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How can I generate a list of files with their absolute path in Linux?

I am writing a shell script that takes file paths as input.

For this reason, I need to generate recursive file listings with full paths. For example, the file bar has the path:

/home/ken/foo/bar

but, as far as I can see, both ls and find only give relative path listings:

./foo/bar   (from the folder ken)

It seems like an obvious requirement, but I can't see anything in the find or ls man pages.

How can I generate a list of files in the shell including their absolute paths?

use: find /home/ken/foo/bar -exec ls -ld $PWD/{} \;

P
Peter Cordes

If you give find an absolute path to start with, it will print absolute paths. For instance, to find all .htaccess files in the current directory:

find "$(pwd)" -name .htaccess

or if your shell expands $PWD to the current directory:

find "$PWD" -name .htaccess

find simply prepends the path it was given to a relative path to the file from that path.

Greg Hewgill also suggested using pwd -P if you want to resolve symlinks in your current directory.


Note that if you also want to resolve symlinks, use pwd -P.
This is helpful, but I think user431529's response below is more valid: ls -d -1 $PWD/**/* but I guess find $PWD also works (tested in bash)
@Brian Why? find $PWD is simple. The ls incantation is complex and unwieldy (unless you alias it). find is not dependent on shell glob expansions, so will work in any shell. find is also a lot more flexible, I can get a recursive listing of all files, or perhaps of all directories, or maybe I want a listing of all xml files, or all files changed in the last week. All that is possible with find, but not easily with ls.
I had to use find "`pwd`" -name .htaccess because of spaces in directory names
I don't get it, this command does not give me the absolute path of the file I, while other answers down on the list does the job.
b
balki
readlink -f filename 

gives the full absolute path. but if the file is a symlink, u'll get the final resolved name.


Nice. Does not work on the BSD Variant of readlink (i.e Mac).I use gnucoreutils on mac. And hence can use greadlink which works with the above solution.
@AndrewLazarus - For Mac OS X, use realpath instead
if you install bash tools via brew install coreutils, then the executable will be installed as /usr/local/opt/coreutils/libexec/gnubin/readlink
P
Peter Cordes

Use this for dirs (the / after ** is needed in bash to limit it to directories):

ls -d -1 "$PWD/"**/

this for files and directories directly under the current directory, whose names contain a .:

ls -d -1 "$PWD/"*.*

this for everything:

ls -d -1 "$PWD/"**/*

Taken from here http://www.zsh.org/mla/users/2002/msg00033.html

In bash, ** is recursive if you enable shopt -s globstar.


ls -d -1 $PWD/**/* does not recurse. Wish I could take my +1 back. You can do ** for each depth you need to go though.
The ** operator is a recursive globbing operator. If you use the command in a shell that supports it (such as zsh), it will work properly.
ls -d1 "$PWD/"{*,.*} to also catch the hidden (dot) files. For me the recursive version in the answer didn't prepend the absolute path to files in subfolders.
I think I'll have to use find... I get -> bash: /bin/ls: Argument list too long
V
Vinko Vrsalovic

You can use

find $PWD 

in bash


That will give the path of the current directory, and all the files and directories below it, as well. That's probably not what people are looking for.
P
Peter Cordes
ls -d "$PWD/"*

This looks only in the current directory. It quotes "$PWD" in case it contains spaces.


This is still a very valid answer, but it would be good to include the info that this does not work recursively (which is what I was looking for in fact!)
For recursive use: find . -exec ls -ld $PWD/{} \;
G
GSM

Command: ls -1 -d "$PWD/"*

This will give the absolute paths of the file like below.

[root@kubenode1 ssl]# ls -1 -d "$PWD/"*
/etc/kubernetes/folder/file-test-config.txt
/etc/kubernetes/folder/file-test.txt
/etc/kubernetes/folder/file-client.txt

e
edorian

The $PWD is a good option by Matthew above. If you want find to only print files then you can also add the -type f option to search only normal files. Other options are "d" for directories only etc. So in your case it would be (if i want to search only for files with .c ext):

find $PWD -type f -name "*.c" 

or if you want all files:

find $PWD -type f

Note: You can't make an alias for the above command, because $PWD gets auto-completed to your home directory when the alias is being set by bash.


Actually, -d doesn't mean only directories - it means it treats directories like files. So if you ls -d /home, you'll get back "/home", not a listing of what's in /home.
@Travis: he was talking about the option to find, not ls. In his case "find / -type d" would find only directories - as he said.
J
Jabir Ali

You can do

ls -1 |xargs realpath

If you need to specify an absolute path or relative path You can do that as well

 ls -1 $FILEPATH |xargs realpath

K
Koder95

Try this:

find "$PWD"/

You get list of absolute paths in working directory.


Does not work if $PWD contains space..:)
C
Cody Gray

If you give the find command an absolute path, it will spit the results out with an absolute path. So, from the Ken directory if you were to type:

find /home/ken/foo/ -name bar -print    

(instead of the relative path find . -name bar -print)

You should get:

/home/ken/foo/bar

Therefore, if you want an ls -l and have it return the absolute path, you can just tell the find command to execute an ls -l on whatever it finds.

find /home/ken/foo -name bar -exec ls -l {} ;\ 

NOTE: There is a space between {} and ;

You'll get something like this:

-rw-r--r--   1 ken admin       181 Jan 27 15:49 /home/ken/foo/bar

If you aren't sure where the file is, you can always change the search location. As long as the search path starts with "/", you will get an absolute path in return. If you are searching a location (like /) where you are going to get a lot of permission denied errors, then I would recommend redirecting standard error so you can actually see the find results:

find / -name bar -exec ls -l {} ;\ 2> /dev/null

(2> is the syntax for the Borne and Bash shells, but will not work with the C shell. It may work in other shells too, but I only know for sure that it works in Bourne and Bash).


You can pass multiple args to the same ls process with -exec ls -ld {} +. (You probably want -d to not have ls list directory contents). Or better, use find's built-in ls with find ... name bar -ls. Also, you have the syntax wrong for one arg per command: you have to quote the semicolon from the shell, so it's {} \;.
k
kenorb

fd

Using fd (alternative to find), use the following syntax:

fd . foo -a

Where . is the search pattern and foo is the root directory.

E.g. to list all files in etc recursively, run: fd . /etc -a.

-a, --absolute-path Show absolute instead of relative paths


M
Marisha

Just an alternative to

ls -d "$PWD/"* 

to pinpoint that * is shell expansion, so

echo "$PWD/"*

would do the same (the drawback you cannot use -1 to separate by new lines, not spaces).


can you elaborate more on this? what is a shell expansion? how to use -1 to separete by lines?
@Antonio Araujo, shell expansion is the shell (e.g. bash) will replace * with list of files - can read more on bash man page. -1 is ls command option, echo is other command, it does not have same options.
T
Thyag

If you need list of all files in current as well as sub-directories

find $PWD -type f

If you need list of all files only in current directory

find $PWD -maxdepth 1 -type f

g
geosmart

find jar file recursely and print absolute path

`ls -R |grep "\.jar$" | xargs readlink -f`                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
/opt/tool/dev/maven_repo/com/oracle/ojdbc/ojdbc8-19.3.0.0.jar
/opt/tool/dev/maven_repo/com/oracle/ojdbc/ons-19.3.0.0.jar
/opt/tool/dev/maven_repo/com/oracle/ojdbc/oraclepki-19.3.0.0.jar
/opt/tool/dev/maven_repo/com/oracle/ojdbc/osdt_cert-19.3.0.0.jar
/opt/tool/dev/maven_repo/com/oracle/ojdbc/osdt_core-19.3.0.0.jar
/opt/tool/dev/maven_repo/com/oracle/ojdbc/simplefan-19.3.0.0.jar
/opt/tool/dev/maven_repo/com/oracle/ojdbc/ucp-19.3.0.0.jar


r
rxw
lspwd() { for i in $@; do ls -d -1 $PWD/$i; done }

M
Mike Behr

Here's an example that prints out a list without an extra period and that also demonstrates how to search for a file match. Hope this helps:

find . -type f -name "extr*" -exec echo `pwd`/{} \; | sed "s|\./||"

R
Raveen Kumar

This worked for me. But it didn't list in alphabetical order.

find "$(pwd)" -maxdepth 1

This command lists alphabetically as well as lists hidden files too.

ls -d -1 "$PWD/".*; ls -d -1 "$PWD/"*;

k
kenorb

stat

Absolute path of a single file:

stat -c %n "$PWD"/foo/bar

f
fangxlmr

You might want to try this.

for name in /home/ken/foo/bar/*
do
    echo $name
done

You can get abs path using for loop and echo simply without find.


A
Adam

Most if not all of the suggested methods result in paths that cannot be used directly in some other terminal command if the path contains spaces. Ideally the results will have slashes prepended. This works for me on macOS:

find / -iname "*SEARCH TERM spaces are okay*" -print 2>&1  | grep -v denied |grep -v permitted |sed -E 's/\ /\\ /g'

D
Daniel Kobe

This works best if you want a dynamic solution that works well in a function

lfp ()
{
  ls -1 $1 | xargs -I{} echo $(realpath $1)/{}
}


J
JGurtz

This will give the canonical path (will resolve symlinks): realpath FILENAME

If you want canonical path to the symlink itself, then: realpath -s FILENAME


Y
Yuri

Recursive files can be listed by many ways in Linux. Here I am sharing one liner script to clear all logs of files(only files) from /var/log/ directory and second check recently which logs file has made an entry.

First:

find /var/log/ -type f  #listing file recursively 

Second:

for i in $(find $PWD -type f) ; do cat /dev/null > "$i" ; done #empty files recursively 

Third use:

ls -ltr $(find /var/log/ -type f ) # listing file used in recent

Note: for directory location you can also pass $PWD instead of /var/log.


M
Michael Yan

If you don't have symbolic links, you could try

tree -iFL 1 [DIR]

-i makes tree print filenames in each line, without the tree structure.

-f makes tree print the full path of each file.

-L 1 avoids tree from recursion.


R
Renju Ashokan

Write one small function

lsf() {
ls `pwd`/$1
}

Then you can use like

lsf test.sh 

it gives full path like

/home/testuser/Downloads/test.sh

D
David Arno

find / -print will do this


...unfortunately it'll do something else (like displaying 'some' other files unless filtered)
A
Albert
ls -1 | awk  -vpath=$PWD/ '{print path$1}'