Find all files older than one minute

find . -type f -mmin +1

Example

$ ls *
four.txt  one.txt  three.txt  two.txt

$ touch foo && find . -mmin +1
.
./three.txt
./four.txt
./two.txt
./one.txt

Use find /path -type f -mtime +60s

The - just before the digits is not a regular "argument dash", but means "less than". + then is "more than".

From man find:

All primaries which take a numeric argument allow the number to be preceded by a plus sign (``+'') or a minus sign (``-''). A preceding plus sign means ``more than n'', a preceding minus sign means ``less than n'' and neither means ``exactly n''.

It should be noted that for exactly n, the time is rounded. So 1 (1 day) does not mean 86400 seconds.


The second - in -mtime -60s is not an option delimiter.

-mtime is an option, and it is followed by an option argument. The option argument is -60s, and the - in it is part of the option argument itself, not an option delimiter. It means "less than 60 seconds". Option arguments 60s and +60s mean "equal to 60 seconds" and "greater than 60 seconds", respectively.

The Apple MacOS manual and the FreeBSD manual mention the + and - prefixes in exactly one place, and forget to explain anywhere what they are. This is what they are.

(The GNU Info manual for GNU find has the same omission, interestingly enough. However, GNU find's syntax for times is somewhat different to the BSD and MacOS find syntax.)

Further reading

  • Apple incorporated (2008-02-24). find MacOS 10 manual page. MacOS 10 Developer Library.
  • find(1). 2010-03-17. FreeBSD General Commands Manual. FreeBSD Project.

Tags:

Linux

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