I have a Bash script that repeatedly copies files every 5 seconds. But this is a touch overkill as usually there is no change.
I know about the Linux command watch but as this script will be used on OS X computers (which don’t have watch, and I don’t want to make everyone install macports) I need to be able to check if a file is modified or not with straight Bash code.
Should I be checking the file modified time? How can I do that?
Edit: I was hoping to expand my script to do more than just copy the file, if it detected a change. So is there a pure-bash way to do this?
I tend to agree with the
rsyncanswer if you have big trees of filesto manage, but you can use the -u (–update) flag to cp to copy the
file(s) over only if the source is newer than the destination.
cp -u
Edit
Since you’ve updated the question to indicate that you’d like to take
some additional actions, you’ll want to use the
-ntcheckin the
[(test) builtin command:From the man page:
Hope that helps.