On Mon, Dec 09, 2002 at 02:15:19PM -0700, Bill Earl wrote: > Is anyone aware of a separate file copying or moving (I need to do > both, depending on the situation) utility that can handle very large > numbers of files? Would switching to a different shell solve this > (if so, which one?), or is it a limit on the cp and mv commands? It's a limitation of the shell. The fastest and easiest way to do this is probably to create a executable script file (say "cp-files") like the following: #!/bin/bash cp "$@" /newdir Then run the command: find /mydir/myfiles -name \*.pdf -print0 | xargs -0 -n 2500 -s 10000 cp-files xargs reads arguments from stdin, repeatedly puts as many as will fit on the command line, then calls the command given. The -n and -s may be necessary because the cp command invocation in the script will have one more argument and a little more text than the cp-files invocation. Find piped to xargs will be much faster than invoking cp on each file individually. Normally you don't need to create a separate script to use with xargs, but cp (and mv) have the peculiar property that the last argument is special. -Mike