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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T05:57:27+00:00 2026-05-11T05:57:27+00:00

Surely there must be a way to do this easily! I’ve tried the Linux

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Surely there must be a way to do this easily!

I’ve tried the Linux command-line apps such as sha1sum and md5sum but they seem only to be able to compute hashes of individual files and output a list of hash values, one for each file.

I need to generate a single hash for the entire contents of a folder (not just the filenames).

I’d like to do something like

sha1sum /folder/of/stuff > singlehashvalue 

Edit: to clarify, my files are at multiple levels in a directory tree, they’re not all sitting in the same root folder.

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  1. 2026-05-11T05:57:28+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 5:57 am

    One possible way would be:

     sha1sum path/to/folder/* | sha1sum 

    If there is a whole directory tree, you’re probably better off using find and xargs. One possible command would be

     find path/to/folder -type f -print0 | sort -z | xargs -0 sha1sum | sha1sum 

    And, finally, if you also need to take account of permissions and empty directories:

    (find path/to/folder -type f -print0  | sort -z | xargs -0 sha1sum;  find path/to/folder \( -type f -o -type d \) -print0 | sort -z | \    xargs -0 stat -c '%n %a') \ | sha1sum 

    The arguments to stat will cause it to print the name of the file, followed by its octal permissions. The two finds will run one after the other, causing double the amount of disk IO, the first finding all file names and checksumming the contents, the second finding all file and directory names, printing name and mode. The list of ‘file names and checksums’, followed by ‘names and directories, with permissions’ will then be checksummed, for a smaller checksum.

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