show  search  results  at the exact given depth. This is an alias for '--min-
              depth <depth> --max-depth <depth>'.

       --prune
              Do not traverse into matching directories.

       -t, --type filetype
              Filter search by type:

              f, file
                     regular files

              d, directory
                     directories

              l, symlink
                     symbolic links

              s, socket
                     sockets

              p, pipe
                     named pipes (FIFOs)

              x, executable
                     executable (files)

              e, empty
                     empty files or directories

              This option can be specified  more  than  once  to  include  multiple  file  types.
              Searching  for '--type file --type symlink' will show both regular files as well as
              symlinks. Note that the 'executable' and 'empty' filters work differently:  '--type
              executable' implies '--type file' by default. And '--type empty' searches for empty
              files and directories,  unless  either  '--type  file'  or  '--type  directory'  is
              specified in addition.

              Examples:
                - Only search for files:
                    fd --type file …
                    fd -tf …
                - Find both files and symlinks
                    fd --type file --type symlink …
                    fd -tf -tl …
                - Find executable files:
                    fd --type executable
                    fd -tx
                - Find empty files:
                    fd --type empty --type file
                    fd -te -tf
                - Find empty directories:
                    fd --type empty --type directory
                    fd -te -td

       -e, --extension ext
              Filter search results by file extension ext.  This option can be used repeatedly to
              allow for multiple possible file extensions.

              If you want to search for files without extension, you can use the regex  '^[^.]+$'
              as a normal search pattern.

       -E, --exclude pattern
              Exclude  files/directories  that  match the given glob pattern.  This overrides any
              other ignore logic.  Multiple exclude patterns can be specified.  Examples:
                --exclude '*.pyc'
                --exclude node_modules

       --ignore-file path
              Add  a  custom  ignore-file  in  '.gitignore'  format.   These  files  have  a  low
              precedence.

       -c, --color when
              Declare when to colorize search results:

              auto   Colorize output when standard output is connected to terminal (default).

              never  Do not colorize output.

              always Always colorize output.

       -j, --threads num
              Set  number  of  threads  to  use  for  searching  &  executing (default: number of
              available CPU cores).

       -S, --size size
              Limit results based on the size of files using the format <+-><NUM><UNIT>

              '+'    file size must be greater than or equal to this

              '-'    file size must be less than or equal to this

              If neither '+' nor '-' is specified, file size must be exactly equal to this.

              'NUM'  The numeric size (e.g. 500)

              'UNIT' The units for NUM. They are not case-sensitive.  Allowed unit values:

                     'b'    bytes

                     'k'    kilobytes (base ten, 10^3 = 1000 bytes)

                     'm'    megabytes

                     'g'    gigabytes

                     't'    terabytes

                     'ki'   kibibytes (base two, 2^10 = 1024 bytes)

                     'mi'   mebibytes

                     'gi'   gibibytes

                     'ti'   tebibytes

       --changed-within date|duration
              Filter results based on the file modification time.  Files with modification  times
              greater  than  the  argument  will  be returned.  The argument can be provided as a
              duration (10h, 1d, 35min) or as a specific point in time  in  either  full  RFC3339
              format  with time zone, or as a date or datetime in the local time zone (YYYY-MM-DD
              or YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS).  --change-newer-than can be used as an alias.

              Examples:
                --changed-within 2weeks
                --change-newer-than "2018-10-27 10:00:00"

       --changed-before date|duration
              Filter results based on the file modification time.  Files with modification  times
              less  than  the  argument  will  be  returned.   The  argument can be provided as a
              duration (10h, 1d, 35min) or as a specific point in time  in  either  full  RFC3339
              format  with time zone, or as a date or datetime in the local time zone (YYYY-MM-DD
              or YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS).  --change-older-than can be used as an alias.

              Examples:
                --changed-before "2018-10-27 10:00:00"
                --change-older-than 2weeks

       -o, --owner [user][:group]
              Filter files by their user and/or group. Format: [(user|uid)][:(group|gid)]. Either
              side is optional. Precede either side with a '!' to exclude files instead.

              Examples:
                --owner john
                --owner :students
                --owner "!john:students"

       --base-directory path
              Change  the  current  working directory of fd to the provided path. This means that
              search results will be shown with  respect  to  the  given  base  path.  Note  that
              relative  paths  which  are  passed  to  fd via the positional path argument or the
              --search-path option will also be resolved relative to this directory.

       --path-separator separator
              Set the path separator to use when printing file paths.  The  default  is  the  OS-
              specific separator ('/' on Unix, '\' on Windows).

       --search-path search-path
              Provide  paths to search as an alternative to the positional path argument. Changes
              the usage to ´fd [FLAGS/OPTIONS] --search-path PATH --search-path PATH2 [PATTERN]´

       -x, --exec command
              Execute command for each search result in parallel (use --threads=1 for  sequential
              command execution).

              Note that all subsequent positional arguments are considered to be arguments to the
              command - not to fd.  It is therefore recommended to  place  the  -x/--exec  option
              last.  Alternatively,  you  can  supply a ';' argument to end the argument list and
              continue with more fd options.  Most shells require ';' to be escaped: '\;'.

              The following placeholders are substituted before the command is executed:

                     {}     path (of the current search result)

                     {/}    basename

                     {//}   parent directory

                     {.}    path without file extension

                     {/.}   basename without file extension

              If no placeholder is present, an implicit "{}" at the end is assumed.

              Examples:

                - find all *.zip files and unzip them:

                      fd -e zip -x unzip

                - find *.h and *.cpp files and run "clang-format -i .." for each of them:

                      fd -e h -e cpp -x clang-format -i

                - Convert all *.jpg files to *.png files:

                      fd -e jpg -x convert {} {.}.png

       -X, --exec-batch command
              Execute command once, with all search results as arguments.  One of  the  following
              placeholders is substituted before the command is executed:

                     {}     path (of all search results)

                     {/}    basename

                     {//}   parent directory

                     {.}    path without file extension

                     {/.}   basename without file extension

              If no placeholder is present, an implicit "{}" at the end is assumed.

              Examples:

                - Find all test_*.py files and open them in your favorite editor:

                      fd -g 'test_*.py' -X vim

                  Note  that  this  executes  a  single  "vim" process with all search results as
              arguments.

                - Find all *.rs files and count the lines with "wc -l ...":

                      fd -e rs -X wc -l

       --batch-size size
              Maximum number of arguments to pass to the command given with -X. If the number  of
              results is greater than the given size, the command given with -X is run again with
              remaining arguments. A batch size of zero means there is no limit.

PATTERN SYNTAX

       The regular expression syntax used by fd is documented here:

           https://docs.rs/regex/1.0.0/regex/#syntax

       The glob syntax is documented here:

           https://docs.rs/globset/#syntax

ENVIRONMENT

       LS_COLORS
              Determines how to colorize search results, see dircolors(1).

       NO_COLOR
              Disables colorized output.

       XDG_CONFIG_HOME, HOME
              Used  to  locate  the  global  ignore  file.  If  XDG_CONFIG_HOME   is   set,   use
              $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fd/ignore.  Otherwise, use $HOME/.config/fd/ignore.

EXAMPLES

       Find files and directories that match the pattern 'needle':
              $ fd needle

       Start a search in a given directory (/var/log):
              $ fd nginx /var/log

       Find all Python files (all files with the extension .py) in the current directory:
              $ fd -e py

       Open all search results with vim:
              $ fd pattern -X vim

       --batch-size size
              Pass at most size arguments to each call to the command given with -X.

       SEE ALSO
              find(1)

                                                                                            FD(1)