Let’s locate files using the terminal! This is just a cool little trick you can use if you’re doing a bunch of stuff in the terminal, and you don’t want to leave, or you’re just interested in cool terminal tricks. Let’s say you’re looking for a file, anywhere on your machine, but you don’t know exactly where it is. You can install a very cool search package called mlocate
(or merging locate).
Install
On Ubuntu/Debian you can run:
sudo apt-get install mlocate
Or if you’re on that Manjaro/Arch life:
sudo pacman -S mlocate
Syntax
To locate files in the terminal by using mlocate
, just type:
locate [name of the file] [directory in which you want to start recursively searching]
If you’re using mlocate
for the first time, it’s not gonna work just yet. mlocate
is actually a pair of tool bundled into one. The other half of mlocate
is called updatedb
. So by running updatedb
, you’re essentially creating/updating an index so that you can run your search. So any time you want to run a locate
command and it’s not giving you the results you are expecting, there’s a good chance your index is outdated, so you can just run updatedb
, then run your locate
search again, and you should be good to go.
Update your junk by running updatedb
then run locate [file]
to get your mind blown!
Bonus Tip
If the results of your locate
command are crazy long, like… CRAZY long…. too long to view everything in the terminal because your terminal only has a finite history, here’s a tip: You can print the results of ANY command to a text file and save it anywhere by using >
. For example:
sudo locate myfile.txt / > ~/Desktop/searchresults.txt
The above command will run a system-wide search for anything matching myfile.txt
recursively from the root directory /
and print the results to searchresults.txt
on the Desktop
.
Good luck and have fun! Now that you’ve found the file you’re looking for, perhaps you want to do something cool with it! If you wanna learn more cool stuff you can do in the terminal, check this out.