Rename all files in a folder with a prefix in a single command Rename all files in a folder with a prefix in a single command unix unix

Rename all files in a folder with a prefix in a single command


If your filenames contain no whitepace and you don't have any subdirectories, you can use a simple for loop:

$ for FILENAME in *; do mv $FILENAME Unix_$FILENAME; done 

Otherwise use the convenient rename command (which is a perl script) - although it might not be available out of the box on every Unix (e.g. OS X doesn't come with rename).

A short overview at debian-administration.org:

If your filenames contain whitespace it's easier to use find, on Linux the following should work:

$ find . -type f -name '*' -printf "echo mv '%h/%f' '%h/Unix_%f\n'" | sh

On BSD systems, there is no -printf option, unfortunately. But GNU findutils should be installable (on e.g. Mac OS X with brew install findutils).

$ gfind . -type f -name '*' -printf "mv \"%h/%f\" \"%h/Unix_%f\"\n" | sh


Try the rename command in the folder with the files:

rename 's/^/Unix_/' *

The argument of rename (sed s command) indicates to replace the regex ^ with Unix_. The caret (^) is a special character that means start of the line.


I think this is just what you'er looking for:

ls | xargs -I {} mv {} Unix_{}

Yes, it is simple yet elegant and powerful, and also one-liner.You can get more detailed intro from me on the page:Rename Files and Directories (Add Prefix)