Working with files and directories
Overview
Teaching: 20 min
Exercises: 10 minQuestions
How can I copy, move, and delete files and directories?
How can I read files?
Objectives
Work with files and directories from the command line
Use tab completion to limit typing
Look at all or part of a file using the command line
Moving and copying files
Working with files and folders
As well as navigating directories, we can interact with files on the command line: we can read them, open them, run them, and even edit them. In fact, there’s really no limit to what we can do in the shell, but even experienced shell users still switch to graphical user interfaces (GUIs) for many tasks, such as editing formatted text documents (Word or OpenOffice), browsing the web, editing images, etc. But if we wanted to make the same crop on hundreds of images, say, the pages of a scanned book, then we could automate that cropping work by using shell commands.
We will try a few basic ways to interact with files. Let’s first move into the
shell-lesson directory on your desktop.
$ cd
$ cd Desktop/shell-lesson
$ pwd
/Users/your.username/Desktop/shell-lesson
Here, we will create a new directory and move into it:
$ mkdir firstdir
$ cd firstdir
Here we used the mkdir command (meaning ‘make directories’) to create a directory
named ‘firstdir’. Then we moved into that directory using the cd command.
But wait! There’s a trick to make things a bit quicker. Let’s go up one directory.
$ cd ..
Instead of typing cd firstdir, let’s try to type cd f and then hit the Tab key.
We notice that the shell completes the line to cd firstdir/.
Tab for Auto-complete
Hitting tab at any time within the shell will prompt it to attempt to auto-complete the line based on the files or sub-directories in the current directory. Where two or more files have the same characters, the auto-complete will only fill up to the first point of difference, after which we can add more characters, and try using tab again. We would encourage using this method throughout today to see how it behaves (as it saves loads of time and effort!).
Reading files
If you are in firstdir, use cd .. to get back to the shell-lesson directory.
Here there are three directories containing the data we will work with
for the workshop. Move into the desktrackers directory.
$ ls -lh
total 98M
53M -rw-r--r-- 1 your.username 1049089 53M Apr 6 11:45 Desk_Tracker.csv
18M -rw-r--r-- 1 your.username 1049089 18M Apr 6 10:02 Desk_Tracker_2016.csv
12M -rw-r--r-- 1 your.username 1049089 12M Apr 6 10:38 Desk_Tracker_2017.csv
9.4M -rw-r--r-- 1 your.username 1049089 9.4M Apr 6 10:39 Desk_Tracker_2018.csv
6.7M -rw-r--r-- 1 your.username 1049089 6.7M Apr 6 10:41 Desk_Tracker_2019.csv
total 1128
The files Desk_Tracker_2016.csv, and ...2017.csv, ...2018.csv
holds statistics exported from DeskTracker, the system used to track
traffic at service desks. But we’ve forgot which desk we exported,
so we try the cat command to read the text of the first file:
$ cat Desk_Tracker_2017.csv
The terminal window erupts and the whole book cascades by (it is printed to your terminal), leaving us with a new prompt and the last few lines of the file above this prompt.
Wrapping and Unwrapping Text
You might not be able to tell line from line if your Shell is wrapping the lines of text. Users can use the command
tput rmamto disable line wrapping andtput smamto enable line wrapping
Often we just want a quick glimpse of the first or the last part of a file to
get an idea about what the file is about. To let us do that, the Unix shell
provides us with the commands head and tail. Let’s make sure that our log files start and end at appropriate dates.
$ head Desk_Tracker_2017.csv
response_set_id,parent_response_set_id,date_time,page,user,branch,desk,library,)
"51530","","2017-01-03 08:02:32","Interdisciplinary Researc","RefBuddy","Interd"
"51531","","2017-01-03 08:08:52","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51532","","2017-01-03 08:08:58","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51533","","2017-01-03 08:17:26","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51534","","2017-01-03 08:57:08","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51535","","2017-01-03 08:58:52","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51538","","2017-01-03 09:10:46","MILrefdesk","RefBuddy","Map and Imagery Lab","
"51539","","2017-01-03 09:11:07","MILrefdesk","RefBuddy","Map and Imagery Lab","
"51540","","2017-01-03 09:32:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
This provides a view of the first ten lines, or as much of the first ten lines as fits the width of your terminal.
Tail, you might guess tail Desk_Tracker_2017.csv
gets you the last ten lines:
$ tail Desk_Tracker_2017.csv
"83263","","2017-12-23 11:59:15","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83264","","2017-12-23 12:14:54","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83265","","2017-12-23 12:28:24","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83266","","2017-12-23 12:51:42","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83267","","2017-12-23 13:37:52","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83268","","2017-12-23 13:44:48","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83269","","2017-12-23 14:21:14","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83270","","2017-12-23 14:41:58","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83271","","2017-12-23 14:42:15","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"83272","","2017-12-23 14:42:35","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
If ten lines is not enough (or too much), we would check man head
to see if there exists an option to specify the number of lines to get
(there is: head -n 20 will print 20 lines).
Another way to navigate files is to view the contents one screen at a time.
Type less Desk_Tracker_2017.csv to see the first screen, spacebar to see the
next screen and so on, then q to quit (return to the command prompt).
$ less Desk_Tracker_2017.csv
Like many other shell commands, the commands cat, head, tail and less
can take any number of arguments (they can work with any number of files).
We will see how we can get the first lines of several files at once.
To save some typing, we introduce a very useful trick first.
Re-using commands
On a blank command prompt, hit the up arrow key and notice that the previous command you typed appears before your cursor. We can continue pressing the up arrow to cycle through your previous commands. The down arrow cycles back toward your most recent command. This is another important labour-saving function and something we’ll use a lot.
Hit the up arrow until you get to the head Desk_Tracker_2017.csv
command. Add a space and then Desk_Tracker_2016.csv to produce the
following command:
$ head Desk_Tracker_2017.csv Desk_Tracker_2016.csv
==> Desk_Tracker_2017.csv <==
response_set_id,parent_response_set_id,date_time,page,user,branch,desk,library,)
"51530","","2017-01-03 08:02:32","Interdisciplinary Researc","RefBuddy","Interd"
"51531","","2017-01-03 08:08:52","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51532","","2017-01-03 08:08:58","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51533","","2017-01-03 08:17:26","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51534","","2017-01-03 08:57:08","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51535","","2017-01-03 08:58:52","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"51538","","2017-01-03 09:10:46","MILrefdesk","RefBuddy","Map and Imagery Lab","
"51539","","2017-01-03 09:11:07","MILrefdesk","RefBuddy","Map and Imagery Lab","
"51540","","2017-01-03 09:32:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
(base)
==> Desk_Tracker_2016.csv <==
response_set_id,parent_response_set_id,date_time,page,user,branch,desk,library,)
"9898","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Service"
"9899","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Service"
"9900","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Service"
"11582","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"11583","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"11584","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"11585","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"11586","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
"11587","","2016-01-04 08:00:00","Desk Statistics","RefBuddy","Reference Servic"
All good so far, but if we had lots of years, it would be tedious to enter
all the filenames. Luckily the shell supports wildcards! The ? (matches exactly
one character) and * (matches zero or more characters) are probably familiar
from library search systems. We can use the * wildcard to write the above head
command in a more compact way:
$ head *.csv
Wildcards
Wildcards are a feature of the shell and will therefore work with any command. The shell will expand wildcards to a list of files and/or directories before the command is executed, and the command will never see the wildcards. As an exception, if a wildcard expression does not match any file, Bash will pass the expression as a parameter to the command as it is. For example typing
ls *.pdfresults in an error message that there is no file called *.pdf.
Moving, Copying and Deleting files
We may also want to change the file name to something more descriptive.
We can move it to a new name by using the mv or move command,
giving it the old name as the first argument and the new name as the second
argument:
$ mv Desk_Tracker_2016.csv CollabStats_2016.csv
This is equivalent to the ‘rename file’ function.
Afterwards, when we perform a ls command, we will see that it is now called CollabStats_2016.csv:
$ ls
CollabStats_2016.csv Desk_Tracker_2017.csv Desk_Tracker_2018.csv Desk_Tracker_2019.csv
Copying a file
Instead of moving a file, you might want to copy a file (make a duplicate), for instance to make a backup before modifying a file. Just like the
mvcommand, thecpcommand takes two arguments: the old name and the new name. How would you make a copy of the fileDesk_Tracker_2018.csvcalledDesk_Tracker_2018_backup.csv? Try it!Answer
cp Desk_Tracker_2018.csv DeskTracker_2018_backup.csv
Renaming a directory
Renaming a directory works in the same way as renaming a file. Try using the
mvcommand to rename thefirstdirdirectory tobackup.Answer
mv firstdir backup
Moving a file into a directory
If the last argument you give to the
mvcommand is a directory, not a file, the file given in the first argument will be moved to that directory. Try using themvcommand to move the fileDeskTracker_2018_backup.csvinto thebackupfolder.Answer
mv DeskTracker_2018_backup.csv backupThis would also work:
mv Desk_Tracker_2018.csv backup/DeskTracker_2018_backup.csv
Using
historyUse the
historycommand to see a list of all the commands you’ve entered during the current session. You can also use Ctrl + r to do a reverse lookup. Hit Ctrl + r, then start typing any part of the command you’re looking for. The past command will autocomplete. Hitenterto run the command again, or press the arrow keys to start editing the command. If multiple past commands contain the text you input, you can Ctrl + r repeatedly to cycle through them. If you can’t find what you’re looking for in the reverse lookup, use Ctrl + c to return to the prompt. If you want to save your history, maybe to extract some commands from which to build a script later on, you can do that withhistory > history.txt. This will output all history to a text file calledhistory.txtthat you can later edit. To recall a command from history, enterhistory. Note the command number, e.g. 2045. Recall the command by entering!2045. This will execute the command.
Using the
echocommandThe
echocommand simply prints out a text you specify. Try it out:echo "Library Carpentry is awesome!". Interesting, isn’t it?You can also specify a variable, for instance
NAME=followed by your name. Then typeecho "$NAME is a fantastic library carpentry student". What happens?You can combine both text and normal shell commands using
echo, for example thepwdcommand you have learned earlier today. You do this by enclosing a shell command in$(and), for instance$(pwd). Now, try out the following:echo "Finally, it is nice and sunny on" $(date). Note that the output of thedatecommand is printed together with the text you specified. You can try the same with some of the other commands you have learned so far.Why do you think the echo command is actually quite important in the shell environment?
Answer
You may think there is not much value in such a basic command like
echo. However, from the moment you start writing automated shell scripts, it becomes very useful. For instance, you often need to output text to the screen, such as the current status of a script.Moreover, you just used a shell variable for the first time, which can be used to temporarily store information, that you can reuse later on. It will give many opportunities from the moment you start writing automated scripts.
Finally, onto deleting. We won’t use it now, but if you do want to delete a file,
for whatever reason, the command is rm, or remove.
Using wildcards, we can even delete lots of files. And adding the -r flag we
can delete folders with all their content.
Unlike deleting from within our graphical user interface, there is no warning,
no recycling bin from which you can get the files back and no other undo options!
For that reason, please be very careful with rm and extremely careful with rm -r.
Key Points
The shell can be used to copy, move, and combine multiple files