man/cat1p/ls.1p.txt

ls(P) ls(P)
 
 
 
 
 
NAME
       ls - list directory contents
 
SYNOPSIS
       ls [-CFRacdilqrtu1][-H | -L ][-fgmnopsx][file...]
 
DESCRIPTION
       For each operand that names a file of a type other than
       directory or symbolic link to a directory, ls shall
       write the name of the file as well as any requested,
       associated information. For each operand that names a
       file of type directory, ls shall write the names of
       files contained within the directory as well as any
       requested, associated information. If one of the -d, -F,
       or -l options are specified, and one of the -H or -L
       options are not specified, for each operand that names a
       file of type symbolic link to a directory, ls shall
       write the name of the file as well as any requested,
       associated information. If none of the -d, -F, or -l
       options are specified, or the -H or -L options are spec-
       ified, for each operand that names a file of type sym-
       bolic link to a directory, ls shall write the names of
       files contained within the directory as well as any
       requested, associated information.
 
       If no operands are specified, ls shall write the con-
       tents of the current directory. If more than one operand
       is specified, ls shall write non-directory operands
       first; it shall sort directory and non-directory oper-
       ands separately according to the collating sequence in
       the current locale.
 
       The ls utility shall detect infinite loops; that is,
       entering a previously visited directory that is an
       ancestor of the last file encountered. When it detects
       an infinite loop, ls shall write a diagnostic message to
       standard error and shall either recover its position in
       the hierarchy or terminate.
 
OPTIONS
       The ls utility shall conform to the Base Definitions
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility
       Syntax Guidelines.
 
       The following options shall be supported:
 
       -C Write multi-text-column output with entries
              sorted down the columns, according to the collat-
              ing sequence. The number of text columns and the
              column separator characters are unspecified, but
              should be adapted to the nature of the output
              device.
 
       -F Do not follow symbolic links named as operands
              unless the -H or -L options are specified. Write
              a slash ( '/' ) immediately after each pathname
              that is a directory, an asterisk ( '*' ) after
              each that is executable, a vertical bar ( '|' )
              after each that is a FIFO, and an at sign ( '@' )
              after each that is a symbolic link. For other
              file types, other symbols may be written.
 
       -H If a symbolic link referencing a file of type
              directory is specified on the command line, ls
              shall evaluate the file information and file type
              to be those of the file referenced by the link,
              and not the link itself; however, ls shall write
              the name of the link itself and not the file ref-
              erenced by the link.
 
       -L Evaluate the file information and file type for
              all symbolic links (whether named on the command
              line or encountered in a file hierarchy) to be
              those of the file referenced by the link, and not
              the link itself; however, ls shall write the name
              of the link itself and not the file referenced by
              the link. When -L is used with -l, write the con-
              tents of symbolic links in the long format (see
              the STDOUT section).
 
       -R Recursively list subdirectories encountered.
 
       -a Write out all directory entries, including those
              whose names begin with a period ( '.' ). Entries
              beginning with a period shall not be written out
              unless explicitly referenced, the -a option is
              supplied, or an implementation-defined condition
              shall cause them to be written.
 
       -c Use time of last modification of the file status
              information (see <sys/stat.h> in the System
              Interfaces volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001)
              instead of last modification of the file itself
              for sorting ( -t) or writing ( -l).
 
       -d Do not follow symbolic links named as operands
              unless the -H or -L options are specified. Do not
              treat directories differently than other types of
              files. The use of -d with -R produces unspecified
              results.
 
       -f Force each argument to be interpreted as a direc-
              tory and list the name found in each slot. This
              option shall turn off -l, -t, -s, and -r, and
              shall turn on -a; the order is the order in which
              entries appear in the directory.
 
       -g The same as -l, except that the owner shall not
              be written.
 
       -i For each file, write the file's file serial num-
              ber (see stat() in the System Interfaces volume
              of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001).
 
       -l (The letter ell.) Do not follow symbolic links
              named as operands unless the -H or -L options are
              specified. Write out in long format (see the STD-
              OUT section). When -l (ell) is specified, -1
              (one) shall be assumed.
 
       -m Stream output format; list files across the page,
              separated by commas.
 
       -n The same as -l, except that the owner's UID and
              GID numbers shall be written, rather than the
              associated character strings.
 
       -o The same as -l, except that the group shall not
              be written.
 
       -p Write a slash ( '/' ) after each filename if that
              file is a directory.
 
       -q Force each instance of non-printable filename
              characters and <tab>s to be written as the ques-
              tion-mark ( '?' ) character. Implementations may
              provide this option by default if the output is
              to a terminal device.
 
       -r Reverse the order of the sort to get reverse col-
              lating sequence or oldest first.
 
       -s Indicate the total number of file system blocks
              consumed by each file displayed. The block size
              is implementation-defined. <img
              src="../images/opt-end.gif" alt="[Option End]"
              border="0">
 
       -t Sort with the primary key being time modified
              (most recently modified first) and the secondary
              key being filename in the collating sequence.
 
       -u Use time of last access (see <sys/stat.h>)
              instead of last modification of the file for
              sorting ( -t) or writing ( -l).
 
       -x The same as -C, except that the multi-text-column
              output is produced with entries sorted across,
              rather than down, the columns.
 
       -1 (The numeric digit one.) Force output to be one
              entry per line.
 
 
       Specifying more than one of the options in the following
       mutually-exclusive pairs shall not be considered an
       error: -C and -l (ell), -m and -l (ell), -x and -l
       (ell), -C and -1 (one), -H and -L, -c and -u. The last
       option specified in each pair shall determine the output
       format.
 
OPERANDS
       The following operand shall be supported:
 
       file A pathname of a file to be written. If the file
              specified is not found, a diagnostic message
              shall be output on standard error.
 
 
STDIN
       Not used.
 
INPUT FILES
       None.
 
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables shall affect the
       execution of ls:
 
       COLUMNS
              Determine the user's preferred column position
              width for writing multiple text-column output. If
              this variable contains a string representing a
              decimal integer, the ls utility shall calculate
              how many pathname text columns to write (see -C)
              based on the width provided. If COLUMNS is not
              set or invalid, an implementation-defined number
              of column positions shall be assumed, based on
              the implementation's knowledge of the output
              device. The column width chosen to write the
              names of files in any given directory shall be
              constant. Filenames shall not be truncated to fit
              into the multiple text-column output.
 
       LANG Provide a default value for the internationaliza-
              tion variables that are unset or null. (See the
              Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,
              Section 8.2, Internationalization Variables for
              the precedence of internationalization variables
              used to determine the values of locale cate-
              gories.)
 
       LC_ALL If set to a non-empty string value, override the
              values of all the other internationalization
              variables.
 
       LC_COLLATE
 
              Determine the locale for character collation
              information in determining the pathname collation
              sequence.
 
       LC_CTYPE
              Determine the locale for the interpretation of
              sequences of bytes of text data as characters
              (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-
              byte characters in arguments) and which charac-
              ters are defined as printable (character class
              print).
 
       LC_MESSAGES
              Determine the locale that should be used to
              affect the format and contents of diagnostic mes-
              sages written to standard error.
 
       LC_TIME
              Determine the format and contents for date and
              time strings written by ls.
 
       NLSPATH
              Determine the location of message catalogs for
              the processing of LC_MESSAGES .
 
       TZ Determine the timezone for date and time strings
              written by ls. If TZ is unset or null, an
              unspecified default timezone shall be used.
 
 
ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       Default.
 
STDOUT
       The default format shall be to list one entry per line
       to standard output; the exceptions are to terminals or
       when one of the -C, -m, or -x options is specified.
       If the output is to a terminal, the format is implemen-
       tation-defined.
 
       When -m is specified, the format used shall be:
 
 
              "%s, %s, ...\n", <filename1>, <filename2>
 
       where the largest number of filenames shall be written
       without exceeding the length of the line.
 
       If the -i option is specified, the file's file serial
       number (see <sys/stat.h>) shall be written in the fol-
       lowing format before any other output for the corre-
       sponding entry:
 
 
              %u ", <file serial number>
 
       If the -l option is specified without -L, the following
       information shall be written:
 
 
              "%s %u %s %s %u %s %s\n", <file mode>, <number of links>,
                  <owner name>, <group name>, <number of bytes in the file>,
                  <date and time>, <pathname>
 
       If the file is a symbolic link, this information shall
       be about the link itself and the <pathname> field shall
       be of the form:
 
 
              "%s -> %s", <pathname of link>, <contents of link>
 
       If both -l and -L are specified, the following informa-
       tion shall be written:
 
 
              "%s %u %s %s %u %s %s\n", <file mode>, <number of links>,
                  <owner name>, <group name>, <number of bytes in the file>,
                  <date and time>, <pathname of link>
 
       where all fields except <pathname of link> shall be for
       the file resolved from the symbolic link.
 
       The -g, -n, and -o options use the same format as -l,
       but with omitted items and their associated <blank>s.
       See the OPTIONS section.
 
       In both the preceding -l forms, if <owner name> or
       <group name> cannot be determined, or if -n is given,
       they shall be replaced with their associated numeric
       values using the format %u .
 
       The <date and time> field shall contain the appropriate
       date and timestamp of when the file was last modified.
       In the POSIX locale, the field shall be the equivalent
       of the output of the following date command:
 
 
              date "+%b %e %H:%M"
 
       if the file has been modified in the last six months,
       or:
 
 
              date "+%b %e %Y"
 
       (where two <space>s are used between %e and %Y ) if the
       file has not been modified in the last six months or if
       the modification date is in the future, except that, in
       both cases, the final <newline> produced by date shall
       not be included and the output shall be as if the date
       command were executed at the time of the last modifica-
       tion date of the file rather than the current time. When
       the LC_TIME locale category is not set to the POSIX
       locale, a different format and order of presentation of
       this field may be used.
 
       If the file is a character special or block special
       file, the size of the file may be replaced with imple-
       mentation-defined information associated with the device
       in question.
 
       If the pathname was specified as a file operand, it
       shall be written as specified.
 
       The file mode written under the -l, -g, -n, and -o
       options shall consist of the following format:
 
 
              "%c%s%s%s%c", <entry type>, <owner permissions>,
                  <group permissions>, <other permissions>,
                  <optional alternate access method flag>
 
       The <optional alternate access method flag> shall be a
       single <space> if there is no alternate or additional
       access control method associated with the file; other-
       wise, a printable character shall be used.
 
       The <entry type> character shall describe the type of
       file, as follows:
 
       d Directory.
 
       b Block special file.
 
       c Character special file.
 
       l (ell)
              Symbolic link.
 
       p FIFO.
 
       - Regular file.
 
 
       Implementations may add other characters to this list to
       represent other implementation-defined file types.
 
       The next three fields shall be three characters each:
 
       <owner permissions>
 
              Permissions for the file owner class (see the
              Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,
              Section 4.4, File Access Permissions).
 
       <group permissions>
 
              Permissions for the file group class.
 
       <other permissions>
 
              Permissions for the file other class.
 
 
       Each field shall have three character positions:
 
       If 'r' , the file is readable; if '-' , the file is not
       readable.
 
       If 'w' , the file is writable; if '-' , the file is not
       writable.
 
       The first of the following that applies:
 
       S If in <owner permissions>, the file is not exe-
              cutable and set-user-ID mode is set. If in
              <group permissions>, the file is not executable
              and set-group-ID mode is set.
 
       s If in <owner permissions>, the file is executable
              and set-user-ID mode is set. If in <group permis-
              sions>, the file is executable and set-group-ID
              mode is set.
 
       T If in <other permissions> and the file is a
              directory, search permission is not granted to
              others, and the restricted deletion flag is set.
 
       t If in <other permissions> and the file is a
              directory, search permission is granted to oth-
              ers, and the restricted deletion flag is set.
 
       x The file is executable or the directory is
              searchable.
 
       - None of the attributes of 'S' , 's' , 'T' , 't' ,
              or 'x' applies.
 
 
       Implementations may add other characters to this list
       for the third character position. Such additions shall,
       however, be written in lowercase if the file is exe-
       cutable or searchable, and in uppercase if it is not.
 
       If any of the -l, -g, -n, -o, or -s options is speci-
       fied, each list of files within the directory shall be
       preceded by a status line indicating the number of file
       system blocks occupied by files in the directory in
       512-byte units, rounded up to the next integral number
       of units, if necessary. In the POSIX locale, the format
       shall be:
 
 
              "total %u\n", <number of units in the directory>
 
       If more than one directory, or a combination of non-
       directory files and directories are written, either as a
       result of specifying multiple operands, or the -R
       option, each list of files within a directory shall be
       preceded by:
 
 
              "\n%s:\n", <directory name>
 
       If this string is the first thing to be written, the
       first <newline> shall not be written. This output shall
       precede the number of units in the directory.
 
       If the -s option is given, each file shall be written
       with the number of blocks used by the file. Along with
       -C, -1, -m, or -x, the number and a <space> shall pre-
       cede the filename; with -g, -l, -n, or -o, they shall
       precede each line describing a file.
 
STDERR
       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic
       messages.
 
OUTPUT FILES
       None.
 
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
       None.
 
EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values shall be returned:
 
        0 Successful completion.
 
       >0 An error occurred.
 
 
CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
       Default.
 
       The following sections are informative.
 
APPLICATION USAGE
       Many implementations use the equal sign ( '=' ) to
       denote sockets bound to the file system for the -F
       option. Similarly, many historical implementations use
       the 's' character to denote sockets as the entry type
       characters for the -l option.
 
       It is difficult for an application to use every part of
       the file modes field of ls -l in a portable manner.
       Certain file types and executable bits are not guaran-
       teed to be exactly as shown, as implementations may have
       extensions. Applications can use this field to pass
       directly to a user printout or prompt, but actions based
       on its contents should generally be deferred, instead,
       to the test utility.
 
       The output of ls (with the -l and related options) con-
       tains information that logically could be used by utili-
       ties such as chmod and touch to restore files to a known
       state. However, this information is presented in a for-
       mat that cannot be used directly by those utilities or
       be easily translated into a format that can be used. A
       character has been added to the end of the permissions
       string so that applications at least have an indication
       that they may be working in an area they do not under-
       stand instead of assuming that they can translate the
       permissions string into something that can be used.
       Future issues or related documents may define one or
       more specific characters to be used based on different
       standard additional or alternative access control mecha-
       nisms.
 
       As with many of the utilities that deal with filenames,
       the output of ls for multiple files or in one of the
       long listing formats must be used carefully on systems
       where filenames can contain embedded white space. Sys-
       tems and system administrators should institute policies
       and user training to limit the use of such filenames.
 
       The number of disk blocks occupied by the file that it
       reports varies depending on underlying file system type,
       block size units reported, and the method of calculating
       the number of blocks. On some file system types, the
       number is the actual number of blocks occupied by the
       file (counting indirect blocks and ignoring holes in the
       file); on others it is calculated based on the file size
       (usually making an allowance for indirect blocks, but
       ignoring holes).
 
EXAMPLES
       An example of a small directory tree being fully listed
       with ls -laRF a in the POSIX locale:
 
 
              total 11
              drwxr-xr-x 3 hlj prog 64 Jul 4 12:07 ./
              drwxrwxrwx 4 hlj prog 3264 Jul 4 12:09 ../
              drwxr-xr-x 2 hlj prog 48 Jul 4 12:07 b/
              -rwxr--r-- 1 hlj prog 572 Jul 4 12:07 foo*
 
 
              a/b:
              total 4
              drwxr-xr-x 2 hlj prog 48 Jul 4 12:07 ./
              drwxr-xr-x 3 hlj prog 64 Jul 4 12:07 ../
              -rw-r--r-- 1 hlj prog 700 Jul 4 12:07 bar
 
RATIONALE
       Some historical implementations of the ls utility show
       all entries in a directory except dot and dot-dot when a
       superuser invokes ls without specifying the -a option.
       When "normal" users invoke ls without specifying -a,
       they should not see information about any files with
       names beginning with a period unless they were named as
       file operands.
 
       Implementations are expected to traverse arbitrary
       depths when processing the -R option. The only limita-
       tion on depth should be based on running out of physical
       storage for keeping track of untraversed directories.
 
       The -1 (one) option was historically found in BSD and
       BSD-derived implementations only. It is required in this
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 so that conforming appli-
       cations might ensure that output is one entry per line,
       even if the output is to a terminal.
 
       Generally, this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 is silent
       about what happens when options are given multiple
       times. In the cases of -C, -l, and -1, however, it does
       specify the results of these overlapping options. Since
       ls is one of the most aliased commands, it is important
       that the implementation perform intuitively. For exam-
       ple, if the alias were:
 
 
              alias ls="ls -C"
 
       and the user typed ls -1, single-text-column output
       should result, not an error.
 
       The BSD ls provides a -A option (like -a, but dot and
       dot-dot are not written out). The small difference from
       -a did not seem important enough to require both.
 
       Implementations may make -q the default for terminals to
       prevent trojan horse attacks on terminals with special
       escape sequences. This is not required because:
 
              Some control characters may be useful on some
              terminals; for example, a system might write them
              as "\001" or "^A" .
 
              Special behavior for terminals is not relevant to
              applications portability.
 
       An early proposal specified that the optional alternate
       access method flag had to be '+' if there was an alter-
       nate access method used on the file or <space> if there
       was not. This was changed to be <space> if there is not
       and a single printable character if there is. This was
       done for three reasons:
 
       There are historical implementations using characters
       other than '+' .
 
       There are implementations that vary this character used
       in that position to distinguish between various alter-
       nate access methods in use.
 
       The standard developers did not want to preclude future
       specifications that might need a way to specify more
       than one alternate access method.
 
       Nonetheless, implementations providing a single alter-
       nate access method are encouraged to use '+' .
 
       In an early proposal, the units used to specify the num-
       ber of blocks occupied by files in a directory in an ls
       -l listing were implementation-defined. This was because
       BSD systems have historically used 1024-byte units and
       System V systems have historically used 512-byte units.
       It was pointed out by BSD developers that their system
       has used 512-byte units in some places and 1024-byte
       units in other places. (System V has consistently used
       512.) Therefore, this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       usually specifies 512. Future releases of BSD are
       expected to consistently provide 512 bytes as a default
       with a way of specifying 1024-byte units where appropri-
       ate.
 
       The <date and time> field in the -l format is specified
       only for the POSIX locale. As noted, the format can be
       different in other locales. No mechanism for defining
       this is present in this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,
       as the appropriate vehicle is a messaging system; that
       is, the format should be specified as a "message".
 
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       The -s uses implementation-defined units and cannot be
       used portably; it may be withdrawn in a future version.
 
SEE ALSO
       chmod() , find , the System Interfaces volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, stat(), the Base Definitions vol-
       ume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, <sys/stat.h>
 
COPYRIGHT
       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in
       electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition,
       Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operat-
       ing System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Speci-
       fications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the Insti-
       tute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and
       The Open Group. In the event of any discrepancy between
       this version and the original IEEE and The Open Group
       Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard
       is the referee document. The original Standard can be
       obtained online at http://www.open-
       group.org/unix/online.html .
 
 
 
POSIX 2003 ls(P)