linux-shell: renaming files to creation time linux-shell: renaming files to creation time linux linux

linux-shell: renaming files to creation time


Naming based on file system date

In the linux shell:

for f in *.jpgdo    mv -n "$f" "$(date -r "$f" +"%Y%m%d_%H%M%S").jpg"done

Explanation:

  • for f in *.jpgdo

    This starts the loop over all jpeg files. A feature of this is that it will work with all file names, even ones with spaces, tabs or other difficult characters in the names.

  • mv -n "$f" "$(date -r "$f" +"%Y%m%d_%H%M%S").jpg"

    This renames the file. It uses the -r option which tells date to display the date of the file rather than the current date. The specification +"%Y%m%d_%H%M%S" tells date to format it as you specified.

    The file name, $f, is placed in double quotes where ever it is used. This assures that odd file names will not cause errors.

    The -n option to mv tells move never to overwrite an existing file.

  • done

    This completes the loop.

For interactive use, you may prefer that the command is all on one line. In that case, use:

for f in *.jpg; do mv -n "$f" "$(date -r "$f" +"%Y%m%d_%H%M%S").jpg"; done

Naming based on EXIF Create Date

To name the file based on the EXIF Create Date (instead of the file system date), we need exiftool or equivalent:

for f in *.jpgdo    mv -n "$f" "$(exiftool -d "%Y%m%d_%H%M%S" -CreateDate "$f" | awk '{print $4".jpg"}')"done

Explanation:

The above is quite similar to the commands for the file date but with the use of exiftool and awk to extract the EXIF image Create Date.

  • The exiftool command provides the date in a format like:

    $ exiftool -d "%Y%m%d_%H%M%S"  -CreateDate sample.jpgCreate Date                     : 20121027_181338

    The actual date that we want is the fourth field in the output.

  • We pass the exiftool output to awk so that it can extract the field that we want:

    awk '{print $4".jpg"}'

    This selects the date field and also adds on the .jpg extension.


Thanks to @John1024 !

I needed to rename files with different extensions in the same time, according to last modification date :

for f in *; do  fn=$(basename "$f")  mv "$fn" "$(date -r "$f" +"%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M-%S")_$fn"done

"DSC_0189.JPG" ➜ "2016-02-21_18-22-15_DSC_0189.JPG"

"MOV_0131.avi" ➜ "2016-01-01_20-30-31_MOV_0131.avi"

If you don't want to keep original filename :

mv "$fn" "$(date -r "$pathAndFileName" +"%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M-%S")"

Hope it helps noobs as me !


Try this

for file in `ls -1 *.jpg`; do name=`stat -c %y $file | awk -F"." '{ print $1 }' | sed -e "s/\-//g" -e "s/\://g" -e "s/[ ]/_/g"`.jpg; mv $file $name; done

Though there might be an easier way.