-exec cp - Tells you to execute the 'cp' command to copy files from source to destination directory. {} - is automatically replaced with the file name of the files found by 'find' command. /home/sk/test2/ - Target directory to save the matching files.
The Linux cp command is used for copying files and directories to another location. To copy a file, specify “cp” followed by the name of a file to copy. Then, state the location at which the new file should appear. The new file does not need to have the same name as the one you are copying.
You can use the shell commands cp or pax or the TSO/E command OCOPY to copy files within the z/OS UNIX file system. Using the shell: Use the cp shell command to copy: One file to another file in the working directory, or to a new file in another directory.
If your intent is to copy the found files into /home/shantanu/tosend
, you have the order of the arguments to cp
reversed:
find /home/shantanu/processed/ -name '*2011*.xml' -exec cp "{}" /home/shantanu/tosend \;
Please, note: the find
command use {}
as placeholder for matched file.
i faced an issue something like this...
Actually, in two ways you can process find
command output in copy
command
If find
command's output doesn't contain any space i.e if file name doesn't contain space in it then you can use below mentioned command:
Syntax: find <Path> <Conditions> | xargs cp -t <copy file path>
Example: find -mtime -1 -type f | xargs cp -t inner/
But most of the time our production data files might contain space in it. So most of time below mentioned command is safer:
Syntax: find <path> <condition> -exec cp '{}' <copy path> \;
Example find -mtime -1 -type f -exec cp '{}' inner/ \;
In the second example, last part i.e semi-colon is also considered as part of find
command, that should be escaped before press the enter button. Otherwise you will get an error something like this
find: missing argument to `-exec'
In your case, copy command syntax is wrong in order to copy find file into /home/shantanu/tosend
. The following command will work:
find /home/shantanu/processed/ -name '*2011*.xml' -exec cp {} /home/shantanu/tosend \;
You need to use cp -t /home/shantanu/tosend
in order to tell it that the argument is the target directory and not a source. You can then change it to -exec ... +
in order to get cp
to copy as many files as possible at once.
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