Linux: copy and create destination dir if it does not exist
mkdir -p "$d" && cp file "$d"
(there's no such option for cp
).
If both of the following are true:
- You are using the GNU version of
cp
(and not, for instance, the Mac version), and - You are copying from some existing directory structure and you just need it recreated
then you can do this with the --parents
flag of cp
. From the info page (viewable at http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/manual/html_node/cp-invocation.html#cp-invocation or with info cp
or man cp
):
--parents Form the name of each destination file by appending to the target directory a slash and the specified name of the source file. The last argument given to `cp' must be the name of an existing directory. For example, the command: cp --parents a/b/c existing_dir copies the file `a/b/c' to `existing_dir/a/b/c', creating any missing intermediate directories.
Example:
/tmp $ mkdir foo
/tmp $ mkdir foo/foo
/tmp $ touch foo/foo/foo.txt
/tmp $ mkdir bar
/tmp $ cp --parents foo/foo/foo.txt bar
/tmp $ ls bar/foo/foo
foo.txt