![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Now you can test the tree command and see what you can do with the tree tool by executing the command tree - help. If you’re able to install Homebrew, you can install the tree command line tool with the command:brew install tree ~/$ brew install tree => Downloading # 100.0% => make prefix=/usr/local/Cellar/tree/1.7.0 MANDIR=/usr/local/Cellar/tree/1.7.0/share/man/man1 CC=clang CFLAGS=-fomit-frame-pointer LDFLAGS= OBJS=tree.o unix.o html.o xml.o hash.o ? /usr/local/Cellar/tree/1.7.0: 7 files, 128K, built in 4 seconds ~/$ You can read here how to install Homebrew. To install command line tools like the tree command on Mac, you can use the Homebrew package manager as well. Make The Tree Command Available On Mac OS X This backup shouldn’t contain any physical data, just a simple directory listing.įrom Debian, I already knew the tree command which lists a directory structure recursively. I needed a solution to create a directory listing backup for my external hard drives. ![]()
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