89
votes

I've got a log file directory that has 82000 files and directories in it (about half and half).

I need to delete all the file and directories which are older than 3 days.

In a directory that has 37000 files in it, I was able to do this with:

find * -mtime +3 -exec rm {} \;

But with 82000 files/directories, I get the error:

/usr/bin/find: Argument list too long

How can I get around this error so that I can delete all files/directories that are older than 3 days?

3
Have you tried find -mtime +3 -exec rm {} + ? - Gilles Quenot
I believe running find * -mtime +3 |xargs rm would solve that problem. - Mats Petersson
I think the only problem is find *. find . is better. The shell globing with expand the * to a huge list of files and directories. - artless noise
@artlessnoise is spot on. - sjas

3 Answers

120
votes

To delete all files and directories within the current directory:

find . -mtime +3 | xargs rm -Rf

Or alternatively, more in line with the OP's original command:

find . -mtime +3 -exec rm -Rf -- {} \;
59
votes

Can also use:

find . -mindepth 1 -mtime +3 -delete

To not delete target directory

17
votes

Another solution for the original question, esp. useful if you want to remove only SOME of the older files in a folder, would be smth like this:

find . -name "*.sess" -mtime +100 

and so on.. Quotes block shell wildcards, thus allowing you to "find" millions of files :)