- Touch (Unix)
touch is a standard
Unix program used to change a file's access and modification timestamps. It is also used to create a new empty file.History
A touch utility appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX. The version of touch bundled in
GNU coreutils was written byPaul Rubin ,Arnold Robbins ,Jim Kingdon , David MacKenzie andSunil Sharma .Specification
The
Single Unix Specification (SUS) specifies that touch should change the access times, modification times, or both, for a file. The file is identified by a pathname supplied as a single argument. It also specifies that if the file identified does not exist, the file is created and the access and modification times are set as specified. If no new timestamps are specified, touch uses the current time.Usage
The SUS mandates the following options:: -a, change the access time only: -c, if the file does not exist, do not create it and do not report this condition: -m, change the modification time only: -r "file", use the access and modification times of "file": -t "time", use the time specified (in the format below) to update the access and modification times
The time is specified in the format [cc] yy] MMDDhhmm [.ss] where MM specifies the two-digit numeric month, DD specifies the two-digit numeric day, hh specifies the two-digit numeric hour, mm specifies the two-digit numeric minutes. Optionally ss specifies the two-digit seconds, cc specifies the first two digits of the year, and yy specifies the last two digits of the year.
Note that if invoked without these options, the standard specifies that the current date and time are used to change the access and modification times. This behaviour simulates an update to a file without having to change it, which may be desirable in certain situations (see the example below).
Other Unix and
Unix-like operating systems may add extra options. For example, GNU touch adds a -d option, which enables time input in formats other than that specified.Examples
The simplest
use case for touch is thus: # touch myfile.txtTouch doesn't modify the contents of myfile.txt; it just updates thetimestamp of the file to the computer's current date and time, whatever that happens to be.Here's an example that shows why we might want to do this. We wish to re-make a software project we are writing. We have changed the makefile and need to run make again. However, if we run make immediately we find that # make make: nothing to be done for `all'
Since the source code file is already updated, we will need to use touch to simulate a file update, so make will run and recompile the software. # touch project.c # makeThen make succeeds.
Here's how to change the date and time of a file.
# touch -t 200701310846.26 index.html # touch -d '2007-01-31 8:46:26' index.html # touch -d 'Jan 31 2007 8:46:26' index.html
The above three are equivalent: they will change the date and time of index.html to January 31, 2007 at 8:46:26am.
Although commands like cp, grep, chmod etc have a recursive switch (-r or -R or both) to apply the command recursively to the subdirectories, touch doesn't have this functionality yet (as of August, 2008). It can be accomplished by the following:
# find . -exec touch {} ;
This method is relatively slow. The faster method will be:
# find . | xargs touch
If the file names or subdirectory names contain spaces, the following should be used:
# find . -print0 | xargs -0 touch
Other operating systems
Programs that perform similar operations as the Unix
touch
utility are available for other operating systems, includingMicrosoft Windows andMac OS .ee also
*
System time
*List of Unix programs External links
* [http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/utilities/touch.html touch specification from the Single Unix Specification]
* [http://www.flos-freeware.ch/archive.html The ntouch/dtouch page]
* [http://www.bellevuelinux.org/touch.html examples showing how to use touch]Manual pages
* [http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/manual/html_node/touch-invocation.html touch] — manual page from
GNU coreutils
* [http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=touch touch] — manual page fromOpenBSD
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