1WHEREIS(1)                       User Commands                      WHEREIS(1)
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NAME

6       whereis  -  locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a com‐
7       mand
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SYNOPSIS

10       whereis [options] [-BMS directory... -f] name...
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DESCRIPTION

13       whereis locates the binary, source and manual files for  the  specified
14       command  names.  The supplied names are first stripped of leading path‐
15       name components and any (single) trailing extension of  the  form  .ext
16       (for  example:  .c)  Prefixes  of s.  resulting from use of source code
17       control are also dealt with.   whereis  then  attempts  to  locate  the
18       desired  program in the standard Linux places, and in the places speci‐
19       fied by $PATH and $MANPATH.
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21       The search restrictions (options -b, -m  and  -s)  are  cumulative  and
22       apply  to  the  subsequent  name patterns on the command line.  Any new
23       search restriction resets the search mask.  For example,
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25              whereis -bm ls tr -m gcc
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27       searches for "ls" and "tr" binaries and man pages, and  for  "gcc"  man
28       pages only.
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30       The  options  -B,  -M and -S reset search paths for the subsequent name
31       patterns.  For example,
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33              whereis -m ls -M /usr/share/man/man1 -f cal
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35       searches for "ls" man pages in all default paths, but for "cal" in  the
36       /usr/share/man/man1 directory only.
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OPTIONS

40       -b     Search for binaries.
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42       -m     Search for manuals.
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44       -s     Search for sources.
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46       -u     Only show the command names that have unusual entries.  A
47              command is said to be unusual if it does  not  have  just
48              one  entry  of  each  explicitly  requested  type.   Thus
49              'whereis -m -u *' asks for those  files  in  the  current
50              directory  which have no documentation file, or more than
51              one.
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53       -B list
54              Limit the places where whereis searches for binaries,  by
55              a whitespace-separated list of directories.
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57       -M list
58              Limit  the  places where whereis searches for manuals and
59              documentation in Info format, by  a  whitespace-separated
60              list of directories.
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62       -S list
63              Limit the places where whereis searches for sources, by a
64              whitespace-separated list of directories.
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66       -f     Terminates the directory list and signals  the  start  of
67              filenames.  It must be used when any of the -B, -M, or -S
68              options is used.
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70       -l     Output the list of effective lookup paths that whereis is
71              using.   When  none  of  -B,  -M, or -S is specified, the
72              option will output the hard-coded paths that the  command
73              was able to find on the system.
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75       -h, --help
76              Display help text and exit.
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78       -V, --version
79              Display version information and exit.
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EXAMPLE

82       To  find all files in /usr/bin which are not documented in /usr/
83       man/man1 or have no source in /usr/src:
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85              cd /usr/bin
86              whereis -u -ms -M /usr/man/man1 -S /usr/src -f *
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FILE SEARCH PATHS

89       By default whereis tries to find files  from  hard-coded  paths,
90       which  are  defined with glob patterns.  The command attempts to
91       use the contents of $PATH and $MANPATH environment variables  as
92       default  search path.  The easiest way to know what paths are in
93       use is to add the -l listing option.  Effects of the -B, -M, and
94       -S are displayed with -l.
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ENVIRONMENT

97       WHEREIS_DEBUG=all
98              enables debug output.
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AVAILABILITY

101       The  whereis  command  is  part of the util-linux package and is
102       available from Linux Kernel Archive  ⟨https://www.kernel.org/pub
103       /linux/utils/util-linux/⟩.
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107util-linux                       October 2014                       WHEREIS(1)
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