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一。
mv /test1/* /test2/test1
rm -rf /test1

二。

You can however use rsync with the --remove-source-files option (and possibly others) to merge one directory into another.

rsync won't delete any directories, so you will have to do something like find -type d -empty -delete afterwards to get rid of the empty source directory tree.


 

rsync -av /source/ /destination/
(after checking)
rm -rf /source/


--remove-source-files has the advantage of only removing files that were transferred successfully,
so you can use find to remove empty directories and will be left with everything that wasn't transferred without having to check rsyncs output

cd source; find -type f | xargs -n 1 -I {} mv {} dest/{}


三。

I'd recommend these four steps:

cd ${SOURCE}; 
find . -type d -exec mkdir -p ${DEST}/\{} \; 
find . -type f -exec mv \{} ${DEST}/\{} \; 
find . -type d -empty -delete

or better yet, here's a script that implements semantics similar to mv:

#!/bin/bash

DEST=${@:${#@}}; for SRC in ${@:1:$(({#@} -1))}; do   (
    cd $SRC;
    find . -type d -exec mkdir -p ${DEST}/\{} \; 
    find . -type f -exec mv \{} ${DEST}/\{} \; 
    find . -type d -empty -delete
) done


Here is a script that worked for me. I prefer mv over rsync, so I use Jewel and Jonathan Mayer's solutions.

#!/bin/bash

# usage source1 .. sourceN dest

length=$(($#-1))
sources=${@:1:$length}
DEST=$(readlink -f ${!#})
for SRC in $sources; do
    pushd $SRC;
    find . -type d -exec mkdir -p ${DEST}/{} \;
    find . -type f -exec mv {} ${DEST}/{} \;
    find . -type d -empty -delete
    popd



if you use use mv --backup=numbered
(or one of the other options for the --backup switch),
then mv will complete the merge and preserve the files intended to be overwritten
posted on 2015-06-14 23:36  xxxxxxxx1x2xxxxxxx  阅读(1788)  评论(0编辑  收藏  举报