David Y.
—How can I copy a folder containing files to another folder in Linux or another Unix-based operating system using the command line?
The cp
command takes a source followed by a destination argument. To copy a folder with its contents, we must perform a recursive copy. We can do the following:
cp -a source/. destination/
The -a
flag is equivalent to -dr --preserve=all
. This does the following:
-r
will copy all folder contents recursively.-d
will preserve symlinks.--preserve=all
will preserve all file attributes, such as ownership, permissions, and timestamps.In the command, we use source/.
instead of source
to take advantage of Bash globbing and ensure we copy any hidden files or folders, which would be missed if we just used source
.
To read more about cp
, type man cp
into your terminal.
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