.ad l .nh .TH lsr 1 "29 Dec 1994" "netlib" .SH NAME lsr - recursive ls .SH SYNOPSIS .B "lsr" [ \fI-t\fP ] [ \fI-s\fP ] [ \fIdir\fP ... ] .SH DESCRIPTION \fBLsr\fP is similar to the customary "ls" command, only recursive. Unlike \fIls -R\fP, whose output is intended for humans, \fIlsr\fP is useful in constructing shell pipelines. .SH OPTIONS .TP 5 .B "-t" Instead of just the filename, also print the mtime, length, and 0 as a "checksum" placeholder. .TP 5 .B "-s" Instead of quietly ignoring symbolic links, as is the default, print: .B .nf localname -> target .fi .SH DIAGNOSTICS \fILsr\fP warns about blanks and non-printing characters in filenames, which are likely to cause trouble in scripts. .SH SEE ALSO .B crc(1) .SH AUTHOR Eric Grosse .