I want to know what is the difference between this
ls | xargs rm
ls | xargs -i{} rm {}
Both are working for me
I want to know what is the difference between this
ls | xargs rm
ls | xargs -i{} rm {}
Both are working for me
xargs rm will invoke rm with all arguments as parameter departed with spaces.
xargs -i{} rm {} will invoke rm {} for each of the argument and {} will be replaced by the current argument.
If you have 2 arguments a.txt and b.txt, xargs rm will call this
rm a.txt b.txt
But xargs -i{} rm {} will call
rm a.txt
rm b.txt
This is because -i option implies -L 1 option which mean the command rm will take only 1 line each time. And here each line contains only 1 argument.
Check this Ideone link to get more idea about it.
-i option (equivalent to --replace) creates a sort of placeholder where xargs stores the input it just received. In your second command, the placeholder is {}, it works like find -exec option. Once defined, xargs will replace this placeholder with the entire line of input. If you don’t like the {} name, you can define your own:
ls | xargs -iPLACEHOLDER echo PLACEHOLDER
In your case, both commands are producing the same result. In the second form, you are just making explicit the default behaviour with the -I option.
With braces it will spawn one rm process per file. Without the braces, xargs will pass as many filenames as possible to each rm command.
Compare
ls | xargs echo
and
ls | xargs -I {} echo {}