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Recursively move files within sub directories


Recursive bash script to collect information about each file in a directory structureMove files from subfoldersMove images from sub-folders into new sub-foldersShell script to function on subfolderscreate a .tar file of all latest files in the directoriesDelete files within all directories in a directoryExtract last 100 files in all subdirectories, each directory has variable number of filesHow to count the total number of files in all sub-directories?Excluding certain files and directories when deleting filesMaking Directories with Bash ScriptCopying single files from multiple directories to a new directory with multiple sub directories hosting each fileMerge multiple directories containing files with same name













2















.
├── subdirectory-A
│   ├── 1.jpg
│   ├── 1.tif
│   ├── 2.jpg
│   ├── 2.tif
│   ├── JPEG
│   └── TIF
└── subdirectory-B
├── 1.jpg
├── 1.tif
├── 2.jpg
├── 2.tif
├── JPEG
└── TIF


Can anyone help please? I'm trying to find a way of moving all .tif files into the TIF directory and all .jpg files into the JPEG directory by running (mv) in a shell script from the local parent directory. I have been using



mv *.jpg JPEG/


within each sub directory but I need to do this job on a archive with over 17K directories and the manual option one dir at a time is not an option.










share|improve this question









New contributor




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




















  • Do the TIF and JPEG already exist ?

    – cmak.fr
    1 hour ago











  • Is there only 1 for path-depth?

    – cmak.fr
    1 hour ago















2















.
├── subdirectory-A
│   ├── 1.jpg
│   ├── 1.tif
│   ├── 2.jpg
│   ├── 2.tif
│   ├── JPEG
│   └── TIF
└── subdirectory-B
├── 1.jpg
├── 1.tif
├── 2.jpg
├── 2.tif
├── JPEG
└── TIF


Can anyone help please? I'm trying to find a way of moving all .tif files into the TIF directory and all .jpg files into the JPEG directory by running (mv) in a shell script from the local parent directory. I have been using



mv *.jpg JPEG/


within each sub directory but I need to do this job on a archive with over 17K directories and the manual option one dir at a time is not an option.










share|improve this question









New contributor




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




















  • Do the TIF and JPEG already exist ?

    – cmak.fr
    1 hour ago











  • Is there only 1 for path-depth?

    – cmak.fr
    1 hour ago













2












2








2








.
├── subdirectory-A
│   ├── 1.jpg
│   ├── 1.tif
│   ├── 2.jpg
│   ├── 2.tif
│   ├── JPEG
│   └── TIF
└── subdirectory-B
├── 1.jpg
├── 1.tif
├── 2.jpg
├── 2.tif
├── JPEG
└── TIF


Can anyone help please? I'm trying to find a way of moving all .tif files into the TIF directory and all .jpg files into the JPEG directory by running (mv) in a shell script from the local parent directory. I have been using



mv *.jpg JPEG/


within each sub directory but I need to do this job on a archive with over 17K directories and the manual option one dir at a time is not an option.










share|improve this question









New contributor




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












.
├── subdirectory-A
│   ├── 1.jpg
│   ├── 1.tif
│   ├── 2.jpg
│   ├── 2.tif
│   ├── JPEG
│   └── TIF
└── subdirectory-B
├── 1.jpg
├── 1.tif
├── 2.jpg
├── 2.tif
├── JPEG
└── TIF


Can anyone help please? I'm trying to find a way of moving all .tif files into the TIF directory and all .jpg files into the JPEG directory by running (mv) in a shell script from the local parent directory. I have been using



mv *.jpg JPEG/


within each sub directory but I need to do this job on a archive with over 17K directories and the manual option one dir at a time is not an option.







command-line bash scripts directory






share|improve this question









New contributor




Ols 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




Ols 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 1 hour ago









pomsky

32.2k11100131




32.2k11100131






New contributor




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









asked 1 hour ago









OlsOls

112




112




New contributor




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





New contributor





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






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












  • Do the TIF and JPEG already exist ?

    – cmak.fr
    1 hour ago











  • Is there only 1 for path-depth?

    – cmak.fr
    1 hour ago

















  • Do the TIF and JPEG already exist ?

    – cmak.fr
    1 hour ago











  • Is there only 1 for path-depth?

    – cmak.fr
    1 hour ago
















Do the TIF and JPEG already exist ?

– cmak.fr
1 hour ago





Do the TIF and JPEG already exist ?

– cmak.fr
1 hour ago













Is there only 1 for path-depth?

– cmak.fr
1 hour ago





Is there only 1 for path-depth?

– cmak.fr
1 hour ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















1














The first thing that comes to my mind is the following Bash loop:





#!/bin/bash
for dir in */ # or use: subdirectory*/
do
cd "$dir"
mv *jpg JPG/
mv *tif TIF/
cd ..
done


Example of usage as inline command:



$ mkdir -p subdirectory-A,B/TIF,JPG; touch subdirectory-A,B/1,2.jpg,tif

$ for dir in */; do cd "$dir"; mv *jpg JPG/; mv *tif TIF/; cd ..; done

$ tree
.
├── subdirectory-A
│   ├── JPG
│   │   ├── 1.jpg
│   │   └── 2.jpg
│   └── TIF
│   ├── 1.tif
│   └── 2.tif
└── subdirectory-B
├── JPG
│   ├── 1.jpg
│   └── 2.jpg
└── TIF
├── 1.tif
└── 2.tif

6 directories, 8 files


Related questions:



  • Move files from subfolders

  • Recursive bash script to collect information about each file in a directory structure





share|improve this answer
































    1














    Since you mentioned "over 17K directories", find and xargs spring to mind.



    # do this part Only Once 
    cat >./TheScript <<"EOF"
    #!/bin/bash
    while $# -gt 0 ; do
    cd "$1"
    find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.jpg' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=JPG
    find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.tif' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=TIF
    cd "$OLDPWD"
    shift
    done
    exit 0
    EOF
    chmod +x ./TheScript
    # end of "Only Once"


    find . -type d ! -name 'JPG' -a ! -name 'TIF` -print |
    xargs $PWD/.TheScript





    share|improve this answer






























      1














      You can do this with rename using bash’s globstar option:



      shopt -s globstar
      rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
      rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//' **/*.tif


      The -n option lets it just output what it would do, remove it to actually perform the moving. What happens here is that rename goes over each e.g. .jpeg file in any subdirectory thanks to ** matching any number of subdirectories. It substitutes its path (everything until the last /) with itself ($&) followed by JPEG/, effectively moving the file to this directory.



      If your list of arguments is too long the commands above will throw an error. Use this approach to work around the shell’s ARG_MAX limit:



      printf '%s' **/*.jpeg | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//'
      printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//'


      This uses the shell builtin printf to build a zero-delimited argument list which is piped to xargs which calls rename with the maximum number of arguments.



      Example run



      $ tree
      .
      ├── subdirectory-A
      │   ├── 1.jpeg
      │   ├── 1.tif
      │   ├── 2.jpeg
      │   ├── 2.tif
      │   ├── JPEG
      │   └── TIF
      └── subdirectory-B
      ├── 1.jpeg
      ├── 1.tif
      ├── 2.jpeg
      ├── 2.tif
      ├── JPEG
      └── TIF
      $ shopt -s globstar
      $ rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
      rename(subdirectory-A/1.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/1.jpeg)
      rename(subdirectory-A/2.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/2.jpeg)
      rename(subdirectory-B/1.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/1.jpeg)
      rename(subdirectory-B/2.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/2.jpeg)
      $ rename 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
      $ printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename 's/.*//$&TIF//'
      $ tree
      .
      ├── subdirectory-A
      │   ├── JPEG
      │   │   ├── 1.jpeg
      │   │   └── 2.jpeg
      │   └── TIF
      │   ├── 1.tif
      │   └── 2.tif
      └── subdirectory-B
      ├── JPEG
      │   ├── 1.jpeg
      │   └── 2.jpeg
      └── TIF
      ├── 1.tif
      └── 2.tif





      share|improve this answer
























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        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        1














        The first thing that comes to my mind is the following Bash loop:





        #!/bin/bash
        for dir in */ # or use: subdirectory*/
        do
        cd "$dir"
        mv *jpg JPG/
        mv *tif TIF/
        cd ..
        done


        Example of usage as inline command:



        $ mkdir -p subdirectory-A,B/TIF,JPG; touch subdirectory-A,B/1,2.jpg,tif

        $ for dir in */; do cd "$dir"; mv *jpg JPG/; mv *tif TIF/; cd ..; done

        $ tree
        .
        ├── subdirectory-A
        │   ├── JPG
        │   │   ├── 1.jpg
        │   │   └── 2.jpg
        │   └── TIF
        │   ├── 1.tif
        │   └── 2.tif
        └── subdirectory-B
        ├── JPG
        │   ├── 1.jpg
        │   └── 2.jpg
        └── TIF
        ├── 1.tif
        └── 2.tif

        6 directories, 8 files


        Related questions:



        • Move files from subfolders

        • Recursive bash script to collect information about each file in a directory structure





        share|improve this answer





























          1














          The first thing that comes to my mind is the following Bash loop:





          #!/bin/bash
          for dir in */ # or use: subdirectory*/
          do
          cd "$dir"
          mv *jpg JPG/
          mv *tif TIF/
          cd ..
          done


          Example of usage as inline command:



          $ mkdir -p subdirectory-A,B/TIF,JPG; touch subdirectory-A,B/1,2.jpg,tif

          $ for dir in */; do cd "$dir"; mv *jpg JPG/; mv *tif TIF/; cd ..; done

          $ tree
          .
          ├── subdirectory-A
          │   ├── JPG
          │   │   ├── 1.jpg
          │   │   └── 2.jpg
          │   └── TIF
          │   ├── 1.tif
          │   └── 2.tif
          └── subdirectory-B
          ├── JPG
          │   ├── 1.jpg
          │   └── 2.jpg
          └── TIF
          ├── 1.tif
          └── 2.tif

          6 directories, 8 files


          Related questions:



          • Move files from subfolders

          • Recursive bash script to collect information about each file in a directory structure





          share|improve this answer



























            1












            1








            1







            The first thing that comes to my mind is the following Bash loop:





            #!/bin/bash
            for dir in */ # or use: subdirectory*/
            do
            cd "$dir"
            mv *jpg JPG/
            mv *tif TIF/
            cd ..
            done


            Example of usage as inline command:



            $ mkdir -p subdirectory-A,B/TIF,JPG; touch subdirectory-A,B/1,2.jpg,tif

            $ for dir in */; do cd "$dir"; mv *jpg JPG/; mv *tif TIF/; cd ..; done

            $ tree
            .
            ├── subdirectory-A
            │   ├── JPG
            │   │   ├── 1.jpg
            │   │   └── 2.jpg
            │   └── TIF
            │   ├── 1.tif
            │   └── 2.tif
            └── subdirectory-B
            ├── JPG
            │   ├── 1.jpg
            │   └── 2.jpg
            └── TIF
            ├── 1.tif
            └── 2.tif

            6 directories, 8 files


            Related questions:



            • Move files from subfolders

            • Recursive bash script to collect information about each file in a directory structure





            share|improve this answer















            The first thing that comes to my mind is the following Bash loop:





            #!/bin/bash
            for dir in */ # or use: subdirectory*/
            do
            cd "$dir"
            mv *jpg JPG/
            mv *tif TIF/
            cd ..
            done


            Example of usage as inline command:



            $ mkdir -p subdirectory-A,B/TIF,JPG; touch subdirectory-A,B/1,2.jpg,tif

            $ for dir in */; do cd "$dir"; mv *jpg JPG/; mv *tif TIF/; cd ..; done

            $ tree
            .
            ├── subdirectory-A
            │   ├── JPG
            │   │   ├── 1.jpg
            │   │   └── 2.jpg
            │   └── TIF
            │   ├── 1.tif
            │   └── 2.tif
            └── subdirectory-B
            ├── JPG
            │   ├── 1.jpg
            │   └── 2.jpg
            └── TIF
            ├── 1.tif
            └── 2.tif

            6 directories, 8 files


            Related questions:



            • Move files from subfolders

            • Recursive bash script to collect information about each file in a directory structure






            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 1 hour ago

























            answered 1 hour ago









            pa4080pa4080

            14.6k52872




            14.6k52872























                1














                Since you mentioned "over 17K directories", find and xargs spring to mind.



                # do this part Only Once 
                cat >./TheScript <<"EOF"
                #!/bin/bash
                while $# -gt 0 ; do
                cd "$1"
                find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.jpg' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=JPG
                find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.tif' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=TIF
                cd "$OLDPWD"
                shift
                done
                exit 0
                EOF
                chmod +x ./TheScript
                # end of "Only Once"


                find . -type d ! -name 'JPG' -a ! -name 'TIF` -print |
                xargs $PWD/.TheScript





                share|improve this answer



























                  1














                  Since you mentioned "over 17K directories", find and xargs spring to mind.



                  # do this part Only Once 
                  cat >./TheScript <<"EOF"
                  #!/bin/bash
                  while $# -gt 0 ; do
                  cd "$1"
                  find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.jpg' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=JPG
                  find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.tif' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=TIF
                  cd "$OLDPWD"
                  shift
                  done
                  exit 0
                  EOF
                  chmod +x ./TheScript
                  # end of "Only Once"


                  find . -type d ! -name 'JPG' -a ! -name 'TIF` -print |
                  xargs $PWD/.TheScript





                  share|improve this answer

























                    1












                    1








                    1







                    Since you mentioned "over 17K directories", find and xargs spring to mind.



                    # do this part Only Once 
                    cat >./TheScript <<"EOF"
                    #!/bin/bash
                    while $# -gt 0 ; do
                    cd "$1"
                    find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.jpg' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=JPG
                    find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.tif' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=TIF
                    cd "$OLDPWD"
                    shift
                    done
                    exit 0
                    EOF
                    chmod +x ./TheScript
                    # end of "Only Once"


                    find . -type d ! -name 'JPG' -a ! -name 'TIF` -print |
                    xargs $PWD/.TheScript





                    share|improve this answer













                    Since you mentioned "over 17K directories", find and xargs spring to mind.



                    # do this part Only Once 
                    cat >./TheScript <<"EOF"
                    #!/bin/bash
                    while $# -gt 0 ; do
                    cd "$1"
                    find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.jpg' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=JPG
                    find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.tif' -print | xargs --no-run-if-empty mv --target-directory=TIF
                    cd "$OLDPWD"
                    shift
                    done
                    exit 0
                    EOF
                    chmod +x ./TheScript
                    # end of "Only Once"


                    find . -type d ! -name 'JPG' -a ! -name 'TIF` -print |
                    xargs $PWD/.TheScript






                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 1 hour ago









                    waltinatorwaltinator

                    22.6k74169




                    22.6k74169





















                        1














                        You can do this with rename using bash’s globstar option:



                        shopt -s globstar
                        rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                        rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//' **/*.tif


                        The -n option lets it just output what it would do, remove it to actually perform the moving. What happens here is that rename goes over each e.g. .jpeg file in any subdirectory thanks to ** matching any number of subdirectories. It substitutes its path (everything until the last /) with itself ($&) followed by JPEG/, effectively moving the file to this directory.



                        If your list of arguments is too long the commands above will throw an error. Use this approach to work around the shell’s ARG_MAX limit:



                        printf '%s' **/*.jpeg | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//'
                        printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//'


                        This uses the shell builtin printf to build a zero-delimited argument list which is piped to xargs which calls rename with the maximum number of arguments.



                        Example run



                        $ tree
                        .
                        ├── subdirectory-A
                        │   ├── 1.jpeg
                        │   ├── 1.tif
                        │   ├── 2.jpeg
                        │   ├── 2.tif
                        │   ├── JPEG
                        │   └── TIF
                        └── subdirectory-B
                        ├── 1.jpeg
                        ├── 1.tif
                        ├── 2.jpeg
                        ├── 2.tif
                        ├── JPEG
                        └── TIF
                        $ shopt -s globstar
                        $ rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                        rename(subdirectory-A/1.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/1.jpeg)
                        rename(subdirectory-A/2.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/2.jpeg)
                        rename(subdirectory-B/1.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/1.jpeg)
                        rename(subdirectory-B/2.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/2.jpeg)
                        $ rename 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                        $ printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename 's/.*//$&TIF//'
                        $ tree
                        .
                        ├── subdirectory-A
                        │   ├── JPEG
                        │   │   ├── 1.jpeg
                        │   │   └── 2.jpeg
                        │   └── TIF
                        │   ├── 1.tif
                        │   └── 2.tif
                        └── subdirectory-B
                        ├── JPEG
                        │   ├── 1.jpeg
                        │   └── 2.jpeg
                        └── TIF
                        ├── 1.tif
                        └── 2.tif





                        share|improve this answer





























                          1














                          You can do this with rename using bash’s globstar option:



                          shopt -s globstar
                          rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                          rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//' **/*.tif


                          The -n option lets it just output what it would do, remove it to actually perform the moving. What happens here is that rename goes over each e.g. .jpeg file in any subdirectory thanks to ** matching any number of subdirectories. It substitutes its path (everything until the last /) with itself ($&) followed by JPEG/, effectively moving the file to this directory.



                          If your list of arguments is too long the commands above will throw an error. Use this approach to work around the shell’s ARG_MAX limit:



                          printf '%s' **/*.jpeg | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//'
                          printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//'


                          This uses the shell builtin printf to build a zero-delimited argument list which is piped to xargs which calls rename with the maximum number of arguments.



                          Example run



                          $ tree
                          .
                          ├── subdirectory-A
                          │   ├── 1.jpeg
                          │   ├── 1.tif
                          │   ├── 2.jpeg
                          │   ├── 2.tif
                          │   ├── JPEG
                          │   └── TIF
                          └── subdirectory-B
                          ├── 1.jpeg
                          ├── 1.tif
                          ├── 2.jpeg
                          ├── 2.tif
                          ├── JPEG
                          └── TIF
                          $ shopt -s globstar
                          $ rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                          rename(subdirectory-A/1.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/1.jpeg)
                          rename(subdirectory-A/2.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/2.jpeg)
                          rename(subdirectory-B/1.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/1.jpeg)
                          rename(subdirectory-B/2.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/2.jpeg)
                          $ rename 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                          $ printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename 's/.*//$&TIF//'
                          $ tree
                          .
                          ├── subdirectory-A
                          │   ├── JPEG
                          │   │   ├── 1.jpeg
                          │   │   └── 2.jpeg
                          │   └── TIF
                          │   ├── 1.tif
                          │   └── 2.tif
                          └── subdirectory-B
                          ├── JPEG
                          │   ├── 1.jpeg
                          │   └── 2.jpeg
                          └── TIF
                          ├── 1.tif
                          └── 2.tif





                          share|improve this answer



























                            1












                            1








                            1







                            You can do this with rename using bash’s globstar option:



                            shopt -s globstar
                            rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                            rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//' **/*.tif


                            The -n option lets it just output what it would do, remove it to actually perform the moving. What happens here is that rename goes over each e.g. .jpeg file in any subdirectory thanks to ** matching any number of subdirectories. It substitutes its path (everything until the last /) with itself ($&) followed by JPEG/, effectively moving the file to this directory.



                            If your list of arguments is too long the commands above will throw an error. Use this approach to work around the shell’s ARG_MAX limit:



                            printf '%s' **/*.jpeg | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//'
                            printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//'


                            This uses the shell builtin printf to build a zero-delimited argument list which is piped to xargs which calls rename with the maximum number of arguments.



                            Example run



                            $ tree
                            .
                            ├── subdirectory-A
                            │   ├── 1.jpeg
                            │   ├── 1.tif
                            │   ├── 2.jpeg
                            │   ├── 2.tif
                            │   ├── JPEG
                            │   └── TIF
                            └── subdirectory-B
                            ├── 1.jpeg
                            ├── 1.tif
                            ├── 2.jpeg
                            ├── 2.tif
                            ├── JPEG
                            └── TIF
                            $ shopt -s globstar
                            $ rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                            rename(subdirectory-A/1.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/1.jpeg)
                            rename(subdirectory-A/2.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/2.jpeg)
                            rename(subdirectory-B/1.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/1.jpeg)
                            rename(subdirectory-B/2.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/2.jpeg)
                            $ rename 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                            $ printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename 's/.*//$&TIF//'
                            $ tree
                            .
                            ├── subdirectory-A
                            │   ├── JPEG
                            │   │   ├── 1.jpeg
                            │   │   └── 2.jpeg
                            │   └── TIF
                            │   ├── 1.tif
                            │   └── 2.tif
                            └── subdirectory-B
                            ├── JPEG
                            │   ├── 1.jpeg
                            │   └── 2.jpeg
                            └── TIF
                            ├── 1.tif
                            └── 2.tif





                            share|improve this answer















                            You can do this with rename using bash’s globstar option:



                            shopt -s globstar
                            rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                            rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//' **/*.tif


                            The -n option lets it just output what it would do, remove it to actually perform the moving. What happens here is that rename goes over each e.g. .jpeg file in any subdirectory thanks to ** matching any number of subdirectories. It substitutes its path (everything until the last /) with itself ($&) followed by JPEG/, effectively moving the file to this directory.



                            If your list of arguments is too long the commands above will throw an error. Use this approach to work around the shell’s ARG_MAX limit:



                            printf '%s' **/*.jpeg | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//'
                            printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename -n 's/.*//$&TIF//'


                            This uses the shell builtin printf to build a zero-delimited argument list which is piped to xargs which calls rename with the maximum number of arguments.



                            Example run



                            $ tree
                            .
                            ├── subdirectory-A
                            │   ├── 1.jpeg
                            │   ├── 1.tif
                            │   ├── 2.jpeg
                            │   ├── 2.tif
                            │   ├── JPEG
                            │   └── TIF
                            └── subdirectory-B
                            ├── 1.jpeg
                            ├── 1.tif
                            ├── 2.jpeg
                            ├── 2.tif
                            ├── JPEG
                            └── TIF
                            $ shopt -s globstar
                            $ rename -n 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                            rename(subdirectory-A/1.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/1.jpeg)
                            rename(subdirectory-A/2.jpeg, subdirectory-A/JPEG/2.jpeg)
                            rename(subdirectory-B/1.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/1.jpeg)
                            rename(subdirectory-B/2.jpeg, subdirectory-B/JPEG/2.jpeg)
                            $ rename 's/.*//$&JPEG//' **/*.jpeg
                            $ printf '%s' **/*.tif | xargs -0 rename 's/.*//$&TIF//'
                            $ tree
                            .
                            ├── subdirectory-A
                            │   ├── JPEG
                            │   │   ├── 1.jpeg
                            │   │   └── 2.jpeg
                            │   └── TIF
                            │   ├── 1.tif
                            │   └── 2.tif
                            └── subdirectory-B
                            ├── JPEG
                            │   ├── 1.jpeg
                            │   └── 2.jpeg
                            └── TIF
                            ├── 1.tif
                            └── 2.tif






                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited 50 mins ago

























                            answered 1 hour ago









                            dessertdessert

                            24.7k672105




                            24.7k672105




















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