Issue
I have
~/bashpractice$ ls
dir3 dir1
I get
~/bashpractice$ xargs ls -l
dir1 dir3
dir1:
total 0
-rw-r--r-- 1 abc abc 0 2011-05-23 10:19 file1
-rw-r--r-- 1 abc abc 0 2011-05-23 10:19 file2
dir3:
total 0
-rw-r--r-- 1 abc abc 0 2011-05-23 10:20 file1
-rw-r--r-- 1 abc abc 0 2011-05-23 10:20 file2
But I get an error when I do
~/bashpractice$ xargs -0 ls -l
dir1 dir3
ls: cannot access dir1 dir3
: No such file or directory
abc@us-sjc1-922l:~/bashpractice$ xargs -0 ls -l
dir1
dir3
ls: cannot access dir1
dir3
: No such file or directory
How to get a listing when specifying -0 option to xargs ?
Solution
For example - as told in the man xargs
-0 Change xargs to expect NUL (``\0'') characters as separators, instead of spaces and newlines. This is expected to be used in concert with the -print0 function in find(1).
find . -print0 | xargs -0 echo
The -0
tells xargs one thing: "Don't separate input with spaces but with NULL char". It is useful usually in combination with find, when you need handle files and/or directories that contain space
in their name.
There are more commands what can play with -print0
- for example grep -z
.
Edit (based on comments)
See Seth's answer or this:
ls -1 | perl -pe 's/\n/\0/;' > null_padded_file.bin
xargs -0 < null_padded_file.bin
But it is strange, why want use -0
if you don't need to use it?. Like "Why want remove a file, if does not exist?". Simply, the -0
is needed to use only with combination, if the input is null-padded. Period. :)
Answered By - clt60 Answer Checked By - Clifford M. (WPSolving Volunteer)