# fd [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/sharkdp/fd.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/sharkdp/fd) *fd* is a simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to [*find*](https://www.gnu.org/software/findutils/). While it does not seek to mirror all of *find*'s powerful functionality, it provides sensible (opinionated) defaults for [80%](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareto_principle) of the use cases. ## Features * Convenient syntax: `fd PATTERN` instead of `find -iname '*PATTERN*'`. * Smart case: the search is case-insensitive by default. It switches to case-sensitive if the pattern contains an uppercase character[\*](http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/options.html#'smartcase'). * Colorized terminal output (similar to *ls*). * Ignores hidden directories and files, by default. * Ignores patterns from your `.gitignore`, by default. * Regular expressions. * Unicode-awareness. * The command name is *50%* shorter[\*](https://github.com/ggreer/the_silver_searcher) than `find` :-). ## Demo ![Demo](http://i.imgur.com/iU6qkQj.gif) ## Colorized output `fd` can colorize files by extension, just like `ls`. In order for this to work, the environment variable [`LS_COLORS`](https://linux.die.net/man/5/dir_colors) has to be set. Typically, the value of this variable is set by the `dircolors` command which provides a convenient configuration format to define colors for different file formats. On most distributions, `LS_COLORS` should be set already. If you are looking for alternative, more complete (and more colorful) variants, see [here](https://github.com/seebi/dircolors-solarized) or [here](https://github.com/trapd00r/LS_COLORS). ## Benchmark A search in my home folder with ~80.000 subdirectories and ~350.000 files. The `--hidden` for `fd` is needed for a fair comparison, as *find* does this by default: ``` bash > time fd --hidden '\.jpg$' > /dev/null 0,39s user 0,40s system 99% cpu 0,790 total > time find -iname '*.jpg' > /dev/null 0,36s user 0,42s system 98% cpu 0,789 total ``` Both tools found the exact same 5504 files and have a comparable performance (averaged over multiple runs), even though *fd* performs a regex search. If we do the same for *find*, it is significantly slower: ``` bash > time find -iregex '.*\.jpg$' > /dev/null 1,29s user 0,41s system 99% cpu 1,705 total ``` ## Install With [cargo](https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo), you can clone, build and install *fd* with a single command: ``` cargo install --git https://github.com/sharkdp/fd ``` The release page of this repository also includes precompiled binaries for Linux. ## Development ```bash cargo build --release ```