Use GNU find to show only the leaf directories Use GNU find to show only the leaf directories bash bash

Use GNU find to show only the leaf directories


You can use -links if your filesystem is POSIX compliant (ie, a directory has a link for each subdirectory in it, a link from its parent and a link to self, thus a count of 2 link if it has no subdirectories).

The following command should do what you want:

find dir -type d -links 2

However, it does not seems to work on Mac OS X (as @Piotr mentionned). Here is another version that is slower, but does work on Mac OS X. It is based on his version, with correction to handle whitespace in directory names:

find . -type d -exec sh -c '(ls -p "{}"|grep />/dev/null)||echo "{}"' \;


I just found another solution to this that works on both Linux & macOS (without find -exec)!

It involves sort (twice) and awk:

find dir -type d | sort -r | awk 'a!~"^"$0{a=$0;print}' | sort

Explanation:

  1. sort the find output in reverse order

    • now you have subdirectories appear first, then their parents
  2. use awk to omit lines if the current line is a prefix of the previous line

    • (this command is from the answer here)
    • now you eliminated "all parent directories" (you're left with parent dirs)
  3. sort them (so it looks like the normal find output)
  4. Voila! Fast and portable.


@Sylvian solution didn't work for me on mac os x for some obscure reason. So I've came up with a bit more direct solution. Hope this will help someone:

find . -type d  -print0 | xargs -0 -IXXX sh -c '(ls -p XXX | grep / >/dev/null) || echo XXX' ;

Explanation:

  • ls -p ends directories with '/'
  • so (ls -p XXX | grep / >/dev/null) returns 0 if there is no directories
  • -print0 && -0 is to make xargs handle spaces in directory names