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The xargs command is a handy Linux utility that is used to convert input data into a string of arguments. xargs, which is short for “extended arguments”, is available on all Linux distributions. Its most common use is to chain commands together. For example, xargs can accept standard input from an initial command and convert it into properly formatted arguments for subsequent commands. This guide explains how xargs works and when to use it, and provides some examples demonstrating how it is used.

Linux xargs: An Overview

Linux operating systems have three standard data streams, which are named stdin, stderr, and stdout. The data is handled in the same matter whether it comes from a file, program output, or user input. Stdin is the standard input stream, which accepts text from either the user or a file. Programs or commands send their results to stdout while directing any error messages to stderr.

In isolation, the relationship of programs, streams, and commands is very simple. However, when one program must send its results to another, it becomes more complicated. Linux provides the pipe command, represented by the | symbol, to redirect the standard output from one command to a second command. This allows you to “chain” commands together and assemble a command pipeline. For example, you can send the results of the cat command to the grep commands to search a file for a particular keyword. Only the lines that match the keyword are displayed. For example:

cat example.com.conf | grep ErrorLog
ErrorLog  /var/www/html/example.com/log/error.log

Unfortunately, not all commands accept data from the pipe command as input. Certain commands, such as cp, rm, and mkdir, must receive their input directly as command arguments. This presents a problem for anyone who wants to use them as part of a sequence. The xargs command resolves this issue. It accepts piped input from any source, including a file or a command, and converts it into a string. It then calls the target command and provides it with the string, which represents the arguments for the command. This means that the target command receives the arguments in the format it expects. If no target command is specified, xargs calls echo.

To use the xargs command, use the | symbol to pipe the results of the initial command to xargs. Follow the xargs keyword with any optional parameters as well as the target command. In the following example, the results of the find command are piped to args, which sends this input to rm as arguments.

  find /path -type f -name '*.txt' | xargs rm

When xargs receives the piped input, it converts it into a list or series of lists. Each list contains one or more elements. The number of elements is constrained by the system limit and the values of the -n or -s parameters. It invokes the target command once for every list and provides the list as an argument. In the previous example, if /path contains file1.txt and file2.txt, then xargs generates the following command:

  rm file1.txt file2.txt

If the -n option is given a value of 1, xargs would generate two commands instead. It keeps calling rm with only one file until the list of files from find is completely consumed.

  rm file1.txt
  rm file2.txt

Common xargs Use Cases

The most frequent use of xargs is to allow a command to act on the output of another command. It is extremely common to see find and xargs used together to process a long list of files. However, xargs has some other handy uses. Many of these cases are covered in more depth in the How To Use xargs section.

  • xargs helps you work around maximum argument lengths for commands. For example, certain kernels limit the maximum size of an argument array. Additionally, some commands might impose even more stringent limits on the number of arguments. xargs can divide the results of ls or find into smaller lists and feed these shorter lists to the second command.

  • You can use xargs in conjunction with the -P or maxprocs option to run operations in parallel. This allows xargs to launch many processes at once, each working on separate data.

  • xargs allows you to implement command substitution through the use of the -I option. In this case, xargs replaces all instances of the substitution string with the list of arguments.

  • xargs can call a shell script that uses sh. This allows for a much higher degree of complexity in the target command.

  • Certain options allow file names with special characters such as , to be processed. Newline characters can also be gracefully handled. Typically the -print0 option is added to the initial find command, while xargs is specified using the -0 option.

  • The xargs command is frequently a more efficient alternative to exec when either option could be used. exec runs more slowly due to the way that processes are created.

xargs Command-Line Options

Calling xargs with different command-line options can dramatically change the behavior of the utility. Here is a list of some of the most common options.

  • -0 tells xargs to use the null character as a separator instead of separating on newline characters and spaces. It is almost always used together with the print0 option, which adds a null character to the end of each string that it passes to xargs. All characters are accepted literally with no backslash substitutions. This helps deal with unwieldy or non-standard file names. However, it is important to note that not all applications support null-terminated strings. The --null flag has the same meaning as -0.

  • -a along with the name of a file reads data from the file rather than standard input.

  • -d specifies a character to use as a string delimiter. A backslash or escape character such as \n might be used instead.

  • -I followed by a placeholder string is used to implement substitutions. Every time the placeholder occurs in the target command, xargs replaces it with the data from standard input. In the command find /path -name '*.txt' | xargs -I % cp % ~/backups, whenever the % symbol occurs in the target cp command, xargs replaces it with the input from find. Multiple substitutions can occur in the same command. This command sets -L to 1 and only processes one line at a time.

  • -L specifies the maximum number of non-blank input lines to use in each list.

  • -n indicates the maximum number of arguments supplied each time the target command is invoked. The size option -s takes precedence over -n. If xargs -n 1 is used with the find command, one filename is used in each invocation of the target command.

  • -o associates the xargs command with the input console. This is useful for running xargs in an interactive context.

  • -P is the maxprocs option. This causes xargs to run up to this many processes simultaneously. The default is 1, while 0 tells xargs to run as many processes as the system allows.

  • -p prompts the user before running each command. It is a good idea to use this option if the target command is potentially dangerous.

  • -s specifies the maximum number of characters supplied to each command, including the command itself and any terminating nulls.

  • -t prints each command that is executed to standard output.

How To Use xargs

The following examples demonstrate several common use cases for the xargs command. In most cases, the -t option has been added solely to illustrate the resulting commands.

Using xargs Without Any Options

The simplest way to use xargs is without any options. The following example displays the word count of every file in the current directory. xargs converts the ls results into a string of arguments for wc.

ls | xargs -t wc
wc test1.txt test2.txt
1 10 42 test1.txt
1 10 42 test2.txt
2 20 84 total

Using xargs and Command Substitution

In the following example, xargs calls cp once for each .txt file in the /path directory. When the % symbol is encountered in the target command, it is replaced with the name of the file. This allows for the insertion of the filename someplace other than at the end of the entire target command.

find ./xargstest -type f -name '*.txt' | xargs -t -I % cp -a % ~/backups
cp -a ./xargstest/test2.txt /home/user/backups
cp -a ./xargstest/test1.txt /home/user/backups

Using the -0 Option to Deal With Complex File Names

In the following example, all directories in the /path directory are removed. The combination of the -print0 option to find and the -0 option for xargs handles directory names with spaces or special characters. The find command inserts a null character after each entry it finds, while xargs uses the null character to distinguish the entries.

find ./xargstest/test1 -type d -name '*_*' -print0 | xargs -t -0 rmdir
rmdir  ./xargstest/test1/test_1 ./xargstest/test1/test_2

Spawning Multiple Processes

The -P option allows a larger number of processes to run simultaneously. The following example unzips four archives at a time. When one of the processes finishes, another one is launched, as long as more zip files remain. The -L option must also be used to launch the target commands properly. In the following example, two and only two processes run at any given time. See the documentation from the GNU organization for more information.

find ./xargstest -name '*.zip' | xargs -t  -P 2  -L 1 -I % unzip -u  %
unzip -u ./xargstest/test4.zip
unzip -u ./xargstest/test5.zip
Archive:  ./xargstest/test4.zip
unzip -u ./xargstest/test2.zip
Archive:  ./xargstest/test5.zip
unzip -u ./xargstest/test1.zip
Archive:  ./xargstest/test2.zip
unzip -u ./xargstest/test3.zip
Archive:  ./xargstest/test1.zip
Archive:  ./xargstest/test3.zip

Invoke xargs to a Shell Script

If the target command is complex or several commands must be executed, an elegant trick is to use sh as the target command. This feeds the results as input to the shell script. Command substitution can be used to translate the input data into the proper sequence. In this case, the shell runs the word count program on each text file and then copies it to the /archive directory. Additional information on using xargs to call sh can be found on the GNU site .

ls *.txt* | xargs  -t -I %  sh -c 'wc %; cp % archive'
sh -c 'wc test1.txt; cp test1.txt archive'
1 10 42 test1.txt
sh -c 'wc test2.txt; cp test2.txt archive'
1 10 42 test2.txt

Call a Command Using a Subset of the Results

The -n option limits the number of arguments xargs sends to the target command, while the -L option selects many lines. If -n is set to 1, then the command only selects the next entry. In the following example, xargs takes the next two text files from the find command and sends them to diff for a comparison.

find ./xargstest/archive  -type f -name '*.txt*'  -print0 | xargs  -0 -t -n 2 diff
diff ./xargstest/archive/test2.txt ./xargstest/archive/test1.txt
1c1
< this is test 1. It has a number of words.
---

> this is test 1. It has a number of words and more.

If n were set to 1, the command would diff the file against its parent. In some cases, the -L 1 option could also be used to achieve the same results.

  • The -n option enables an efficient method of copying files to multiple directories at the same time.
  • The echo command passes in a list of destination directories to xargs, while the target command describes the specific details of the cp command.
  • Adding the -n 1 option instructs xargs to pass in each destination directory one at a time.

The following example copies each text file in the current directory sequentially to archive and backup.

echo ~/xargstest/archive/ ~/xargstest/backup/ | xargs -t -n 1 cp -v ./*.txt
cp -v ./test1.txt ./test2.txt /home/user/xargstest/archive/
'./test1.txt' -> '/home/user/xargstest/archive/test1.txt'
'./test2.txt' -> '/home/user/xargstest/archive/test2.txt'
cp -v ./test1.txt ./test2.txt /home/user/xargstest/backup/
'./test1.txt' -> '/home/user/xargstest/backup/test1.txt'
'./test2.txt' -> '/home/user/xargstest/backup/test2.txt'

Use xargs Debug Options

The -p and -t options are used to debug xargs commands. The -t option prints the full command line to the standard error output before running it. The -p option prints each command, and prompts the user to enter y orY before executing it. The following command prompts you to approve each potential delete operation before rm does anything.

find ./xargstest/archive -type f -print0 | xargs -0 -n 1 -p rm
rm ./xargstest/archive/test2.txt ?...y
rm ./xargstest/archive/test1.txt ?...y

More Information

You may wish to consult the following resources for additional information on this topic. While these are provided in the hope that they will be useful, please note that we cannot vouch for the accuracy or timeliness of externally hosted materials.

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