xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/find/find.1 (revision 3bdf775801b218aa5a89564839405b122f4b233e)
1.\" Copyright (c) 1990, 1993
2.\"	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
3.\"
4.\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
5.\" the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
6.\"
7.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
8.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
9.\" are met:
10.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
11.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
12.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
13.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
14.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
15.\" 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
16.\"    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
17.\"    without specific prior written permission.
18.\"
19.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
20.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
21.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
22.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
23.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
24.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
25.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
26.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
27.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
28.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
29.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
30.\"
31.\"	@(#)find.1	8.7 (Berkeley) 5/9/95
32.\" $FreeBSD$
33.\"
34.Dd April 12, 2014
35.Dt FIND 1
36.Os
37.Sh NAME
38.Nm find
39.Nd walk a file hierarchy
40.Sh SYNOPSIS
41.Nm
42.Op Fl H | Fl L | Fl P
43.Op Fl EXdsx
44.Op Fl f Ar path
45.Ar path ...
46.Op Ar expression
47.Nm
48.Op Fl H | Fl L | Fl P
49.Op Fl EXdsx
50.Fl f Ar path
51.Op Ar path ...
52.Op Ar expression
53.Sh DESCRIPTION
54The
55.Nm
56utility recursively descends the directory tree for each
57.Ar path
58listed, evaluating an
59.Ar expression
60(composed of the
61.Dq primaries
62and
63.Dq operands
64listed below) in terms
65of each file in the tree.
66.Pp
67The options are as follows:
68.Bl -tag -width indent
69.It Fl E
70Interpret regular expressions followed by
71.Ic -regex
72and
73.Ic -iregex
74primaries as extended (modern) regular expressions rather than basic
75regular expressions (BRE's).
76The
77.Xr re_format 7
78manual page fully describes both formats.
79.It Fl H
80Cause the file information and file type (see
81.Xr stat 2 )
82returned for each symbolic link specified on the command line to be
83those of the file referenced by the link, not the link itself.
84If the referenced file does not exist, the file information and type will
85be for the link itself.
86File information of all symbolic links not on
87the command line is that of the link itself.
88.It Fl L
89Cause the file information and file type (see
90.Xr stat 2 )
91returned for each symbolic link to be those of the file referenced by the
92link, not the link itself.
93If the referenced file does not exist, the file information and type will
94be for the link itself.
95.Pp
96This option is equivalent to the deprecated
97.Ic -follow
98primary.
99.It Fl P
100Cause the file information and file type (see
101.Xr stat 2 )
102returned for each symbolic link to be those of the link itself.
103This is the default.
104.It Fl X
105Permit
106.Nm
107to be safely used in conjunction with
108.Xr xargs 1 .
109If a file name contains any of the delimiting characters used by
110.Xr xargs 1 ,
111a diagnostic message is displayed on standard error, and the file
112is skipped.
113The delimiting characters include single
114.Pq Dq Li " ' "
115and double
116.Pq Dq Li " \*q "
117quotes, backslash
118.Pq Dq Li \e ,
119space, tab and newline characters.
120.Pp
121However, you may wish to consider the
122.Fl print0
123primary in conjunction with
124.Dq Nm xargs Fl 0
125as an effective alternative.
126.It Fl d
127Cause
128.Nm
129to perform a depth-first traversal.
130.Pp
131This option is a BSD-specific equivalent of the
132.Ic -depth
133primary specified by
134.St -p1003.1-2001 .
135Refer to its description under
136.Sx PRIMARIES
137for more information.
138.It Fl s
139Cause
140.Nm
141to traverse the file hierarchies in lexicographical order,
142i.e., alphabetical order within each directory.
143Note:
144.Ql find -s
145and
146.Ql "find | sort"
147may give different results.
148.It Fl x
149Prevent
150.Nm
151from descending into directories that have a device number different
152than that of the file from which the descent began.
153.Pp
154This option is equivalent to the deprecated
155.Ic -xdev
156primary.
157.El
158.Sh PRIMARIES
159All primaries which take a numeric argument allow the number to be
160preceded by a plus sign
161.Pq Dq Li +
162or a minus sign
163.Pq Dq Li - .
164A preceding plus sign means
165.Dq more than n ,
166a preceding minus sign means
167.Dq less than n
168and neither means
169.Dq exactly n .
170.Bl -tag -width indent
171.It Ic -Bmin Ar n
172True if the difference between the time of a file's inode creation
173and the time
174.Nm
175was started, rounded up to the next full minute, is
176.Ar n
177minutes.
178.It Ic -Bnewer Ar file
179Same as
180.Ic -newerBm .
181.It Ic -Btime Ar n Ns Op Cm smhdw
182If no units are specified, this primary evaluates to
183true if the difference between the time of a file's inode creation
184and the time
185.Nm
186was started, rounded up to the next full 24-hour period, is
187.Ar n
18824-hour periods.
189.Pp
190If units are specified, this primary evaluates to
191true if the difference between the time of a file's inode creation
192and the time
193.Nm
194was started is exactly
195.Ar n
196units.
197Please refer to the
198.Ic -atime
199primary description for information on supported time units.
200.It Ic -acl
201May be used in conjunction with other primaries to locate
202files with extended ACLs.
203See
204.Xr acl 3
205for more information.
206.It Ic -amin Oo Cm - Ns | Ns Cm + Oc Ns Ar n
207True if the difference between the file last access time and the time
208.Nm
209was started, rounded up to the next full minute, is
210more than
211.Ar n
212.Pq + Ns Ar n ,
213less than
214.Ar n
215.Pq - Ns Ar n ,
216or exactly
217.Ar n
218minutes ago.
219.It Ic -anewer Ar file
220Same as
221.Ic -neweram .
222.It Ic -atime Ar n Ns Op Cm smhdw
223If no units are specified, this primary evaluates to
224true if the difference between the file last access time and the time
225.Nm
226was started, rounded up to the next full 24-hour period, is
227.Ar n
22824-hour periods.
229.Pp
230If units are specified, this primary evaluates to
231true if the difference between the file last access time and the time
232.Nm
233was started is exactly
234.Ar n
235units.
236Possible time units are as follows:
237.Pp
238.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
239.It Cm s
240second
241.It Cm m
242minute (60 seconds)
243.It Cm h
244hour (60 minutes)
245.It Cm d
246day (24 hours)
247.It Cm w
248week (7 days)
249.El
250.Pp
251Any number of units may be combined in one
252.Ic -atime
253argument, for example,
254.Dq Li "-atime -1h30m" .
255Units are probably only useful when used in conjunction with the
256.Cm +
257or
258.Cm -
259modifier.
260.It Ic -cmin Oo Cm - Ns | Ns Cm + Oc Ns Ar n
261True if the difference between the time of last change of file status
262information and the time
263.Nm
264was started, rounded up to the next full minute, is
265more than
266.Ar n
267.Pq + Ns Ar n ,
268less than
269.Ar n
270.Pq - Ns Ar n ,
271or exactly
272.Ar n
273minutes ago.
274.It Ic -cnewer Ar file
275Same as
276.Ic -newercm .
277.It Ic -ctime Ar n Ns Op Cm smhdw
278If no units are specified, this primary evaluates to
279true if the difference between the time of last change of file status
280information and the time
281.Nm
282was started, rounded up to the next full 24-hour period, is
283.Ar n
28424-hour periods.
285.Pp
286If units are specified, this primary evaluates to
287true if the difference between the time of last change of file status
288information and the time
289.Nm
290was started is exactly
291.Ar n
292units.
293Please refer to the
294.Ic -atime
295primary description for information on supported time units.
296.It Ic -d
297Non-portable, BSD-specific version of
298.Ic depth .
299GNU find implements this as a primary in mistaken emulation of
300.Fx
301.Nm .
302.It Ic -delete
303Delete found files and/or directories.
304Always returns true.
305This executes
306from the current working directory as
307.Nm
308recurses down the tree.
309It will not attempt to delete a filename with a
310.Dq Pa /
311character in its pathname relative to
312.Dq Pa \&.
313for security reasons.
314Depth-first traversal processing is implied by this option.
315The
316.Ic -delete
317primary will fail to delete a directory if it is not empty.
318Following symlinks is incompatible with this option.
319.It Ic -depth
320Always true;
321same as the non-portable
322.Fl d
323option.
324Cause
325.Nm
326to perform a depth-first traversal, i.e., directories
327are visited in post-order and all entries in a directory will be acted
328on before the directory itself.
329By default,
330.Nm
331visits directories in pre-order, i.e., before their contents.
332Note, the default is
333.Em not
334a breadth-first traversal.
335.Pp
336The
337.Ic -depth
338primary
339can be useful when
340.Nm
341is used with
342.Xr cpio 1
343to process files that are contained in directories with unusual permissions.
344It ensures that you have write permission while you are placing files in a
345directory, then sets the directory's permissions as the last thing.
346.It Ic -depth Ar n
347True if the depth of the file relative to the starting point of the traversal
348is
349.Ar n .
350.It Ic -empty
351True if the current file or directory is empty.
352.It Ic -exec Ar utility Oo Ar argument ... Oc Li \&;
353True if the program named
354.Ar utility
355returns a zero value as its exit status.
356Optional
357.Ar arguments
358may be passed to the utility.
359The expression must be terminated by a semicolon
360.Pq Dq Li \&; .
361If you invoke
362.Nm
363from a shell you may need to quote the semicolon if the shell would
364otherwise treat it as a control operator.
365If the string
366.Dq Li {}
367appears anywhere in the utility name or the
368arguments it is replaced by the pathname of the current file.
369.Ar Utility
370will be executed from the directory from which
371.Nm
372was executed.
373.Ar Utility
374and
375.Ar arguments
376are not subject to the further expansion of shell patterns
377and constructs.
378.It Ic -exec Ar utility Oo Ar argument ... Oc Li {} +
379Same as
380.Ic -exec ,
381except that
382.Dq Li {}
383is replaced with as many pathnames as possible for each invocation of
384.Ar utility .
385This behaviour is similar to that of
386.Xr xargs 1 .
387The primary always returns true;
388if at least one invocation of
389.Ar utility
390returns a non-zero exit status,
391.Nm
392will return a non-zero exit status.
393.It Ic -execdir Ar utility Oo Ar argument ... Oc Li \&;
394The
395.Ic -execdir
396primary is identical to the
397.Ic -exec
398primary with the exception that
399.Ar utility
400will be executed from the directory that holds
401the current file.
402The filename substituted for
403the string
404.Dq Li {}
405is not qualified.
406.It Ic -execdir Ar utility Oo Ar argument ... Oc Li {} +
407Same as
408.Ic -execdir ,
409except that
410.Dq Li {}
411is replaced with as many pathnames as possible for each invocation of
412.Ar utility .
413This behaviour is similar to that of
414.Xr xargs 1 .
415The primary always returns true;
416if at least one invocation of
417.Ar utility
418returns a non-zero exit status,
419.Nm
420will return a non-zero exit status.
421.It Ic -flags Oo Cm - Ns | Ns Cm + Oc Ns Ar flags , Ns Ar notflags
422The flags are specified using symbolic names (see
423.Xr chflags 1 ) .
424Those with the
425.Qq Li no
426prefix (except
427.Qq Li nodump )
428are said to be
429.Ar notflags .
430Flags in
431.Ar flags
432are checked to be set, and flags in
433.Ar notflags
434are checked to be not set.
435Note that this is different from
436.Ic -perm ,
437which only allows the user to specify mode bits that are set.
438.Pp
439If flags are preceded by a dash
440.Pq Dq Li - ,
441this primary evaluates to true
442if at least all of the bits in
443.Ar flags
444and none of the bits in
445.Ar notflags
446are set in the file's flags bits.
447If flags are preceded by a plus
448.Pq Dq Li + ,
449this primary evaluates to true
450if any of the bits in
451.Ar flags
452is set in the file's flags bits,
453or any of the bits in
454.Ar notflags
455is not set in the file's flags bits.
456Otherwise,
457this primary evaluates to true
458if the bits in
459.Ar flags
460exactly match the file's flags bits,
461and none of the
462.Ar flags
463bits match those of
464.Ar notflags .
465.It Ic -fstype Ar type
466True if the file is contained in a file system of type
467.Ar type .
468The
469.Xr lsvfs 1
470command can be used to find out the types of file systems
471that are available on the system.
472In addition, there are two pseudo-types,
473.Dq Li local
474and
475.Dq Li rdonly .
476The former matches any file system physically mounted on the system where
477the
478.Nm
479is being executed and the latter matches any file system which is
480mounted read-only.
481.It Ic -gid Ar gname
482The same thing as
483.Ar -group Ar gname
484for compatibility with GNU find.
485GNU find imposes a restriction that
486.Ar gname
487is numeric, while
488.Nm
489does not.
490.It Ic -group Ar gname
491True if the file belongs to the group
492.Ar gname .
493If
494.Ar gname
495is numeric and there is no such group name, then
496.Ar gname
497is treated as a group ID.
498.It Ic -ignore_readdir_race
499Ignore errors because a file or a directory is deleted
500after reading the name from a directory.
501This option does not affect errors occurring on starting points.
502.It Ic -ilname Ar pattern
503Like
504.Ic -lname ,
505but the match is case insensitive.
506This is a GNU find extension.
507.It Ic -iname Ar pattern
508Like
509.Ic -name ,
510but the match is case insensitive.
511.It Ic -inum Ar n
512True if the file has inode number
513.Ar n .
514.It Ic -ipath Ar pattern
515Like
516.Ic -path ,
517but the match is case insensitive.
518.It Ic -iregex Ar pattern
519Like
520.Ic -regex ,
521but the match is case insensitive.
522.It Ic -iwholename Ar pattern
523The same thing as
524.Ic -ipath ,
525for GNU find compatibility.
526.It Ic -links Ar n
527True if the file has
528.Ar n
529links.
530.It Ic -lname Ar pattern
531Like
532.Ic -name ,
533but the contents of the symbolic link are matched instead of the file
534name.
535Note that this only matches broken symbolic links
536if symbolic links are being followed.
537This is a GNU find extension.
538.It Ic -ls
539This primary always evaluates to true.
540The following information for the current file is written to standard output:
541its inode number, size in 512-byte blocks, file permissions, number of hard
542links, owner, group, size in bytes, last modification time, and pathname.
543If the file is a block or character special file, the device number
544will be displayed instead of the size in bytes.
545If the file is a symbolic link, the pathname of the linked-to file will be
546displayed preceded by
547.Dq Li -> .
548The format is identical to that produced by
549.Bk -words
550.Dq Nm ls Fl dgils .
551.Ek
552.It Ic -maxdepth Ar n
553Always true; descend at most
554.Ar n
555directory levels below the command line arguments.
556If any
557.Ic -maxdepth
558primary is specified, it applies to the entire expression even if it would
559not normally be evaluated.
560.Dq Ic -maxdepth Li 0
561limits the whole search to the command line arguments.
562.It Ic -mindepth Ar n
563Always true; do not apply any tests or actions at levels less than
564.Ar n .
565If any
566.Ic -mindepth
567primary is specified, it applies to the entire expression even if it would
568not normally be evaluated.
569.Dq Ic -mindepth Li 1
570processes all but the command line arguments.
571.It Ic -mmin Oo Cm - Ns | Ns Cm + Oc Ns Ar n
572True if the difference between the file last modification time and the time
573.Nm
574was started, rounded up to the next full minute, is
575.Ar n
576.Pq + Ns Ar n ,
577less than
578.Ar n
579.Pq - Ns Ar n ,
580or exactly
581.Ar n
582minutes ago.
583.It Ic -mnewer Ar file
584Same as
585.Ic -newer .
586.It Ic -mount
587The same thing as
588.Ic -xdev ,
589for GNU find compatibility.
590.It Ic -mtime Ar n Ns Op Cm smhdw
591If no units are specified, this primary evaluates to
592true if the difference between the file last modification time and the time
593.Nm
594was started, rounded up to the next full 24-hour period, is
595.Ar n
59624-hour periods.
597.Pp
598If units are specified, this primary evaluates to
599true if the difference between the file last modification time and the time
600.Nm
601was started is exactly
602.Ar n
603units.
604Please refer to the
605.Ic -atime
606primary description for information on supported time units.
607.It Ic -name Ar pattern
608True if the last component of the pathname being examined matches
609.Ar pattern .
610Special shell pattern matching characters
611.Dq ( Li \&[ ,
612.Dq Li \&] ,
613.Dq Li * ,
614and
615.Dq Li \&? )
616may be used as part of
617.Ar pattern .
618These characters may be matched explicitly by escaping them with a
619backslash
620.Pq Dq Li \e .
621.It Ic -newer Ar file
622True if the current file has a more recent last modification time than
623.Ar file .
624.It Ic -newer Ns Ar X Ns Ar Y Ar file
625True if the current file has a more recent last access time
626.Pq Ar X Ns = Ns Cm a ,
627inode creation time
628.Pq Ar X Ns = Ns Cm B ,
629change time
630.Pq Ar X Ns = Ns Cm c ,
631or modification time
632.Pq Ar X Ns = Ns Cm m
633than the last access time
634.Pq Ar Y Ns = Ns Cm a ,
635inode creation time
636.Pq Ar Y Ns = Ns Cm B ,
637change time
638.Pq Ar Y Ns = Ns Cm c ,
639or modification time
640.Pq Ar Y Ns = Ns Cm m
641of
642.Ar file .
643In addition, if
644.Ar Y Ns = Ns Cm t ,
645then
646.Ar file
647is instead interpreted as a direct date specification of the form
648understood by
649.Xr cvs 1 .
650Note that
651.Ic -newermm
652is equivalent to
653.Ic -newer .
654.It Ic -nogroup
655True if the file belongs to an unknown group.
656.It Ic -noignore_readdir_race
657Turn off the effect of
658.Ic -ignore_readdir_race .
659This is default behaviour.
660.It Ic -noleaf
661This option is for GNU find compatibility.
662In GNU find it disables an optimization not relevant to
663.Nm ,
664so it is ignored.
665.It Ic -nouser
666True if the file belongs to an unknown user.
667.It Ic -ok Ar utility Oo Ar argument ... Oc Li \&;
668The
669.Ic -ok
670primary is identical to the
671.Ic -exec
672primary with the exception that
673.Nm
674requests user affirmation for the execution of the
675.Ar utility
676by printing
677a message to the terminal and reading a response.
678If the response is not affirmative
679.Ql ( y
680in the
681.Dq Li POSIX
682locale),
683the command is not executed and the
684value of the
685.Ic -ok
686expression is false.
687.It Ic -okdir Ar utility Oo Ar argument ... Oc Li \&;
688The
689.Ic -okdir
690primary is identical to the
691.Ic -execdir
692primary with the same exception as described for the
693.Ic -ok
694primary.
695.It Ic -path Ar pattern
696True if the pathname being examined matches
697.Ar pattern .
698Special shell pattern matching characters
699.Dq ( Li \&[ ,
700.Dq Li \&] ,
701.Dq Li * ,
702and
703.Dq Li \&? )
704may be used as part of
705.Ar pattern .
706These characters may be matched explicitly by escaping them with a
707backslash
708.Pq Dq Li \e .
709Slashes
710.Pq Dq Li /
711are treated as normal characters and do not have to be
712matched explicitly.
713.It Ic -perm Oo Cm - Ns | Ns Cm + Oc Ns Ar mode
714The
715.Ar mode
716may be either symbolic (see
717.Xr chmod 1 )
718or an octal number.
719If the
720.Ar mode
721is symbolic, a starting value of zero is assumed and the
722.Ar mode
723sets or clears permissions without regard to the process' file mode
724creation mask.
725If the
726.Ar mode
727is octal, only bits 07777
728.Pq Dv S_ISUID | S_ISGID | S_ISTXT | S_IRWXU | S_IRWXG | S_IRWXO
729of the file's mode bits participate
730in the comparison.
731If the
732.Ar mode
733is preceded by a dash
734.Pq Dq Li - ,
735this primary evaluates to true
736if at least all of the bits in the
737.Ar mode
738are set in the file's mode bits.
739If the
740.Ar mode
741is preceded by a plus
742.Pq Dq Li + ,
743this primary evaluates to true
744if any of the bits in the
745.Ar mode
746are set in the file's mode bits.
747Otherwise, this primary evaluates to true if
748the bits in the
749.Ar mode
750exactly match the file's mode bits.
751Note, the first character of a symbolic mode may not be a dash
752.Pq Dq Li - .
753.It Ic -print
754This primary always evaluates to true.
755It prints the pathname of the current file to standard output.
756If none of
757.Ic -exec , -ls , -print0 ,
758or
759.Ic -ok
760is specified, the given expression shall be effectively replaced by
761.Cm \&( Ar "given expression" Cm \&) Ic -print .
762.It Ic -print0
763This primary always evaluates to true.
764It prints the pathname of the current file to standard output, followed by an
765.Tn ASCII
766.Dv NUL
767character (character code 0).
768.It Ic -prune
769This primary always evaluates to true.
770It causes
771.Nm
772to not descend into the current file.
773Note, the
774.Ic -prune
775primary has no effect if the
776.Fl d
777option was specified.
778.It Ic -quit
779Causes
780.Nm
781to immediately terminate successfully.
782.It Ic -regex Ar pattern
783True if the whole path of the file matches
784.Ar pattern
785using regular expression.
786To match a file named
787.Dq Pa ./foo/xyzzy ,
788you can use the regular expression
789.Dq Li ".*/[xyz]*"
790or
791.Dq Li ".*/foo/.*" ,
792but not
793.Dq Li xyzzy
794or
795.Dq Li /foo/ .
796.It Ic -samefile Ar name
797True if the file is a hard link to
798.Ar name .
799If the command option
800.Ic -L
801is specified, it is also true if the file is a symbolic link and
802points to
803.Ar name .
804.It Ic -size Ar n Ns Op Cm ckMGTP
805True if the file's size, rounded up, in 512-byte blocks is
806.Ar n .
807If
808.Ar n
809is followed by a
810.Cm c ,
811then the primary is true if the
812file's size is
813.Ar n
814bytes (characters).
815Similarly if
816.Ar n
817is followed by a scale indicator then the file's size is compared to
818.Ar n
819scaled as:
820.Pp
821.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
822.It Cm k
823kilobytes (1024 bytes)
824.It Cm M
825megabytes (1024 kilobytes)
826.It Cm G
827gigabytes (1024 megabytes)
828.It Cm T
829terabytes (1024 gigabytes)
830.It Cm P
831petabytes (1024 terabytes)
832.El
833.It Ic -sparse
834True if the current file is sparse,
835i.e. has fewer blocks allocated than expected based on its size in bytes.
836This might also match files that have been compressed by the filesystem.
837.It Ic -type Ar t
838True if the file is of the specified type.
839Possible file types are as follows:
840.Pp
841.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
842.It Cm b
843block special
844.It Cm c
845character special
846.It Cm d
847directory
848.It Cm f
849regular file
850.It Cm l
851symbolic link
852.It Cm p
853FIFO
854.It Cm s
855socket
856.El
857.It Ic -uid Ar uname
858The same thing as
859.Ar -user Ar uname
860for compatibility with GNU find.
861GNU find imposes a restriction that
862.Ar uname
863is numeric, while
864.Nm
865does not.
866.It Ic -user Ar uname
867True if the file belongs to the user
868.Ar uname .
869If
870.Ar uname
871is numeric and there is no such user name, then
872.Ar uname
873is treated as a user ID.
874.It Ic -wholename Ar pattern
875The same thing as
876.Ic -path ,
877for GNU find compatibility.
878.El
879.Sh OPERATORS
880The primaries may be combined using the following operators.
881The operators are listed in order of decreasing precedence.
882.Pp
883.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
884.It Cm \&( Ar expression Cm \&)
885This evaluates to true if the parenthesized expression evaluates to
886true.
887.Pp
888.It Cm \&! Ar expression
889.It Cm -not Ar expression
890This is the unary
891.Tn NOT
892operator.
893It evaluates to true if the expression is false.
894.Pp
895.It Cm -false
896Always false.
897.It Cm -true
898Always true.
899.Pp
900.It Ar expression Cm -and Ar expression
901.It Ar expression expression
902The
903.Cm -and
904operator is the logical
905.Tn AND
906operator.
907As it is implied by the juxtaposition of two expressions it does not
908have to be specified.
909The expression evaluates to true if both expressions are true.
910The second expression is not evaluated if the first expression is false.
911.Pp
912.It Ar expression Cm -or Ar expression
913The
914.Cm -or
915operator is the logical
916.Tn OR
917operator.
918The expression evaluates to true if either the first or the second expression
919is true.
920The second expression is not evaluated if the first expression is true.
921.El
922.Pp
923All operands and primaries must be separate arguments to
924.Nm .
925Primaries which themselves take arguments expect each argument
926to be a separate argument to
927.Nm .
928.Sh ENVIRONMENT
929The
930.Ev LANG , LC_ALL , LC_COLLATE , LC_CTYPE , LC_MESSAGES
931and
932.Ev LC_TIME
933environment variables affect the execution of the
934.Nm
935utility as described in
936.Xr environ 7 .
937.Sh EXAMPLES
938The following examples are shown as given to the shell:
939.Bl -tag -width indent
940.It Li "find / \e! -name \*q*.c\*q -print"
941Print out a list of all the files whose names do not end in
942.Pa .c .
943.It Li "find / -newer ttt -user wnj -print"
944Print out a list of all the files owned by user
945.Dq wnj
946that are newer
947than the file
948.Pa ttt .
949.It Li "find / \e! \e( -newer ttt -user wnj \e) -print"
950Print out a list of all the files which are not both newer than
951.Pa ttt
952and owned by
953.Dq wnj .
954.It Li "find / \e( -newer ttt -or -user wnj \e) -print"
955Print out a list of all the files that are either owned by
956.Dq wnj
957or that are newer than
958.Pa ttt .
959.It Li "find / -newerct '1 minute ago' -print"
960Print out a list of all the files whose inode change time is more
961recent than the current time minus one minute.
962.It Li "find / -type f -exec echo {} \e;"
963Use the
964.Xr echo 1
965command to print out a list of all the files.
966.It Li "find -L /usr/ports/packages -type l -exec rm -- {} +"
967Delete all broken symbolic links in
968.Pa /usr/ports/packages .
969.It Li "find /usr/src -name CVS -prune -o -depth +6 -print"
970Find files and directories that are at least seven levels deep
971in the working directory
972.Pa /usr/src .
973.It Li "find /usr/src -name CVS -prune -o -mindepth 7 -print"
974Is not equivalent to the previous example, since
975.Ic -prune
976is not evaluated below level seven.
977.El
978.Sh COMPATIBILITY
979The
980.Ic -follow
981primary is deprecated; the
982.Fl L
983option should be used instead.
984See the
985.Sx STANDARDS
986section below for details.
987.Sh SEE ALSO
988.Xr chflags 1 ,
989.Xr chmod 1 ,
990.Xr cvs 1 ,
991.Xr locate 1 ,
992.Xr lsvfs 1 ,
993.Xr whereis 1 ,
994.Xr which 1 ,
995.Xr xargs 1 ,
996.Xr stat 2 ,
997.Xr acl 3 ,
998.Xr fts 3 ,
999.Xr getgrent 3 ,
1000.Xr getpwent 3 ,
1001.Xr strmode 3 ,
1002.Xr re_format 7 ,
1003.Xr symlink 7
1004.Sh STANDARDS
1005The
1006.Nm
1007utility syntax is a superset of the syntax specified by the
1008.St -p1003.1-2001
1009standard.
1010.Pp
1011All the single character options except
1012.Fl H
1013and
1014.Fl L
1015as well as
1016.Ic -amin , -anewer , -cmin , -cnewer , -delete , -empty , -fstype ,
1017.Ic -iname , -inum , -iregex , -ls , -maxdepth , -mindepth , -mmin ,
1018.Ic -path , -print0 , -regex, -sparse
1019and all of the
1020.Ic -B*
1021birthtime related primaries are extensions to
1022.St -p1003.1-2001 .
1023.Pp
1024Historically, the
1025.Fl d , L
1026and
1027.Fl x
1028options were implemented using the primaries
1029.Ic -depth , -follow ,
1030and
1031.Ic -xdev .
1032These primaries always evaluated to true.
1033As they were really global variables that took effect before the traversal
1034began, some legal expressions could have unexpected results.
1035An example is the expression
1036.Ic -print Cm -o Ic -depth .
1037As
1038.Ic -print
1039always evaluates to true, the standard order of evaluation
1040implies that
1041.Ic -depth
1042would never be evaluated.
1043This is not the case.
1044.Pp
1045The operator
1046.Cm -or
1047was implemented as
1048.Cm -o ,
1049and the operator
1050.Cm -and
1051was implemented as
1052.Cm -a .
1053.Pp
1054Historic implementations of the
1055.Ic -exec
1056and
1057.Ic -ok
1058primaries did not replace the string
1059.Dq Li {}
1060in the utility name or the
1061utility arguments if it had preceding or following non-whitespace characters.
1062This version replaces it no matter where in the utility name or arguments
1063it appears.
1064.Pp
1065The
1066.Fl E
1067option was inspired by the equivalent
1068.Xr grep 1
1069and
1070.Xr sed 1
1071options.
1072.Sh HISTORY
1073A
1074.Nm
1075command appeared in
1076.At v1 .
1077.Sh BUGS
1078The special characters used by
1079.Nm
1080are also special characters to many shell programs.
1081In particular, the characters
1082.Dq Li * ,
1083.Dq Li \&[ ,
1084.Dq Li \&] ,
1085.Dq Li \&? ,
1086.Dq Li \&( ,
1087.Dq Li \&) ,
1088.Dq Li \&! ,
1089.Dq Li \e
1090and
1091.Dq Li \&;
1092may have to be escaped from the shell.
1093.Pp
1094As there is no delimiter separating options and file names or file
1095names and the
1096.Ar expression ,
1097it is difficult to specify files named
1098.Pa -xdev
1099or
1100.Pa \&! .
1101These problems are handled by the
1102.Fl f
1103option and the
1104.Xr getopt 3
1105.Dq Fl Fl
1106construct.
1107.Pp
1108The
1109.Ic -delete
1110primary does not interact well with other options that cause the file system
1111tree traversal options to be changed.
1112.Pp
1113The
1114.Ic -mindepth
1115and
1116.Ic -maxdepth
1117primaries are actually global options (as documented above).
1118They should
1119probably be replaced by options which look like options.
1120