I need to compare two different versions of a source tree
excluding certain directories and print out some statistics
on the files which have been changed, removed or added.
Here comes a boiled down example of the problem I'm having.
Let's say there are 4 files in the current directory:
./aa
./aaa
./bb
./bbb
and I want to exclude all paths starting with ./bb
This one is easy:
find . ! -path './bb*'
Now I want to make it into a generic script:
DIR=.
OPT='! -path $DIR/bb*'
find $DIR $OPT
$DIR and * within OPT are essential
and no matter what I've tried I can't get the parameter expansion right.
Any suggestions will be appreciated,
I couldn't get * to expand later either. Backslashes didn't help. What I
finally did was like:
opt1='! -path $dir/bb<wild>'
opt = `echo $opt1 | sed 's|<wild>|*|'`
find $dir $opt
Hi Tony,
Actually I was trying to achieve just the opposite: to prevent * expansion.
And the only solution I've found so far was to explicitly forbid
pathname expansion with shell -f option:
DIR=.
OPT='! -path '$DIR'/bb*'
set -f
find $DIR $OPT
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