Use GNU find to show only the leaf directories
You can use -links
if your filesystem is POSIX compliant (i.e. a directory has a link for each subdirectory in it, a link from its parent and a link to itself, thus a count of 2 links 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 mentioned). Here is another version that is slower, but does work on Mac OS X. It is based on his version, with a 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:
sort the
find
output in reverse order- now you have subdirectories appear first, then their parents
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)
sort
them (so it looks like the normalfind
output)- Voila! Fast and portable.