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September 18, 2011 at 4:44 am #9649
andy
ParticipantI am trying to find where
index.html
is located on my linux server, and was wondering if there was a command to do that. Very new to linux and appreciate any help I can get.September 18, 2011 at 4:46 am #9653chown
ParticipantTry this (via a shell):
update db locate index.html
Or:
find /var -iname "index.html"
Replace /var with your best guess as to the directory it is in but avoid starting from /
September 18, 2011 at 4:47 am #9650xdazz
Participantfind /the_path_you_want_to_find -name index.html
September 18, 2011 at 4:47 am #9655datalost
ParticipantFind from root path
find / -name "index.html"
Find from current path
find . -name "index.html"
September 18, 2011 at 4:50 am #9651paulsm4
ParticipantIn general, the best way to find any file in any arbitrary location is to start a terminal window and type in the classic Unix command “find”:
find / -name index.html -print
Since the file you’re looking for is the root file in the root directory of your web server, it’s probably easier to find your web server’s document root. For example, look under:
/var/www/*
Or type:
find /var/www -name index.html -print
September 18, 2011 at 4:51 am #9654taylor-jasko
ParticipantThe below line of code would do it for you.
find / -name index.html
However, on most Linux servers, your files will be located in /var/www or in your user directory folder /home/(user) depending on how you have it set up. If you’re using a control panel, most likely it’ll be under your user folder.
May 6, 2020 at 3:11 am #9652avivamg
ParticipantSolution: Use unix command
find
The find utility recursively descends the directory tree for each path
listed, evaluating an expression (composed of the ‘primaries’ and
‘operands’) in terms of
each file in the tree.- You can make the find action be more efficient and smart by controlling it with
regular expressions queries, file types, size thresholds, depths
dimensions in subtree, groups, ownership, timestamps , modification/creation date and more. - In addition you can use operators and combine find requests such as
or/not/and etc…
The Traditional Formula would be :
find <path> -flag <valueOfFlag>
Easy Examples
1.Find by Name – Find all
package.json
from my current location subtree hierarchy.find . -name "package.json"
2.Find by Name and Type – find all
node_modules
directories from ALL file system (starting from root hierarchy )sudo find / -name "node_modules" -type d
Complex Examples:
More Useful examples which can demonstrate the power of flag options and operators:
3.Regex and File Type – Find all javascript controllers variation names (using regex) javascript Files only in my app location.
find /user/dev/app -name "*contoller-*\.js" -type f
-type
f means file-name
related to regular expression to any variation of controller string and dash with.js
at the end4.Depth – Find all routes patterns directories in app directory no more than 3 dimensions ( app/../../.. only and no more deeper)
find app -name "*route*" -type d -maxdepth 3
-type
d means directory-name
related to regular expression to any variation of route string-maxdepth
making the finder focusing on 3 subtree depth and no more<yourSearchlocation>/depth1/depth2/depth3
)5.File Size , Ownership and OR Operator – Find all files with names ‘sample’ or ‘test’ under ownership of root user that greater than 1 Mega and less than 5 Mega.
find . \( -name "test" -or -name "sample" \) -user root -size +1M -size -5M
-size
threshold representing the range between more than (+) and less than (-)-user
representing the file owner-or
operator filters query for both regex matches6.Empty Files – find all empty directories in file system
find / -type d -empty
7.Time Access, Modification and creation of files – find all files that were created/modified/access in directory in 10 days
# creation (c) find /test -name "*.groovy" -ctime -10d # modification (m) find /test -name "*.java" -mtime -10d # access (a) find /test -name "*.js" -atime -10d
8.Modification Size Filter – find all files that were modified exactly between a week ago to 3 weeks ago and less than 500kb and present their sizes as a list
find /test -name "*.java" -mtime -3w -mtime +1w -size -500k | xargs du -h
- You can make the find action be more efficient and smart by controlling it with
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