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new first-line standard
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In Bash, you can do this safely and easily with the nullglob and dotglob options (which change the behaviour of [:glob:globbing]), and arrays: |
In Bash, you can do this safely and easily with the `nullglob` and `dotglob` options (which change the behaviour of [[glob|globbing]]), and [[BashFAQ/005|arrays]]: |
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In fact, you may wish to avoid the ''direct'' question altogether. Usually people want to know whether a directory is empty... ''because'' they want to do something involving the files therein, etc. Look to the larger question. For example, one of these [:UsingFind:find-based examples] may be an appropriate solution: | In fact, you may wish to avoid the ''direct'' question altogether. Usually people want to know whether a directory is empty... ''because'' they want to do something involving the files therein, etc. Look to the larger question. For example, one of these [[UsingFind|find-based examples]] may be an appropriate solution: |
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if test "`printf '%s %s %s' .* *`" = '. .. *' && ! test -f '*' | if test "`printf '%s %s %s' .* *`" = '. .. *' && test ! -f '*' |
How can I check whether a directory is empty or not? How do I check for any *.mpg files?
In Bash, you can do this safely and easily with the nullglob and dotglob options (which change the behaviour of globbing), and arrays:
# Bash shopt -s nullglob dotglob files=(*) (( ${#files[*]} )) || echo directory is empty shopt -u nullglob dotglob
As you can see we unset the nullglob after using it, to prevent it affecting other globs in the script in unexpected ways. nullglob also simplifies various other operations:
# Bash shopt -s nullglob for i in *.zip; do blah blah "$i" # No need to check $i is a file. done shopt -u nullglob
Without the nullglob, that would have to be:
# Bash for i in *.zip; do [[ -f $i ]] || continue # If no .zip files, i becomes *.zip blah blah "$i" done
(You may want to use the latter anyway, if there's a possibility that the glob may match directories in addition to files.)
In fact, you may wish to avoid the direct question altogether. Usually people want to know whether a directory is empty... because they want to do something involving the files therein, etc. Look to the larger question. For example, one of these find-based examples may be an appropriate solution:
# Bourne find "$somedir" -type f -exec echo Found unexpected file {} \; find "$somedir" -maxdepth 0 -empty -exec echo {} is empty. \; # GNU/BSD find "$somedir" -type d -empty -exec cp /my/configfile {} \; # GNU/BSD
If your script needs to run with various shell implementations, you can try using an external program like python, perl, or find as indicated above, or you can try something like:
# Bourne # (Of course, the system must have printf(1).) cd foo || exit 1 if test "`printf '%s %s %s' .* *`" = '. .. *' && test ! -f '*' then echo "directory is empty" fi
Yes, it's extremely ugly, but it should be more portable than anything depending on ls output. Even ls -A solutions can break (HPUX for one, if you are root).