Categorized | Unix

Purge old files using “find” command

I’ve noticed that one of our interface directories has a lot of old files, some of them were more than a year old. I checked it with our implementers and it turns out that we can delete all files that are older than 60 days.

I decided to write a (tiny) shell script to purge all files older than 60 days and schedule it with crontab, this way I won’t deal with it manually. I wrote a find command to identify and delete those files. I started with the following command:

find /interfaces/inbound -mtime +60 -type f -maxdepth 1 -exec rm {} \;

It finds and deletes all files in directory /interface/inbound that are older than 60 days.
“-maxdepth 1″ -> find files in current directory only. Don’t look for files in sub directories.

After packing it in a shell script I got a request to delete “csv” files only. No problem… I added the “-name” to the find command:

find /interfaces/inbound -name “*.csv” -mtime +60 -type f -maxdepth 1 -exec rm {} \;

All csv files in /interface/inbound that are older than 60 days will be deleted.

But then, the request had changed, and I was asked to delete “*.xls” files further to “*.csv” files. At this point things went complicated for me since I’m not a shell script expert…

I tried several things, like add another “-name” to the find command:

find /interfaces/inbound -name “*.csv” -name “*.xls” -mtime +60 -type f -maxdepth 1 -exec rm {} \;

But no file was deleted. Couple of moments later I understood that I’m trying to find csv files which is also xls files… (logically incorrect of course).

After struggling a liitle with the find command, I managed to make it works:

find /interfaces/inbound \( -name “*.csv” -o -name “*.xls” \) -mtime +60 -type f -maxdepth 1 -exec rm {} \;

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