Advanced Bash Scripting Guide
Advanced Bash Scripting Guide
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Why Shell Programming?...............................................................................................................1 Chapter 2. Starting Off With a ShaBang.......................................................................................................3 2.1. Invoking the script............................................................................................................................5 2.2. Preliminary Exercises.......................................................................................................................5 Part 2. Basics.......................................................................................................................................................6 Chapter 3. Special Characters...........................................................................................................................7 Chapter 4. Introduction to Variables and Parameters ..................................................................................23 4.1. Variable Substitution......................................................................................................................23 4.2. Variable Assignment......................................................................................................................25 . 4.3. Bash Variables Are Untyped..........................................................................................................26 4.4. Special Variable Types...................................................................................................................28 Chapter 5. Quoting...........................................................................................................................................32 Chapter 6. Exit and Exit Status.......................................................................................................................38 Chapter 7. Tests................................................................................................................................................40 7.1. Test Constructs...............................................................................................................................40 7.2. File test operators............................................................................................................................46 7.3. Comparison operators (binary).......................................................................................................49 7.4. Nested if/then Condition Tests.......................................................................................................54 7.5. Testing Your Knowledge of Tests..................................................................................................54 Chapter 8. Operations and Related Topics....................................................................................................55 8.1. Operators.........................................................................................................................................55 8.2. Numerical Constants.......................................................................................................................61 Part 3. Beyond the Basics.................................................................................................................................63 Chapter 9. Variables Revisited........................................................................................................................64 9.1. Internal Variables............................................................................................................................64 9.2. Manipulating Strings .......................................................................................................................79 9.2.1. Manipulating strings using awk............................................................................................83 9.2.2. Further Discussion .................................................................................................................84 9.3. Parameter Substitution....................................................................................................................84 9.4. Typing variables: declare or typeset...............................................................................................92 9.5. Indirect References to Variables.....................................................................................................94 9.6. $RANDOM: generate random integer............................................................................................96 9.7. The Double Parentheses Construct...............................................................................................101 Chapter 10. Loops and Branches..................................................................................................................103 10.1. Loops..........................................................................................................................................103 10.2. Nested Loops..............................................................................................................................113 10.3. Loop Control...............................................................................................................................114 i
Table of Contents
Chapter 10. Loops and Branches 10.4. Testing and Branching................................................................................................................117 Chapter 11. Internal Commands and Builtins.............................................................................................125 11.1. Job Control Commands..............................................................................................................145 Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands...........................................................................149 12.1. Basic Commands........................................................................................................................149 12.2. Complex Commands ...................................................................................................................152 12.3. Time / Date Commands..............................................................................................................159 12.4. Text Processing Commands ........................................................................................................161 12.5. File and Archiving Commands...................................................................................................177 12.6. Communications Commands......................................................................................................192 12.7. Terminal Control Commands.....................................................................................................196 12.8. Math Commands.........................................................................................................................197 12.9. Miscellaneous Commands..........................................................................................................205 Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands..................................................................................215 Chapter 14. Command Substitution.............................................................................................................237 Chapter 15. Arithmetic Expansion................................................................................................................242 Chapter 16. I/O Redirection ...........................................................................................................................243 16.1. Using exec ...................................................................................................................................245 16.2. Redirecting Code Blocks............................................................................................................248 16.3. Applications................................................................................................................................252 Chapter 17. Here Documents.........................................................................................................................254 Chapter 18. Recess Time................................................................................................................................263 Part 4. Advanced Topics .................................................................................................................................264 Chapter 19. Regular Expressions..................................................................................................................265 19.1. A Brief Introduction to Regular Expressions ..............................................................................265 19.2. Globbing.....................................................................................................................................268 Chapter 20. Subshells.....................................................................................................................................270 Chapter 21. Restricted Shells.........................................................................................................................273 Chapter 22. Process Substitution ...................................................................................................................275 Chapter 23. Functions....................................................................................................................................277 23.1. Complex Functions and Function Complexities.........................................................................279 23.2. Local Variables...........................................................................................................................286 23.2.1. Local variables make recursion possible...........................................................................287 ii
Table of Contents
Chapter 24. Aliases.........................................................................................................................................289 Chapter 25. List Constructs...........................................................................................................................292 Chapter 26. Arrays.........................................................................................................................................295 Chapter 27. Files.............................................................................................................................................314 Chapter 28. /dev and /proc.............................................................................................................................315 28.1. /dev ..............................................................................................................................................315 28.2. /proc............................................................................................................................................315 Chapter 29. Of Zeros and Nulls.....................................................................................................................320 Chapter 30. Debugging...................................................................................................................................323 Chapter 31. Options........................................................................................................................................329 Chapter 32. Gotchas.......................................................................................................................................331 Chapter 33. Scripting With Style..................................................................................................................337 33.1. Unofficial Shell Scripting Stylesheet..........................................................................................337 Chapter 34. Miscellany...................................................................................................................................340 34.1. Interactive and noninteractive shells and scripts......................................................................340 34.2. Shell Wrappers............................................................................................................................341 34.3. Tests and Comparisons: Alternatives ..........................................................................................344 34.4. Recursion....................................................................................................................................345 34.5. "Colorizing" Scripts....................................................................................................................346 34.6. Optimizations..............................................................................................................................350 34.7. Assorted Tips..............................................................................................................................351 34.8. Security Issues............................................................................................................................359 34.9. Portability Issues.........................................................................................................................359 34.10. Shell Scripting Under Windows...............................................................................................360 Chapter 35. Bash, version 2...........................................................................................................................361 Chapter 36. Endnotes.....................................................................................................................................366 36.1. Author's Note..............................................................................................................................366 36.2. About the Author........................................................................................................................366 36.3. Tools Used to Produce This Book..............................................................................................366 36.3.1. Hardware...........................................................................................................................366 36.3.2. Software and Printware.....................................................................................................366 36.4. Credits.........................................................................................................................................367 Bibliography....................................................................................................................................................369
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Table of Contents
Appendix A. Contributed Scripts..................................................................................................................374 Appendix B. Reference Cards........................................................................................................................413 Appendix C. A Sed and Awk MicroPrimer ................................................................................................416 C.1. Sed................................................................................................................................................416 C.2. Awk..............................................................................................................................................419 Appendix D. Exit Codes With Special Meanings.........................................................................................421 Appendix E. A Detailed Introduction to I/O and I/O Redirection.............................................................422 Appendix F. Localization...............................................................................................................................424 Appendix G. History Commands..................................................................................................................426 Appendix H. A Sample .bashrc File..............................................................................................................427 Appendix I. Converting DOS Batch Files to Shell Scripts..........................................................................438 Appendix J. Exercises.....................................................................................................................................442 J.1. Analyzing Scripts..........................................................................................................................442 J.2. Writing Scripts..............................................................................................................................443 Appendix K. Copyright..................................................................................................................................449
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Advanced BashScripting Guide We will be using Bash, an acronym for "BourneAgain Shell" and a pun on Stephen Bourne's now classic Bourne Shell. Bash has become a de facto standard for shell scripting on all flavors of UNIX. Most of the principles dealt with in this book apply equally well to scripting with other shells, such as the Korn Shell, from which Bash derives some of its features, [2] and the C Shell and its variants. (Note that C Shell programming is not recommended due to certain inherent problems, as pointed out in an October, 1993 Usenet post by Tom Christiansen.) What follows is a tutorial on shell scripting. It relies heavily on examples to illustrate various features of the shell. The example scripts work they've been tested and some of them are even useful in real life. The reader can play with the actual working code of the examples in the source archive (scriptname.sh), [3] give them execute permission (chmod u+rx scriptname), then run them to see what happens. Should the source archive not be available, then cutandpaste from the HTML, pdf, or text rendered versions. Be aware that some of the scripts below introduce features before they are explained, and this may require the reader to temporarily skip ahead for enlightenment. Unless otherwise noted, the author of this book wrote the example scripts that follow.
There is nothing unusual here, just a set of commands that could just as easily be invoked one by one from the command line on the console or in an xterm. The advantages of placing the commands in a script go beyond not having to retype them time and again. The script can easily be modified, customized, or generalized for a particular application.
Only users with $UID 0 have root privileges. Default number of lines saved. Can't change directory? Nonroot exit error.
if [ "$UID" ne "$ROOT_UID" ] then echo "Must be root to run this script." exit $E_NOTROOT fi if [ n "$1" ] # Test if command line argument present (nonempty). then lines=$1 else lines=$LINES # Default, if not specified on command line. fi
# Stephane Chazelas suggests the following, #+ as a better way of checking command line arguments, #+ but this is still a bit advanced for this stage of the tutorial. # # E_WRONGARGS=65 # Nonnumerical argument (bad arg format) # # case "$1" in
then echo "Can't change to $LOG_DIR." exit $E_XCD fi # Doublecheck if in right directory, before messing with log file. # far more efficient is: # # cd /var/log || { # echo "Cannot change to necessary directory." >&2 # exit $E_XCD; # }
tail $lines messages > mesg.temp # Saves last section of message log file. mv mesg.temp messages # Becomes new log directory.
# cat /dev/null > messages #* No longer needed, as the above method is safer. cat /dev/null > wtmp # echo "Logs cleaned up." ': > wtmp' and '> wtmp' have the same effect.
exit 0 # A zero return value from the script upon exit #+ indicates success to the shell.
Since you may not wish to wipe out the entire system log, this variant of the first script keeps the last section of the message log intact. You will constantly discover ways of refining previously written scripts for increased effectiveness. The shabang ( #!) at the head of a script tells your system that this file is a set of commands to be fed to the command interpreter indicated. The #! is actually a twobyte [4] "magic number", a special marker that designates a file type, or in this case an executable shell script (see man magic for more details on this fascinating topic). Immediately following the shabang is a path name. This is the path to the program that interprets the commands in the script, whether it be a shell, a programming language, or a utility. This command interpreter then executes the commands in the script, starting at the top (line 1 of the script), ignoring comments. [5]
#!/bin/sh #!/bin/bash #!/usr/bin/perl #!/usr/bin/tcl #!/bin/sed f #!/usr/awk f
Advanced BashScripting Guide Each of the above script header lines calls a different command interpreter, be it /bin/sh, the default shell (bash in a Linux system) or otherwise. [6] Using #!/bin/sh, the default Bourne Shell in most commercial variants of UNIX, makes the script portable to nonLinux machines, though you may have to sacrifice a few Bashspecific features. The script will, however, conform to the POSIX [7] sh standard. Note that the path given at the "shabang" must be correct, otherwise an error message usually "Command not found" will be the only result of running the script. #! can be omitted if the script consists only of a set of generic system commands, using no internal shell directives. The second example, above, requires the initial #!, since the variable assignment line, lines=50, uses a shellspecific construct. Note again that #!/bin/sh invokes the default shell interpreter, which defaults to /bin/bash on a Linux machine. This tutorial encourages a modular approach to constructing a script. Make note of and collect "boilerplate" code snippets that might be useful in future scripts. Eventually you can build a quite extensive library of nifty routines. As an example, the following script prolog tests whether the script has been invoked with the correct number of parameters.
if [ $# ne Number_of_expected args ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` whatever" exit $WRONG_ARGS fi
Part 2. Basics
Table of Contents 3. Special Characters 4. Introduction to Variables and Parameters 4.1. Variable Substitution 4.2. Variable Assignment 4.3. Bash Variables Are Untyped 4.4. Special Variable Types 5. Quoting 6. Exit and Exit Status 7. Tests 7.1. Test Constructs 7.2. File test operators 7.3. Comparison operators (binary) 7.4. Nested if/then Condition Tests 7.5. Testing Your Knowledge of Tests 8. Operations and Related Topics 8.1. Operators 8.2. Numerical Constants
Part 2. Basics
A command may not follow a comment on the same line. There is no method of terminating the comment, in order for "live code" to begin on the same line. Use a new line for the next command. Of course, an escaped # in an echo statement does not begin a comment. Likewise, a # appears in certain parameter substitution constructs and in numerical constant expressions.
echo echo echo echo "The # here does not begin a comment." 'The # here does not begin a comment.' The \# here does not begin a comment. The # here begins a comment. # Parameter substitution, not a comment. # Base conversion, not a comment.
The standard quoting and escape characters (" ' \) escape the #. Certain pattern matching operations also use the #. ; Command separator. [Semicolon] Permits putting two or more commands on the same line.
echo hello; echo there
Note that the ";" sometimes needs to be escaped. ;; Terminator in a case option. [Double semicolon]
case "$variable" in abc) echo "$variable = abc" ;; xyz) echo "$variable = xyz" ;; esac
Advanced BashScripting Guide . "dot" command. [period] Equivalent to source (see Example 1118). This is a bash builtin. . "dot", as a component of a filename. When working with filenames, a dot is the prefix of a "hidden" file, a file that an ls will not normally show.
bash$ touch .hiddenfile bash$ ls l total 10 rwrr 1 bozo rwrr 1 bozo rwrr 1 bozo
4034 Jul 18 22:04 data1.addressbook 4602 May 25 13:58 data1.addressbook.bak 877 Dec 17 2000 employment.addressbook
2 52 1 1 1 1
29 29 18 25 17 29
When considering directory names, a single dot represents the current working directory, and two dots denote the parent directory.
bash$ pwd /home/bozo/projects bash$ cd . bash$ pwd /home/bozo/projects bash$ cd .. bash$ pwd /home/bozo/
The dot often appears as the destination (directory) of a file movement command.
bash$ cp /home/bozo/current_work/junk/* .
. "dot" character match. When matching characters, as part of a regular expression, a "dot" matches a single character. " partial quoting. [double quote] "STRING" preserves (from interpretation) most of the special characters within STRING. See also Chapter 5. ' full quoting. [single quote] 'STRING' preserves all special characters within STRING. This is a stronger form of quoting than using ". See also Chapter 5. , comma operator. The comma operator links together a series of arithmetic operations. All are evaluated, but only the last one is returned. Chapter 3. Special Characters 8
\ escape. [backslash] \X "escapes" the character X. This has the effect of "quoting" X, equivalent to 'X'. The \ may be used to quote " and ', so they are expressed literally. See Chapter 5 for an indepth explanation of escaped characters. / Filename path separator. [forward slash] Separates the components of a filename (as in /home/bozo/projects/Makefile). This is also the division arithmetic operator. ` command substitution. [backticks] `command` makes available the output of command for setting a variable. This is also known as backticks or backquotes. : null command. [colon] This is the shell equivalent of a "NOP" (no op, a donothing operation). It may be considered a synonym for the shell builtin true. The ":" command is a itself a Bash builtin, and its exit status is "true" (0).
: echo $?
# 0
Endless loop:
while : do operation1 operation2 ... operationn done # Same as: # while true # do # ... # done
Provide a placeholder where a binary operation is expected, see Example 82 and default parameters.
: ${username=`whoami`} # ${username=`whoami`} #
Provide a placeholder where a command is expected in a here document. See Example 1710. Chapter 3. Special Characters 9
Advanced BashScripting Guide Evaluate string of variables using parameter substitution (as in Example 913).
: ${HOSTNAME?} ${USER?} ${MAIL?} #Prints error message if one or more of essential environmental variables not set.
Variable expansion / substring replacement. In combination with the > redirection operator, truncates a file to zero length, without changing its permissions. If the file did not previously exist, creates it.
: > data.xxx # File "data.xxx" now empty.
# Same effect as cat /dev/null >data.xxx # However, this does not fork a new process, since ":" is a builtin.
See also Example 1211. In combination with the >> redirection operator, updates a file access/modification time (: >> new_file). If the file did not previously exist, creates it. This is equivalent to touch. This applies to regular files, not pipes, symlinks, and certain special files. May be used to begin a comment line, although this is not recommended. Using # for a comment turns off error checking for the remainder of that line, so almost anything may be appear in a comment. However, this is not the case with :.
: This is a comment that generates an error, ( if [ $x eq 3] ).
The ":" also serves as a field separator, in /etc/passwd, and in the $PATH variable.
bash$ echo $PATH /usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/usr/games
! reverse (or negate) the sense of a test or exit status. The ! operator inverts the exit status of the command to which it is applied (see Example 62). It also inverts the meaning of a test operator. This can, for example, change the sense of "equal" ( = ) to "notequal" ( != ). The ! operator is a Bash keyword. In a different context, the ! also appears in indirect variable references. In yet another context, from the command line, the ! invokes the Bash history mechanism (see Appendix G). Note that within a script, the history mechanism is disabled. * wild card. [asterisk] The * character serves as a "wild card" for filename expansion in globbing. By itself, it matches every filename in a given directory.
bash$ echo * absbook.sgml adddrive.sh agram.sh alias.sh
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Advanced BashScripting Guide The * also represents any number (or zero) characters in a regular expression. * arithmetic operator. In the context of arithmetic operations, the * denotes multiplication. A double asterisk, **, is the exponentiation operator. ? test operator. Within certain expressions, the ? indicates a test for a condition. In a double parentheses construct, the ? serves as a Cstyle trinary operator. See Example 928. In a parameter substitution expression, the ? tests whether a variable has been set. ? wild card. The ? character serves as a singlecharacter "wild card" for filename expansion in globbing, as well as representing one character in an extended regular expression. $ Variable substitution.
var1=5 var2=23skidoo echo $var1 echo $var2 # 5 # 23skidoo
A $ prefixing a variable name indicates the value the variable holds. $ endofline. In a regular expression, a "$" addresses the end of a line of text. ${} Parameter substitution. $*, $@ positional parameters. $? exit status variable. The $? variable holds the exit status of a command, a function, or of the script itself. $$ process id variable. The $$ variable holds the process id of the script in which it appears. () command group.
(a=hello; echo $a)
A listing of commands within parentheses starts a subshell. Variables inside parentheses, within the subshell, are not visible to the rest of the script. The parent process, the script, cannot read variables created in the child process, the subshell.
a=123 ( a=321; ) echo "a = $a" # a = 123 # "a" within parentheses acts like a local variable.
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A command may act upon a commaseparated list of file specs within braces. [11] Filename expansion (globbing) applies to the file specs between the braces. No spaces allowed within the braces unless the spaces are quoted or escaped. echo {file1,file2}\ :{\ A," B",' C'} file1 : A file1 : B file1 : C file2 : A file2 : B file2 : C {} Block of code. [curly brackets] Also referred to as an "inline group", this construct, in effect, creates an anonymous function. However, unlike a function, the variables in a code block remain visible to the remainder of the script.
bash$ { local a; a=123; } bash: local: can only be used in a function
# a = 321
The code block enclosed in braces may have I/O redirected to and from it.
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Unlike a command group within (parentheses), as above, a code block enclosed by {braces} will not normally launch a subshell. [12] {} \; pathname. Mostly used in find constructs. This is not a shell builtin. The ";" ends the exec option of a find command sequence. It needs to be escaped to protect it from interpretation by the shell. [] test.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Test expression between [ ]. Note that [ is part of the shell builtin test (and a synonym for it), not a link to the external command /usr/bin/test. [[ ]] test. Test expression between [[ ]] (shell keyword). See the discussion on the [[ ... ]] construct. [] array element. In the context of an array, brackets set off the numbering of each element of that array.
Array[1]=slot_1 echo ${Array[1]}
[] range of characters. As part of a regular expression, brackets delineate a range of characters to match. (( )) integer expansion. Expand and evaluate integer expression between (( )). See the discussion on the (( ... )) construct. > &> >& >> < redirection. scriptname >filename redirects the output of scriptname to file filename. Overwrite filename if it already exists. command &>filename redirects both the stdout and the stderr of command to filename. command >&2 redirects stdout of command to stderr. scriptname >>filename appends the output of scriptname to file filename. If filename does not already exist, it will be created. process substitution. (command)> <(command) In a different context, the "<" and ">" characters act as string comparison operators. In yet another context, the "<" and ">" characters act as integer comparison operators. See also Example 126. << redirection used in a here document. <, > Chapter 3. Special Characters 14
\<, \> word boundary in a regular expression. bash$ grep '\<the\>' textfile | pipe. Passes the output of previous command to the input of the next one, or to the shell. This is a method of chaining commands together.
echo ls l | sh # Passes the output of "echo ls l" to the shell, #+ with the same result as a simple "ls l".
cat *.lst | sort | uniq # Merges and sorts all ".lst" files, then deletes duplicate lines.
A pipe, as a classic method of interprocess communication, sends the stdout of one process to the stdin of another. In a typical case, a command, such as cat or echo, pipes a stream of data to a "filter" (a command that transforms its input) for processing. cat $filename | grep $search_word The output of a command or commands may be piped to a script.
#!/bin/bash # uppercase.sh : Changes input to uppercase. tr 'az' 'AZ' # Letter ranges must be quoted #+ to prevent filename generation from singleletter filenames. exit 0
109 APR 7 19:49 1.TXT 109 APR 14 16:48 2.TXT 725 APR 20 20:56 DATAFILE
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Advanced BashScripting Guide The stdout of each process in a pipe must be read as the stdin of the next. If this is not the case, the data stream will block, and the pipe will not behave as expected.
cat file1 file2 | ls l | sort # The output from "cat file1 file2" disappears.
A pipe runs as a child process, and therefore cannot alter script variables.
variable="initial_value" echo "new_value" | read variable echo "variable = $variable" # variable = initial_value
If one of the commands in the pipe aborts, this prematurely terminates execution of the pipe. Called a broken pipe, this condition sends a SIGPIPE signal. >| force redirection (even if the noclobber option is set). This will forcibly overwrite an existing file. || OR logical operator. In a test construct, the || operator causes a return of 0 (success) if either of the linked test conditions is true. & Run job in background. A command followed by an & will run in the background.
bash$ sleep 10 & [1] 850 [1]+ Done
sleep 10
Within a script, commands and even loops may run in the background.
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# Occasionally also: # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 # (The first 'echo' doesn't execute. Why?) # Very rarely something like: # 11 12 13 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 # The foreground loop preempts the background one. exit 0
A command run in the background within a script may cause the script to hang, waiting for a keystroke. Fortunately, there is a remedy for this. && AND logical operator. In a test construct, the && operator causes a return of 0 (success) only if both the linked test conditions are true. option, prefix. Option flag for a command or filter. Prefix for an operator. COMMAND [Option1][Option2][...] ls al sort dfu $filename set $variable
if [ $file1 ot $file2 ] then echo "File $file1 is older than $file2." fi if [ "$a" eq "$b" ] then echo "$a is equal to $b." fi if [ "$c" eq 24 a "$d" eq 47 ] then echo "$c equals 24 and $d equals 47." fi
Source directory, where the files to be moved are. "Andlist": if the 'cd' operation successful, then execute the The 'c' option 'tar' archiving command creates a new archive, the 'f' (file) option, followed by '' designates the target and do it in current directory tree ('.').
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Piped to... a subshell Change to the destination directory. "Andlist", as above Unarchive ('x'), preserve ownership and file permissions ('p' and send verbose messages to stdout ('v'), reading data from stdin ('f' followed by ''). Note that 'x' is a command, and 'p', 'v', 'f' are options.
Whew!
# More elegant than, but equivalent to: # cd sourcedirectory # tar cf . | (cd ../targetdirectory; tar xzf ) # # cp a /source/directory /dest also has same effect. bunzip2 linux2.4.3.tar.bz2 | tar xvf # uncompress tar file | then pass it to "tar" # If "tar" has not been patched to handle "bunzip2", # this needs to be done in two discrete steps, using a pipe. # The purpose of the exercise is to unarchive "bzipped" kernel source.
Note that in this context the "" is not itself a Bash operator, but rather an option recognized by certain UNIX utilities that write to stdout, such as tar, cat, etc.
bash$ echo "whatever" | cat whatever
Where a filename is expected, redirects output to stdout (sometimes seen with tar cf), or accepts input from stdin, rather than from a file. This is a method of using a fileoriented utility as a filter in a pipe.
bash$ file Usage: file [bciknvzL] [f namefile] [m magicfiles] file...
By itself on the command line, file fails with an error message. Add a "" for a more useful result. This causes the shell to await user input.
bash$ file abc standard input:
ASCII text
Now the command accepts input from stdin and analyzes it.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide The "" can be used to pipe stdout to other commands. This permits such stunts as prepending lines to a file. Using diff to compare a file with a section of another: grep Linux file1 | diff file2 Finally, a realworld example using with tar.
# Stephane Chazelas points out that the above code will fail #+ if there are too many files found #+ or if any filenames contain blank characters. # He suggests the following alternatives: # # find . mtime 1 type f print0 | xargs 0 tar rvf "$archive.tar" # using the GNU version of "find".
# find . mtime 1 type f exec tar rvf "$archive.tar" '{}' \; # portable to other UNIX flavors, but much slower. #
exit 0
Filenames beginning with "" may cause problems when coupled with the "" redirection operator. A script should check for this and add an appropriate prefix to such filenames, for example ./FILENAME, $PWD/FILENAME, or $PATHNAME/FILENAME. If the value of a variable begins with a , this may likewise create problems.
var="n" echo $var # Has the effect of "echo n", and outputs nothing.
previous working directory. [dash] cd changes to the previous working directory. This uses the Chapter 3. Special Characters 19
Advanced BashScripting Guide $OLDPWD environmental variable. Do not confuse the "" used in this sense with the "" redirection operator just discussed. The interpretation of the "" depends on the context in which it appears. Minus. Minus sign in an arithmetic operation. = Equals. Assignment operator
a=28 echo $a
# 28
In a different context, the "=" is a string comparison operator. + Plus. Addition arithmetic operator. In a different context, the + is a Regular Expression operator. + Option. Option flag for a command or filter. Certain commands and builtins use the + to enable certain options and the to disable them. % modulo. Modulo (remainder of a division) arithmetic operation. In a different context, the % is a pattern matching operator. ~ home directory. [tilde] This corresponds to the $HOME internal variable. ~bozo is bozo's home directory, and ls ~bozo lists the contents of it. ~/ is the current user's home directory, and ls ~/ lists the contents of it.
bash$ echo ~bozo /home/bozo bash$ echo ~ /home/bozo bash$ echo ~/ /home/bozo/ bash$ echo ~: /home/bozo: bash$ echo ~nonexistentuser ~nonexistentuser
~+ current working directory. This corresponds to the $PWD internal variable. ~ previous working directory. This corresponds to the $OLDPWD internal variable. ^ beginningofline. In a regular expression, a "^" addresses the beginning of a line of text. Control Characters
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Advanced BashScripting Guide change the behavior of the terminal or text display. A control character is a CONTROL + key combination. CtlC Terminate a foreground job. CtlD Log out from a shell (similar to exit). "EOF" (end of file). This also terminates input from stdin. CtlG "BEL" (beep). CtlH Backspace.
#!/bin/bash # Embedding CtlH in a string. a="^H^H" echo "abcdef" echo n "abcdef$a " # Space at end ^ echo n "abcdef$a" # No space at end echo; echo # Two CtlH's (backspaces). # abcdef # abcd f ^ Backspaces twice. # abcdef Doesn't backspace (why?). # Results may not be quite as expected.
CtlJ Carriage return. CtlL Formfeed (clear the terminal screen). This has the same effect as the clear command. CtlM Newline. CtlU Erase a line of input. CtlZ Pause a foreground job. Whitespace functions as a separator, separating commands or variables. Whitespace consists of either spaces, tabs, blank lines, or any combination thereof. In some contexts, such as variable assignment, whitespace is not permitted, and results in a syntax error. Blank lines have no effect on the action of a script, and are therefore useful for visually separating Chapter 3. Special Characters 21
Advanced BashScripting Guide functional sections. $IFS, the special variable separating fields of input to certain commands, defaults to whitespace.
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echo hello
23
hello= # Setting it to a null value. echo "\$hello (null value) = $hello" # Note that setting a variable to a null value is not the same as #+ unsetting it, although the end result is the same (see below). # # It is permissible to set multiple variables on the same line, #+ if separated by white space. # Caution, this may reduce legibility, and may not be portable. var1=variable1 var2=variable2 var3=variable3 echo echo "var1=$var1 var2=$var2 var3=$var3" # May cause problems with older versions of "sh". # echo; echo numbers="one two three" other_numbers="1 2 3" # If whitespace within a variable, then quotes necessary. echo "numbers = $numbers" echo "other_numbers = $other_numbers" # other_numbers = 1 2 3 echo echo "uninitialized_variable = $uninitialized_variable" # Uninitialized variable has null value (no value at all). uninitialized_variable= # Declaring, but not initializing it #+ (same as setting it to a null value, as above). echo "uninitialized_variable = $uninitialized_variable" # It still has a null value. uninitialized_variable=23 # Set it. unset uninitialized_variable # Unset it. echo "uninitialized_variable = $uninitialized_variable" # It still has a null value.
24
An uninitialized variable has a "null" value no assigned value at all (not zero!). Using a variable before assigning a value to it will usually cause problems. It is nevertheless possible to perform arithmetic operations on an uninitialized variable.
echo "$uninitialized" let "uninitialized += 5" echo "$uninitialized" # # #+ # # (blank line) # Add 5 to it. # 5
Conclusion: An uninitialized variable has no value, however it acts as if it were 0 in an arithmetic operation. This is undocumented (and probably nonportable) behavior.
25
# Now, getting a little bit fancier (command substitution). a=`echo Hello!` # Assigns result of 'echo' command to 'a' echo $a # Note that using an exclamation mark (!) in command substitution #+ will not work from the command line, #+ since this triggers the Bash "history mechanism." # Within a script, however, the history functions are disabled. a=`ls l` echo $a echo echo "$a" # Assigns result of 'ls l' command to 'a' # Unquoted, however, removes tabs and newlines. # The quoted variable preserves whitespace. # (See the chapter on "Quoting.")
exit 0
Variable assignment using the $(...) mechanism (a newer method than backquotes)
# From /etc/rc.d/rc.local R=$(cat /etc/redhatrelease) arch=$(uname m)
26
b=${a/23/BB} echo "b = $b" declare i b echo "b = $b" let "b += 1" echo "b = $b" echo c=BB34 echo "c = $c" d=${c/BB/23} echo "d = $d" let "d += 1" echo "d = $d" echo
# # # # #
Substitute "BB" for "23". This transforms $b into a string. b = BB35 Declaring it an integer doesn't help. b = BB35
# BB35 + 1 = # b = 1
# # # # # #
c = BB34 Substitute "23" for "BB". This makes $d an integer. d = 2334 2334 + 1 = d = 2335
# What about null variables? e="" echo "e = $e" # e = let "e += 1" # Arithmetic operations allowed on a null variable? echo "e = $e" # e = 1 echo # Null variable transformed into an integer. # What about undeclared variables? echo "f = $f" # f = let "f += 1" # Arithmetic operations allowed? echo "f = $f" # f = 1 echo # Undeclared variable transformed into an integer.
Untyped variables are both a blessing and a curse. They permit more flexibility in scripting (enough rope to hang yourself!) and make it easier to grind out lines of code. However, they permit errors to creep in and encourage sloppy programming habits. The burden is on the programmer to keep track of what type the script variables are. Bash will not do it for you.
27
(Thank you, S. C. for the clarification, and for providing the above example.) If a script sets environmental variables, they need to be "exported", that is, reported to the environment local to the script. This is the function of the export command.
A script can export variables only to child processes, that is, only to commands or processes which that particular script initiates. A script invoked from the command line cannot export variables back to the command line environment. Child processes cannot export variables back to the parent processes that spawned them. positional parameters arguments passed to the script from the command line $0, $1, $2, $3... $0 is the name of the script itself, $1 is the first argument, $2 the second, $3 the third, and so forth. [13] After $9, the arguments must be enclosed in brackets, for example, ${10}, ${11}, ${12}. The special variables $* and $@ denote all the positional parameters.
28
if [ n "${10}" ] # Parameters > $9 must be enclosed in {brackets}. then echo "Parameter #10 is ${10}" fi echo "" echo "All the commandline parameters are: "$*"" if [ $# lt "$MINPARAMS" ] then echo echo "Give me at least $MINPARAMS commandline arguments!" fi echo exit 0
The bracket notation for positional parameters leads to a fairly simple way of referencing the last argument passed to a script on the command line. This also requires indirect referencing.
args=$# lastarg=${!args} # Number of args passed. # Note that lastarg=${!$#} doesn't work.
Some scripts can perform different operations, depending on which name they are invoked with. For this to work, the script needs to check $0, the name it was invoked by. There must also exist symbolic links to all the alternate names of the script. If a script expects a command line parameter but is invoked without one, this may cause a null variable assignment, generally an undesirable result. One way to prevent Chapter 4. Introduction to Variables and Parameters 29
Advanced BashScripting Guide this is to append an extra character to both sides of the assignment statement using the expected positional parameter.
variable1_=$1_ # This will prevent an error, even if positional parameter is absent. critical_argument01=$variable1_ # The extra character can be stripped off later, if desired, like so. variable1=${variable1_/_/} # Side effects only if $variable1_ begins with "_". # This uses one of the parameter substitution templates discussed in Chapter 9. # Leaving out the replacement pattern results in a deletion. # A more straightforward way of dealing with this is #+ to simply test whether expected positional parameters have been passed. if [ z $1 ] then exit $POS_PARAMS_MISSING fi
if [ z "$1" ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` [domainname]" exit 65 fi case `basename $0` in # Checks script name and calls proper server "wh" ) whois [email protected];; "whripe") whois [email protected];; "whradb") whois [email protected];; "whcw" ) whois [email protected];; * ) echo "Usage: `basename $0` [domainname]";; esac exit 0
30
Advanced BashScripting Guide The shift command reassigns the positional parameters, in effect shifting them to the left one notch. $1 < $2, $2 < $3, $3 < $4, etc. The old $1 disappears, but $0 (the script name) does not change. If you use a large number of positional parameters to a script, shift lets you access those past 10, although {bracket} notation also permits this.
The shift command also works on parameters passed to a function. See Example 3410.
31
Chapter 5. Quoting
Quoting means just that, bracketing a string in quotes. This has the effect of protecting special characters in the string from reinterpretation or expansion by the shell or shell script. (A character is "special" if it has an interpretation other than its literal meaning, such as the wild card character, *.)
bash$ ls l [Vv]* rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo
324 Apr 2 15:05 VIEWDATA.BAT 507 May 4 14:25 vartrace.sh 539 Apr 14 17:11 viewdata.sh
Certain programs and utilities can still reinterpret or expand special characters in a quoted string. This is an important use of quoting, protecting a commandline parameter from the shell, but still letting the calling program expand it.
bash$ grep '[Ff]irst' *.txt file1.txt:This is the first line of file1.txt. file2.txt:This is the First line of file2.txt.
Note that the unquoted grep [Ff]irst *.txt works under the Bash shell, but not under tcsh. When referencing a variable, it is generally advisable to enclose it in double quotes (" "). This preserves all special characters within the variable name, except $, ` (backquote), and \ (escape). [14] Keeping $ as a special character within double quotes permits referencing a quoted variable ("$variable"), that is, replacing the variable with its value (see Example 41, above). Use double quotes to prevent word splitting. [15] An argument enclosed in double quotes presents itself as a single word, even if it contains whitespace separators.
variable1="a variable containing five words" COMMAND This is $variable1 # Executes COMMAND with 7 arguments: # "This" "is" "a" "variable" "containing" "five" "words" COMMAND "This is $variable1" # Executes COMMAND with 1 argument: # "This is a variable containing five words"
variable2=""
# Empty. # Executes COMMAND with no arguments. # Executes COMMAND with 3 empty arguments. # Executes COMMAND with 1 argument (2 spaces).
COMMAND $variable2 $variable2 $variable2 COMMAND "$variable2" "$variable2" "$variable2" COMMAND "$variable2 $variable2 $variable2" # Thanks, S.C.
Enclosing the arguments to an echo statement in double quotes is necessary only when word splitting is an issue.
Chapter 5. Quoting
32
\ converted to space.
Single quotes (' ') operate similarly to double quotes, but do not permit referencing variables, since the special meaning of $ is turned off. Within single quotes, every special character except ' gets interpreted literally. Consider single quotes ("full quoting") to be a stricter method of quoting than double quotes ("partial quoting"). Since even the escape character (\) gets a literal interpretation within single quotes, trying to enclose a single quote within single quotes will not yield the expected result.
echo "Why can't I write 's between single quotes" echo # The roundabout method. echo 'Why can'\''t I write '"'"'s between single quotes' # || || || # Three singlequoted strings, with escaped and quoted single quotes between. # This example courtesy of Stephane Chazelas.
Escaping is a method of quoting single characters. The escape (\) preceding a character tells the shell to interpret that character literally. With certain commands and utilities, such as echo and sed, escaping a character may have the opposite effect it can toggle on a special meaning for that character. Special meanings of certain escaped characters used with echo and sed \n means newline \r means return \t means tab \v means vertical tab Chapter 5. Quoting 33
Advanced BashScripting Guide \b means backspace \a means "alert" (beep or flash) \0xx translates to the octal ASCII equivalent of 0xx
# Assigning ASCII characters to a variable. # quote=$'\042' # " assigned to a variable. echo "$quote This is a quoted string, $quote and this lies outside the quotes." echo # Concatenating ASCII chars in a variable. triple_underline=$'\137\137\137' # 137 is octal ASCII code for '_'. echo "$triple_underline UNDERLINE $triple_underline" echo ABC=$'\101\102\103\010' echo $ABC # 101, 102, 103 are octal A, B, C.
Chapter 5. Quoting
34
See Example 351 for another example of the $' ' string expansion construct. \" gives the quote its literal meaning
echo "Hello" echo "\"Hello\", he said." # Hello # "Hello", he said.
\$ gives the dollar sign its literal meaning (variable name following \$ will not be referenced)
echo "\$variable01" # results in $variable01
# Whereas . . . echo "\" # Invokes secondary prompt from the command line. # In a script, gives an error message.
The behavior of \ depends on whether it is itself escaped, quoted, or appearing within command substitution or a here document.
# # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # Simple escaping and quoting z \z \z \\z \z \z Command substitution z z \z \z \z \\z \z \z
# \z
Chapter 5. Quoting
35
# \z
Elements of a string assigned to a variable may be escaped, but the escape character alone may not be assigned to a variable.
variable=\ echo "$variable" # Will not work gives an error message: # test.sh: : command not found # A "naked" escape cannot safely be assigned to a variable. # # What actually happens here is that the "\" escapes the newline and #+ the effect is variable=echo "$variable" #+ invalid variable assignment variable=\ 23skidoo echo "$variable"
# 23skidoo # This works, since the second line #+ is a valid variable assignment.
variable=\ # \^ escape followed by space echo "$variable" # space variable=\\ echo "$variable"
# \
variable=\\\ echo "$variable" # Will not work gives an error message: # test.sh: \: command not found # # First escape escapes second one, but the third one is left "naked", #+ with same result as first instance, above. variable=\\\\ echo "$variable"
Chapter 5. Quoting
36
Advanced BashScripting Guide The escape also provides a means of writing a multiline command. Normally, each separate line constitutes a different command, but an escape at the end of a line escapes the newline character, and the command sequence continues on to the next line.
(cd /source/directory && tar cf . ) | \ (cd /dest/directory && tar xpvf ) # Repeating Alan Cox's directory tree copy command, # but split into two lines for increased legibility. # As an alternative: tar cf C /source/directory . | tar xpvf C /dest/directory # See note below. # (Thanks, Stephane Chazelas.)
If a script line ends with a |, a pipe character, then a \, an escape, is not strictly necessary. It is, however, good programming practice to always escape the end of a line of code that continues to the following line.
echo "foo bar" #foo #bar echo echo 'foo bar' # No difference yet. #foo #bar echo echo foo\ bar # Newline escaped. #foobar echo echo "foo\ bar" # Same here, as \ still interpreted as escape within weak quotes. #foobar echo echo 'foo\ bar' # Escape character \ taken literally because of strong quoting. #foo\ #bar # Examples suggested by Stephane Chazelas.
Chapter 5. Quoting
37
$? reads the exit status of the last command executed. After a function returns, $? gives the exit status of the last command executed in the function. This is Bash's way of giving functions a "return value". After a script terminates, a $? from the command line gives the exit status of the script, that is, the last command executed in the script, which is, by convention, 0 on success or an integer in the range 1 255 on error.
# By convention, an 'exit 0' indicates success, #+ while a nonzero exit value means an error or anomalous condition.
$? is especially useful for testing the result of a command in a script (see Example 1227 and Example 1213). The !, the logical "not" qualifier, reverses the outcome of a test or command, and this affects its exit status. Example 62. Negating a condition using ! Chapter 6. Exit and Exit Status 38
! true echo "exit status of \"! true\" = $?" # 1 # Note that the "!" needs a space. # !true leads to a "command not found" error # Thanks, S.C.
Certain exit status codes have reserved meanings and should not be userspecified in a script.
39
Chapter 7. Tests
Every reasonably complete programming language can test for a condition, then act according to the result of the test. Bash has the test command, various bracket and parenthesis operators, and the if/then construct.
An if can test any command, not just conditions enclosed within brackets.
if cmp a b &> /dev/null # Suppress output. then echo "Files a and b are identical." else echo "Files a and b differ." fi if grep q Bash file then echo "File contains at least one occurrence of Bash." fi if COMMAND_WHOSE_EXIT_STATUS_IS_0_UNLESS_ERROR_OCCURRED then echo "Command succeeded." else echo "Command failed." fi
Chapter 7. Tests
40
Advanced BashScripting Guide This detailed "iftest" explanation courtesy of Stephane Chazelas.
Chapter 7. Tests
41
xyz=
echo "Testing \"n \$xyz\"" if [ n "$xyz" ] then echo "Null variable is true." else echo "Null variable is false." fi # Null variable is false.
echo
# When is "false" true? echo "Testing \"false\"" if [ "false" ] # It seems that "false" is just a string. then echo "\"false\" is true." #+ and it tests true. else echo "\"false\" is false." fi # "false" is true. echo echo "Testing \"\$false\"" # Again, uninitialized variable. if [ "$false" ] then echo "\"\$false\" is true." else echo "\"\$false\" is false." fi # "$false" is false. # Now, we get the expected result.
echo exit 0
When if and then are on same line in a condition test, a semicolon must terminate the if statement. Both if and then are keywords. Keywords (or commands) begin statements, and before a new statement on the same line begins, the old one must terminate.
if [ x "$filename" ]; then
Else if and elif elif elif is a contraction for else if. The effect is to nest an inner if/then construct within an outer one.
if [ condition1 ] then command1 command2 command3 elif [ condition2 ] # Same as else if then command4 command5 else defaultcommand fi
The if test conditiontrue construct is the exact equivalent of if [ conditiontrue ]. As it happens, the left bracket, [ , is a token which invokes the test command. The closing right bracket, ] , in an if/test should not therefore be strictly necessary, however newer versions of Bash require it. The test command is a Bash builtin which tests file types and compares strings. Therefore, in a Bash script, test does not call the external /usr/bin/test binary, which is part of the shutils package. Likewise, [ does not call /usr/bin/[, which is linked to /usr/bin/test.
bash$ type test test is a shell builtin bash$ type '[' [ is a shell builtin bash$ type '[[' [[ is a shell keyword bash$ type ']]' ]] is a shell keyword bash$ type ']' bash: type: ]: not found
Chapter 7. Tests
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The [[ ]] construct is the more versatile Bash version of [ ]. This is the extended test command, adopted from ksh88. No filename expansion or word splitting takes place between [[ and ]], but there is parameter expansion and command substitution.
file=/etc/passwd
Chapter 7. Tests
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Using the [[ ... ]] test construct, rather than [ ... ] can prevent many logic errors in scripts. For example, the &&, ||, <, and > operators work within a [[ ]] test, despite giving an error within a [ ] construct. Following an if, neither the test command nor the test brackets ( [ ] or [[ ]] ) are strictly necessary.
dir=/home/bozo if cd "$dir" 2>/dev/null; then echo "Now in $dir." else echo "Can't change to $dir." fi # "2>/dev/null" hides error message.
The "if COMMAND" construct returns the exit status of COMMAND. Similarly, a condition within test brackets may stand alone without an if, when used in combination with a list construct.
var1=20 var2=22 [ "$var1" ne "$var2" ] && echo "$var1 is not equal to $var2" home=/home/bozo [ d "$home" ] || echo "$home directory does not exist."
The (( )) construct expands and evaluates an arithmetic expression. If the expression evaluates as zero, it returns an exit status of 1, or "false". A nonzero expression returns an exit status of 0, or "true". This is in marked contrast to using the test and [ ] constructs previously discussed.
# 1
# 0 # true # 0 # false # 1
Chapter 7. Tests
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(( 1 / 0 )) 2>/dev/null echo "Exit status of \"(( 1 / 0 ))\" is $?." # What effect does the "2>/dev/null" have? # What would happen if it were removed? # Try removing it, then rerunning the script. exit 0
Advanced BashScripting Guide file has execute permission (for the user running the test) g setgroupid (sgid) flag set on file or directory If a directory has the sgid flag set, then a file created within that directory belongs to the group that owns the directory, not necessarily to the group of the user who created the file. This may be useful for a directory shared by a workgroup. u setuserid (suid) flag set on file A binary owned by root with setuserid flag set runs with root privileges, even when an ordinary user invokes it. [16] This is useful for executables (such as pppd and cdrecord) that need to access system hardware. Lacking the suid flag, these binaries could not be invoked by a nonroot user.
rwsrxrt 1 root 178236 Oct 2 2000 /usr/sbin/pppd
A file with the suid flag set shows an s in its permissions. k sticky bit set Commonly known as the "sticky bit", the savetextmode flag is a special type of file permission. If a file has this flag set, that file will be kept in cache memory, for quicker access. [17] If set on a directory, it restricts write permission. Setting the sticky bit adds a t to the permissions on the file or directory listing.
drwxrwxrwt 7 root 1024 May 19 21:26 tmp/
If a user does not own a directory that has the sticky bit set, but has write permission in that directory, he can only delete files in it that he owns. This keeps users from inadvertently overwriting or deleting each other's files in a publicly accessible directory, such as /tmp. O you are owner of file G groupid of file same as yours N file modified since it was last read f1 nt f2 file f1 is newer than f2 f1 ot f2 file f1 is older than f2 f1 ef f2 files f1 and f2 are hard links to the same file ! "not" reverses the sense of the tests above (returns true if condition absent).
Chapter 7. Tests
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#If no args are passed to the script set directorys to search #to current directory. Otherwise set the directorys to search #to the agrs passed. #################### [ $# eq 0 ] && directorys=`pwd` || directorys=$@ #Setup the function linkchk to check the directory it is passed #for files that are links and don't exist, then print them quoted. #If one of the elements in the directory is a subdirectory then #send that send that subdirectory to the linkcheck function. ########## linkchk () { for element in $1/*; do [ h "$element" a ! e "$element" ] && echo \"$element\" [ d "$element" ] && linkchk $element # Of course, 'h' tests for symbolic link, 'd' for directory. done } #Send each arg that was passed to the script to the linkchk function #if it is a valid directoy. If not, then print the error message #and usage info. ################ for directory in $directorys; do if [ d $directory ] then linkchk $directory else echo "$directory is not a directory" echo "Usage: $0 dir1 dir2 ..." fi done exit 0
Example 291, Example 107, Example 103, Example 293, and Example A2 also illustrate uses of the file test operators.
Chapter 7. Tests
48
Chapter 7. Tests
49
Advanced BashScripting Guide is equal to if [ "$a" = "$b" ] == is equal to if [ "$a" == "$b" ] This is a synonym for =.
[[ $a == z* ]] [[ $a == "z*" ]] [ $a == z* ] [ "$a" == "z*" ] # Thanks, S.C. # true if $a starts with an "z" (pattern matching) # true if $a is equal to z* # file globbing and word splitting take place # true if $a is equal to z*
!= is not equal to if [ "$a" != "$b" ] This operator uses pattern matching within a [[ ... ]] construct. < is less than, in ASCII alphabetical order if [[ "$a" < "$b" ]] if [ "$a" \< "$b" ] Note that the "<" needs to be escaped within a [ ] construct. > is greater than, in ASCII alphabetical order if [[ "$a" > "$b" ]] if [ "$a" \> "$b" ] Note that the ">" needs to be escaped within a [ ] construct. See Example 266 for an application of this comparison operator. z string is "null", that is, has zero length n string is not "null". The n test absolutely requires that the string be quoted within the test brackets. Using an unquoted string with ! z, or even just the unquoted string alone within test brackets (see Example 76) normally works, however, this is an unsafe practice. Always quote a tested string. [18]
Chapter 7. Tests
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# If a string has not been initialized, it has no defined value. # This state is called "null" (not the same as zero). if [ n $string1 ] # $string1 has not been declared or initialized. then echo "String \"string1\" is not null." else echo "String \"string1\" is null." fi # Wrong result. # Shows $string1 as not null, although it was not initialized.
Chapter 7. Tests
51
echo
# Lets try it again. if [ n "$string1" ] # This time, $string1 is quoted. then echo "String \"string1\" is not null." else echo "String \"string1\" is null." fi # Quote strings within test brackets!
echo
if [ $string1 ] # This time, $string1 stands naked. then echo "String \"string1\" is not null." else echo "String \"string1\" is null." fi # This works fine. # The [ ] test operator alone detects whether the string is null. # However it is good practice to quote it ("$string1"). # # As Stephane Chazelas points out, # if [ $string 1 ] has one argument, "]" # if [ "$string 1" ] has two arguments, the empty "$string1" and "]"
echo
string1=initialized if [ $string1 ] # Again, $string1 stands naked. then echo "String \"string1\" is not null." else echo "String \"string1\" is null." fi # Again, gives correct result. # Still, it is better to quote it ("$string1"), because...
string1="a = b" if [ $string1 ] # Again, $string1 stands naked. then echo "String \"string1\" is not null." else echo "String \"string1\" is null." fi # Not quoting "$string1" now gives wrong result! exit 0 # Also, thank you, Florian Wisser, for the "headsup".
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exit $? # Script returns exit status of pipe. # Actually "exit $?" unnecessary, as the script will, in any case, # return the exit status of the last command executed.
compound comparison a logical and exp1 a exp2 returns true if both exp1 and exp2 are true. o logical or exp1 o exp2 returns true if either exp1 or exp2 are true. These are similar to the Bash comparison operators && and ||, used within double brackets. Chapter 7. Tests 53
The o and a operators work with the test command or occur within single test brackets.
if [ "$exp1" a "$exp2" ]
Refer to Example 83 and Example 2611 to see compound comparison operators in action.
Explain the "test" constructs in the above excerpt, then examine the entire file, /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc, and analyze the if/then test constructs there. You may need to refer ahead to the discussions of grep, sed, and regular expressions.
Chapter 7. Tests
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Do not confuse the "=" assignment operator with the = test operator.
# = as a test operator
if [ "$string1" = "$string2" ] # if [ "X$string1" = "X$string2" ] is safer, # to prevent an error message should one of the variables be empty. # (The prepended "X" characters cancel out.) then command fi
# z = 125
This operator finds use in, among other things, generating numbers within a specific range (see Example 923 and Example 925) and formatting program output (see Example 2610 and Example Chapter 8. Operations and Related Topics 55
Advanced BashScripting Guide A7). It can even be used to generate prime numbers, (see Example A17). Modulo turns up surprisingly often in various numerical recipes.
# # Argument check ARGS=2 E_BADARGS=65 if [ $# ne "$ARGS" ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` firstnumber secondnumber" exit $E_BADARGS fi #
gcd () { # # #+ # Arbitrary assignment. It does not matter which of the two is larger. Why?
dividend=$1 divisor=$2
remainder=1
# If uninitialized variable used in loop, #+ it results in an error message #+ on first pass through loop.
until [ "$remainder" eq 0 ] do let "remainder = $dividend % $divisor" dividend=$divisor # Now repeat with 2 smallest numbers. divisor=$remainder done # Euclid's algorithm } # Last $dividend is the gcd.
gcd $1 $2
56
# Exercise : # # Check commandline arguments to make sure they are integers, #+ and exit the script with an appropriate error message if not. exit 0
+= "plusequal" (increment variable by a constant) let "var += 5" results in var being incremented by 5. = "minusequal" (decrement variable by a constant) *= "timesequal" (multiply variable by a constant) let "var *= 4" results in var being multiplied by 4. /= "slashequal" (divide variable by a constant) %= "modequal" (remainder of dividing variable by a constant) Arithmetic operators often occur in an expr or let expression.
: $((n = $n + 1)) # ":" necessary because otherwise Bash attempts #+ to interpret "$((n = $n + 1))" as a command. echo n "$n " n=$(($n + 1)) echo n "$n " : $[ n = $n + 1 ] # ":" necessary because otherwise Bash attempts #+ to interpret "$[ n = $n + 1 ]" as a command. # Works even if "n" was initialized as a string. echo n "$n " n=$[ $n + 1 ] # Works even if "n" was initialized as a string. #* Avoid this type of construct, since it is obsolete and nonportable. echo n "$n "; echo # Thanks, Stephane Chazelas.
57
Integer variables in Bash are actually signed long (32bit) integers, in the range of 2147483648 to 2147483647. An operation that takes a variable outside these limits will give an erroneous result.
a=2147483646 echo "a = $a" let "a+=1" echo "a = $a" let "a+=1" echo "a = $a"
# # # # # #
a = 2147483646 Increment "a". a = 2147483647 increment "a" again, past the limit. a = 2147483648 ERROR (out of range)
Bash does not understand floating point arithmetic. It treats numbers containing a decimal point as strings.
a=1.5 let "b = $a + 1.3" # Error. # t2.sh: let: b = 1.5 + 1.3: syntax error in expression (error token is ".5 + 1.3") echo "b = $b" # b=1
Use bc in scripts that that need floating point calculations or math library functions. bitwise operators. The bitwise operators seldom make an appearance in shell scripts. Their chief use seems to be manipulating and testing values read from ports or sockets. "Bit flipping" is more relevant to compiled languages, such as C and C++, which run fast enough to permit its use on the fly. bitwise operators << bitwise left shift (multiplies by 2 for each shift position) <<= "leftshiftequal" let "var <<= 2" results in var leftshifted 2 bits (multiplied by 4) >> bitwise right shift (divides by 2 for each shift position) >>= "rightshiftequal" (inverse of <<=) & bitwise and &= "bitwise andequal" | bitwise OR |= "bitwise ORequal" ~ Chapter 8. Operations and Related Topics 58
Advanced BashScripting Guide bitwise negate ! bitwise NOT ^ bitwise XOR ^= "bitwise XORequal" logical operators && and (logical)
if [ $condition1 ] && [ $condition2 ] # Same as: if [ $condition1 a $condition2 ] # Returns true if both condition1 and condition2 hold true... if [[ $condition1 && $condition2 ]] # Also works. # Note that && operator not permitted within [ ... ] construct.
&& may also, depending on context, be used in an and list to concatenate commands. || or (logical)
if [ $condition1 ] || [ $condition2 ] # Same as: if [ $condition1 o $condition2 ] # Returns true if either condition1 or condition2 holds true... if [[ $condition1 || $condition2 ]] # Also works. # Note that || operator not permitted within [ ... ] construct.
Bash tests the exit status of each statement linked with a logical operator.
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if [ "$a" eq 98 ] || [ "$b" eq 47 ] then echo "Test #2 succeeds." else echo "Test #2 fails." fi
# The a and o options provide #+ an alternative compound condition test. # Thanks to Patrick Callahan for pointing this out.
if [ "$a" eq 24 a "$b" eq 47 ] then echo "Test #3 succeeds." else echo "Test #3 fails." fi
if [ "$a" eq 98 o "$b" eq 47 ] then echo "Test #4 succeeds." else echo "Test #4 fails." fi
a=rhino b=crocodile if [ "$a" = rhino ] && [ "$b" = crocodile ] then echo "Test #5 succeeds." else echo "Test #5 fails." fi exit 0
miscellaneous operators , comma operator The comma operator chains together two or more arithmetic operations. All the operations are evaluated (with possible side effects), but only the last operation is returned.
let "t1 = ((5 + 3, 7 1, 15 4))" echo "t1 = $t1" # t1 = 11
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The comma operator finds use mainly in for loops. See Example 1012.
# 32
# Octal: numbers preceded by '0' (zero) let "oct = 032" echo "octal number = $oct" # Expresses result in decimal. #
# 26
# Hexadecimal: numbers preceded by '0x' or '0X' let "hex = 0x32" echo "hexadecimal number = $hex" # 50 # Expresses result in decimal. # Other bases: BASE#NUMBER # BASE between 2 and 64. # NUMBER must use symbols within the BASE range, see below. let "bin = 2#111100111001101" echo "binary number = $bin" let "b32 = 32#77" echo "base32 number = $b32"
# 31181
# 231
let "b64 = 64#@_" echo "base64 number = $b64" # 4094 # # This notation only works for a limited range (2 64) # 10 digits + 26 lowercase characters + 26 uppercase characters + @ + _ echo echo $((36#zz)) $((2#10101010)) $((16#AF16)) $((53#1aA)) # 1295 170 44822 3375
# #
Important note:
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$BASH_ENV an environmental variable pointing to a Bash startup file to be read when a script is invoked $BASH_VERSINFO[n] a 6element array containing version information about the installed release of Bash. This is similar to $BASH_VERSION, below, but a bit more detailed.
# Bash version info: for n in 0 1 2 3 4 5 do echo "BASH_VERSINFO[$n] = ${BASH_VERSINFO[$n]}" done # # # # # # BASH_VERSINFO[0] BASH_VERSINFO[1] BASH_VERSINFO[2] BASH_VERSINFO[3] BASH_VERSINFO[4] BASH_VERSINFO[5] = = = = = = 2 05 8 1 release i386redhatlinuxgnu # # # # # # # Major version no. Minor version no. Patch level. Build version. Release status. Architecture (same as $MACHTYPE).
Checking $BASH_VERSION is a good method of determining which shell is running. $SHELL does not necessarily give the correct answer. $DIRSTACK the top value in the directory stack (affected by pushd and popd) This builtin variable corresponds to the dirs command, however dirs shows the entire contents of the directory stack. Chapter 9. Variables Revisited 64
Advanced BashScripting Guide $EDITOR the default editor invoked by a script, usually vi or emacs. $EUID "effective" user ID number Identification number of whatever identity the current user has assumed, perhaps by means of su. The $EUID is not necessarily the same as the $UID. $FUNCNAME name of the current function
xyz23 () { echo "$FUNCNAME now executing." } xyz23 echo "FUNCNAME = $FUNCNAME" # FUNCNAME = # Null value outside a function.
$GLOBIGNORE A list of filename patterns to be excluded from matching in globbing. $GROUPS groups current user belongs to This is a listing (array) of the group id numbers for current user, as recorded in /etc/passwd.
root# echo $GROUPS 0
$HOME home directory of the user, usually /home/username (see Example 913) $HOSTNAME The hostname command assigns the system name at bootup in an init script. However, the gethostname() function sets the Bash internal variable $HOSTNAME. See also Example 913. $HOSTTYPE host type Like $MACHTYPE, identifies the system hardware.
bash$ echo $HOSTTYPE i686
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Advanced BashScripting Guide This defaults to whitespace (space, tab, and newline), but may be changed, for example, to parse a commaseparated data file. Note that $* uses the first character held in $IFS. See Example 51.
bash$ echo $IFS | cat vte $
$IFS does not handle whitespace the same as it does other characters. Example 91. $IFS and whitespace
#!/bin/bash # $IFS treats whitespace differently than other characters. output_args_one_per_line() { for arg do echo "[$arg]" done } echo; echo "IFS=\" \"" echo "" IFS=" " var=" a b c " output_args_one_per_line $var # # [a] # [b] # [c]
b c
"`
echo; echo "IFS=:" echo "" IFS=: var=":a::b:c:::" output_args_one_per_line $var # # [] # [a] # [] # [b] # [c] # [] # [] # []
# The same thing happens with the "FS" field separator in awk. # Thank you, Stephane Chazelas. echo exit 0
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Advanced BashScripting Guide (Thanks, S. C., for clarification and examples.) $IGNOREEOF ignore EOF: how many endoffiles (controlD) the shell will ignore before logging out. $LC_COLLATE Often set in the .bashrc or /etc/profile files, this variable controls collation order in filename expansion and pattern matching. If mishandled, LC_COLLATE can cause unexpected results in filename globbing. As of version 2.05 of Bash, filename globbing no longer distinguishes between lowercase and uppercase letters in a character range between brackets. For example, ls [AM]* would match both File1.txt and file1.txt. To revert to the customary behavior of bracket matching, set LC_COLLATE to C by an export LC_COLLATE=C in /etc/profile and/or ~/.bashrc. $LC_CTYPE This internal variable controls character interpretation in globbing and pattern matching. $LINENO This variable is the line number of the shell script in which this variable appears. It has significance only within the script in which it appears, and is chiefly useful for debugging purposes.
# *** BEGIN DEBUG BLOCK *** last_cmd_arg=$_ # Save it. echo "At line number $LINENO, variable \"v1\" = $v1" echo "Last command argument processed = $last_cmd_arg" # *** END DEBUG BLOCK ***
$OLDPWD old working directory ("OLDprintworkingdirectory", previous directory you were in) $OSTYPE operating system type
bash$ echo $OSTYPE linux
$PATH path to binaries, usually /usr/bin/, /usr/X11R6/bin/, /usr/local/bin, etc. When given a command, the shell automatically does a hash table search on the directories listed in the path for the executable. The path is stored in the environmental variable, $PATH, a list of directories, separated by colons. Normally, the system stores the $PATH definition in /etc/profile and/or ~/.bashrc (see Chapter 27).
bash$ echo $PATH /bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin
PATH=${PATH}:/opt/bin appends the /opt/bin directory to the current path. In a script, it may be expedient to temporarily add a directory to the path in this way. When the script exits, this Chapter 9. Variables Revisited 67
Advanced BashScripting Guide restores the original $PATH (a child process, such as a script, may not change the environment of the parent process, the shell). The current "working directory", ./, is usually omitted from the $PATH as a security measure. $PIPESTATUS Exit status of last executed foreground pipe. Interestingly enough, this does not give the same result as the exit status of the last executed command.
bash$ echo $PIPESTATUS 0 bash$ ls al | bogus_command bash: bogus_command: command not found bash$ echo $PIPESTATUS 141 bash$ ls al | bogus_command bash: bogus_command: command not found bash$ echo $? 127
The above lines contained in a script would produce the expected 0 1 0 output. Thank you, Wayne Pollock for pointing this out and supplying the above example. $PPID The $PPID of a process is the process id (pid) of its parent process. [19] Compare this with the pidof command. $PS1 This is the main prompt, seen at the command line. $PS2 The secondary prompt, seen when additional input is expected. It displays as ">". $PS3 The tertiary prompt, displayed in a select loop (see Example 1029). $PS4 The quartenary prompt, shown at the beginning of each line of output when invoking a script with the x option. It displays as "+". $PWD working directory (directory you are in at the time)
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Advanced BashScripting Guide This is the analog to the pwd builtin command.
#!/bin/bash E_WRONG_DIRECTORY=73 clear # Clear screen. TargetDirectory=/home/bozo/projects/GreatAmericanNovel cd $TargetDirectory echo "Deleting stale files in $TargetDirectory." if [ "$PWD" != "$TargetDirectory" ] then # Keep from wiping out wrong directory by accident. echo "Wrong directory!" echo "In $PWD, rather than $TargetDirectory!" echo "Bailing out!" exit $E_WRONG_DIRECTORY fi rm rf * rm .[AZaz09]* # Delete dotfiles. # rm f .[^.]* ..?* to remove filenames beginning with multiple dots. # (shopt s dotglob; rm f *) will also work. # Thanks, S.C. for pointing this out. # Filenames may contain all characters in the 0 255 range, except "/". # Deleting files beginning with weird characters is left as an exercise. # Various other operations here, as necessary. echo echo "Done." echo "Old files deleted in $TargetDirectory." echo
exit 0
$REPLY The default value when a variable is not supplied to read. Also applicable to select menus, but only supplies the item number of the variable chosen, not the value of the variable itself.
#!/bin/bash echo echo n "What is your favorite vegetable? " read echo "Your favorite vegetable is $REPLY." # REPLY holds the value of last "read" if and only if # no variable supplied. echo echo n "What is your favorite fruit? " read fruit echo "Your favorite fruit is $fruit." echo "but..." echo "Value of \$REPLY is still $REPLY." # $REPLY is still set to its previous value because
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$SHLVL Shell level, how deeply Bash is nested. If, at the command line, $SHLVL is 1, then in a script it will increment to 2. $TMOUT If the $TMOUT environmental variable is set to a nonzero value time, then the shell prompt will time out after time seconds. This will cause a logout. Unfortunately, this works only while waiting for input at the shell prompt console or in an xterm. While it would be nice to speculate on the uses of this internal variable for timed input, for example in combination with read, $TMOUT does not work in that context and is virtually useless for shell scripting. (Reportedly the ksh version of a timed read does work.) Implementing timed input in a script is certainly possible, but may require complex machinations. One method is to set up a timing loop to signal the script when it times out. This also requires a signal Chapter 9. Variables Revisited 70
Advanced BashScripting Guide handling routine to trap (see Example 305) the interrupt generated by the timing loop (whew!).
PrintAnswer() { if [ "$answer" = TIMEOUT ] then echo $answer else # Don't want to mix up the two instances. echo "Your favorite veggie is $answer" kill $! # Kills no longer needed TimerOn function running in background. # $! is PID of last job running in background. fi }
TimerOn() { sleep $TIMELIMIT && kill s 14 $$ & # Waits 3 seconds, then sends sigalarm to script. } Int14Vector() { answer="TIMEOUT" PrintAnswer exit 14 } trap Int14Vector 14 # Timer interrupt (14) subverted for our purposes.
echo "What is your favorite vegetable " TimerOn read answer PrintAnswer
# Admittedly, this is a kludgy implementation of timed input, #+ however the "t" option to "read" simplifies this task. # See "tout.sh", below. # If you need something really elegant... #+ consider writing the application in C or C++, #+ using appropriate library functions, such as 'alarm' and 'setitimer'. exit 0
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timedout_read() { timeout=$1 varname=$2 old_tty_settings=`stty g` stty icanon min 0 time ${timeout}0 eval read $varname # or just stty "$old_tty_settings" # See man page for "stty". }
read $varname
echo; echo n "What's your name? Quick! " timedout_read $INTERVAL your_name # This may not work on every terminal type. # The maximum timeout depends on the terminal. # (it is often 25.5 seconds). echo if [ ! z "$your_name" ] # If name input before timeout... then echo "Your name is $your_name." else echo "Timed out." fi echo # The behavior of this script differs somewhat from "timedinput.sh". # At each keystroke, the counter resets. exit 0
read t $TIMELIMIT variable <&1 echo if [ z "$variable" ] then echo "Timed out, variable still unset."
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$UID user ID number current user's user identification number, as recorded in /etc/passwd This is the current user's real id, even if she has temporarily assumed another identity through su. $UID is a readonly variable, not subject to change from the command line or within a script, and is the counterpart to the id builtin.
Am I root or not?
if [ "$UID" eq "$ROOT_UID" ] # Will the real "root" please stand up? then echo "You are root." else echo "You are just an ordinary user (but mom loves you just the same)." fi exit 0
# ============================================================= # # Code below will not execute, because the script already exited. # An alternate method of getting to the root of matters: ROOTUSER_NAME=root username=`id nu` # Or... username=`whoami` if [ "$username" = "$ROOTUSER_NAME" ] then echo "Rooty, toot, toot. You are root." else echo "You are just a regular fella." fi
See also Example 22. The variables $ENV, $LOGNAME, $MAIL, $TERM, $USER, and $USERNAME are not Bash builtins. These are, however, often set as environmental variables in one of the Bash startup files. $SHELL, the name of the user's login shell, may be set from /etc/passwd or in an "init" script, and it is likewise not a Bash builtin.
tcsh% echo $LOGNAME bozo tcsh% echo $SHELL
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Positional Parameters $0, $1, $2, etc. positional parameters, passed from command line to script, passed to a function, or set to a variable (see Example 45 and Example 1113) $# number of command line arguments [20] or positional parameters (see Example 342) $* All of the positional parameters, seen as a single word $@ Same as $*, but each parameter is a quoted string, that is, the parameters are passed on intact, without interpretation or expansion. This means, among other things, that each parameter in the argument list is seen as a separate word.
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Following a shift, the $@ holds the remaining commandline parameters, lacking the previous $1, which was lost.
#!/bin/bash # Invoke with ./scriptname 1 2 3 4 5 echo "$@" shift echo "$@" shift echo "$@" # 1 2 3 4 5 # 2 3 4 5 # 3 4 5
# Each "shift" loses parameter $1. # "$@" then contains the remaining parameters.
The $@ special parameter finds use as a tool for filtering input into shell scripts. The cat "$@" construction accepts input to a script either from stdin or from files given as parameters to the script. See Example 1217 and Example 1218. The $* and $@ parameters sometimes display inconsistent and puzzling behavior, depending on the setting of $IFS.
set "First one" "second" "third:one" "" "Fifth: :one" # Setting the script arguments, $1, $2, etc. echo echo 'IFS unchanged, using "$*"' c=0 for i in "$*" # quoted do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" # This line remains the same in every instance. # Echo args. done echo echo 'IFS unchanged, using $*' c=0
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echo 'IFS unchanged, using "$@"' c=0 for i in "$@" do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" done echo echo 'IFS unchanged, using $@' c=0 for i in $@ do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" done echo IFS=: echo 'IFS=":", using "$*"' c=0 for i in "$*" do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" done echo echo 'IFS=":", using $*' c=0 for i in $* do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" done echo var=$* echo 'IFS=":", using "$var" (var=$*)' c=0 for i in "$var" do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" done echo echo 'IFS=":", using $var (var=$*)' c=0 for i in $var do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" done echo var="$*" echo 'IFS=":", using $var (var="$*")' c=0 for i in $var do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" done echo echo 'IFS=":", using "$var" (var="$*")' c=0 for i in "$var" do echo "$((c+=1)): [$i]" done
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# The behavior of $* and $@ when $IFS is empty depends # on whatever Bash or sh version being run. # It is therefore inadvisable to depend on this "feature" in a script.
Other Special Parameters $ Flags passed to script (using set). See Example 1113. This was originally a ksh construct adopted into Bash, and unfortunately it does not seem to work reliably in Bash scripts. One possible use for it is to have a script selftest whether it is interactive. $! PID (process ID) of last job run in background
LOG=$0.log COMMAND1="sleep 100" echo "Logging PIDs background commands for script: $0" >> "$LOG" # So they can be monitored, and killed as necessary. echo >> "$LOG" # Logging commands. echo n "PID of \"$COMMAND1\": ${COMMAND1} & echo $! >> "$LOG" # PID of "sleep 100": 1506 " >> "$LOG"
$_ Special variable set to last argument of previous command executed. Chapter 9. Variables Revisited 78
# :
$? Exit status of a command, function, or the script itself (see Example 233) $$ Process ID of the script itself. The $$ variable often finds use in scripts to construct "unique" temp file names (see Example A14, Example 306, Example 1223, and Example 1123). This is usually simpler than invoking mktemp.
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len=${#line} if [ "$len" lt "$MINLEN" ] then echo # Add a blank line after short line. fi done exit 0
Length of Matching Substring at Beginning of String expr match "$string" '$substring' $substring is a regular expression. expr "$string" : '$substring' $substring is a regular expression.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc # || echo `expr match "$stringZ" 'abc[AZ]*.2'` echo `expr "$stringZ" : 'abc[AZ]*.2'` # 8 # 8
Index expr index $string $substring Numerical position in $string of first character in $substring that matches.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc echo `expr index "$stringZ" C12`
# 6 # C position. # 3
echo `expr index "$stringZ" 1c` # 'c' (in #3 position) matches before '1'.
This is the near equivalent of strchr() in C. Substring Extraction ${string:position} Extracts substring from $string at $position. If the $string parameter is "*" or "@", then this extracts the positional parameters, [21] starting at $position. ${string:position:length} Extracts $length characters of substring from $string at $position.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc # 0123456789..... # 0based indexing. echo ${stringZ:0} echo ${stringZ:1} # abcABC123ABCabc # bcABC123ABCabc
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# Is it possible to index from the right end of the string? echo ${stringZ:4} # abcABC123ABCabc # Defaults to full string, as in ${parameter:default}. # However . . . echo ${stringZ:(4)} # Cabc echo ${stringZ: 4} # Cabc # Now, it works. # Parentheses or added space "escape" the position parameter. # Thank you, Dan Jacobson, for pointing this out.
If the $string parameter is "*" or "@", then this extracts a maximum of $length positional parameters, starting at $position.
echo ${*:2} echo ${@:2} echo ${*:2:3} # Echoes second and following positional parameters. # Same as above. # Echoes three positional parameters, starting at second.
expr substr $string $position $length Extracts $length characters from $string starting at $position.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc # 123456789...... # 1based indexing. echo `expr substr $stringZ 1 2` echo `expr substr $stringZ 4 3` # ab # ABC
expr match "$string" '\($substring\)' Extracts $substring at beginning of $string, where $substring is a regular expression. expr "$string" : '\($substring\)' Extracts $substring at beginning of $string, where $substring is a regular expression.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc # ======= echo `expr match "$stringZ" '\(.[bc]*[AZ]..[09]\)'` echo `expr "$stringZ" : '\(.[bc]*[AZ]..[09]\)'` echo `expr "$stringZ" : '\(.......\)'` # All of the above forms give an identical result. # abcABC1 # abcABC1 # abcABC1
expr match "$string" '.*\($substring\)' Extracts $substring at end of $string, where $substring is a regular expression. expr "$string" : '.*\($substring\)' Extracts $substring at end of $string, where $substring is a regular expression.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc # ======
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Substring Removal ${string#substring} Strips shortest match of $substring from front of $string. ${string##substring} Strips longest match of $substring from front of $string.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc # || # || echo ${stringZ#a*C} # 123ABCabc # Strip out shortest match between 'a' and 'C'. echo ${stringZ##a*C} # abc # Strip out longest match between 'a' and 'C'.
${string%substring} Strips shortest match of $substring from back of $string. ${string%%substring} Strips longest match of $substring from back of $string.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc # || # || echo ${stringZ%b*c} # abcABC123ABCa # Strip out shortest match between 'b' and 'c', from back of $stringZ. echo ${stringZ%%b*c} # a # Strip out longest match between 'b' and 'c', from back of $stringZ.
# If directory name given as a script argument... # Otherwise use current working directory.
# Assumes all files in the target directory are MacPaint image files, # + with a ".mac" suffix.
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# Strip ".mac" suffix off filename #+ ('.*c' matches everything #+ between '.' and 'c', inclusive). $OPERATION $file > "$filename.$SUFFIX" # Redirect conversion to new filename. rm f $file # Delete original files after converting. echo "$filename.$SUFFIX" # Log what is happening to stdout. done exit 0 # Exercise: # # As it stands, this script converts *all* the files in the current #+ working directory. # Modify it to work *only* on files with a ".mac" suffix.
Substring Replacement ${string/substring/replacement} Replace first match of $substring with $replacement. ${string//substring/replacement} Replace all matches of $substring with $replacement.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc echo ${stringZ/abc/xyz} # xyzABC123ABCabc # Replaces first match of 'abc' with 'xyz'. # xyzABC123ABCxyz # Replaces all matches of 'abc' with # 'xyz'.
echo ${stringZ//abc/xyz}
${string/#substring/replacement} If $substring matches front end of $string, substitute $replacement for $substring. ${string/%substring/replacement} If $substring matches back end of $string, substitute $replacement for $substring.
stringZ=abcABC123ABCabc echo ${stringZ/#abc/XYZ} # XYZABC123ABCabc # Replaces frontend match of 'abc' with 'XYZ'. # abcABC123ABCXYZ # Replaces backend match of 'abc' with 'XYZ'.
echo ${stringZ/%abc/XYZ}
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${parameterdefault} and ${parameter:default} are almost equivalent. The extra : makes a difference only when parameter has been declared, but is null.
#!/bin/bash username0= # username0 has been declared, but is set to null. echo "username0 = ${username0`whoami`}" # Will not echo. echo "username1 = ${username1`whoami`}" # username1 has not been declared. # Will echo. username2= # username2 has been declared, but is set to null. echo "username2 = ${username2:`whoami`}" # Will echo because of : rather than just in condition test. exit 0
The default parameter construct finds use in providing "missing" commandline arguments in scripts.
DEFAULT_FILENAME=generic.data filename=${1:$DEFAULT_FILENAME} # If not otherwise specified, the following command block operates #+ on the file "generic.data". # # Commands follow.
See also Example 34, Example 292, and Example A7. Compare this method with using an and list to supply a default commandline argument. ${parameter=default}, ${parameter:=default} If parameter not set, set it to default. Both forms nearly equivalent. The : makes a difference only when $parameter has been declared and is null, [22] as above.
echo ${username=`whoami`} # Variable "username" is now set to `whoami`.
${parameter+alt_value}, ${parameter:+alt_value} If parameter set, use alt_value, else use null string. Both forms nearly equivalent. The : makes a difference only when parameter has been declared and is null, see below.
echo "###### \${parameter+alt_value} ########" echo
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# a = xyz
# a = xyz
echo echo "###### \${parameter:+alt_value} ########" echo a=${param4:+xyz} echo "a = $a"
# a =
param5= a=${param5:+xyz} echo "a = $a" # a = # Different result from param6=123 a=${param6+xyz} echo "a = $a"
a=${param5+xyz}
# a = xyz
${parameter?err_msg}, ${parameter:?err_msg} If parameter set, use it, else print err_msg. Both forms nearly equivalent. The : makes a difference only when parameter has been declared and is null, as above.
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: ${ZZXy23AB?"ZZXy23AB has not been set."} # If ZZXy23AB has not been set, #+ then the script terminates with an error message. # You can specify the error message. # : ${ZZXy23AB?"ZZXy23AB has not been set."}
echo "You will not see this message, because script terminated above." HERE=0 exit $HERE
# Check the exit status, both with and without commandline parameter. # If commandline parameter present, then "$?" is 0. # If not, then "$?" is 1.
Parameter substitution and/or expansion. The following expressions are the complement to the match in expr string operations (see Example 126). These particular ones are used mostly in parsing file path names. Variable length / Substring removal ${#var} String length (number of characters in $var). For an array, ${#array} is the length of the first element in the array. Exceptions:
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Advanced BashScripting Guide ${#*} and ${#@} give the number of positional parameters. For an array, ${#array[*]} and ${#array[@]} give the number of elements in the array.
${var#Pattern}, ${var##Pattern} Remove from $var the shortest/longest part of $Pattern that matches the front end of $var. A usage illustration from Example A8:
# Function from "daysbetween.sh" example. # Strips leading zero(s) from argument passed. strip_leading_zero () # Better to strip { # from day and/or val=${1#0} # since otherwise return $val # as octal values } possible leading zero(s) month Bash will interpret them (POSIX.2, sect 2.9.2.1).
${var%Pattern}, ${var%%Pattern} Remove from $var the shortest/longest part of $Pattern that matches the back end of $var. Version 2 of Bash adds additional options. Chapter 9. Variables Revisited 88
var1=abcd12345abc6789 pattern1=a*c # * (wild card) matches everything between a c. echo echo echo echo echo echo
# abcd12345abc6789 # abcd12345abc6789 (alternate form) ${var1} = ${#var1}" # a*c (everything between 'a' and 'c')
echo '${var1#$pattern1} =' "${var1#$pattern1}" # # Shortest possible match, strips out first 3 characters # ^^^^^ echo '${var1##$pattern1} =' "${var1##$pattern1}" # # Longest possible match, strips out first 12 characters # ^^^^^ echo; echo pattern2=b*9 # everything between 'b' and '9' echo "var1 = $var1" # Still abcd12345abc6789 echo "pattern2 = $pattern2" echo echo '${var1%pattern2} =' "${var1%$pattern2}" # # Shortest possible match, strips out last 6 characters # ^^^^ echo '${var1%%pattern2} =' "${var1%%$pattern2}" # # Longest possible match, strips out last 12 characters # ^^^^ # Remember, # and ## work from the left end of string, # % and %% work from the right end. echo exit 0
# Renaming file extensions. # # rfe old_extension new_extension # # Example: # To rename all *.gif files in working directory to *.jpg, # rfe gif jpg
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Variable expansion / Substring replacement These constructs have been adopted from ksh. ${var:pos} Variable var expanded, starting from offset pos. ${var:pos:len} Expansion to a max of len characters of variable var, from offset pos. See Example A15 for an example of the creative use of this operator. ${var/Pattern/Replacement} First match of Pattern, within var replaced with Replacement. If Replacement is omitted, then the first match of Pattern is replaced by nothing, that is, deleted. ${var//Pattern/Replacement} Global replacement. All matches of Pattern, within var replaced with Replacement. As above, if Replacement is omitted, then all occurrences of Pattern are replaced by nothing, that is, deleted.
var1 = $t"
t=${var1%**}
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${var/#Pattern/Replacement} If prefix of var matches Pattern, then substitute Replacement for Pattern. ${var/%Pattern/Replacement} If suffix of var matches Pattern, then substitute Replacement for Pattern.
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# Match at suffix (end) of string. v2=${v0/%abc/ABCDEF} # abc1234zip123abc # || echo "v2 = $v2" # abc1234zip1234ABCDEF # || echo # # Must match at beginning / end of string, #+ otherwise no replacement results. # v3=${v0/#123/000} # Matches, but not at beginning. echo "v3 = $v3" # abc1234zip1234abc # NO REPLACEMENT. v4=${v0/%123/000} # Matches, but not at end. echo "v4 = $v4" # abc1234zip1234abc # NO REPLACEMENT. exit 0
${!varprefix*}, ${!varprefix@} Matches all previously declared variables beginning with varprefix.
xyz23=whatever xyz24= a=${!xyz*} echo "a = $a" a=${!xyz@} echo "a = $a" # # # # Expands to names of declared variables beginning with "xyz". a = xyz23 xyz24 Same as above. a = xyz23 xyz24
(declare r var1 works the same as readonly var1) This is the rough equivalent of the C const type qualifier. An attempt to change the value of a readonly variable fails with an error message. i integer
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# number = 3
Note that certain arithmetic operations are permitted for declared integer variables without the need for expr or let. a array
declare a indices
A declare f line with no arguments in a script causes a listing of all the functions previously defined in that script.
declare f function_name
This declares a variable as available for exporting outside the environment of the script itself. var=$value
declare x var3=373
The declare command permits assigning a value to a variable in the same statement as setting its properties.
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# Now, let's try changing the second order reference. t=table_cell_3 table_cell_3=24 echo "\"table_cell_3\" = $table_cell_3" echo n "dereferenced \"t\" = "; eval echo \$$t # In this simple case, # eval t=\$$t; echo "\"t\" = $t" # also works (why?).
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# Another method is the ${!t} notation, discussed in "Bash, version 2" section. # See also example "ex78.sh". exit 0
# Begin awk script. # awk " { total += \$${column_number} # indirect reference } END { print total } " "$filename" # # End awk script.
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exit 0
This method of indirect referencing is a bit tricky. If the second order variable changes its value, then the first order variable must be properly dereferenced (as in the above example). Fortunately, the ${!variable} notation introduced with version 2 of Bash (see Example 352) makes indirect referencing more intuitive.
$number"
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$number"
# May combine above two techniques to retrieve random number between two limits. number=0 #initialize while [ "$number" le $FLOOR ] do number=$RANDOM let "number %= $RANGE" # Scales $number down within $RANGE. done echo "Random number between $FLOOR and $RANGE $number" echo
# Generate binary choice, that is, "true" or "false" value. BINARY=2 number=$RANDOM T=1 let "number %= $BINARY" # let "number >>= 14" gives a better random distribution # (right shifts out everything except last binary digit). if [ "$number" eq $T ] then echo "TRUE" else echo "FALSE" fi echo
# May generate toss of the dice. SPOTS=7 # Modulo 7 gives range 0 6. ZERO=0 die1=0 die2=0 # Tosses each die separately, and so gives correct odds. while [ "$die1" eq $ZERO ] # Can't have a zero come up. do let "die1 = $RANDOM % $SPOTS" # Roll first one. done while [ "$die2" eq $ZERO ] do let "die2 = $RANDOM % $SPOTS" # Roll second one. done let "throw = $die1 + $die2" echo "Throw of the dice = $throw" echo
exit 0
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Example 924. Picking a random card from a deck
#!/bin/bash # pickcard.sh # This is an example of choosing a random element of an array.
# Pick a card, any card. Suites="Clubs Diamonds Hearts Spades" Denominations="2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Jack Queen King Ace" suite=($Suites) denomination=($Denominations) # Read into array variable.
num_suites=${#suite[*]} # Count how many elements. num_denominations=${#denomination[*]} echo n "${denomination[$((RANDOM%num_denominations))]} of " echo ${suite[$((RANDOM%num_suites))]}
# Thank you, "jipe," for pointing out this use of $RANDOM. exit 0
Jipe points out another set of techniques for generating random numbers within a range.
# Generate random number between 6 and 30. rnumber=$((RANDOM%25+6)) # Generate random number in the same 6 30 range, #+ but the number must be evenly divisible by 3. rnumber=$(((RANDOM%30/3+1)*3)) # Exercise: Try to figure out the pattern here.
Just how random is $RANDOM? The best way to test this is to write a script that tracks the distribution of "random" numbers generated by $RANDOM. Let's roll a $RANDOM die a few times... Chapter 9. Variables Revisited 98
Advanced BashScripting Guide Example 925. Rolling the die with RANDOM
#!/bin/bash # How random is RANDOM? RANDOM=$$ PIPS=6 MAXTHROWS=600 throw=0 zeroes=0 ones=0 twos=0 threes=0 fours=0 fives=0 sixes=0 # Reseed the random number generator using script process ID. # A die has 6 pips. # Increase this, if you have nothing better to do with your time. # Throw count. # Must initialize counts to zero. # since an uninitialized variable is null, not zero.
print_result () { echo echo "ones = $ones" echo "twos = $twos" echo "threes = $threes" echo "fours = $fours" echo "fives = $fives" echo "sixes = $sixes" echo } update_count() { case "$1" in 0) let "ones += 1";; # Since die has no "zero", this corresponds to 1. 1) let "twos += 1";; # And this to 2, etc. 2) let "threes += 1";; 3) let "fours += 1";; 4) let "fives += 1";; 5) let "sixes += 1";; esac } echo
while [ "$throw" lt "$MAXTHROWS" ] do let "die1 = RANDOM % $PIPS" update_count $die1 let "throw += 1" done print_result # # # # # The scores should distribute fairly evenly, assuming RANDOM is fairly random. With $MAXTHROWS at 600, all should cluster around 100, plusorminus 20 or so. Keep in mind that RANDOM is a pseudorandom generator, and not a spectacularly good one at that.
# Exercise (easy):
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As we have seen in the last example, it is best to "reseed" the RANDOM generator each time it is invoked. Using the same seed for RANDOM repeats the same series of numbers. (This mirrors the behavior of the random() function in C.)
random_numbers () { count=0 while [ "$count" lt "$MAXCOUNT" ] do number=$RANDOM echo n "$number " let "count += 1" done } echo; echo RANDOM=1 random_numbers echo; echo RANDOM=1 random_numbers # Same seed for RANDOM... # ...reproduces the exact same number series. # # When is it useful to duplicate a "random" number series? # Setting RANDOM seeds the random number generator.
echo; echo RANDOM=2 random_numbers echo; echo # RANDOM=$$ seeds RANDOM from process id of script. # It is also possible to seed RANDOM from 'time' or 'date' commands. # Getting fancy... SEED=$(head 1 /dev/urandom | od N 1 | awk '{ print $2 }') # Pseudorandom output fetched #+ from /dev/urandom (system pseudorandom devicefile), #+ then converted to line of printable (octal) numbers by "od", #+ finally "awk" retrieves just one number for SEED. RANDOM=$SEED random_numbers # Trying again, but with a different seed... # gives a different number series.
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The /dev/urandom devicefile provides a means of generating much more "random" pseudorandom numbers than the $RANDOM variable. dd if=/dev/urandom of=targetfile bs=1 count=XX creates a file of wellscattered pseudorandom numbers. However, assigning these numbers to a variable in a script requires a workaround, such as filtering through od (as in above example) or using dd (see Example 1242).
There are also other means of generating pseudorandom numbers in a script. Awk provides a convenient means of doing this.
# Exercises: # # 1) Using a loop construct, print out 10 different random numbers. # (Hint: you must reseed the "srand()" function with a different seed # in each pass through the loop. What happens if you fail to do this?) # 2) Using an integer multiplier as a scaling factor, generate random numbers # in the range between 10 and 100. # 3) Same as exercise #2, above, but generate random integers this time.
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echo (( a = 23 )) # Setting a value, Cstyle, with spaces on both sides of the "=". echo "a (initial value) = $a" (( a++ )) # Postincrement 'a', Cstyle. echo "a (after a++) = $a" (( a )) # Postdecrement 'a', Cstyle. echo "a (after a) = $a"
(( ++a )) # Preincrement 'a', Cstyle. echo "a (after ++a) = $a" (( a )) # Predecrement 'a', Cstyle. echo "a (after a) = $a" echo (( t = a<45?7:11 )) # Cstyle trinary operator. echo "If a < 45, then t = 7, else t = 11." echo "t = $t " # Yes! echo
# # Easter Egg alert! # # Chet Ramey apparently snuck a bunch of undocumented Cstyle constructs #+ into Bash (actually adapted from ksh, pretty much). # In the Bash docs, Ramey calls ((...)) shell arithmetic, #+ but it goes far beyond that. # Sorry, Chet, the secret is now out. # See also "for" and "while" loops using the ((...)) construct. # These work only with Bash, version 2.04 or later. exit 0
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10.1. Loops
A loop is a block of code that iterates (repeats) a list of commands as long as the loop control condition is true. for loops for (in) This is the basic looping construct. It differs significantly from its C counterpart. for arg in [list] do command(s)... done During each pass through the loop, arg takes on the value of each successive variable in the list.
for arg in "$var1" # In pass 1 of the # In pass 2 of the # In pass 3 of the # ... # In pass N of the "$var2" "$var3" ... "$varN" loop, $arg = $var1 loop, $arg = $var2 loop, $arg = $var3 loop, $arg = $varN
The argument list may contain wild cards. If do is on same line as for, there needs to be a semicolon after list. for arg in [list] ; do
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Each [list] element may contain multiple parameters. This is useful when processing parameters in groups. In such cases, use the set command (see Example 1113) to force parsing of each [list] element and assignment of each component to the positional parameters.
Example 102. for loop with two parameters in each [list] element
#!/bin/bash # Planets revisited. # Associate the name of each planet with its distance from the sun. for planet in "Mercury 36" "Venus 67" "Earth 93" "Mars 142" "Jupiter 483" do set $planet # Parses variable "planet" and sets positional parameters. # the "" prevents nasty surprises if $planet is null or begins with a dash. # May need to save original positional parameters, since they get overwritten. # One way of doing this is to use an array, # original_params=("$@") echo "$1 #two done $2,000,000 miles from the sun" tabsconcatenate zeroes onto parameter $2
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The [list] in a for loop may contain filename globbing, that is, using wildcards for filename expansion.
Omitting the in [list] part of a for loop causes the loop to operate on $@, the list of arguments given on the command line to the script. A particularly clever illustration of this is Example A17.
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It is possible to use command substitution to generate the [list] in a for loop. See also Example 1239, Example 1010 and Example 1233.
Example 106. Generating the [list] in a for loop with command substitution
#!/bin/bash # A forloop with [list] generated by command substitution. NUMBERS="9 7 3 8 37.53" for number in `echo $NUMBERS` do echo n "$number " done echo exit 0 # for number in 9 7 3 8 37.53
This is a somewhat more complex example of using command substitution to create the [list].
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# # # # #
exit 0
for file in $( find $directory type f name '*' | sort ) do strings f $file | grep "$fstring" | sed e "s%$directory%%" # In the "sed" expression,
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directory=${1`pwd`} # Defaults to current working directory, #+ if not otherwise specified. # Equivalent to code block below. # # ARGS=1 # Expect one commandline argument. # # if [ $# ne "$ARGS" ] # If not 1 arg... # then # directory=`pwd` # current working directory # else # directory=$1 # fi # echo "symbolic links in directory \"$directory\"" for file in "$( find $directory type l )" do echo "$file" done | sort # #+ #+ # # type l = symbolic links
As Dominik 'Aeneas' Schnitzer points out, failing to quote $( find $directory type l ) will choke on filenames with embedded whitespace. Even this will only pick up the first field of each argument.
exit 0
# Jean Helou proposes the following alternative: echo "symbolic links in directory \"$directory\"" # Backup of the current IFS. One can never be too cautious. OLDIFS=$IFS IFS=: for file in $(find $directory type l printf "%p$IFS") do # ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The stdout of a loop may be redirected to a file, as this slight modification to the previous example shows.
echo "symbolic links in directory \"$directory\"" > "$OUTFILE" echo "" >> "$OUTFILE" for file in "$( find $directory type l )" do echo "$file" done | sort >> "$OUTFILE" # ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ exit 0 # type l = symbolic links
There is an alternative syntax to a for loop that will look very familiar to C programmers. This requires double parentheses.
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See also Example 2610, Example 2611, and Example A7. Now, a forloop used in a "reallife" context.
# Create fax formatted files from text files. # Concatenate the converted files. # Uses wild card in variable list.
# Do the work.
# As S.C. points out, the forloop can be eliminated with # efax d /dev/ttyS3 o1 t "T$1" $2.0* # but it's not quite as instructive [grin].
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while This construct tests for a condition at the top of a loop, and keeps looping as long as that condition is true (returns a 0 exit status). In contrast to a for loop, a while loop finds use in situations where the number of loop repetitions is not known beforehand. while [condition] do command... done As is the case with for/in loops, placing the do on the same line as the condition test requires a semicolon. while [condition] ; do Note that certain specialized while loops, as, for example, a getopts construct, deviate somewhat from the standard template given here.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide A while loop may have multiple conditions. Only the final condition determines when the loop terminates. This necessitates a slightly different loop syntax, however.
As with a for loop, a while loop may employ Clike syntax by using the double parentheses construct (see also Example 928).
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A while loop may have its stdin redirected to a file by a < at its end. until This construct tests for a condition at the top of a loop, and keeps looping as long as that condition is false (opposite of while loop). until [conditionistrue] do command... done Note that an until loop tests for the terminating condition at the top of the loop, differing from a similar construct in some programming languages. As is the case with for/in loops, placing the do on the same line as the condition test requires a semicolon. until [conditionistrue] ; do
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# Beginning of outer loop. for a in 1 2 3 4 5 do echo "Pass $outer in outer loop." echo "" inner=1 # Reset inner loop counter. # Beginning of inner loop. for b in 1 2 3 4 5 do echo "Pass $inner in inner loop." let "inner+=1" # Increment inner loop counter. done # End of inner loop. let "outer+=1" # Increment outer loop counter. echo # Space between output in pass of outer loop. done # End of outer loop. exit 0
See Example 266 for an illustration of nested "while" loops, and Example 268 to see a "while" loop nested inside an "until" loop.
echo echo "Printing Numbers 1 through 20 (but not 3 and 11)." a=0 while [ $a le "$LIMIT" ] do a=$(($a+1)) if [ "$a" eq 3 ] || [ "$a" eq 11 ] # Excludes 3 and 11
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echo n "$a " done # Exercise: # Why does loop print up to 20? echo; echo echo Printing Numbers 1 through 20, but something happens after 2. ################################################################## # Same loop, but substituting 'break' for 'continue'. a=0 while [ "$a" le "$LIMIT" ] do a=$(($a+1)) if [ "$a" gt 2 ] then break # Skip entire rest of loop. fi echo n "$a " done echo; echo; echo exit 0
The break command may optionally take a parameter. A plain break terminates only the innermost loop in which it is embedded, but a break N breaks out of N levels of loop.
"
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The continue command, similar to break, optionally takes a parameter. A plain continue cuts short the current iteration within its loop and begins the next. A continue N terminates all remaining iterations at its loop level and continues with the next iteration at the loop N levels above.
# inner loop
if [ "$inner" eq 7 ] then continue 2 # Continue at loop on 2nd level, that is "outer loop". # Replace above line with a simple "continue" # to see normal loop behavior. fi echo n "$inner " done done echo; echo # Exercise: # Come up with a meaningful use for "continue N" in a script. exit 0 # 8 9 10 will never echo.
while true do
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The continue N construct is difficult to understand and tricky to use in any meaningful context. It is probably best avoided.
Advanced BashScripting Guide statements and is an appropriate tool for creating menus. case "$variable" in "$condition1" ) command... ;; "$condition2" ) command... ;; esac
Quoting the variables is not mandatory, since word splitting does not take place. Each test line ends with a right paren ). Each condition block ends with a double semicolon ;;. The entire case block terminates with an esac (case spelled backwards).
exit 0
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read person case "$person" in # Note variable is quoted. "E" | "e" ) # Accept upper or lowercase input. echo echo "Roland Evans" echo "4321 Floppy Dr." echo "Hardscrabble, CO 80753" echo "(303) 7349874" echo "(303) 7349892 fax" echo "[email protected]" echo "Business partner & old friend" ;; # Note double semicolon to terminate each option. "J" | "j" ) echo echo "Mildred Jones" echo "249 E. 7th St., Apt. 19" echo "New York, NY 10009" echo "(212) 5332814" echo "(212) 5339972 fax" echo "[email protected]" echo "Girlfriend" echo "Birthday: Feb. 11" ;; # Add info for Smith & Zane later. * ) # Default option. # Empty input (hitting RETURN) fits here, too. echo echo "Not yet in database." ;; esac echo # # # #+ Exercise: Change the script so it accepts continuous input, instead of terminating after displaying just one address.
exit 0
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# No commandline parameters, # or first parameter empty. # Note that ${0##*/} is ${var##pattern} param substitution. Net result is $0. *) FILENAME=./$1;; # If filename passed as argument ($1) starts with a dash, # replace it with ./$1 # so further commands don't interpret it as an option. # Otherwise, $1.
* ) FILENAME=$1;; esac
exit 0
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exit 0
isalpha2 () # Tests whether *entire string* is alphabetic. { [ $# eq 1 ] || return $FAILURE case $1 in *[!azAZ]*|"") return $FAILURE;; *) return $SUCCESS;; esac } isdigit () # Tests whether *entire string* is numerical. { # In other words, tests for integer variable. [ $# eq 1 ] || return $FAILURE case $1 in *[!09]*|"") return $FAILURE;; *) return $SUCCESS;; esac }
check_var () {
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# Command substitution.
check_var $a check_var $b check_var $c check_var $d check_var $e check_var $f check_var # No argument passed, so what happens? # digit_check $g digit_check $h digit_check $i
exit 0
# Exercise: # # Write an 'isfloat ()' function that tests for floating point numbers. # Hint: The function duplicates 'isdigit ()', #+ but adds a test for a mandatory decimal point.
Advanced BashScripting Guide The select construct, adopted from the Korn Shell, is yet another tool for building menus. select variable [in list] do command... break done This prompts the user to enter one of the choices presented in the variable list. Note that select uses the PS3 prompt (#? ) by default, but that this may be changed.
If in list is omitted, then select uses the list of command line arguments ($@) passed to the script or to the function in which the select construct is embedded. Compare this to the behavior of a for variable [in list] construct with the in list omitted. Example 1030. Creating menus using select in a function
#!/bin/bash PS3='Choose your favorite vegetable: ' echo choice_of() { select vegetable # [in list] omitted, so 'select' uses arguments passed to function. do echo echo "Your favorite veggie is $vegetable." echo "Yuck!"
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When a command or the shell itself initiates (or spawns) a new subprocess to carry out a task, this is called forking. This new process is the "child", and the process that forked it off is the "parent". While the child process is doing its work, the parent process is still executing. Generally, a Bash builtin does not fork a subprocess when it executes within a script. An external system command or filter in a script usually will fork a subprocess. A builtin may be a synonym to a system command of the same name, but Bash reimplements it internally. For example, the Bash echo command is not the same as /bin/echo, although their behavior is almost identical.
#!/bin/bash echo "This line uses the \"echo\" builtin." /bin/echo "This line uses the /bin/echo system command."
A keyword is a reserved word, token or operator. Keywords have a special meaning to the shell, and indeed are the building blocks of the shell's syntax. As examples, "for", "while", "do", and "!" are keywords. Similar to a builtin, a keyword is hardcoded into Bash, but unlike a builtin, a keyword is not by itself a command, but part of a larger command structure. [24] I/O echo prints (to stdout) an expression or variable (see Example 41).
echo Hello echo $a
An echo requires the e option to print escaped characters. See Example 52. Normally, each echo command prints a terminal newline, but the n option suppresses this. An echo can be used to feed a sequence of commands down a pipe.
if echo "$VAR" | grep q txt # if [[ $VAR = *txt* ]] then echo "$VAR contains the substring sequence \"txt\"" fi
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Advanced BashScripting Guide a=`echo "HELLO" | tr AZ az` See also Example 1215, Example 122, Example 1232, and Example 1233. Be aware that echo `command` deletes any linefeeds that the output of command generates. The $IFS (internal field separator) variable normally contains \n (linefeed) as one of its set of whitespace characters. Bash therefore splits the output of command at linefeeds into arguments to echo. Then echo outputs these arguments, separated by spaces.
bash$ ls l /usr/share/apps/kjezz/sounds rwrr 1 root root 1407 Nov 7 2000 reflect.au rwrr 1 root root 362 Nov 7 2000 seconds.au
bash$ echo `ls l /usr/share/apps/kjezz/sounds` total 40 rwrr 1 root root 716 Nov 7 2000 reflect.au rwrr 1 root root 362 Nov 7
This command is a shell builtin, and not the same as /bin/echo, although its behavior is similar.
bash$ type a echo echo is a shell builtin echo is /bin/echo
printf The printf, formatted print, command is an enhanced echo. It is a limited variant of the C language printf() library function, and its syntax is somewhat different. printf formatstring... parameter... This is the Bash builtin version of the /bin/printf or /usr/bin/printf command. See the printf manpage (of the system command) for indepth coverage. Older versions of Bash may not support printf.
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printf "Constant = \t%d\n" $DecimalConstant printf "%s %s \n" $Message1 $Message2 echo # ==========================================# # Simulation of C function, 'sprintf'. # Loading a variable with a formatted string. echo Pi12=$(printf "%1.12f" $PI) echo "Pi to 12 decimal places = $Pi12" Msg=`printf "%s %s \n" $Message1 $Message2` echo $Msg; echo $Msg
# As it happens, the 'sprintf' function can now be accessed # as a loadable module to Bash, but this is not portable. exit 0
read "Reads" the value of a variable from stdin, that is, interactively fetches input from the keyboard. The a option lets read get array variables (see Example 263).
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echo # A single 'read' statement can set multiple variables. echo n "Enter the values of variables 'var2' and 'var3' (separated by a space or tab): " read var2 var3 echo "var2 = $var2 var3 = $var3" # If you input only one value, the other variable(s) will remain unset (null). exit 0
A read without an associated variable assigns its input to the dedicated variable $REPLY.
Normally, inputting a \ suppresses a newline during input to a read. The r option causes an inputted \ to be interpreted literally.
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The read command has some interesting options that permit echoing a prompt and even reading keystrokes without hitting ENTER.
# Read a keypress without hitting ENTER. read s n1 p "Hit a key " keypress echo; echo "Keypress was "\"$keypress\""." # s option means do not echo input. # n N option means accept only N characters of input. # p option means echo the following prompt before reading input. # Using these options is tricky, since they need to be in the correct order.
The n option to read also allows detection of the arrow keys and certain of the other unusual keys.
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echo " Some other key pressed." exit $OTHER # # # #+ # Exercises: 1) Simplify this script by rewriting the multiple "if" tests as a 'case' construct. 2) Add detection of the "Home," "End," "PgUp," and "PgDn" keys.
The t option to read permits timed input (see Example 94). The read command may also "read" its variable value from a file redirected to stdin. If the file contains more than one line, only the first line is assigned to the variable. If read has more than one Chapter 11. Internal Commands and Builtins 130
Advanced BashScripting Guide parameter, then each of these variables gets assigned a successive whitespacedelineated string. Caution!
# Setting the $IFS variable within the loop itself #+ eliminates the need for storing the original $IFS #+ in a temporary variable. # Thanks, Dim Segebart, for pointing this out. echo "" echo "List of all users:" while IFS=: read name passwd uid gid fullname ignore do echo "$name ($fullname)" done </etc/passwd # I/O redirection. echo echo "\$IFS still $IFS"
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Piping output to a read, using echo to set variables will fail. However, piping the output of cat does seem to work.
cat file1 file2 | while read line do echo $line done
Filesystem cd The familiar cd change directory command finds use in scripts where execution of a command requires being in a specified directory.
(cd /source/directory && tar cf . ) | (cd /dest/directory && tar xpvf )
[from the previously cited example by Alan Cox] The P (physical) option to cd causes it to ignore symbolic links. cd changes to $OLDPWD, the previous working directory.
The cd command does not function as expected when presented with two forward slashes.
bash$ cd // bash$ pwd //
The output should, of course, be /. This is a problem both from the command line and in a script. pwd Print Working Directory. This gives the user's (or script's) current directory (see Example 117). The effect is identical to reading the value of the builtin variable $PWD. pushd, popd, dirs This command set is a mechanism for bookmarking working directories, a means of moving back and forth through directories in an orderly manner. A pushdown stack is used to keep track of directory names. Options allow various manipulations of the directory stack. pushd dirname pushes the path dirname onto the directory stack and simultaneously changes the current working directory to dirname popd removes (pops) the top directory path name off the directory stack and simultaneously changes the current working directory to that directory popped from the stack.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide dirs lists the contents of the directory stack (compare this with the $DIRSTACK variable). A successful pushd or popd will automatically invoke dirs. Scripts that require various changes to the current working directory without hardcoding the directory name changes can make good use of these commands. Note that the implicit $DIRSTACK array variable, accessible from within a script, holds the contents of the directory stack.
Variables let The let command carries out arithmetic operations on variables. In many cases, it functions as a less complex version of expr.
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let "a %= 8" # Equivalent to let "a = a % 8" echo "270 modulo 8 = $a (270 / 8 = 33, remainder $a)" echo exit 0
eval eval arg1 [arg2] ... [argN] Translates into commands the arguments in a list (useful for code generation within a script).
# When LF's not preserved, it may make it easier to parse output, #+ using utilities such as "awk". exit 0
# Above lines may be replaced by # kill 9 `ps ax | awk '/ppp/ { print $1 }'
chmod 666 /dev/ttyS3 # Doing a SIGKILL on ppp changes the permissions # on the serial port. Restore them to previous state. rm /var/lock/LCK..ttyS3 exit 0 # Remove the serial port lock file.
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Rory Winston contributed the following instance of how useful eval can be.
The eval command can be risky, and normally should be avoided when there exists a reasonable alternative. An eval $COMMANDS executes the contents of COMMANDS, which may contain such unpleasant surprises as rm rf *. Running an eval on unfamiliar code written by persons unknown is living dangerously. set The set command changes the value of internal script variables. One use for this is to toggle option flags which help determine the behavior of the script. Another application for it is to reset the positional parameters that a script sees as the result of a command (set `command`). The script can then parse the fields of the command output. Chapter 11. Internal Commands and Builtins 135
Advanced BashScripting Guide Example 1113. Using set with positional parameters
#!/bin/bash # script "settest" # Invoke this script with three command line parameters, # for example, "./settest one two three". echo echo echo echo echo
set `uname a` # Sets the positional parameters to the output # of the command `uname a` echo $_ # unknown # Flags set in script. echo "Positional parameters after set \`uname a\` :" # $1, $2, $3, etc. reinitialized to result of `uname a` echo "Field #1 of 'uname a' = $1" echo "Field #2 of 'uname a' = $2" echo "Field #3 of 'uname a' = $3" echo echo $_ # echo exit 0
Invoking set without any options or arguments simply lists all the environmental and other variables that have been initialized.
bash$ set AUTHORCOPY=/home/bozo/posts BASH=/bin/bash BASH_VERSION=$'2.05.8(1)release' ... XAUTHORITY=/home/bozo/.Xauthority _=/etc/bashrc variable22=abc variable23=xzy
Using set with the option explicitly assigns the contents of a variable to the positional parameters. When no variable follows the , it unsets the positional parameters.
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# one # two
# ====================================================== set # Unsets positional parameters if no variable specified. first_param=$1 second_param=$2 echo "first parameter = $first_param" echo "second parameter = $second_param" exit 0
See also Example 102 and Example 1240. unset The unset command deletes a shell variable, effectively setting it to null. Note that this command does not affect positional parameters.
bash$ unset PATH bash$ echo $PATH bash$
export
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Advanced BashScripting Guide The export command makes available variables to all child processes of the running script or shell. Unfortunately, there is no way to export variables back to the parent process, to the process that called or invoked the script or shell. One important use of export command is in startup files, to initialize and make accessible environmental variables to subsequent user processes.
# Begin awk script. # awk '{ total += $ENVIRON["column_number"] } END { print total }' $filename # # End awk script.
It is possible to initialize and export variables in the same operation, as in export var1=xxx. However, as Greg Keraunen points out, in certain situations this may have a different effect than setting a variable, then exporting it.
bash$ export var=(a b); echo ${var[0]} (a b)
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declare, typeset The declare and typeset commands specify and/or restrict properties of variables. readonly Same as declare r, sets a variable as readonly, or, in effect, as a constant. Attempts to change the variable fail with an error message. This is the shell analog of the C language const type qualifier. getopts This powerful tool parses commandline arguments passed to the script. This is the Bash analog of the getopt external command and the getopt library function familiar to C programmers. It permits passing and concatenating multiple options [25] and associated arguments to a script (for example scriptname abc e /usr/local). The getopts construct uses two implicit variables. $OPTIND is the argument pointer (OPTion INDex) and $OPTARG (OPTion ARGument) the (optional) argument attached to an option. A colon following the option name in the declaration tags that option as having an associated argument. A getopts construct usually comes packaged in a while loop, which processes the options and arguments one at a time, then decrements the implicit $OPTIND variable to step to the next.
1. The arguments passed from the command line to the script must be preceded by a minus () or a plus (+). It is the prefixed or + that lets getopts recognize commandline arguments as options. In fact, getopts will not process arguments without the prefixed or +, and will terminate option processing at the first argument encountered lacking them. 2. The getopts template differs slightly from the standard while loop, in that it lacks condition brackets. 3. The getopts construct replaces the obsolete and less powerful getopt external command.
while getopts ":abcde:fg" Option # Initial declaration. # a, b, c, d, e, f, and g are the options (flags) expected. # The : after option 'e' shows it will have an argument passed with it. do case $Option in a ) # Do something with variable 'a'. b ) # Do something with variable 'b'. ... e) # Do something with 'e', and also with $OPTARG, # which is the associated argument passed with option 'e'. ... g ) # Do something with variable 'g'. esac done shift $(($OPTIND 1)) # Move argument pointer to next. # All this is not nearly as complicated as it looks <grin>.
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NO_ARGS=0 E_OPTERROR=65 if [ $# eq "$NO_ARGS" ] # Script invoked with no commandline args? then echo "Usage: `basename $0` options (mnopqrs)" exit $E_OPTERROR # Exit and explain usage, if no argument(s) given. fi # Usage: scriptname options # Note: dash () necessary
while getopts ":mnopq:rs" Option do case $Option in m ) echo "Scenario #1: option m";; n | o ) echo "Scenario #2: option $Option";; p ) echo "Scenario #3: option p";; q ) echo "Scenario #4: option q, with argument \"$OPTARG\"";; # Note that option 'q' must have an associated argument, # otherwise it falls through to the default. r | s ) echo "Scenario #5: option $Option"'';; * ) echo "Unimplemented option chosen.";; # DEFAULT esac done shift $(($OPTIND 1)) # Decrements the argument pointer so it points to next argument. exit 0
Script Behavior source, . (dot command) This command, when invoked from the command line, executes a script. Within a script, a source filename loads the file filename. This is the shell scripting equivalent of a C/C++ #include directive. It is useful in situations when multiple scripts use a common data file or function library.
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exit 0
File datafile for Example 1118, above. Must be present in same directory.
# This is a data file loaded by a script. # Files of this type may contain variables, functions, etc. # It may be loaded with a 'source' or '.' command by a shell script. # Let's initialize some variables. variable1=22 variable2=474 variable3=5 variable4=97 message1="Hello, how are you?" message2="Enough for now. Goodbye." print_message () { # Echoes any message passed to it. if [ z "$1" ] then return 1 # Error, if argument missing. fi echo until [ z "$1" ] do # Step through arguments passed to function. echo n "$1" # Echo args one at a time, suppressing line feeds. echo n " " # Insert spaces between words. shift # Next one. done echo
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It is even possible for a script to source itself, though this does not seem to have any practical applications.
echo n "$pass_count " # At first execution pass, this just echoes two blank spaces, #+ since $pass_count still uninitialized. let "pass_count += 1" # Assumes the uninitialized variable $pass_count #+ can be incremented the first time around. # This works with Bash and pdksh, but #+ it relies on nonportable (and possibly dangerous) behavior. # Better would be to set $pass_count to 0 if noninitialized. while [ "$pass_count" le $MAXPASSCNT ] do . $0 # Script "sources" itself, rather than calling itself. # ./$0 (which would be true recursion) doesn't work here. done # #+ #+ #+ # # # #+ What occurs here is not actually recursion, since the script effectively "expands" itself (generates a new section of code) with each pass throught the 'while' loop', with each 'source' in line 20. Of course, the script interprets each newly 'sourced' "#!" line as a comment, and not as the start of a new script.
echo exit 0 # The net effect is counting from 1 to 100. # Very impressive.
exit Unconditionally terminates a script. The exit command may optionally take an integer argument, which is returned to the shell as the exit status of the script. It is good practice to end all but the simplest scripts with an exit 0, indicating a successful run. If a script terminates with an exit lacking an argument, the exit status of the script is the exit status of the last command executed in the script, not counting the exit. exec Chapter 11. Internal Commands and Builtins 142
Advanced BashScripting Guide This shell builtin replaces the current process with a specified command. Normally, when the shell encounters a command, it forks off a child process to actually execute the command. Using the exec builtin, the shell does not fork, and the command exec'ed replaces the shell. When used in a script, therefore, it forces an exit from the script when the exec'ed command terminates. For this reason, if an exec appears in a script, it would probably be the final command.
# # The following lines never execute. echo "This echo will never echo." exit 99 # # #+ # This script will not exit here. Check exit value after script terminates with an 'echo $?'. It will *not* be 99.
An exec also serves to reassign file descriptors. exec <zzzfile replaces stdin with the file zzzfile (see Example 161). The exec option to find is not the same as the exec shell builtin. shopt This command permits changing shell options on the fly (see Example 241 and Example 242). It often appears in the Bash startup files, but also has its uses in scripts. Needs version 2 or later of Bash.
shopt s cdspell # Allows minor misspelling of directory names with 'cd'
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Commands true A command that returns a successful (zero) exit status, but does nothing else.
# Endless loop while true # alias for ":" do operation1 operation2 ... operationn # Need a way to break out of loop. done
false A command that returns an unsuccessful exit status, but does nothing else.
# Null loop while false do # The following code will not execute. operation1 operation2 ... operationn # Nothing happens! done
type [cmd] Similar to the which external command, type cmd gives the full pathname to "cmd". Unlike which, type is a Bash builtin. The useful a option to type identifies keywords and builtins, and also locates system commands with identical names.
bash$ type '[' [ is a shell builtin bash$ type a '[' [ is a shell builtin [ is /usr/bin/[
hash [cmds] Record the path name of specified commands (in the shell hash table), so the shell or script will not need to search the $PATH on subsequent calls to those commands. When hash is called with no arguments, it simply lists the commands that have been hashed. The r option resets the hash table. help help COMMAND looks up a short usage summary of the shell builtin COMMAND. This is the counterpart to whatis, but for builtins.
bash$ help exit exit: exit [n] Exit the shell with a status of N. If N is omitted, the exit status is that of the last command executed.
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"1" is the job number (jobs are maintained by the current shell), and "1384" is the process number (processes are maintained by the system). To kill this job/process, either a kill %1 or a kill 1384 works. Thanks, S.C. disown Remove job(s) from the shell's table of active jobs. fg, bg The fg command switches a job running in the background into the foreground. The bg command restarts a suspended job, and runs it in the background. If no job number is specified, then the fg or bg command acts upon the currently running job. wait Stop script execution until all jobs running in background have terminated, or until the job number or process id specified as an option terminates. Returns the exit status of waitedfor command. You may use the wait command to prevent a script from exiting before a background job finishes executing (this would create a dreaded orphan process).
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echo "Updating 'locate' database..." echo "This may take a while." updatedb /usr & # Must be run as root. wait # Don't run the rest of the script until 'updatedb' finished. # You want the the database updated before looking up the file name. locate $1 # Without the wait command, in the worse case scenario, # the script would exit while 'updatedb' was still running, # leaving it as an orphan process. exit 0
Optionally, wait can take a job identifier as an argument, for example, wait%1 or wait $PPID. See the job id table.
Within a script, running a command in the background with an ampersand (&) may cause the script to hang until ENTER is hit. This seems to occur with commands that write to stdout. It can be a major annoyance.
#!/bin/bash # test.sh ls l & echo "Done." bash$ ./test.sh Done. [bozo@localhost testscripts]$ total 1 rwxrxrx 1 bozo bozo _
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Redirecting the output of the command to a file or even to /dev/null also takes care of this problem. suspend This has a similar effect to ControlZ, but it suspends the shell (the shell's parent process should resume it at an appropriate time). logout Exit a login shell, optionally specifying an exit status. times Gives statistics on the system time used in executing commands, in the following form:
0m0.020s 0m0.020s
This capability is of very limited value, since it is uncommon to profile and benchmark shell scripts. kill Forcibly terminate a process by sending it an appropriate terminate signal (see Example 134).
echo "This line will not echo." # Instead, the shell sends a "Terminated" message to stdout. exit 0 # After this script terminates prematurely, #+ what exit status does it return? # # sh selfdestruct.sh # echo $? # 143 # # 143 = 128 + 15 # TERM signal
kill l lists all the signals. A kill 9 is a "sure kill", which will usually terminate a process that stubbornly refuses to die with a plain kill. Sometimes, a kill 15 works. A "zombie process", that is, a process whose parent has terminated, cannot be killed (you can't kill something that is already dead), but init will usually clean it up sooner or later. command The command COMMAND directive disables aliases and functions for the command "COMMAND". This is one of three shell directives that effect script command processing. The others are builtin and enable. builtin Invoking builtin BUILTIN_COMMAND runs the command "BUILTIN_COMMAND" as a shell Chapter 11. Internal Commands and Builtins 147
Advanced BashScripting Guide builtin, temporarily disabling both functions and external system commands with the same name. enable This either enables or disables a shell builtin command. As an example, enable n kill disables the shell builtin kill, so that when Bash subsequently encounters kill, it invokes /bin/kill. The a option to enable lists all the shell builtins, indicating whether or not they are enabled. The f filename option lets enable load a builtin as a shared library (DLL) module from a properly compiled object file. [26]. autoload This is a port to Bash of the ksh autoloader. With autoload in place, a function with an "autoload" declaration will load from an external file at its first invocation. [27] This saves system resources. Note that autoload is not a part of the core Bash installation. It needs to be loaded in with enable f (see above).
Table 111. Job identifiers Notation %N %S %?S %% %+ % $! Meaning Job number [N] Invocation (command line) of job begins with string S Invocation (command line) of job contains within it string S "current" job (last job stopped in foreground or started in background) "current" job (last job stopped in foreground or started in background) Last job Last background process
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Example 121. Using ls to create a table of contents for burning a CDR disk
#!/bin/bash # burncd.sh # Script to automate burning a CDR.
SPEED=2 # May use higher speed if your hardware supports it. IMAGEFILE=cdimage.iso CONTENTSFILE=contents DEFAULTDIR=/opt # This is the directory containing the data to be burned. # Make sure it exists. # Uses Joerg Schilling's "cdrecord" package. # (http://www.fokus.gmd.de/nthp/employees/schilling/cdrecord.html) # If this script invoked as an ordinary user, need to suid cdrecord #+ (chmod u+s /usr/bin/cdrecord, as root). if [ z "$1" ] then IMAGE_DIRECTORY=$DEFAULTDIR # Default directory, if not specified on command line. else IMAGE_DIRECTORY=$1 fi # Create a "table of contents" file. ls lRF $IMAGE_DIRECTORY > $IMAGE_DIRECTORY/$CONTENTSFILE # The "l" option gives a "long" file listing. # The "R" option makes the listing recursive. # The "F" option marks the file types (directories get a trailing /). echo "Creating table of contents." # Create an image file preparatory to burning it onto the CDR. mkisofs r o $IMAGFILE $IMAGE_DIRECTORY echo "Creating ISO9660 file system image ($IMAGEFILE)."
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cat, tac cat, an acronym for concatenate, lists a file to stdout. When combined with redirection (> or >>), it is commonly used to concatenate files.
cat filename cat file.1 file.2 file.3 > file.123
The n option to cat inserts consecutive numbers before all lines of the target file(s). The b option numbers only the nonblank lines. The v option echoes nonprintable characters, using ^ notation. The s option squeezes multiple consecutive blank lines into a single blank line. See also Example 1221 and Example 1217. tac, is the inverse of cat, listing a file backwards from its end. rev reverses each line of a file, and outputs to stdout. This is not the same effect as tac, as it preserves the order of the lines, but flips each one around.
bash$ cat file1.txt This is line 1. This is line 2.
cp This is the file copy command. cp file1 file2 copies file1 to file2, overwriting file2 if it already exists (see Example 125). Particularly useful are the a archive flag (for copying an entire directory tree) and the r and R recursive flags. mv This is the file move command. It is equivalent to a combination of cp and rm. It may be used to move multiple files to a directory, or even to rename a directory. For some examples of using mv in a script, see Example 917 and Example A3. When used in a noninteractive script, mv takes the f (force) option to bypass user input. When a directory is moved to a preexisting directory, it becomes a subdirectory of the destination directory.
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rm Delete (remove) a file or files. The f option forces removal of even readonly files, and is useful for bypassing user input in a script. When used with the recursive flag r, this command removes files all the way down the directory tree. rmdir Remove directory. The directory must be empty of all files, including invisible "dotfiles", [28] for this command to succeed. mkdir Make directory, creates a new directory. mkdir p project/programs/December creates the named directory. The p option automatically creates any necessary parent directories. chmod Changes the attributes of an existing file (see Example 1110).
chmod +x filename # Makes "filename" executable for all users. chmod u+s filename # Sets "suid" bit on "filename" permissions. # An ordinary user may execute "filename" with same privileges as the file's owner. # (This does not apply to shell scripts.) chmod 644 filename # Makes "filename" readable/writable to owner, readable to # others # (octal mode). chmod 1777 directoryname # Gives everyone read, write, and execute permission in directory, # however also sets the "sticky bit". # This means that only the owner of the directory, # owner of the file, and, of course, root # can delete any particular file in that directory.
chattr Change file attributes. This has the same effect as chmod above, but with a different invocation syntax, and it works only on an ext2 filesystem. ln Creates links to preexistings files. Most often used with the s, symbolic or "soft" link flag. This permits referencing the linked file by more than one name and is a superior alternative to aliasing (see Example 46). ln s oldfile newfile links the previously existing oldfile to the newly created link, newfile. man, info These commands access the manual and information pages on system commands and installed utilities. When available, the info pages usually contain a more detailed description than do the man pages. Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands 151
find /home/bozo/projects mtime 1 # Lists all files in /home/bozo/projects directory tree #+ that were modified within the last day. # # mtime = last modification time of the target file # ctime = last status change time (via 'chmod' or otherwise) # atime = last access time DIR=/home/bozo/junk_files find "$DIR" type f atime +5 exec rm {} \; # Deletes all files in "/home/bozo/junk_files" #+ that have not been accessed in at least 5 days. # # "type filetype", where # f = regular file # d = directory, etc. # (The 'find' manpage has a complete listing.) find /etc exec grep '[09][09]*[.][09][09]*[.][09][09]*[.][09][09]*' {} \; # Finds all IP addresses (xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx) in /etc directory files. # There a few extraneous hits how can they be filtered out? # Perhaps by: find /etc type f exec cat '{}' \; | tr c '.[:digit:]' '\n' \ | grep '^[^.][^.]*\.[^.][^.]*\.[^.][^.]*\.[^.][^.]*$' # [:digit:] is one of the character classes # introduced with the POSIX 1003.2 standard. # Thanks, S.C.
The exec option to find should not be confused with the exec shell builtin.
Example 122. Badname, eliminate file names in current directory containing bad characters and whitespace. Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands 152
if [ $# ne "$ARGCOUNT" ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` filename" exit $E_WRONGARGS fi if [ ! e "$1" ] then echo "File \""$1"\" does not exist." exit $E_FILE_NOT_EXIST fi inum=`ls i | grep "$1" | awk '{print $1}'` # inum = inode (index node) number of file # Every file has an inode, a record that hold its physical address info. echo; echo n "Are you absolutely sure you want to delete \"$1\" (y/n)? " # The 'v' option to 'rm' also asks this. read answer case "$answer" in [nN]) echo "Changed your mind, huh?"
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*) esac
See Example 1222, Example 34, and Example 109 for scripts using find. Its manpage provides more detail on this complex and powerful command. xargs A filter for feeding arguments to a command, and also a tool for assembling the commands themselves. It breaks a data stream into small enough chunks for filters and commands to process. Consider it as a powerful replacement for backquotes. In situations where backquotes fail with a too many arguments error, substituting xargs often works. Normally, xargs reads from stdin or from a pipe, but it can also be given the output of a file. The default command for xargs is echo. This means that input piped to xargs may have linefeeds and other whitespace characters stripped out.
bash$ ls l total 0 rwrwr rwrwr
1 bozo 1 bozo
bozo bozo
bash$ ls l | xargs total 0 rwrwr 1 bozo bozo 0 Jan 29 23:58 file1 rwrwr 1 bozo bozo 0 Jan 29 23:58
ls | xargs p l gzip gzips every file in current directory, one at a time, prompting before each operation. An interesting xargs option is n NN, which limits to NN the number of arguments passed. ls | xargs n 8 echo lists the files in the current directory in 8 columns. Another useful option is 0, in combination with find print0 or grep lZ. This allows handling arguments containing whitespace or quotes. find / type f print0 | xargs 0 grep liwZ GUI | xargs 0 rm f grep rliwZ GUI / | xargs 0 rm f Either of the above will remove any file containing "GUI". (Thanks, S.C.)
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Example 125. copydir, copying files in current directory to another, using xargs
#!/bin/bash # Copy (verbose) all files in current directory # to directory specified on command line. if [ z "$1" ] # Exit if no argument given. then echo "Usage: `basename $0` directorytocopyto" exit 65 fi ls . | xargs i t cp ./{} $1 # This is the exact equivalent of # cp * $1 # unless any of the filenames has "whitespace" characters. exit 0
expr Allpurpose expression evaluator: Concatenates and evaluates the arguments according to the operation given (arguments must be separated by spaces). Operations may be arithmetic, comparison, string, or logical. expr 3 + 5 returns 8 expr 5 % 3 returns 2 expr 5 \* 3 returns 15
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Advanced BashScripting Guide The multiplication operator must be escaped when used in an arithmetic expression with expr. y=`expr $y + 1` Increment a variable, with the same effect as let y=y+1 and y=$(($y+1)). This is an example of arithmetic expansion. z=`expr substr $string $position $length` Extract substring of $length characters, starting at $position. Example 126. Using expr
#!/bin/bash # Demonstrating some of the uses of 'expr' # ======================================= echo # Arithmetic Operators # echo "Arithmetic Operators" echo a=`expr 5 + 3` echo "5 + 3 = $a" a=`expr $a + 1` echo echo "a + 1 = $a" echo "(incrementing a variable)" a=`expr 5 % 3` # modulo echo echo "5 mod 3 = $a" echo echo # Logical Operators # # Returns 1 if true, 0 if false, #+ opposite of normal Bash convention. echo "Logical Operators" echo x=24 y=25 b=`expr $x = $y` echo "b = $b" echo
# Test equality. # 0 ( $x ne $y )
a=3 b=`expr $a \> 10` echo 'b=`expr $a \> 10`, therefore...' echo "If a > 10, b = 0 (false)" echo "b = $b" # 0 ( 3 ! gt 10 ) echo
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echo echo # Comparison Operators # echo "Comparison Operators" echo a=zipper echo "a is $a" if [ `expr $a = snap` ] # Force reevaluation of variable 'a' then echo "a is not zipper" fi echo echo
# String Operators # echo "String Operators" echo a=1234zipper43231 echo "The string being operated upon is \"$a\"." # length: length of string b=`expr length $a` echo "Length of \"$a\" is $b." # index: position of first character in substring # that matches a character in string b=`expr index $a 23` echo "Numerical position of first \"2\" in \"$a\" is \"$b\"." # substr: extract substring, starting position & length specified b=`expr substr $a 2 6` echo "Substring of \"$a\", starting at position 2,\ and 6 chars long is \"$b\"."
# The default behavior of the 'match' operations is to #+ search for the specified match at the ***beginning*** of the string. # # uses Regular Expressions b=`expr match "$a" '[09]*'` # Numerical count.
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The : operator can substitute for match. For example, b=`expr $a : [09]*` is the exact equivalent of b=`expr match $a [09]*` in the above listing.
#!/bin/bash echo echo "String operations using \"expr \$string : \" construct" echo "===================================================" echo a=1234zipper5FLIPPER43231 echo "The string being operated upon is \"`expr "$a" : '\(.*\)'`\"." # Escaped parentheses grouping operator. == == # #+ #+ # *************************** Escaped parentheses match a substring ***************************
# If no escaped parentheses... #+ then 'expr' converts the string operand to an integer. echo "Length of \"$a\" is `expr "$a" : '.*'`." # Length of string
echo "Number of digits at the beginning of \"$a\" is `expr "$a" : '[09]*'`." # # echo echo "The digits at the beginning of \"$a\" are `expr "$a" : '\([09]*\)'`." # == == echo "The first 7 characters of \"$a\" are `expr "$a" : '\(.......\)'`." # ===== == == # Again, escaped parentheses force a substring match. # echo "The last 7 characters of \"$a\" are `expr "$a" : '.*\(.......\)'`." # ==== end of string operator ^^ # (actually means skip over one or more of any characters until specified #+ substring) echo exit 0
This example illustrates how expr uses the escaped parentheses \( ... \) grouping operator in tandem with regular expression parsing to match a substring.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Perl, sed, and awk have far superior string parsing facilities. A short sed or awk "subroutine" within a script (see Section 34.2) is an attractive alternative to using expr. See Section 9.2 for more on string operations.
Advanced BashScripting Guide Outputs very verbose timing statistics for executing a command. time ls l / gives something like this:
0.00user 0.01system 0:00.05elapsed 16%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 0maxresident)k 0inputs+0outputs (149major+27minor)pagefaults 0swaps
See also the very similar times command in the previous section. As of version 2.0 of Bash, time became a shell reserved word, with slightly altered behavior in a pipeline. touch Utility for updating access/modification times of a file to current system time or other specified time, but also useful for creating a new file. The command touch zzz will create a new file of zero length, named zzz, assuming that zzz did not previously exist. Timestamping empty files in this way is useful for storing date information, for example in keeping track of modification times on a project. The touch command is equivalent to : >> newfile or >> newfile (for ordinary files). at The at job control command executes a given set of commands at a specified time. Superficially, it resembles crond, however, at is chiefly useful for onetime execution of a command set. at 2pm January 15 prompts for a set of commands to execute at that time. These commands should be shellscript compatible, since, for all practical purposes, the user is typing in an executable shell script a line at a time. Input terminates with a CtlD. Using either the f option or input redirection (<), at reads a command list from a file. This file is an executable shell script, though it should, of course, be noninteractive. Particularly clever is including the runparts command in the file to execute a different set of scripts.
bash$ at 2:30 am Friday < atjobs.list job 2 at 20001027 02:30
batch The batch job control command is similar to at, but it runs a command list when the system load drops below .8. Like at, it can read commands from a file with the f option. cal Prints a neatly formatted monthly calendar to stdout. Will do current year or a large range of past and future years. sleep This is the shell equivalent of a wait loop. It pauses for a specified number of seconds, doing nothing. It can be useful for timing or in processes running in the background, checking for a specific event every so often (polling), as in Example 306.
sleep 3 # Pauses 3 seconds.
The sleep command defaults to seconds, but minute, hours, or days may also be specified. Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands 160
The watch command may be a better choice than sleep for running commands at timed intervals. usleep Microsleep (the "u" may be read as the Greek "mu", or micro prefix). This is the same as sleep, above, but "sleeps" in microsecond intervals. It can be used for finegrain timing, or for polling an ongoing process at very frequent intervals.
usleep 30 # Pauses 30 microseconds.
This command is part of the Red Hat initscripts / rcscripts package. The usleep command does not provide particularly accurate timing, and is therefore unsuitable for critical timing loops. hwclock, clock The hwclock command accesses or adjusts the machine's hardware clock. Some options require root privileges. The /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit startup file uses hwclock to set the system time from the hardware clock at bootup. The clock command is a synonym for hwclock.
The useful c option prefixes each line of the input file with its number of occurrences.
bash$ cat testfile This line occurs only once. This line occurs twice. This line occurs twice.
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bash$ uniq c testfile 1 This line occurs only once. 2 This line occurs twice. 3 This line occurs three times.
bash$ sort testfile | uniq c | sort nr 3 This line occurs three times. 2 This line occurs twice. 1 This line occurs only once.
The sort INPUTFILE | uniq c | sort nr command string produces a frequency of occurrence listing on the INPUTFILE file (the nr options to sort cause a reverse numerical sort). This template finds use in analysis of log files and dictionary lists, and wherever the lexical structure of a document needs to be examined.
# Check for input file on command line. ARGS=1 E_BADARGS=65 E_NOFILE=66 if [ $# ne "$ARGS" ] # Correct number of arguments passed to script? then echo "Usage: `basename $0` filename" exit $E_BADARGS fi if [ ! f "$1" ] # Check if file exists. then echo "File \"$1\" does not exist." exit $E_NOFILE fi
######################################################## # main () sed e 's/\.//g' e 's/ /\ /g' "$1" | tr 'AZ' 'az' | sort | uniq c | sort nr # ========================= # Frequency of occurrence # Filter out periods and #+ change space between words to linefeed, #+ then shift characters to lowercase, and #+ finally prefix occurrence count and sort numerically. ########################################################
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bash$ ./wf.sh testfile 6 this 6 occurs 6 line 3 times 3 three 2 twice 1 only 1 once
expand, unexpand The expand filter converts tabs to spaces. It is often used in a pipe. The unexpand filter converts spaces to tabs. This reverses the effect of expand. cut A tool for extracting fields from files. It is similar to the print $N command set in awk, but more limited. It may be simpler to use cut in a script than awk. Particularly important are the d (delimiter) and f (field specifier) options. Using cut to obtain a listing of the mounted filesystems:
cat /etc/mtab | cut d ' ' f1,2
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cut d ' ' f2,3 filename is equivalent to awk F'[ ]' '{ print $2, $3 }' filename See also Example 1233. paste Tool for merging together different files into a single, multicolumn file. In combination with cut, useful for creating system log files. join Consider this a specialpurpose cousin of paste. This powerful utility allows merging two files in a meaningful fashion, which essentially creates a simple version of a relational database. The join command operates on exactly two files, but pastes together only those lines with a common tagged field (usually a numerical label), and writes the result to stdout. The files to be joined should be sorted according to the tagged field for the matchups to work properly.
File: 1.data 100 Shoes 200 Laces 300 Socks File: 2.data 100 $40.00 200 $1.00 300 $2.00 bash$ join 1.data 2.data File: 1.data 2.data 100 Shoes $40.00 200 Laces $1.00 300 Socks $2.00
The tagged field appears only once in the output. head lists the beginning of a file to stdout (the default is 10 lines, but this can be changed). It has a number of interesting options. Example 129. Which files are scripts?
#!/bin/bash # scriptdetector.sh: Detects scripts within a directory.
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for file in * # Traverse all the files in current directory. do if [[ `head c$TESTCHARS "$file"` = "$SHABANG" ]] # head c2 #! # The 'c' option to "head" outputs a specified #+ number of characters, rather than lines (the default). then echo "File \"$file\" is a script." else echo "File \"$file\" is *not* a script." fi done exit 0
# =================================================================== # # Analysis # # head: # c4 option takes first 4 bytes. # od: # N4 option limits output to 4 bytes. # tu4 option selects unsigned decimal format for output. # sed: # n option, in combination with "p" flag to the "s" command, # outputs only matched lines.
# The author of this script explains the action of 'sed', as follows. # head c4 /dev/urandom | od N4 tu4 | sed ne '1s/.* //p' # > | # Assume output up to "sed" > | # is 0000000 1198195154\n # # # # sed begins reading characters: 0000000 1198195154\n. Here it finds a newline character, so it is ready to process the first line (0000000 1198195154). It looks at its <range><action>s. The first and only one is
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The line number is in the range, so it executes the action: tries to substitute the longest string ending with a space in the line ("0000000 ") with nothing (//), and if it succeeds, prints the result ("p" is a flag to the "s" command here, this is different from the "p" command).
# sed is now ready to continue reading its input. (Note that before # continuing, if n option had not been passed, sed would have printed # the line once again). # # # # Now, sed reads the remainder of the characters, and finds the end of the file. It is now ready to process its 2nd line (which is also numbered '$' as it's the last one). It sees it is not matched by any <range>, so its job is done.
# In few word this sed commmand means: # "On the first line only, remove any character up to the rightmost space, # then print it." # A better way to do this would have been: # sed e 's/.* //;q' # Here, two <range><action>s (could have been written # sed e 's/.* //' e q): # # # range nothing (matches line) nothing (matches line) action s/.* // q (quit)
# Here, sed only reads its first line of input. # It performs both actions, and prints the line (substituted) before quitting # (because of the "q" action) since the "n" option is not passed. # =================================================================== # # A simpler altenative to the above 1line script would be: # head c4 /dev/urandom| od An tu4 exit 0
See also Example 1230. tail lists the end of a file to stdout (the default is 10 lines). Commonly used to keep track of changes to a system logfile, using the f option, which outputs lines appended to the file.
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See also Example 124, Example 1230 and Example 306. grep A multipurpose file search tool that uses regular expressions. It was originally a command/filter in the venerable ed line editor, g/re/p, that is, global regular expression print. grep pattern [file...] Search the target file(s) for occurrences of pattern, where pattern may be literal text or a regular expression.
bash$ grep '[rst]ystem.$' osinfo.txt The GPL governs the distribution of the Linux operating system.
The i option causes a caseinsensitive search. The w option matches only whole words. The l option lists only the files in which matches were found, but not the matching lines. The r (recursive) option searches files in the current working directory and all subdirectories below it. The n option lists the matching lines, together with line numbers.
bash$ grep n Linux osinfo.txt 2:This is a file containing information about Linux. 6:The GPL governs the distribution of the Linux operating system.
The c (count) option gives a numerical count of matches, rather than actually listing the matches.
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# grep cz . # ^ dot # means count (c) zeroseparated (z) items matching "." # that is, nonempty ones (containing at least 1 character). # printf 'a b\nc d\n\n\n\n\n\000\n\000e\000\000\nf' | grep cz . printf 'a b\nc d\n\n\n\n\n\000\n\000e\000\000\nf' | grep cz '$' printf 'a b\nc d\n\n\n\n\n\000\n\000e\000\000\nf' | grep cz '^' # printf 'a b\nc d\n\n\n\n\n\000\n\000e\000\000\nf' | grep c '$' # By default, newline chars (\n) separate items to match. # Note that the z option is GNU "grep" specific.
# 4 # 5 # 5 # 9
# Thanks, S.C.
When invoked with more than one target file given, grep specifies which file contains matches.
bash$ grep Linux osinfo.txt misc.txt osinfo.txt:This is a file containing information about Linux. osinfo.txt:The GPL governs the distribution of the Linux operating system. misc.txt:The Linux operating system is steadily gaining in popularity.
To force grep to show the filename when searching only one target file, simply give /dev/null as the second file.
bash$ grep Linux osinfo.txt /dev/null osinfo.txt:This is a file containing information about Linux. osinfo.txt:The GPL governs the distribution of the Linux operating system.
If there is a successful match, grep returns an exit status of 0, which makes it useful in a condition test in a script, especially in combination with the q option to suppress output.
SUCCESS=0 word=Linux filename=data.file grep q "$word" "$filename" # if grep lookup succeeds
if [ $? eq $SUCCESS ] then echo "$word found in $filename" else echo "$word not found in $filename" fi
Example 306 demonstrates how to use grep to search for a word pattern in a system logfile.
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egrep is the same as grep E. This uses a somewhat different, extended set of regular expressions, which can make the search somewhat more flexible. fgrep is the same as grep F. It does a literal string search (no regular expressions), which allegedly speeds things up a bit. agrep extends the capabilities of grep to approximate matching. The search string may differ by a specified number of characters from the resulting matches. This utility is not part of the core Linux distribution. To search compressed files, use zgrep, zegrep, or zfgrep. These also work on noncompressed files, though slower than plain grep, egrep, fgrep. They are handy for searching through a mixed set of files, some compressed, some not. To search bzipped files, use bzgrep. look The command look works like grep, but does a lookup on a "dictionary", a sorted word list. By default, look searches for a match in /usr/dict/words, but a different dictionary file may be specified.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Example 1213. Checking words in a list for validity
#!/bin/bash # lookup: Does a dictionary lookup on each word in a data file. file=words.data echo while [ "$word" != end ] # Last word in data file. do read word # From data file, because of redirection at end of loop. look $word > /dev/null # Don't want to display lines in dictionary file. lookup=$? # Exit status of 'look' command. if [ "$lookup" eq 0 ] then echo "\"$word\" is valid." else echo "\"$word\" is invalid." fi done <"$file" echo exit 0 # # Code below line will not execute because of "exit" command above. # Redirects stdin to $file, so "reads" come from there. # Data file from which to read words to test.
# Stephane Chazelas proposes the following, more concise alternative: while read word && [[ $word != end ]] do if look "$word" > /dev/null then echo "\"$word\" is valid." else echo "\"$word\" is invalid." fi done <"$file" exit 0
sed, awk Scripting languages especially suited for parsing text files and command output. May be embedded singly or in combination in pipes and shell scripts. sed Noninteractive "stream editor", permits using many ex commands in batch mode. It finds many uses in shell scripts. awk Programmable file extractor and formatter, good for manipulating and/or extracting fields (columns) in structured text files. Its syntax is similar to C. wc wc gives a "word count" on a file or I/O stream:
bash $ wc /usr/doc/sed3.02/README 20 127 838 /usr/doc/sed3.02/README [20 lines 127 words 838 characters]
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Advanced BashScripting Guide wc w gives only the word count. wc l gives only the line count. wc c gives only the character count. wc L gives only the length of the longest line. Using wc to count how many .txt files are in current working directory:
$ ls *.txt | wc l # Will work as long as none of the "*.txt" files have a linefeed in their name. # Alternative ways of doing this are: # find . maxdepth 1 name \*.txt print0 | grep cz . # (shopt s nullglob; set *.txt; echo $#) # Thanks, S.C.
Using wc to total up the size of all the files whose names begin with letters in the range d h
bash$ wc [dh]* | grep total | awk '{print $3}' 71832
Using wc to count the instances of the word "Linux" in the main source file for this book.
bash$ grep Linux absbook.sgml | wc l 50
See also Example 1230 and Example 167. Certain commands include some of the functionality of wc as options.
... | grep foo | wc l # This frequently used construct can be more concisely rendered. ... | grep c foo # Just use the "c" (or "count") option of grep. # Thanks, S.C.
tr character translation filter. Must use quoting and/or brackets, as appropriate. Quotes prevent the shell from reinterpreting the special characters in tr command sequences. Brackets should be quoted to prevent expansion by the shell. Either tr "AZ" "*" <filename or tr AZ \* <filename changes all the uppercase letters in filename to asterisks (writes to stdout). On some systems this may not work, but tr AZ '[**]' will.
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The squeezerepeats (or s) option deletes all but the first instance of a string of consecutive characters. This option is useful for removing excess whitespace.
bash$ echo "XXXXX" | tr squeezerepeats 'X' X
The c "complement" option inverts the character set to match. With this option, tr acts only upon those characters not matching the specified set.
bash$ echo "acfdeb123" | tr c bd + +c+d+b++++
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for filename in * do fname=`basename $filename` n=`echo $fname | tr AZ az` if [ "$fname" != "$n" ] then mv $fname $n fi done exit 0
# Code below this line will not execute because of "exit". ## # To run it, delete script above line. # The above script will not work on filenames containing blanks or newlines. # Stephane Chazelas therefore suggests the following alternative:
for filename in *
# Not necessary to use basename, # since "*" won't return any file containing "/". do n=`echo "$filename/" | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]'` # POSIX char set notation. # Slash added so that trailing newlines are not # removed by command substitution. # Variable substitution: n=${n%/} # Removes trailing slash, added above, from filename. [[ $filename == $n ]] || mv "$filename" "$n" # Checks if filename already lowercase. done exit 0
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key=ETAOINSHRDLUBCFGJMQPVWZYXK # The "key" is nothing more than a scrambled alphabet. # Changing the "key" changes the encryption. # The 'cat "$@"' construction gets input either from stdin or from files. # If using stdin, terminate input with a ControlD. # Otherwise, specify filename as commandline parameter. cat "$@" | tr "az" "AZ" | tr "AZ" "$key" # | to uppercase | encrypt # Will work on lowercase, uppercase, or mixedcase quotes. # Passes nonalphabetic characters through unchanged.
# # # # # # #
Try this script with something like "Nothing so needs reforming as other people's habits." Mark Twain Output is: "CFPHRCS QF CIIOQ MINFMBRCS EQ FPHIM GIFGUI'Q HETRPQ." BEML PZERC
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tr variants The tr utility has two historic variants. The BSD version does not use brackets (tr az AZ), but the SysV one does (tr '[az]' '[AZ]'). The GNU version of tr resembles the BSD one, so quoting letter ranges within brackets is mandatory. fold A filter that wraps lines of input to a specified width. This is especially useful with the s option, which breaks lines at word spaces (see Example 1219 and Example A2). fmt Simpleminded file formatter, used as a filter in a pipe to "wrap" long lines of text output.
See also Example 124. A powerful alternative to fmt is Kamil Toman's par utility, available from http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~amc/Par/. col This deceptively named filter removes reverse line feeds from an input stream. It also attempts to replace whitespace with equivalent tabs. The chief use of col is in filtering the output from certain text processing utilities, such as groff and tbl. column Column formatter. This filter transforms listtype text output into a "prettyprinted" table by inserting tabs at appropriate places.
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colrm Column removal filter. This removes columns (characters) from a file and writes the file, lacking the range of specified columns, back to stdout. colrm 2 4 <filename removes the second through fourth characters from each line of the text file filename. If the file contains tabs or nonprintable characters, this may cause unpredictable behavior. In such cases, consider using expand and unexpand in a pipe preceding colrm. nl Line numbering filter. nl filename lists filename to stdout, but inserts consecutive numbers at the beginning of each nonblank line. If filename omitted, operates on stdin. The output of nl is very similar to cat n, however, by default nl does not list blank lines.
cat n `basename $0` # The difference is that 'cat n' numbers the blank lines. # Note that 'nl ba' will also do so. exit 0
pr Print formatting filter. This will paginate files (or stdout) into sections suitable for hard copy printing or viewing on screen. Various options permit row and column manipulation, joining lines, setting margins, numbering lines, adding page headers, and merging files, among other things. The pr command combines much of the functionality of nl, paste, fold, column, and expand. pr o 5 width=65 fileZZZ | more gives a nice paginated listing to screen of fileZZZ with margins set at 5 and 65. A particularly useful option is d, forcing doublespacing (same effect as sed G). gettext
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Advanced BashScripting Guide A GNU utility for localization and translating the text output of programs into foreign languages. While primarily intended for C programs, gettext also finds use in shell scripts. See the info page. iconv A utility for converting file(s) to a different encoding (character set). Its chief use is for localization. recode Consider this a fancier version of iconv, above. This very versatile utility for converting a file to a different encoding is not part of the standard Linux installation. TeX, gs TeX and Postscript are text markup languages used for preparing copy for printing or formatted video display. TeX is Donald Knuth's elaborate typsetting system. It is often convenient to write a shell script encapsulating all the options and arguments passed to one of these markup languages. Ghostscript (gs) is a GPLed Postscript interpreter. groff, tbl, eqn Yet another text markup and display formatting language is groff. This is the enhanced GNU version of the venerable UNIX roff/troff display and typesetting package. Manpages use groff (see Example A1). The tbl table processing utility is considered part of groff, as its function is to convert table markup into groff commands. The eqn equation processing utility is likewise part of groff, and its function is to convert equation markup into groff commands. lex, yacc The lex lexical analyzer produces programs for pattern matching. This has been replaced by the nonproprietary flex on Linux systems. The yacc utility creates a parser based on a set of specifications. This has been replaced by the nonproprietary bison on Linux systems.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide This option will not work on magnetic tape devices. 4. r append (files to existing archive) 5. A append (tar files to existing archive) 6. t list (contents of existing archive) 7. u update archive 8. d compare archive with specified filesystem 9. z gzip the archive (compress or uncompress, depending on whether combined with the c or x) option 10. j bzip2 the archive It may be difficult to recover data from a corrupted gzipped tar archive. When archiving important files, make multiple backups. shar Shell archiving utility. The files in a shell archive are concatenated without compression, and the resultant archive is essentially a shell script, complete with #!/bin/sh header, and containing all the necessary unarchiving commands. Shar archives still show up in Internet newsgroups, but otherwise shar has been pretty well replaced by tar/gzip. The unshar command unpacks shar archives. ar Creation and manipulation utility for archives, mainly used for binary object file libraries. rpm The Red Hat Package Manager, or rpm utility provides a wrapper for source or binary archives. It includes commands for installing and checking the integrity of packages, among other things. A simple rpm i package_name.rpm usually suffices to install a package, though there are many more options available. An rpm qa gives a complete list of all installed rpm packages on a given system. An rpm qa package_name lists only the package(s) corresponding to package_name.
bash$ rpm qa redhatlogos1.1.31 glibc2.2.413 cracklib2.712 dosfstools2.71 gdbm1.8.010 ksymoops2.4.11 mktemp1.511 perl5.6.017 reiserfsutils3.x.0j2 ...
bash$ rpm qa docbook | grep docbook docbookdtd31sgml1.010 docbookstyledsssl1.643 docbookdtd30sgml1.010 docbookdtd40sgml1.011 docbookutilspdf0.6.92
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cpio This specialized archiving copy command (copy input and output) is rarely seen any more, having been supplanted by tar/gzip. It still has its uses, such as moving a directory tree.
TEMPFILE=$$.cpio
# Tempfile with "unique" name. # $$ is process ID of script. # Converts rpm archive into cpio archive. # Unpacks cpio archive. # Deletes cpio archive.
# Exercise: # Add check for whether 1) "targetfile" exists and #+ 2) it is really an rpm archive. # Hint: parse output of 'file' command.
Advanced BashScripting Guide gzip The standard GNU/UNIX compression utility, replacing the inferior and proprietary compress. The corresponding decompression command is gunzip, which is the equivalent of gzip d. The zcat filter decompresses a gzipped file to stdout, as possible input to a pipe or redirection. This is, in effect, a cat command that works on compressed files (including files processed with the older compress utility). The zcat command is equivalent to gzip dc. On some commercial UNIX systems, zcat is a synonym for uncompress c, and will not work on gzipped files. See also Example 77. bzip2 An alternate compression utility, usually more efficient (but slower) than gzip, especially on large files. The corresponding decompression command is bunzip2. Newer versions of tar have been patched with bzip2 support. compress, uncompress This is an older, proprietary compression utility found in commercial UNIX distributions. The more efficient gzip has largely replaced it. Linux distributions generally include a compress workalike for compatibility, although gunzip can unarchive files treated with compress. The znew command transforms compressed files into gzipped ones. sq Yet another compression utility, a filter that works only on sorted ASCII word lists. It uses the standard invocation syntax for a filter, sq < inputfile > outputfile. Fast, but not nearly as efficient as gzip. The corresponding uncompression filter is unsq, invoked like sq. The output of sq may be piped to gzip for further compression. zip, unzip Crossplatform file archiving and compression utility compatible with DOS pkzip.exe. "Zipped" archives seem to be a more acceptable medium of exchange on the Internet than "tarballs". unarc, unarj, unrar These Linux utilities permit unpacking archives compressed with the DOS arc.exe, arj.exe, and rar.exe programs. File Information file A utility for identifying file types. The command file filename will return a file specification for filename, such as ascii text or data. It references the magic numbers found in /usr/share/magic, /etc/magic, or /usr/lib/magic, depending on the Linux/UNIX distribution. The f option causes file to run in batch mode, to read from a designated file a list of filenames to analyze. The z option, when used on a compressed target file, forces an attempt to analyze the uncompressed file type.
bash$ file test.tar.gz
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bash file z test.tar.gz test.tar.gz: GNU tar archive (gzip compressed data, deflated, last modified: Sun Sep 16 13
# Rather cryptic sed script: # sed ' /^\/\*/d /.*\/\*/d ' $1 # # Easy to understand if you take several hours to learn sed fundamentals.
# Need to add one more line to the sed script to deal with #+ case where line of code has a comment following it on same line. # This is left as a nontrivial exercise. # Also, the above code deletes lines with a "*/" or "/*", # not a desirable result. exit 0
# # Code below this line will not execute because of 'exit 0' above.
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exit 0
which which commandxxx gives the full path to "commandxxx". This is useful for finding out whether a particular command or utility is installed on the system. $bash which rm
/usr/bin/rm
whereis Similar to which, above, whereis commandxxx gives the full path to "commandxxx", but also to its manpage. $bash whereis rm
rm: /bin/rm /usr/share/man/man1/rm.1.bz2
whatis whatis filexxx looks up "filexxx" in the whatis database. This is useful for identifying system commands and important configuration files. Consider it a simplified man command. $bash whatis whatis
whatis (1) search the whatis database for complete words
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exit 0 # You may wish to redirect output of this script, like so: # ./what.sh >>whatis.db # or view it a page at a time on stdout, # ./what.sh | less
See also Example 103. vdir Show a detailed directory listing. The effect is similar to ls l. This is one of the GNU fileutils.
bash$ vdir total 10 rwrr rwrr rwrr bash ls l total 10 rwrr rwrr rwrr
4034 Jul 18 22:04 data1.xrolo 4602 May 25 13:58 data1.xrolo.bak 877 Dec 17 2000 employment.xrolo
4034 Jul 18 22:04 data1.xrolo 4602 May 25 13:58 data1.xrolo.bak 877 Dec 17 2000 employment.xrolo
locate, slocate The locate command searches for files using a database stored for just that purpose. The slocate command is the secure version of locate (which may be aliased to slocate). $bash locate hickson
/usr/lib/xephem/catalogs/hickson.edb
strings Use the strings command to find printable strings in a binary or data file. It will list sequences of printable characters found in the target file. This might be handy for a quick 'n dirty examination of a core dump or for looking at an unknown graphic image file (strings imagefile | more might show something like JFIF, which would identify the file as a jpeg graphic). In a script, you would probably parse the output of strings with grep or sed. See Example 107 and Example 109.
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MINSTRLEN=3 WORDFILE=/usr/share/dict/linux.words
# # # #+ #+
Minimum string length. Dictionary file. May specify a different word list file of format 1 word per line.
wlist=`strings "$1" | tr AZ az | tr '[:space:]' Z | \ tr cs '[:alpha:]' Z | tr s '\173\377' Z | tr Z ' '` # Translate output of 'strings' command with multiple passes of 'tr'. # "tr AZ az" converts to lowercase. # "tr '[:space:]'" converts whitespace characters to Z's. # "tr cs '[:alpha:]' Z" converts nonalphabetic characters to Z's, #+ and squeezes multiple consecutive Z's. # "tr s '\173\377' Z" converts all characters past 'z' to Z's #+ and squeezes multiple consecutive Z's, #+ which gets rid of all the weird characters that the previous #+ translation failed to deal with. # Finally, "tr Z ' '" converts all those Z's to whitespace, #+ which will be seen as word separators in the loop below. # Note the technique of feeding the output of 'tr' back to itself, #+ but with different arguments and/or options on each pass.
# # # #
Important: $wlist must not be quoted here. "$wlist" does not work. Why?
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exit 0
Comparison diff, patch diff: flexible file comparison utility. It compares the target files linebyline sequentially. In some applications, such as comparing word dictionaries, it may be helpful to filter the files through sort and uniq before piping them to diff. diff file1 file2 outputs the lines in the files that differ, with carets showing which file each particular line belongs to. The sidebyside option to diff outputs each compared file, line by line, in separate columns, with nonmatching lines marked. The c and u options likewise make the output of the command easier to interpret. There are available various fancy frontends for diff, such as spiff, wdiff, xdiff, and mgdiff. The diff command returns an exit status of 0 if the compared files are identical, and 1 if they differ. This permits use of diff in a test construct within a shell script (see below). A common use for diff is generating difference files to be used with patch The e option outputs files suitable for ed or ex scripts. patch: flexible versioning utility. Given a difference file generated by diff, patch can upgrade a previous version of a package to a newer version. It is much more convenient to distribute a relatively small "diff" file than the entire body of a newly revised package. Kernel "patches" have become the preferred method of distributing the frequent releases of the Linux kernel.
patch p1 <patchfile # Takes all the changes listed in 'patchfile' # and applies them to the files referenced therein. # This upgrades to a newer version of the package.
The diff command can also recursively compare directories (for the filenames present).
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Use zdiff to compare gzipped files. diff3 An extended version of diff that compares three files at a time. This command returns an exit value of 0 upon successful execution, but unfortunately this gives no information about the results of the comparison.
bash$ diff3 file1 file2 file3 ==== 1:1c This is line 1 of "file1". 2:1c This is line 1 of "file2". 3:1c This is line 1 of "file3"
sdiff Compare and/or edit two files in order to merge them into an output file. Because of its interactive nature, this command would find little use in a script. cmp The cmp command is a simpler version of diff, above. Whereas diff reports the differences between two files, cmp merely shows at what point they differ. Like diff, cmp returns an exit status of 0 if the compared files are identical, and 1 if they differ. This permits use in a test construct within a shell script.
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if [ $? eq 0 ] # Test exit status of "cmp" command. then echo "File \"$1\" is identical to file \"$2\"." else echo "File \"$1\" differs from file \"$2\"." fi exit 0
Use zcmp on gzipped files. comm Versatile file comparison utility. The files must be sorted for this to be useful. comm options firstfile secondfile comm file1 file2 outputs three columns: column 1 = lines unique to file1 column 2 = lines unique to file2 column 3 = lines common to both. The options allow suppressing output of one or more columns. 1 suppresses column 1 2 suppresses column 2 3 suppresses column 3 12 suppresses both columns 1 and 2, etc. Utilities basename Strips the path information from a file name, printing only the file name. The construction basename $0 lets the script know its name, that is, the name it was invoked by. This can be used for "usage" messages if, for example a script is called with missing arguments:
echo "Usage: `basename $0` arg1 arg2 ... argn"
dirname Strips the basename from a filename, printing only the path information. basename and dirname can operate on any arbitrary string. The argument does not need to refer to an existing file, or even be a filename for that matter (see Example A8).
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split Utility for splitting a file into smaller chunks. Usually used for splitting up large files in order to back them up on floppies or preparatory to emailing or uploading them. sum, cksum, md5sum These are utilities for generating checksums. A checksum is a number mathematically calculated from the contents of a file, for the purpose of checking its integrity. A script might refer to a list of checksums for security purposes, such as ensuring that the contents of key system files have not been altered or corrupted. For security applications, use the 128bit md5sum (message digest checksum) command.
bash$ cksum /boot/vmlinuz 1670054224 804083 /boot/vmlinuz
/boot/vmlinuz
Note that cksum also shows the size, in bytes, of the target file.
set_up_database () { echo ""$directory"" > "$dbfile" # Write directory name to first line of file. md5sum "$directory"/* >> "$dbfile" # Append md5 checksums and filenames. } check_database () { local n=0 local filename local checksum # # # This file check should be unnecessary, #+ but better safe than sorry. if [ ! r "$dbfile" ]
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# Clear screen.
# # if [ ! r "$dbfile" ] # Need to create database file? then echo "Setting up database file, \""$directory"/"$dbfile"\"."; echo set_up_database fi # # check_database # Do the actual work.
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See also Example A20 for a creative use of the md5sum command. shred Securely erase a file by overwriting it multiple times with random bit patterns before deleting it. This command has the same effect as Example 1242, but does it in a more thorough and elegant manner. This is one of the GNU fileutils. Advanced forensic technology may still be able to recover the contents of a file, even after application of shred. Encoding and Encryption uuencode This utility encodes binary files into ASCII characters, making them suitable for transmission in the body of an email message or in a newsgroup posting. uudecode This reverses the encoding, decoding uuencoded files back into the original binaries.
for File in * # Test all the files in the current working directory... do search1=`head $lines $File | grep begin | wc w` search2=`tail $lines $File | grep end | wc w` # Uuencoded files have a "begin" near the beginning, #+ and an "end" near the end. if [ "$search1" gt 0 ] then if [ "$search2" gt 0 ] then echo "uudecoding $File " uudecode $File fi fi done # Note that running this script upon itself fools it #+ into thinking it is a uuencoded file, #+ because it contains both "begin" and "end". # Exercise:
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The fold s command may be useful (possibly in a pipe) to process long uudecoded text messages downloaded from Usenet newsgroups. mimencode, mmencode The mimencode and mmencode commands process multimediaencoded email attachments. Although mail user agents (such as pine or kmail) normally handle this automatically, these particular utilities permit manipulating such attachments manually from the command line or in a batch by means of a shell script. crypt At one time, this was the standard UNIX file encryption utility. [31] Politically motivated government regulations prohibiting the export of encryption software resulted in the disappearance of crypt from much of the UNIX world, and it is still missing from most Linux distributions. Fortunately, programmers have come up with a number of decent alternatives to it, among them the author's very own cruft (see Example A5). Miscellaneous mktemp Create a temporary file with a "unique" filename.
PREFIX=filename tempfile=`mktemp $PREFIX.XXXXXX` # ^^^^^^ Need at least 6 placeholders #+ in the filename template. echo "tempfile name = $tempfile" # tempfile name = filename.QA2ZpY # or something similar...
make Utility for building and compiling binary packages. This can also be used for any set of operations that is triggered by incremental changes in source files.
The make command checks a Makefile, a list of file dependencies and operations to be carried out. install Special purpose file copying command, similar to cp, but capable of setting permissions and attributes of the copied files. This command seems tailormade for installing software packages, and as such it shows up frequently in Makefiles (in the make install : section). It could likewise find use in installation scripts. dos2unix This utility, written by Benjamin Lin and collaborators, converts DOSformatted text files (lines terminated by CRLF) to UNIX format (lines terminated by LF only), and viceversa. ptx The ptx [targetfile] command outputs a permuted index (crossreference list) of the targetfile. This may be further filtered and formatted in a pipe, if necessary. more, less Pagers that display a text file or stream to stdout, one screenful at a time. These may be used to filter the output of a script.
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ipcalc Carries out IP address lookups. With the h option, ipcalc does a reverse DNS lookup, finding the name of the host (server) from the IP address.
bash$ ipcalc h 202.92.42.236 HOSTNAME=surfacemail.com
nslookup Do an Internet "name server lookup" on a host by IP address. This is essentially equivalent to ipcalc h or dig x . The command may be run either interactively or noninteractively, i.e., from within a script. The nslookup command has allegedly been "deprecated," but it still has its uses.
bash$ nslookup sil 66.97.104.180 nslookup kuhleersparnis.ch Server: 135.116.137.2 Address: 135.116.137.2#53 Nonauthoritative answer: Name: kuhleersparnis.ch
dig Similar to nslookup, do an Internet "name server lookup" on a host. May be run either interactively or noninteractively, i.e., from within a script. Compare the output of dig x with ipcalc h and nslookup.
bash$ dig x 81.9.6.2 ;; Got answer: ;; >>HEADER<< opcode: QUERY, status: NXDOMAIN, id: 11649 ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 0, AUTHORITY: 1, ADDITIONAL: 0 ;; QUESTION SECTION: ;2.6.9.81.inaddr.arpa. ;; AUTHORITY SECTION: 6.9.81.inaddr.arpa. 3600 2002031705 900 600 86400 3600
IN
PTR
IN
SOA
ns.eltel.net. noc.eltel.net.
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traceroute Trace the route taken by packets sent to a remote host. This command works within a LAN, WAN, or over the Internet. The remote host may be specified by an IP address. The output of this command may be filtered by grep or sed in a pipe.
bash$ traceroute 81.9.6.2 traceroute to 81.9.6.2 (81.9.6.2), 30 hops max, 38 byte packets 1 tc43.xjbnnbrb.com (136.30.178.8) 191.303 ms 179.400 ms 179.767 ms 2 or0.xjbnnbrb.com (136.30.178.1) 179.536 ms 179.534 ms 169.685 ms 3 192.168.11.101 (192.168.11.101) 189.471 ms 189.556 ms * ...
ping Broadcast an "ICMP ECHO_REQUEST" packet to other machines, either on a local or remote network. This is a diagnostic tool for testing network connections, and it should be used with caution. A successful ping returns an exit status of 0. This can be tested for in a script.
bash$ ping localhost PING localhost.localdomain (127.0.0.1) from 127.0.0.1 : 56(84) bytes of data. Warning: time of day goes back, taking countermeasures. 64 bytes from localhost.localdomain (127.0.0.1): icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=709 usec 64 bytes from localhost.localdomain (127.0.0.1): icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=286 usec localhost.localdomain ping statistics 2 packets transmitted, 2 packets received, 0% packet loss roundtrip min/avg/max/mdev = 0.286/0.497/0.709/0.212 ms
whois Perform a DNS (Domain Name System) lookup. The h option permits specifying which whois server to query. See Example 46. finger Retrieve information about users on a network. Optionally, this command can display a user's ~/.plan, ~/.project, and ~/.forward files, if present.
bash$ finger Login Name bozo Bozo Bozeman bozo Bozo Bozeman bozo Bozo Bozeman
Idle 8
Office Phone
bash$ finger bozo Login: bozo Directory: /home/bozo On since Fri Aug 31 20:13 On since Fri Aug 31 20:13 On since Fri Aug 31 20:13 On since Fri Aug 31 20:31 No mail. No Plan.
on on on on
Name: Bozo Bozeman Shell: /bin/bash tty1 1 hour 38 minutes idle pts/0 12 seconds idle pts/1 pts/2 1 hour 16 minutes idle
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Out of security considerations, many networks disable finger and its associated daemon. [32] vrfy Verify an Internet email address. Remote Host Access sx, rx The sx and rx command set serves to transfer files to and from a remote host using the xmodem protocol. These are generally part of a communications package, such as minicom. sz, rz The sz and rz command set serves to transfer files to and from a remote host using the zmodem protocol. Zmodem has certain advantages over xmodem, such as faster transmission rate and resumption of interrupted file transfers. Like sx and rx, these are generally part of a communications package. ftp Utility and protocol for uploading / downloading files to or from a remote host. An ftp session can be automated in a script (see Example 176, Example A5, and Example A14). uucp UNIX to UNIX copy. This is a communications package for transferring files between UNIX servers. A shell script is an effective way to handle a uucp command sequence. Since the advent of the Internet and email, uucp seems to have faded into obscurity, but it still exists and remains perfectly workable in situations where an Internet connection is not available or appropriate. cu Call Up a remote system and connect as a simple terminal. This command is part of the uucp package. It is a sort of dumbeddown version of telnet. telnet Utility and protocol for connecting to a remote host. The telnet protocol contains security holes and should therefore probably be avoided. wget The wget utility noninteractively retrieves or downloads files from a Web or ftp site. It works well in a script.
wget p http://www.xyz23.com/file01.html wget r ftp://ftp.xyz24.net/~bozo/project_files/ o $SAVEFILE
lynx The lynx Web and file browser can be used inside a script (with the dump option) to retrieve a file from a Web or ftp site noninteractively.
lynx dump http://www.xyz23.com/file01.html >$SAVEFILE
rlogin Remote login, initates a session on a remote host. This command has security issues, so use ssh instead. rsh Remote shell, executes command(s) on a remote host. This has security issues, so use ssh instead. rcp Remote copy, copies files between two different networked machines. Using rcp and similar Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands 194
Advanced BashScripting Guide utilities with security implications in a shell script may not be advisable. Consider, instead, using ssh or an expect script. ssh Secure shell, logs onto a remote host and executes commands there. This secure replacement for telnet, rlogin, rcp, and rsh uses identity authentication and encryption. See its manpage for details. Local Network write This is a utility for terminaltoterminal communication. It allows sending lines from your terminal (console or xterm) to that of another user. The mesg command may, of course, be used to disable write access to a terminal Since write is interactive, it would not normally find use in a script. Mail mail Send or read email messages. This strippeddown commandline mail client works fine as a command embedded in a script.
mailto Similar to the mail command, mailto sends email messages from the command line or in a script. However, mailto also permits sending MIME (multimedia) messages. Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands 195
Advanced BashScripting Guide vacation This utility automatically replies to emails that the intended recipient is on vacation and temporarily unavailable. This runs on a network, in conjunction with sendmail, and is not applicable to a dialup POPmail account.
Issuing a tput cup X Y moves the cursor to the (X,Y) coordinates in the current terminal. A clear to erase the terminal screen would normally precede this. Note that stty offers a more powerful command set for controlling a terminal. infocmp This command prints out extensive information about the current terminal. It references the terminfo database.
bash$ infocmp # Reconstructed via infocmp from file: /usr/share/terminfo/r/rxvt rxvt|rxvt terminal emulator (X Window System), am, bce, eo, km, mir, msgr, xenl, xon, colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, pairs#64, acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~, bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l, clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=^M, ...
reset Reset terminal parameters and clear text screen. As with clear, the cursor and prompt reappear in the upper lefthand corner of the terminal. clear The clear command simply clears the text screen at the console or in an xterm. The prompt and cursor reappear at the upper lefthand corner of the screen or xterm window. This command may be used either at the command line or in a script. See Example 1025. script This utility records (saves to a file) all the user keystrokes at the command line in a console or an xterm window. This, in effect, creates a record of a session.
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bc Bash can't handle floating point calculations, and it lacks operators for certain important mathematical functions. Fortunately, bc comes to the rescue. Not just a versatile, arbitrary precision calculation utility, bc offers many of the facilities of a programming language. bc has a syntax vaguely resembling C. Since it is a fairly wellbehaved UNIX utility, and may therefore be used in a pipe, bc comes in handy in scripts. Here is a simple template for using bc to calculate a script variable. This uses command substitution.
variable=$(echo "OPTIONS; OPERATIONS" | bc)
# This is a modification of code in the "mcalc" (mortgage calculator) package, #+ by Jeff Schmidt and Mendel Cooper (yours truly, the author of this document). # http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/apps/financial/mcalc1.6.tar.gz [15k] echo echo "Given the principal, interest rate, and term of a mortgage," echo "calculate the monthly payment." bottom=1.0 echo echo read echo read echo read
n "Enter principal (no commas) " principal n "Enter interest rate (percent) " interest_r n "Enter term (months) " term
interest_r=$(echo "scale=9; $interest_r/100.0" | bc) # Convert to decimal. # "scale" determines how many decimal places.
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top=$(echo "scale=9; $principal*$interest_rate^$term" | bc) echo; echo "Please be patient. This may take a while." let "months = $term 1" # ==================================================================== for ((x=$months; x > 0; x)) do bot=$(echo "scale=9; $interest_rate^$x" | bc) bottom=$(echo "scale=9; $bottom+$bot" | bc) # bottom = $(($bottom + $bot")) done # # Rick Boivie pointed out a more efficient implementation #+ of the above loop, which decreases computation time by 2/3. # for ((x=1; x <= $months; x++)) # do # bottom=$(echo "scale=9; $bottom * $interest_rate + 1" | bc) # done
# And then he came up with an even more efficient alternative, #+ one that cuts down the run time by about 95%! # bottom=`{ # echo "scale=9; bottom=$bottom; interest_rate=$interest_rate" # for ((x=1; x <= $months; x++)) # do # echo 'bottom = bottom * interest_rate + 1' # done # echo 'bottom' # } | bc` # Embeds a 'for loop' within command substitution. # ==================================================================== # let "payment = $top/$bottom" payment=$(echo "scale=2; $top/$bottom" | bc) # Use two decimal places for dollars and cents. echo echo "monthly payment = \$$payment" echo
input to permit commas in principal amount. input to permit interest to be entered as percent or decimal. are really ambitious, this script to print complete amortization tables.
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Usage () { echo "$PN print number to different bases, $VER (stv '95) usage: $PN [number ...] If no number is given, the numbers are read from standard input. A number may be binary (base 2) starting with 0b (i.e. 0b1100) octal (base 8) starting with 0 (i.e. 014) hexadecimal (base 16) starting with 0x (i.e. 0xc) decimal otherwise (i.e. 12)" >&2 exit $NOARGS } # ==> Function to print usage message. Msg () { for i # ==> in [list] missing. do echo "$PN: $i" >&2 done } Fatal () { Msg "$@"; exit 66; } PrintBases () { # Determine base of the number for i # ==> in [list] missing... do # ==> so operates on command line arg(s). case "$i" in 0b*) ibase=2;; # binary 0x*|[af]*|[AF]*) ibase=16;; # hexadecimal 0*) ibase=8;; # octal [19]*) ibase=10;; # decimal *) Msg "illegal number $i ignored" continue;; esac # Remove prefix, convert hex digits to uppercase (bc needs this) number=`echo "$i" | sed e 's:^0[bBxX]::' | tr '[af]' '[AF]'` # ==> Uses ":" as sed separator, rather than "/". # Convert number to decimal dec=`echo "ibase=$ibase; $number" | bc`
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# Print all conversions in one line. # ==> 'here document' feeds command list to 'bc'. echo `bc <<! obase=16; "hex="; $dec obase=10; "dec="; $dec obase=8; "oct="; $dec obase=2; "bin="; $dec ! ` | sed e 's: : done } while [ $# gt 0 ] do case "$1" in ) shift; break;; h) Usage;; # ==> Help message. *) Usage;; *) break;; # first number esac # ==> More error checking for illegal input would be useful. shift done if [ $# gt 0 ] then PrintBases "$@" else while read line do PrintBases $line done fi :g'
An alternate method of invoking bc involves using a here document embedded within a command substitution block. This is especially appropriate when a script needs to pass a list of options and commands to bc.
variable=`bc << LIMIT_STRING options statements operations LIMIT_STRING ` ...or...
200
# 362.56
# $( ... ) notation also works. v1=23.53 v2=17.881 v3=83.501 v4=171.63 var2=$(bc << EOF scale = 4 a = ( $v1 + $v2 ) b = ( $v3 * $v4 ) a * b + 15.35 EOF ) echo $var2 # 593487.8452
var3=$(bc l << EOF scale = 9 s ( 1.7 ) EOF ) # Returns the sine of 1.7 radians. # The "l" option calls the 'bc' math library. echo $var3 # .991664810
# Now, try it in a function... hyp= # Declare global variable. hypotenuse () # Calculate hypotenuse of a right triangle. { hyp=$(bc l << EOF scale = 9 sqrt ( $1 * $1 + $2 * $2 ) EOF ) # Unfortunately, can't return floating point values from a Bash function. } hypotenuse 3.68 7.31 echo "hypotenuse = $hyp"
# 8.184039344
exit 0
Example 1235. Calculating PI Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands 201
DIMENSION=10000
# Length of each side of the plot of land. # Also sets ceiling for random integers generated. # Fire this many shots. # 10000 or more would be better, but would take too long. # Scaling factor to approximate PI.
MAXSHOTS=1000 PMULTIPLIER=4.0
get_random () { SEED=$(head 1 /dev/urandom | od N 1 | awk '{ print $2 }') RANDOM=$SEED # From "seedingrandom.sh" #+ example script. let "rnum = $RANDOM % $DIMENSION" # Range less than 10000. echo $rnum } distance= # Declare global variable. hypotenuse () # Calculate hypotenuse of a right triangle. { # From "altbc.sh" example. distance=$(bc l << EOF scale = 0 sqrt ( $1 * $1 + $2 * $2 ) EOF ) # Setting "scale" to zero rounds down result to integer value, #+ a necessary compromise in this script.
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# main() { # Initialize variables. shots=0 splashes=0 thuds=0 Pi=0 while [ "$shots" lt do "$MAXSHOTS" ] # Main loop.
xCoord=$(get_random) yCoord=$(get_random) hypotenuse $xCoord $yCoord ((shots++)) printf printf printf printf "#%4d " $shots "Xc = %4d " $xCoord "Yc = %4d " $yCoord "Distance = %5d " $distance
if [ "$distance" le "$DIMENSION" ] then echo n "SPLASH! " ((splashes++)) else echo n "THUD! " ((thuds++)) fi Pi=$(echo "scale=9; $PMULTIPLIER*$splashes/$shots" | bc) # Multiply ratio by 4.0. echo n "PI ~ $Pi" echo done echo echo "After $shots shots, PI looks like approximately $Pi." # Tends to run a bit high... # Probably due to roundoff error and imperfect randomness of $RANDOM. echo # } exit 0 # #+ # # # # #+ One might well wonder whether a shell script is appropriate for an application as complex and computationintensive as a simulation. There 1) As 2) To it are at least two justifications. a proof of concept: to show it can be done. prototype and test the algorithms before rewriting in a compiled highlevel language.
Advanced BashScripting Guide The dc (desk calculator) utility is stackoriented and uses RPN ("Reverse Polish Notation"). Like bc, it has much of the power of a programming language. Most persons avoid dc, since it requires nonintuitive RPN input. Yet it has its uses.
if [ z "$1" ] then echo "Usage: $0 number" exit $E_NOARGS # Need a command line argument. fi # Exercise: add argument validity checking.
hexcvt () { if [ z "$1" ] then echo 0 return # "Return" 0 if no arg passed to function. fi echo ""$1" "$BASE" o p" | dc # "o" sets radix (numerical base) of output. # "p" prints the top of stack. # See 'man dc' for other options. return } hexcvt "$1" exit 0
Studying the info page for dc gives some insight into its intricacies. However, there seems to be a small, select group of dc wizards who delight in showing off their mastery of this powerful, but arcane utility.
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awk Yet another way of doing floating point math in a script is using awk's builtin math functions in a shell wrapper.
if [ $# ne "$ARGS" ] # Test number of arguments to script. then echo "Usage: `basename $0` side_1 side_2" exit $E_BADARGS fi
AWKSCRIPT=' { printf( "%3.7f\n", sqrt($1*$1 + $2*$2) ) } ' # command(s) / parameters passed to awk
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Advanced BashScripting Guide The normal separator character between each integer is a newline, but this can be changed with the s option.
bash$ seq 5 1 2 3 4 5
COUNT=80
# Yes, 'seq' may also take a replaceable parameter. for a in $( seq $COUNT )
for a in `seq $COUNT` # or do echo n "$a " done # 1 2 3 4 5 ... 80 echo; echo BEGIN=75 END=80
for a in `seq $BEGIN $END` # Giving "seq" two arguments starts the count at the first one, #+ and continues until it reaches the second. do echo n "$a " done # 75 76 77 78 79 80 echo; echo BEGIN=45
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getopt The getopt command parses commandline options preceded by a dash. This external command corresponds to the getopts Bash builtin, but it is not nearly as versatile.
207
runparts The runparts command [33] executes all the scripts in a target directory, sequentially in ASCIIsorted filename order. Of course, the scripts need to have execute permission. The crond daemon invokes runparts to run the scripts in the /etc/cron.* directories. yes In its default behavior the yes command feeds a continuous string of the character y followed by a line feed to stdout. A controlc terminates the run. A different output string may be specified, as in yes different string, which would continually output different string to stdout. One might well ask the purpose of this. From the command line or in a script, the output of yes can be redirected or piped into a program expecting user input. In effect, this becomes a sort of poor man's version of expect. yes | fsck /dev/hda1 runs fsck noninteractively (careful!). yes | rm r dirname has same effect as rm rf dirname (careful!). Caution advised when piping yes to a potentially dangerous system command, such as fsck or fdisk. It may have unintended sideeffects. banner Prints arguments as a large vertical banner to stdout, using an ASCII character (default '#'). This may be redirected to a printer for hardcopy. printenv Show all the environmental variables set for a particular user.
bash$ printenv | grep HOME HOME=/home/bozo
lp The lp and lpr commands send file(s) to the print queue, to be printed as hard copy. [34] These commands trace the origin of their names to the line printers of another era. bash$ lp file1.txt or bash lp <file1.txt It is often useful to pipe the formatted output from pr to lp. bash$ pr options file1.txt | lp Formatting packages, such as groff and Ghostscript may send their output directly to lp. bash$ groff Tascii file.tr | lp bash$ gs options | lp file.ps Related commands are lpq, for viewing the print queue, and lprm, for removing jobs from the print queue. Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands 208
Advanced BashScripting Guide tee [UNIX borrows an idea here from the plumbing trade.] This is a redirection operator, but with a difference. Like the plumber's "tee," it permits "siponing off" to a file the output of a command or commands within a pipe, but without affecting the result. This is useful for printing an ongoing process to a file or paper, perhaps to keep track of it for debugging purposes.
tee |> to file | ===============|=============== command>|operator>> result of command(s) ===============================
(The file check.file contains the concatenated sorted "listfiles", before the duplicate lines are removed by uniq.) mkfifo This obscure command creates a named pipe, a temporary firstinfirstout buffer for transferring data between processes. [35] Typically, one process writes to the FIFO, and the other reads from it. See Example A16. pathchk This command checks the validity of a filename. If the filename exceeds the maximum allowable length (255 characters) or one or more of the directories in its path is not searchable, then an error message results. Unfortunately, pathchk does not return a recognizable error code, and it is therefore pretty much useless in a script. Consider instead the file test operators. dd This is the somewhat obscure and much feared "data duplicator" command. Originally a utility for exchanging data on magnetic tapes between UNIX minicomputers and IBM mainframes, this command still has its uses. The dd command simply copies a file (or stdin/stdout), but with conversions. Possible conversions are ASCII/EBCDIC, [36] upper/lower case, swapping of byte pairs between input and output, and skipping and/or truncating the head or tail of the input file. A dd help lists the conversion and other options that this powerful utility takes.
# Exercising 'dd'. n=3 p=5 input_file=project.txt output_file=log.txt dd if=$input_file of=$output_file bs=1 skip=$((n1)) count=$((pn+1)) 2> /dev/null # Extracts characters n to p from file $input_file.
echo n "hello world" | dd cbs=1 conv=unblock 2> /dev/null # Echoes "hello world" vertically.
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keypresses=4
# Disable canonical mode. # Disable local echo. keys=$(dd bs=1 count=$keypresses 2> /dev/null) # 'dd' uses stdin, if "if" not specified. stty "$old_tty_setting" # Restore old terminal settings.
echo "You pressed the \"$keys\" keys." # Thanks, S.C. for showing the way. exit 0
The dd command can copy raw data and disk images to and from devices, such as floppies and tape drives (Example A6). A common use is creating boot floppies. dd if=kernelimage of=/dev/fd0H1440 Similarly, dd can copy the entire contents of a floppy, even one formatted with a "foreign" OS, to the hard drive as an image file. dd if=/dev/fd0 of=/home/bozo/projects/floppy.img Other applications of dd include initializing temporary swap files (Example 292) and ramdisks (Example 293). It can even do a lowlevel copy of an entire hard drive partition, although this is not necessarily recommended. People (with presumably nothing better to do with their time) are constantly thinking of interesting applications of dd.
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if [ z "$1" ] # No filename specified. then echo "Usage: `basename $0` filename" exit $E_BADARGS fi file=$1 if [ ! e "$file" ] then echo "File \"$file\" not found." exit $E_NOT_FOUND fi echo; echo n "Are you absolutely sure you want to blot out \"$file\" (y/n)? " read answer case "$answer" in [nN]) echo "Changed your mind, huh?" exit $E_CHANGED_MIND ;; *) echo "Blotting out file \"$file\".";; esac
while [ "$pass_count" le "$PASSES" ] do echo "Pass #$pass_count" sync # Flush buffers. dd if=/dev/urandom of=$file bs=$BLOCKSIZE count=$flength # Fill with random bytes. sync # Flush buffers again. dd if=/dev/zero of=$file bs=$BLOCKSIZE count=$flength # Fill with zeros. sync # Flush buffers yet again. let "pass_count += 1" echo done
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# #+ #+ #+
This is a fairly secure, if inefficient and slow method of thoroughly "shredding" a file. The "shred" command, part of the GNU "fileutils" package, does the same thing, but more efficiently.
# The file cannot not be "undeleted" or retrieved by normal methods. # However... #+ this simple method will likely *not* withstand forensic analysis.
# Tom Vier's "wipe" filedeletion package does a much more thorough job #+ of file shredding than this simple script. # http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/utils/file/wipe2.0.0.tar.bz2 # For an indepth analysis on the topic of file deletion and security, #+ see Peter Gutmann's paper, #+ "Secure Deletion of Data From Magnetic and SolidState Memory". # http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/secure_del.html
exit 0
od The od, or octal dump filter converts input (or files) to octal (base8) or other bases. This is useful for viewing or processing binary data files or otherwise unreadable system device files, such as /dev/urandom, and as a filter for binary data. See Example 926 and Example 1210. hexdump Performs a hexadecimal, octal, decimal, or ASCII dump of a binary file. This command is the rough equivalent of od, above, but not nearly as useful. objdump Displays an object file or binary executable in either hexadecimal form or as a disassembled listing (with the d option).
bash$ objdump d /bin/ls /bin/ls: file format elf32i386 Disassembly of section .init: 080490bc <.init>: 80490bc: 55 80490bd: 89 e5 . . .
push mov
%ebp %esp,%ebp
mcookie This command generates a "magic cookie", a 128bit (32character) pseudorandom hexadecimal number, normally used as an authorization "signature" by the X server. This also available for use in a script as a "quick 'n dirty" random number.
random000=`mcookie | sed e '2p'` # Uses 'sed' to strip off extraneous characters.
Of course, a script could use md5 for the same purpose. Chapter 12. External Filters, Programs and Commands 212
The mcookie command gives yet another way to generate a "unique" filename.
temp filename generator # 32character magic cookie. # Arbitrary position in magic cookie string. # Get $LEN consecutive characters. # This is, after all, a "temp" file. # For more "uniqueness," generate the filename prefix #+ using the same method as the suffix, below.
suffix=${BASE_STR:POS:LEN} # Extract a 5character string, starting at position 11. temp_filename=$prefix.$suffix # Construct the filename. echo "Temp filename = "$temp_filename"" # sh tempfilename.sh # Temp filename = temp.e19ea exit 0
units This utility converts between different units of measure. While normally invoked in interactive mode, units may find use in a script.
convert_units () # Takes as arguments the units to convert. { cf=$(units "$1" "$2" | sed silent e '1p' | awk '{print $2}') # Strip off everything except the actual conversion factor. echo "$cf" } Unit1=miles Unit2=meters cfactor=`convert_units $Unit1 $Unit2` quantity=3.73 result=$(echo $quantity*$cfactor | bc) echo "There are $result $Unit2 in $quantity $Unit1."
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m4 A hidden treasure, m4 is a powerful macro processing filter, [37] virtually a complete language. Although originally written as a preprocessor for RatFor, m4 turned out to be useful as a standalone utility. In fact, m4 combines some of the functionality of eval, tr, and awk, in addition to its extensive macro expansion facilities. The April, 2002 issue of Linux Journal has a very nice article on m4 and its uses.
# 7 # A01 # 01Z
# 23 # 33
doexec The doexec command enables passing an arbitrary list of arguments to a binary executable. In particular, passing argv[0] (which corresponds to $0 in a script) lets the executable be invoked by various names, and it can then carry out different sets of actions, according to the name by which it was called. What this amounts to is roundabout way of passing options to an executable. For example, the /usr/local/bin directory might contain a binary called "aaa". Invoking doexec /usr/local/bin/aaa list would list all those files in the current working directory beginning with an "a", while invoking (the same executable with) doexec /usr/local/bin/aaa delete would delete those files. The various behaviors of the executable must be defined within the code of the executable itself, analogous to something like the following in a shell script:
case `basename $0` in "name1" ) do_something;; "name2" ) do_something_else;; "name3" ) do_yet_another_thing;; * ) bail_out;; esac
dialog The dialog family of tools provide a method of calling interactive "dialog" boxes from a script. The more elaborate variations of dialog gdialog, Xdialog, and kdialog actually invoke XWindows widgets. See Example 3414.
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chown, chgrp The chown command changes the ownership of a file or files. This command is a useful method that root can use to shift file ownership from one user to another. An ordinary user may not change the ownership of files, not even her own files. [38]
root# chown bozo *.txt
The chgrp command changes the group ownership of a file or files. You must be owner of the file(s) as well as a member of the destination group (or root) to use this operation.
chgrp recursive dunderheads *.data # The "dunderheads" group will now own all the "*.data" files #+ all the way down the $PWD directory tree (that's what "recursive" means).
useradd, userdel The useradd administrative command adds a user account to the system and creates a home directory for that particular user, if so specified. The corresponding userdel command removes a user account from the system [39] and deletes associated files. The adduser command is a synonym for useradd and is usually a symbolic link to it. id The id command lists the real and effective user IDs and the group IDs of the current user. This is the counterpart to the $UID, $EUID, and $GROUPS internal Bash variables.
bash$ id uid=501(bozo) gid=501(bozo) groups=501(bozo),22(cdrom),80(cdwriter),81(audio) bash$ echo $UID 501
Also see Example 95. Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands 215
Advanced BashScripting Guide who Show all users logged on to the system.
bash$ who bozo tty1 bozo pts/0 bozo pts/1 bozo pts/2
The m gives detailed information about only the current user. Passing any two arguments to who is the equivalent of who m, as in who am i or who The Man.
bash$ who m localhost.localdomain!bozo
pts/2
Apr 27 17:49
w Show all logged on users and the processes belonging to them. This is an extended version of who. The output of w may be piped to grep to find a specific user and/or process.
bash$ w | grep startx bozo tty1
4:22pm
6:41
4.47s
0.45s
startx
logname Show current user's login name (as found in /var/run/utmp). This is a nearequivalent to whoami, above.
bash$ logname bozo bash$ whoami bozo
However...
bash$ su Password: ...... bash# whoami root bash# logname bozo
su Runs a program or script as a substitute user. su rjones starts a shell as user rjones. A naked su defaults to root. See Example A16. sudo Runs a command as root (or another user). This may be used in a script, thus permitting a regular user to run the script.
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The file /etc/sudoers holds the names of users permitted to invoke sudo. passwd Sets or changes a user's password. The passwd can be used in a script, but should not be.
#!/bin/bash # setnewpassword.sh: Not a good idea. # This script must be run as root, #+ or better yet, not run at all. ROOT_UID=0 E_WRONG_USER=65 # Root has $UID 0. # Not root?
if [ "$UID" ne "$ROOT_UID" ] then echo; echo "Only root can run this script."; echo exit $E_WRONG_USER else echo; echo "You should know better than to run this script, root." fi
username=bozo NEWPASSWORD=security_violation echo "$NEWPASSWORD" | passwd stdin "$username" # The 'stdin' option to 'passwd' permits #+ getting new password from stdin (or a pipe). echo; echo "User $username's password changed!" # Using the 'passwd' command in a script is dangerous. exit 0
ac Show users' logged in time, as read from /var/log/wtmp. This is one of the GNU accounting utilities.
bash$ ac total
68.08
last List last logged in users, as read from /var/log/wtmp. This command can also show remote logins. newgrp Change user's group ID without logging out. This permits access to the new group's files. Since users may be members of multiple groups simultaneously, this command finds little use. Terminals tty Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands 217
Advanced BashScripting Guide Echoes the name of the current user's terminal. Note that each separate xterm window counts as a different terminal.
bash$ tty /dev/pts/1
stty Shows and/or changes terminal settings. This complex command, used in a script, can control terminal behavior and the way output displays. See the info page, and study it carefully.
echo "Your name is $name." stty echo read echo erase '#' n "What is your name? " name "Your name is $name." # # Set "hashmark" (#) as erase character. Use # to erase last character typed.
exit 0
n "Enter password " passwd "password is $passwd" n "If someone had been looking over your shoulder, " "your password would have been compromised." # Two linefeeds in an "and list". # Turns off screen echo.
echo n "Enter password again " read passwd echo echo "password is $passwd" echo stty echo exit 0 # Restores screen echo.
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echo echo "Key pressed was \""$Keypress"\"." echo stty "$old_tty_settings" # Thanks, Stephane Chazelas. exit 0 # Restore old settings.
terminals and modes Normally, a terminal works in the canonical mode. When a user hits a key, the resulting character does not immediately go to the program actually running in this terminal. A buffer local to the terminal stores keystrokes. When the user hits the ENTER key, this sends all the stored keystrokes to the program running. There is even a basic line editor inside the terminal.
bash$ stty a speed 9600 baud; rows 36; columns 96; line = 0; intr = ^C; quit = ^\; erase = ^H; kill = ^U; eof = ^D; eol = <undef>; eol2 = <undef>; start = ^Q; stop = ^S; susp = ^Z; rprnt = ^R; werase = ^W; lnext = ^V; flush = ^O; ... isig icanon iexten echo echoe echok echonl noflsh xcase tostop echoprt
Using canonical mode, it is possible to redefine the special keys for the local terminal line editor.
bash$ cat > filexxx wha<ctlW>I<ctlH>foo bar<ctlU>hello world<ENTER> <ctlD> bash$ cat filexxx hello world bash$ bash$ wc c < file 13
The process controlling the terminal receives only 13 characters (12 alphabetic ones, plus a newline), although the user hit 26 keys. In noncanonical ("raw") mode, every key hit (including special editing keys such as ctlH) sends a character immediately to the controlling process. Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands 219
Advanced BashScripting Guide The Bash prompt disables both icanon and echo, since it replaces the basic terminal line editor with its own more elaborate one. For example, when you hit ctlA at the Bash prompt, there's no ^A echoed by the terminal, but Bash gets a \1 character, interprets it, and moves the cursor to the begining of the line. Stephane Chazelas tset Show or initialize terminal settings. This is a less capable version of stty.
bash$ tset r Terminal type is xtermxfree86. Kill is controlU (^U). Interrupt is controlC (^C).
setserial Set or display serial port parameters. This command must be run by root user and is usually found in a system setup script.
# From /etc/pcmcia/serial script: IRQ=`setserial /dev/$DEVICE | sed e 's/.*IRQ: //'` setserial /dev/$DEVICE irq 0 ; setserial /dev/$DEVICE irq $IRQ
getty, agetty The initialization process for a terminal uses getty or agetty to set it up for login by a user. These commands are not used within user shell scripts. Their scripting counterpart is stty. mesg Enables or disables write access to the current user's terminal. Disabling access would prevent another user on the network to write to the terminal. It can be very annoying to have a message about ordering pizza suddenly appear in the middle of the text file you are editing. On a multiuser network, you might therefore wish to disable write access to your terminal when you need to avoid interruptions. wall This is an acronym for "write all", i.e., sending a message to all users at every terminal logged into the network. It is primarily a system administrator's tool, useful, for example, when warning everyone that the system will shortly go down due to a problem (see Example 172).
bash$ wall System going down for maintenance in 5 minutes! Broadcast message from bozo (pts/1) Sun Jul 8 13:53:27 2001... System going down for maintenance in 5 minutes!
If write access to a particular terminal has been disabled with mesg, then wall cannot send a message to it. dmesg Lists all system bootup messages to stdout. Handy for debugging and ascertaining which device drivers were installed and which system interrupts in use. The output of dmesg may, of course, be parsed with grep, sed, or awk from within a script.
bash$ dmesg | grep hda Kernel command line: ro root=/dev/hda2 hda: IBMDLGA23080, ATA DISK drive
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Information and Statistics uname Output system specifications (OS, kernel version, etc.) to stdout. Invoked with the a option, gives verbose system info (see Example 124). The s option shows only the OS type.
bash$ uname a Linux localhost.localdomain 2.2.152.5.0 #1 Sat Feb 5 00:13:43 EST 2000 i686 unknown bash$ uname s Linux
lastcomm Gives information about previous commands, as stored in the /var/account/pacct file. Command name and user name can be specified by options. This is one of the GNU accounting utilities. lastlog List the last login time of all system users. This references the /var/log/lastlog file.
bash$ lastlog root tty1 bin daemon ... bozo tty1
Fri Dec 7 18:43:21 0700 2001 **Never logged in** **Never logged in** Sat Dec 8 21:14:29 0700 2001
Fri Dec
This command will fail if the user invoking it does not have read permission for the /var/log/lastlog file. lsof List open files. This command outputs a detailed table of all currently open files and gives information about their owner, size, the processes associated with them, and more. Of course, lsof may be piped to grep and/or awk to parse and analyze its results.
bash$ lsof COMMAND PID init 1 init 1 init 1
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strace Diagnostic and debugging tool for tracing system calls and signals. The simplest way of invoking it is strace COMMAND.
bash$ strace df execve("/bin/df", ["df"], [/* 45 vars */]) = 0 uname({sys="Linux", node="bozo.localdomain", ...}) = 0 brk(0) = 0x804f5e4 ...
This is the Linux equivalent of truss. nmap Network port scanner. This command scans a server to locate open ports and the services associated with those ports. It is an important security tool for locking down a network against hacking attempts.
#!/bin/bash SERVER=$HOST PORT_NUMBER=25 # localhost.localdomain (127.0.0.1). # SMTP port.
nmap $SERVER | grep w "$PORT_NUMBER" # Is that particular port open? # grep w matches whole words only, #+ so this wouldn't match port 1025, for example. exit 0 # 25/tcp open smtp
free Shows memory and cache usage in tabular form. The output of this command lends itself to parsing, using grep, awk or Perl. The procinfo command shows all the information that free does, and much more.
bash$ free total Mem: 30504 /+ buffers/cache: Swap: 68540 used 28624 10640 3128 free 1880 19864 65412 shared 15820 buffers 1608 cached 16376
procinfo Extract and list information and statistics from the /proc pseudofilesystem. This gives a very extensive and detailed listing.
bash$ procinfo | grep Bootup Bootup: Wed Mar 21 15:15:50 2001
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du Show (disk) file usage, recursively. Defaults to current working directory, unless otherwise specified.
bash$ du ach 1.0k ./wi.sh 1.0k ./tst.sh 1.0k ./random.file 6.0k . 6.0k total
Used Available Use% Mounted on 92607 166547 36% / 123951 87085 59% /home 1075744 261488 80% /usr
stat Gives detailed and verbose statistics on a given file (even a directory or device file) or set of files.
bash$ stat test.cru File: "test.cru" Size: 49970 Allocated Blocks: 100 Filetype: Regular File Mode: (0664/rwrwr) Uid: ( 501/ bozo) Gid: ( 501/ bozo) Device: 3,8 Inode: 18185 Links: 1 Access: Sat Jun 2 16:40:24 2001 Modify: Sat Jun 2 16:40:24 2001 Change: Sat Jun 2 16:40:24 2001
If the target file does not exist, stat returns an error message.
bash$ stat nonexistentfile nonexistentfile: No such file or directory
free 11040
buff 2636
si 0
swap so 0
bi 33
io system bo in 7 271
cs 88
us 8
cpu sy id 3 89
netstat Show current network statistics and information, such as routing tables and active connections. This utility accesses information in /proc/net (Chapter 28). See Example 282. Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands 223
Advanced BashScripting Guide netstat r is equivalent to route. uptime Shows how long the system has been running, along with associated statistics.
bash$ uptime 10:28pm up 1:57,
3 users,
hostname Lists the system's host name. This command sets the host name in an /etc/rc.d setup script (/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit or similar). It is equivalent to uname n, and a counterpart to the $HOSTNAME internal variable.
bash$ hostname localhost.localdomain bash$ echo $HOSTNAME localhost.localdomain
hostid Echo a 32bit hexadecimal numerical identifier for the host machine.
bash$ hostid 7f0100
This command allegedly fetches a "unique" serial number for a particular system. Certain product registration procedures use this number to brand a particular user license. Unfortunately, hostid only returns the machine network address in hexadecimal, with pairs of bytes transposed. The network address of a typical nonnetworked Linux machine, is found in /etc/hosts.
bash$ cat /etc/hosts 127.0.0.1
localhost.localdomain localhost
As it happens, transposing the bytes of 127.0.0.1, we get 0.127.1.0, which translates in hex to 007f0100, the exact equivalent of what hostid returns, above. There exist only a few million other Linux machines with this identical hostid. sar Invoking sar (system activity report) gives a very detailed rundown on system statistics. This command is found on some commercial UNIX systems, but is not part of the base Linux distribution. It is contained in the sysstat utilities package, written by Sebastien Godard.
bash$ sar Linux 2.4.710 (localhost.localdomain) 10:30:01 10:40:00 10:50:00 11:00:00 11:10:00 11:20:00 06:30:00 Average: AM AM AM AM AM AM PM CPU all all all all all all all %user 1.39 76.83 1.32 1.17 0.51 100.00 1.39
12/31/2001 %system 0.77 1.45 0.69 0.30 0.30 100.01 0.66 %idle 97.84 21.72 97.99 98.53 99.19 0.00 97.95
Advanced BashScripting Guide Show information and statistics about a designated elf binary. This is part of the binutils package.
bash$ readelf h /bin/bash ELF Header: Magic: 7f 45 4c 46 01 01 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 Class: ELF32 Data: 2's complement, little endian Version: 1 (current) OS/ABI: UNIX System V ABI Version: 0 Type: EXEC (Executable file) . . .
size The size [/path/to/binary] command gives the segment sizes of a binary executable or archive file. This is mainly of use to programmers.
bash$ size /bin/bash text data bss 495971 22496 17392
dec 535859
System Logs logger Appends a usergenerated message to the system log (/var/log/messages). You do not have to be root to invoke logger.
logger Experiencing instability in network connection at 23:10, 05/21. # Now, do a 'tail /var/log/messages'.
logrotate This utility manages the system log files, rotating, compressing, deleting, and/or mailing them, as appropriate. Usually crond runs logrotate on a daily basis. Adding an appropriate entry to /etc/logrotate.conf makes it possible to manage personal log files, as well as systemwide ones. Job Control ps Process Statistics: lists currently executing processes by owner and PID (process id). This is usually invoked with ax options, and may be piped to grep or sed to search for a specific process (see Example 1110 and Example 281).
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pstree Lists currently executing processes in "tree" format. The p option shows the PIDs, as well as the process names. top Continuously updated display of most cpuintensive processes. The b option displays in text mode, so that the output may be parsed or accessed from a script.
bash$ top b 8:30pm up 3 min, 3 users, load average: 0.49, 0.32, 0.13 45 processes: 44 sleeping, 1 running, 0 zombie, 0 stopped CPU states: 13.6% user, 7.3% system, 0.0% nice, 78.9% idle Mem: 78396K av, 65468K used, 12928K free, 0K shrd, Swap: 157208K av, 0K used, 157208K free PID 848 1 2 ... USER bozo root root PRI 17 8 9 NI 0 0 0 SIZE 996 512 0 RSS SHARE STAT %CPU %MEM 996 800 R 5.6 1.2 512 444 S 0.0 0.6 0 0 SW 0.0 0.0 TIME 0:00 0:04 0:00
nice Run a background job with an altered priority. Priorities run from 19 (lowest) to 20 (highest). Only root may set the negative (higher) priorities. Related commands are renice, snice, and skill. nohup Keeps a command running even after user logs off. The command will run as a foreground process unless followed by &. If you use nohup within a script, consider coupling it with a wait to avoid creating an orphan or zombie process. pidof Identifies process id (pid) of a running job. Since job control commands, such as kill and renice act on the pid of a process (not its name), it is sometimes necessary to identify that pid. The pidof command is the approximate counterpart to the $PPID internal variable.
bash$ pidof xclock 880
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# Need a check here to see if process allowed itself to be killed. # Perhaps another " t=`pidof $process` ".
# This entire script could be replaced by # kill $(pidof x process_name) # but it would not be as instructive. exit 0
fuser Identifies the processes (by pid) that are accessing a given file, set of files, or directory. May also be invoked with the k option, which kills those processes. This has interesting implications for system security, especially in scripts preventing unauthorized users from accessing system services. crond Administrative program scheduler, performing such duties as cleaning up and deleting system log files and updating the slocate database. This is the superuser version of at (although each user may have their own crontab file which can be changed with the crontab command). It runs as a daemon and executes scheduled entries from /etc/crontab. Process Control and Booting init The init command is the parent of all processes. Called in the final step of a bootup, init determines the runlevel of the system from /etc/inittab. Invoked by its alias telinit, and by root only. telinit Symlinked to init, this is a means of changing the system runlevel, usually done for system maintenance or emergency filesystem repairs. Invoked only by root. This command can be dangerous be certain you understand it well before using! runlevel Shows the current and last runlevel, that is, whether the system is halted (runlevel 0), in singleuser mode (1), in multiuser mode (2 or 3), in X Windows (5), or rebooting (6). This command accesses the /var/run/utmp file. halt, shutdown, reboot Command set to shut the system down, usually just prior to a power down. Network ifconfig Network interface configuration and tuning utility. It is most often used at bootup to set up the interfaces, or to shut them down when rebooting.
# Code snippets from /etc/rc.d/init.d/network # ... # Check that networking is up.
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See also Example 306. route Show info about or make changes to the kernel routing table.
bash$ route Destination Gateway Genmask Flags pm367.bozosisp * 255.255.255.255 UH 127.0.0.0 * 255.0.0.0 U default pm367.bozosisp 0.0.0.0 UG
MSS Window 40 0 40 0 40 0
chkconfig Check network configuration. This command lists and manages the network services started at bootup in the /etc/rc?.d directory. Originally a port from IRIX to Red Hat Linux, chkconfig may not be part of the core installation of some Linux flavors.
bash$ chkconfig list atd 0:off rwhod 0:off ...
1:off 1:off
2:off 2:off
3:on 3:off
4:on 4:off
5:on 5:off
6:off 6:off
tcpdump Network packet "sniffer". This is a tool for analyzing and troubleshooting traffic on a network by dumping packet headers that match specified criteria. Dump ip packet traffic between hosts bozoville and caduceus:
bash$ tcpdump ip host bozoville and caduceus
Of course, the output of tcpdump can be parsed, using certain of the previously discussed text processing utilities. Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands 228
Advanced BashScripting Guide Filesystem mount Mount a filesystem, usually on an external device, such as a floppy or CDROM. The file /etc/fstab provides a handy listing of available filesystems, partitions, and devices, including options, that may be automatically or manually mounted. The file /etc/mtab shows the currently mounted filesystems and partitions (including the virtual ones, such as /proc). mount a mounts all filesystems and partitions listed in /etc/fstab, except those with a noauto option. At bootup, a startup script in /etc/rc.d (rc.sysinit or something similar) invokes this to get everything mounted.
mount t iso9660 /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom # Mounts CDROM mount /mnt/cdrom # Shortcut, if /mnt/cdrom listed in /etc/fstab
This versatile command can even mount an ordinary file on a block device, and the file will act as if it were a filesystem. Mount accomplishes that by associating the file with a loopback device. One application of this is to mount and examine an ISO9660 image before burning it onto a CDR. [40]
mount r t iso9660 o loop cdimage.iso /mnt/cdtest # Mount the image. # "o loop" option equivalent to "losetup /dev/loop0" cd /mnt/cdtest # Now, check the image. ls alR # List the files in the directory tree there. # And so forth.
umount Unmount a currently mounted filesystem. Before physically removing a previously mounted floppy or CDROM disk, the device must be umounted, else filesystem corruption may result.
umount /mnt/cdrom # You may now press the eject button and safely remove the disk.
The automount utility, if properly installed, can mount and unmount floppies or CDROM disks as they are accessed or removed. On laptops with swappable floppy and CDROM drives, this can cause problems, though. sync Forces an immediate write of all updated data from buffers to hard drive (synchronize drive with buffers). While not strictly necessary, a sync assures the sys admin or user that the data just changed will survive a sudden power failure. In the olden days, a sync; sync (twice, just to make absolutely sure) was a useful precautionary measure before a system reboot. At times, you may wish to force an immediate buffer flush, as when securely deleting a file (see Example 1242) or when the lights begin to flicker. losetup Sets up and configures loopback devices. Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands 229
head c $SIZE < /dev/zero > file losetup /dev/loop0 file mke2fs /dev/loop0 mount o loop /dev/loop0 /mnt # Thanks, S.C.
mkswap Creates a swap partition or file. The swap area must subsequently be enabled with swapon. swapon, swapoff Enable / disable swap partitition or file. These commands usually take effect at bootup and shutdown. mke2fs Create a Linux ext2 filesystem. This command must be invoked as root.
ROOT_UID=0 E_NOTROOT=67
if [ "$UID" ne "$ROOT_UID" ] then echo "Must be root to run this script." exit $E_NOTROOT fi # Use with extreme caution! # If something goes wrong, you may wipe out your current filesystem.
NEWDISK=/dev/hdb MOUNTPOINT=/mnt/newdisk
fdisk $NEWDISK mke2fs cv $NEWDISK1 # Check for bad blocks & verbose output. # Note: /dev/hdb1, *not* /dev/hdb! mkdir $MOUNTPOINT chmod 777 $MOUNTPOINT # Makes new drive accessible to all users.
# # # #
Now, test... mount t ext2 /dev/hdb1 /mnt/newdisk Try creating a directory. If it works, umount it, and proceed.
# Final step: # Add the following line to /etc/fstab. # /dev/hdb1 /mnt/newdisk ext2 defaults
1 1
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See also Example 136 and Example 293. tune2fs Tune ext2 filesystem. May be used to change filesystem parameters, such as maximum mount count. This must be invoked as root. This is an extremely dangerous command. Use it at your own risk, as you may inadvertently destroy your filesystem. dumpe2fs Dump (list to stdout) very verbose filesystem info. This must be invoked as root.
root# dumpe2fs /dev/hda7 | dumpe2fs 1.19, 13Jul2000 Mount count: Maximum mount count: grep 'ount count' for EXT2 FS 0.5b, 95/08/09 6 20
hdparm List or change hard disk parameters. This command must be invoked as root, and it may be dangerous if misused. fdisk Create or change a partition table on a storage device, usually a hard drive. This command must be invoked as root. Use this command with extreme caution. If something goes wrong, you may destroy an existing filesystem. fsck, e2fsck, debugfs Filesystem check, repair, and debug command set. fsck: a front end for checking a UNIX filesystem (may invoke other utilities). The actual filesystem type generally defaults to ext2. e2fsck: ext2 filesystem checker. debugfs: ext2 filesystem debugger. One of the uses of this versatile, but dangerous command is to (attempt to) recover deleted files. For advanced users only! All of these should be invoked as root, and they can damage or destroy a filesystem if misused. badblocks Checks for bad blocks (physical media flaws) on a storage device. This command finds use when formatting a newly installed hard drive or testing the integrity of backup media. [41] As an example, badblocks /dev/fd0 tests a floppy disk. The badblocks command may be invoked destructively (overwrite all data) or in nondestructive readonly mode. If root user owns the device to be tested, as is generally the case, then root must invoke this command. mkbootdisk Creates a boot floppy which can be used to bring up the system if, for example, the MBR (master boot record) becomes corrupted. The mkbootdisk command is actually a Bash script, written by Erik Troan, in the /sbin directory. Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands 231
Advanced BashScripting Guide chroot CHange ROOT directory. Normally commands are fetched from $PATH, relative to /, the default root directory. This changes the root directory to a different one (and also changes the working directory to there). This is useful for security purposes, for instance when the system administrator wishes to restrict certain users, such as those telnetting in, to a secured portion of the filesystem (this is sometimes referred to as confining a guest user to a "chroot jail"). Note that after a chroot, the execution path for system binaries is no longer valid. A chroot /opt would cause references to /usr/bin to be translated to /opt/usr/bin. Likewise, chroot /aaa/bbb /bin/ls would redirect future instances of ls to /aaa/bbb as the base directory, rather than / as is normally the case. An alias XX 'chroot /aaa/bbb ls' in a user's ~/.bashrc effectively restricts which portion of the filesystem she may run command "XX" on. The chroot command is also handy when running from an emergency boot floppy (chroot to /dev/fd0), or as an option to lilo when recovering from a system crash. Other uses include installation from a different filesystem (an rpm option) or running a readonly filesystem from a CD ROM. Invoke only as root, and use with care. It might be necessary to copy certain system files to a chrooted directory, since the normal $PATH can no longer be relied upon. lockfile This utility is part of the procmail package (www.procmail.org). It creates a lock file, a semaphore file that controls access to a file, device, or resource. The lock file serves as a flag that this particular file, device, or resource is in use by a particular process ("busy"), and this permits only restricted access (or no access) to other processes. Lock files are used in such applications as protecting system mail folders from simultaneously being changed by multiple users, indicating that a modem port is being accessed, and showing that an instance of Netscape is using its cache. Scripts may check for the existence of a lock file created by a certain process to check if that process is running. Note that if a script attempts create a lock file that already exists, the script will likely hang. Normally, applications create and check for lock files in the /var/lock directory. A script can test for the presence of a lock file by something like the following.
appname=xyzip # Application "xyzip" created lock file "/var/lock/xyzip.lock". if [ e "/var/lock/$appname.lock ] then ...
mknod Creates block or character device files (may be necessary when installing new hardware on the system). tmpwatch Automatically deletes files which have not been accessed within a specified period of time. Usually invoked by crond to remove stale log files. MAKEDEV Utility for creating device files. It must be run as root, and in the /dev directory.
root# ./MAKEDEV
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Advanced BashScripting Guide This is a sort of advanced version of mknod. Backup dump, restore The dump command is an elaborate filesystem backup utility, generally used on larger installations and networks. [42] It reads raw disk partitions and writes a backup file in a binary format. Files to be backed up may be saved to a variety of storage media, including disks and tape drives. The restore command restores backups made with dump. fdformat Perform a lowlevel format on a floppy disk. System Resources ulimit Sets an upper limit on use of system resources. Usually invoked with the f option, which sets a limit on file size (ulimit f 1000 limits files to 1 meg maximum). The t option limits the coredump size (ulimit c 0 eliminates coredumps). Normally, the value of ulimit would be set in /etc/profile and/or ~/.bash_profile (see Chapter 27). Judicious use of ulimit can protect a system against the dreaded fork bomb.
#!/bin/bash while 1 do $0 & # # #+ #+ # # Endless loop. This script invokes itself . . . forks an infinite number of times . . . until the system freezes up because all resources exhausted. This is the notorious "sorcerer's appentice" scenario. Will not exit here, because this script will never terminate.
done exit 0
A ulimit Hu XX (where XX is the user process limit) in /etc/profile would abort this script when it exceeds the preset limit. umask User file creation MASK. Limit the default file attributes for a particular user. All files created by that user take on the attributes specified by umask. The (octal) value passed to umask defines the file permissions disabled. For example, umask 022 ensures that new files will have at most 755 permissions (777 NAND 022). [43] Of course, the user may later change the attributes of particular files with chmod. The usual practice is to set the value of umask in /etc/profile and/or ~/.bash_profile (see Chapter 27). rdev Get info about or make changes to root device, swap space, or video mode. The functionality of rdev has generally been taken over by lilo, but rdev remains useful for setting up a ram disk. This is another dangerous command, if misused. Modules lsmod List installed kernel modules.
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Doing a cat /proc/modules gives the same information. insmod Force installation of a kernel module (use modprobe instead, when possible). Must be invoked as root. rmmod Force unloading of a kernel module. Must be invoked as root. modprobe Module loader that is normally invoked automatically in a startup script. Must be invoked as root. depmod Creates module dependency file, usually invoked from startup script. Miscellaneous env Runs a program or script with certain environmental variables set or changed (without changing the overall system environment). The [varname=xxx] permits changing the environmental variable varname for the duration of the script. With no options specified, this command lists all the environmental variable settings. In Bash and other Bourne shell derivatives, it is possible to set variables in a single command's environment.
var1=value1 var2=value2 commandXXX # $var1 and $var2 set in the environment of 'commandXXX' only.
The first line of a script (the "shabang" line) may use env when the path to the shell or interpreter is unknown.
#! /usr/bin/env perl print "This Perl script will run,\n"; print "even when I don't know where to find Perl.\n"; # Good for portable crossplatform scripts, # where the Perl binaries may not be in the expected place. # Thanks, S.C.
ldd Show shared lib dependencies for an executable file. Chapter 13. System and Administrative Commands 234
watch Run a command repeatedly, at specified time intervals. The default is twosecond intervals, but this may be changed with the n option.
watch n 5 tail /var/log/messages # Shows tail end of system log, /var/log/messages, every five seconds.
strip Remove the debugging symbolic references from an executable binary. This decreases its size, but makes debugging it impossible. This command often occurs in a Makefile, but rarely in a shell script. nm List symbols in an unstripped compiled binary. rdist Remote distribution client: synchronizes, clones, or backs up a file system on a remote server. Using our knowledge of administrative commands, let us examine a system script. One of the shortest and simplest to understand scripts is killall, used to suspend running processes at system shutdown.
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That wasn't so bad. Aside from a little fancy footwork with variable matching, there is no new material there. Exercise 1. In /etc/rc.d/init.d, analyze the halt script. It is a bit longer than killall, but similar in concept. Make a copy of this script somewhere in your home directory and experiment with it (do not run it as root). Do a simulated run with the vn flags (sh vn scriptname). Add extensive comments. Change the "action" commands to "echos". Exercise 2. Look at some of the more complex scripts in /etc/rc.d/init.d. See if you can understand parts of them. Follow the above procedure to analyze them. For some additional insight, you might also examine the file sysvinitfiles in /usr/share/doc/initscripts?.??, which is part of the "initscripts" documentation.
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The output of commands can be used as arguments to another command, to set a variable, and even for generating the argument list in a for loop.
rm `cat filename` # "filename" contains a list of files to delete. # # S. C. points out that "arg list too long" error might result. # Better is xargs rm < filename # ( covers those cases where "filename" begins with a "" ) textfile_listing=`ls *.txt` # Variable contains names of all *.txt files in current working directory. echo $textfile_listing textfile_listing2=$(ls *.txt) echo $textfile_listing2 # Same result. # # # # # # # # # The alternative form of command substitution.
A possible problem with putting a list of files into a single string is that a newline may creep in. A safer way to assign a list of files to a parameter is with an array. shopt s nullglob # If no match, filename expands to nothing. textfile_listing=( *.txt ) Thanks, S.C.
# Thanks, S.C.
Even when there is no word splitting, command substitution can remove trailing newlines.
# cd "`pwd`" # However... # This should always work.
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# Disable "canonical" mode for terminal. # Also, disable *local* echo. key=$(dd bs=1 count=1 2> /dev/null) # Using 'dd' to get a keypress. stty "$old_tty_setting" # Restore old setting. echo "You hit ${#key} key." # ${#variable} = number of characters in $variable # # Hit any key except RETURN, and the output is "You hit 1 key." # Hit RETURN, and it's "You hit 0 key." # The newline gets eaten in the command substitution. Thanks, S.C.
Using echo to output an unquoted variable set with command substitution removes trailing newlines characters from the output of the reassigned command(s). This can cause unpleasant surprises.
dir_listing=`ls l` echo $dir_listing
# unquoted
# Expecting a nicely ordered directory listing. # However, what you get is: # total 3 rwrwr 1 bozo bozo 30 May 13 17:15 1.txt rwrwr 1 bozo # bozo 51 May 15 20:57 t2.sh rwxrxrx 1 bozo bozo 217 Mar 5 21:13 wi.sh # The newlines disappeared.
echo "$dir_listing" # quoted # rwrwr 1 bozo 30 May 13 17:15 1.txt # rwrwr 1 bozo 51 May 15 20:57 t2.sh # rwxrxrx 1 bozo 217 Mar 5 21:13 wi.sh
Command substitution even permits setting a variable to the contents of a file, using either redirection or the cat command.
variable1=`<file1` variable2=`cat file2` # # # # Note 1: Removes newlines. Note 2: # Set "variable1" to contents of "file1". # Set "variable2" to contents of "file2".
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if [ f /fsckoptions ]; then fsckoptions=`cat /fsckoptions` ... fi # # if [ e "/proc/ide/${disk[$device]}/media" ] ; then hdmedia=`cat /proc/ide/${disk[$device]}/media` ... fi # # if [ ! n "`uname r | grep ""`" ]; then ktag="`cat /proc/version`" ... fi # # if [ $usb = "1" ]; then sleep 5 mouseoutput=`cat /proc/bus/usb/devices 2>/dev/null|grep E "^I.*Cls=03.*Prot=02"` kbdoutput=`cat /proc/bus/usb/devices 2>/dev/null|grep E "^I.*Cls=03.*Prot=01"` ... fi
Do not set a variable to the contents of a long text file unless you have a very good reason for doing so. Do not set a variable to the contents of a binary file, even as a joke.
dangerous_variable=`cat /boot/vmlinuz`
echo "stringlength of \$dangerous_variable = ${#dangerous_variable}" # stringlength of $dangerous_variable = 794151 # (Does not give same count as 'wc c /boot/vmlinuz'.) # echo "$dangerous_variable" # Don't try this! It would hang the script.
# The document author is aware of no useful applications for #+ setting a variable to the contents of a binary file. exit 0
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Notice that a buffer overrun does not occur. This is one instance where an interpreted language, such as Bash, provides more protection from programmer mistakes than a compiled language. Command substitution permits setting a variable to the output of a loop. The key to this is grabbing the output of an echo command within the loop.
i=0 variable2=`while [ "$i" lt 10 ] do echo n "$i" # Again, the necessary 'echo'. let "i += 1" # Increment. done` echo "variable2 = $variable2" exit 0 # variable2 = 0123456789
Command substitution makes it possible to extend the toolset available to Bash. It is simply a matter of writing a program or script that outputs to stdout (like a wellbehaved UNIX tool should) and assigning that output to a variable.
#include <stdio.h> /* "Hello, world." C program */
int main() { printf( "Hello, world." ); return (0); } bash$ gcc o hello hello.c
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# Setting a variable to the contents of a text file. File_contents1=$(cat $file1) File_contents2=$(<$file2) # Bash permits this also.
Examples of command substitution in shell scripts: 1. Example 107 2. Example 1026 3. Example 926 4. Example 122 5. Example 1215 6. Example 1212 7. Example 1239 8. Example 1013 9. Example 1010 10. Example 1224 11. Example 167 12. Example A18 13. Example 281 14. Example 1232 15. Example 1233 16. Example 1234
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Arithmetic expansion with double parentheses, and using let The use of backticks in arithmetic expansion has been superseded by double parentheses $((...)) or the very convenient let construction.
z=$(($z+3)) # $((EXPRESSION)) is arithmetic expansion.
let z=z+3 let "z += 3" # Quotes permit the use of spaces and special operators. # The 'let' operator actually performs arithmetic evaluation, #+ rather than expansion.
All the above are equivalent. You may use whichever one "rings your chimes". Examples of arithmetic expansion in scripts: 1. Example 126 2. Example 1014 3. Example 261 4. Example 266 5. Example A18
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COMMAND_OUTPUT > # Redirect stdout to a file. # Creates the file if not present, otherwise overwrites it. ls lR > dirtree.list # Creates a file containing a listing of the directory tree. : > filename # The > truncates file "filename" to zero length. # If file not present, creates zerolength file (same effect as 'touch'). # The : serves as a dummy placeholder, producing no output. > filename # The > truncates file "filename" to zero length. # If file not present, creates zerolength file (same effect as 'touch'). # (Same result as ": >", above, but this does not work with some shells.) COMMAND_OUTPUT >> # Redirect stdout to a file. # Creates the file if not present, otherwise appends to it.
# Singleline redirection commands (affect only the line they are on): # 1>filename # Redirect 1>>filename # Redirect 2>filename # Redirect 2>>filename # Redirect &>filename # Redirect
stdout to file "filename". and append stdout to file "filename". stderr to file "filename". and append stderr to file "filename". both stdout and stderr to file "filename".
#============================================================================== # Redirecting stdout, one line at a time. LOGFILE=script.log echo echo echo echo "This "This "This "This statement statement statement statement is is is is sent to the log file, \"$LOGFILE\"." 1>$LOGFILE appended to \"$LOGFILE\"." 1>>$LOGFILE also appended to \"$LOGFILE\"." 1>>$LOGFILE echoed to stdout, and will not appear in \"$LOGFILE\"."
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# Redirecting stderr, one line at a time. ERRORFILE=script.errors bad_command1 2>$ERRORFILE bad_command2 2>>$ERRORFILE bad_command3 # Error message sent to $ERRORFILE. # Error message appended to $ERRORFILE. # Error message echoed to stderr, #+ and does not appear in $ERRORFILE. # These redirection commands also automatically "reset" after each line. #==============================================================================
2>&1 # Redirects stderr to stdout. # Error messages get sent to same place as standard output. i>&j # Redirects file descriptor i to j. # All output of file pointed to by i gets sent to file pointed to by j. >&j # Redirects, by default, file descriptor 1 (stdout) to j. # All stdout gets sent to file pointed to by j. 0< FILENAME < FILENAME # Accept input from a file. # Companion command to ">", and often used in combination with it. # # grep searchword <filename
[j]<>filename # Open file "filename" for reading and writing, and assign file descriptor "j" to it. # If "filename" does not exist, create it. # If file descriptor "j" is not specified, default to fd 0, stdin. # # An application of this is writing at a specified place in a file. echo 1234567890 > File # Write string to "File". exec 3<> File # Open "File" and assign fd 3 to it. read n 4 <&3 # Read only 4 characters. echo n . >&3 # Write a decimal point there. exec 3>& # Close fd 3. cat File # ==> 1234.67890 # Random access, by golly.
| # Pipe. # General purpose process and command chaining tool. # Similar to ">", but more general in effect. # Useful for chaining commands, scripts, files, and programs together. cat *.txt | sort | uniq > resultfile # Sorts the output of all the .txt files and deletes duplicate lines, # finally saves results to "resultfile".
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Multiple instances of input and output redirection and/or pipes can be combined in a single command line.
command < inputfile > outputfile command1 | command2 | command3 > outputfile
See Example 1223 and Example A16. Multiple output streams may be redirected to one file.
ls yz >> command.log 2>&1 # Capture result of illegal options "yz" to "ls" in file "command.log". # Because stderr redirected to the file, any error messages will also be there.
Closing File Descriptors n<& Close input file descriptor n. 0<&, <& Close stdin. n>& Close output file descriptor n. 1>&, >& Close stdout. Child processes inherit open file descriptors. This is why pipes work. To prevent an fd from being inherited, close it.
# Redirecting only stderr to a pipe. exec 3>&1 ls l 2>&1 >&3 3>& | grep bad 3>& # ^^^^ ^^^^ exec 3>& # Thanks, S.C. # Save current "value" of stdout. # Close fd 3 for 'grep' (but not 'ls'). # Now close it for the remainder of the script.
exec 6<&0
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echo; echo; echo exec 0<&6 6<& # Now restore stdin from fd #6, where it had been saved, #+ and close fd #6 ( 6<& ) to free it for other processes to use. # # <&6 6<& also works. echo read echo echo echo echo exit 0 n "Enter data " b1 # Now "read" functions as expected, reading from normal stdin. "Input read from stdin." "" "b1 = $b1"
Similarly, an exec >filename command redirects stdout to a designated file. This sends all command output that would normally go to stdout to that file.
# # # All output from commands in this block sent to file $LOGFILE. echo n "Logfile: " date echo "" echo echo "Output of \"ls al\" command" echo ls al echo; echo echo "Output of \"df\" command"
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echo echo "== stdout now restored to default == " echo ls al echo exit 0
Example 163. Redirecting both stdin and stdout in the same script with exec
#!/bin/bash # upperconv.sh # Converts a specified input file to uppercase. E_FILE_ACCESS=70 E_WRONG_ARGS=71 if [ ! then echo echo exit fi r "$1" ] # Is specified input file readable?
"Can't read from input file!" "Usage: $0 inputfile outputfile" $E_FILE_ACCESS # Will exit with same error #+ even if input file ($1) not specified.
if [ z "$2" ] then echo "Need to specify output file." echo "Usage: $0 inputfile outputfile" exit $E_WRONG_ARGS fi
# Will write to output file. # Assumes output file writable (add check?).
# cat | tr az AZ # Uppercase conversion. # ^^^^^ # Reads from stdin. # ^^^^^^^^^^ # Writes to stdout. # However, both stdin and stdout were redirected. # exec 1>&7 7>& exec 0<&4 4<& # Restore stout. # Restore stdin.
# After restoration, the following line prints to stdout as expected. echo "File \"$1\" written to \"$2\" as uppercase conversion."
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echo; echo "$count names read"; echo # Note that in some older shell scripting languages, #+ the redirected loop would run as a subshell. # Therefore, $count would return 0, the initialized value outside the loop. # Bash and ksh avoid starting a subshell whenever possible, # +so that this script, for example, runs correctly. # # Thanks to Heiner Steven for pointing this out. exit 0
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while [ "$name" != Smith ] do read name # Reads from redirected stdin ($Filename). echo $name let "count += 1" done <"$Filename" # Loop reads from file $Filename. # ^^^^^^^^^^^^
# Change
!=
to =.
# Reads from $Filename, rather than stdin. # Redirects stdin to file $Filename.
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line_count=`wc $Filename | awk '{ print $1 }'` # Number of lines in target file. # # Very contrived and kludgy, nevertheless shows that #+ it's possible to redirect stdin within a "for" loop... #+ if you're clever enough. # # More concise is line_count=$(wc < "$Filename")
for name in `seq $line_count` # while [ "$name" != Smith ] do read name echo $name if [ "$name" = Smith ] then break fi done <"$Filename" # ^^^^^^^^^^^^ exit 0
# Recall that "seq" prints sequence of numbers. more complicated than a "while" loop # Reads from $Filename, rather than stdin. # Need all this extra baggage here.
We can modify the previous example to also redirect the output of the loop.
Example 168. Redirected for loop (both stdin and stdout redirected)
#!/bin/bash if [ z "$1" ] then Filename=names.data else Filename=$1 fi Savefile=$Filename.new FinalName=Jonah
# Filename to save results in. # Name to terminate "read" on. # Number of lines in target file.
for name in `seq $line_count` do read name echo "$name" if [ "$name" = "$FinalName" ] then break
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# Reads only first line of file. # An "if/then" test has no way of iterating unless embedded in a loop. exit 0
Redirecting the stdout of a code block has the effect of saving its output to a file. See Example 32. Here documents are a special case of redirected code blocks. Chapter 16. I/O Redirection 251
16.3. Applications
Clever use of I/O redirection permits parsing and stitching together snippets of command output (see Example 116). This permits generating report and log files.
if [ "$UID" ne "$ROOT_UID" ] then echo "Must be root to run this script." exit $E_NOTROOT fi
FD_DEBUG1=3 FD_DEBUG2=4 FD_DEBUG3=5 # Uncomment one of the two lines below to activate script. # LOG_EVENTS=1 # LOG_VARS=1
log() # Writes time and date to log file. { echo "$(date) $*" >&7 # This *appends* the date to the file. # See below. }
case $LOG_LEVEL in 1) exec 3>&2 2) exec 3>&2 3) exec 3>&2 *) exec 3> /dev/null esac
FD_LOGVARS=6 if [[ $LOG_VARS ]] then exec 6>> /var/log/vars.log else exec 6> /dev/null fi FD_LOGEVENTS=7 if [[ $LOG_EVENTS ]] then
# Bury output.
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exit 0
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Choose a limit string sufficiently unusual that it will not occur anywhere in the command list and confuse matters. Note that here documents may sometimes be used to good effect with noninteractive utilities and commands.
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The above script could just as effectively have been implemented with ex, rather than vi. Here documents containing a list of ex commands are common enough to form their own category, known as ex scripts.
# # Code below disabled, due to "exit 0" above. # S.C. points out that the following also works. echo " This is line 1 of the message. This is line 2 of the message. This is line 3 of the message.
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The option to mark a here document limit string (<<LimitString) suppresses tabs (but not spaces) in the output. This may be useful in making a script more readable.
cat <<ENDOFMESSAGE This is line 1 of the message. This is line 2 of the message. This is line 3 of the message. This is line 4 of the message. This is the last line of the message. ENDOFMESSAGE # The output of the script will be flush left. # Leading tab in each line will not show. # Above 5 lines of "message" prefaced by a tab, not spaces. # Spaces not affected by << .
exit 0
A here document supports parameter and command substitution. It is therefore possible to pass different parameters to the body of the here document, changing its output accordingly.
if [ $# ge $CMDLINEPARAM ] then NAME=$1 # If more than one command line param, # then just take the first. else NAME="John Doe" # Default, if no command line parameter. fi RESPONDENT="the author of this fine script"
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cat <<Endofmessage Hello, there, $NAME. Greetings to you, $NAME, from $RESPONDENT. # This comment shows up in the output (why?). Endofmessage # Note that the blank lines show up in the output. # So does the "comment". exit 0
Filename=`basename $1`
Server="ibiblio.org" Directory="/incoming/Linux" # These need not be hardcoded into script, # but may instead be changed to command line argument. Password="your.email.address" ftp n $Server <<EndOfSession # n option disables autologon user anonymous "$Password" binary bell # Ring 'bell' after each file transfer cd $Directory put "$Filename.lsm" put "$Filename.tar.gz" bye EndOfSession exit 0 # Change above to suit.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Quoting or escaping the "limit string" at the head of a here document disables parameter substitution within its body.
exit 0
Disabling parameter substitution permits outputting literal text. Generating scripts or even program code is one use for this.
# # 'Here document containing the body of the generated script. ( cat <<'EOF' #!/bin/bash echo "This is a generated shell script." # Note that since we are inside a subshell, #+ we can't access variables in the "outside" script. # Just to prove it . . . echo "Generated file will be named: $OUTFILE" # Won't work. a=7 b=3 let "c = $a * $b" echo "c = $c" exit 0 EOF
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# Supply input to the above function. GetPersonalData <<RECORD001 Bozo Bozeman 2726 Nondescript Dr. Baltimore MD 21226 RECORD001
echo echo "$firstname $lastname" echo "$address" echo "$city, $state $zipcode" echo exit 0
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Advanced BashScripting Guide It is possible to use : as a dummy command accepting output from a here document. This, in effect, creates an "anonymous" here document.
&*@!!++= The above line will cause no error message, because the Bash interpreter will ignore it. COMMENTBLOCK echo "Exit value of above \"COMMENTBLOCK\" is $?." # No error shown. # 0
# #+ # #+
The above technique also comes in useful for commenting out a block of working code for debugging purposes. This saves having to put a "#" at the beginning of each line, then having to go back and delete each "#" later.
Yet another twist of this nifty trick makes "selfdocumenting" scripts possible.
260
Here documents create temporary files, but these files are deleted after opening and are not accessible to any other process.
bash$ bash c 'lsof a p $$ d0' << EOF > EOF lsof 1213 bozo 0r REG 3,5 0 30386 /tmp/t12130sh (deleted)
The closing limit string, on the final line of a here document, must start in the first character position. There can be no leading whitespace.
#!/bin/bash echo "" cat <<LimitString echo "This is line 1 of the message inside the here document." echo "This is line 2 of the message inside the here document." echo "This is the final line of the message inside the here document." LimitString #^^^^Indented limit string. Error! This script will not behave as expected.
261
For those tasks too complex for a "here document", consider using the expect scripting language, which is specifically tailored for feeding input into interactive programs.
262
Courtesy 'NIX "fortune cookies", with some alterations and many apologies
263
264
265
Advanced BashScripting Guide Combined sequences of bracketed characters match common word patterns. "[Yy][Ee][Ss]" matches yes, Yes, YES, yEs, and so forth. "[09][09][09][09][09][09][09][09][09]" matches any Social Security number. The backslash \ escapes a special character, which means that character gets interpreted literally. A "\$" reverts back to its literal meaning of "$", rather than its RE meaning of endofline. Likewise a "\\" has the literal meaning of "\". Escaped "angle brackets" \<...\> mark word boundaries. The angle brackets must be escaped, since otherwise they have only their literal character meaning. "\<the\>" matches the word "the", but not the words "them", "there", "other", etc.
bash$ cat textfile This is line 1, of which there is only one instance. This is the only instance of line 2. This is line 3, another line. This is line 4.
bash$ grep 'the' textfile This is line 1, of which there is only one instance. This is the only instance of line 2. This is line 3, another line.
Extended REs. Used in egrep, awk, and Perl The question mark ? matches zero or one of the previous RE. It is generally used for matching single characters. The plus + matches one or more of the previous RE. It serves a role similar to the *, but does not match zero occurrences.
# GNU versions of sed and awk can use "+", # but it needs to be escaped. echo a111b | sed ne '/a1\+b/p' echo a111b | grep 'a1\+b' echo a111b | gawk '/a1+b/' # All of above are equivalent. # Thanks, S.C.
Escaped "curly brackets" \{ \} indicate the number of occurrences of a preceding RE to match. It is necessary to escape the curly brackets since they have only their literal character meaning otherwise. This usage is technically not part of the basic RE set. "[09]\{5\}" matches exactly five digits (characters in the range of 0 to 9). Chapter 19. Regular Expressions 266
Advanced BashScripting Guide Curly brackets are not available as an RE in the "classic" (nonPOSIX compliant) version of awk. However, gawk has the reinterval option that permits them (without being escaped).
bash$ echo 2222 | gawk reinterval '/2{3}/' 2222
Perl and some egrep versions do not require escaping the curly brackets. Parentheses ( ) enclose groups of REs. They are useful with the following "|" operator and in substring extraction using expr. The | "or" RE operator matches any of a set of alternate characters.
bash$ egrep 're(a|e)d' misc.txt People who read seem to be better informed than those who do not. The clarinet produces sound by the vibration of its reed.
Some versions of sed, ed, and ex support escaped versions of the extended regular expressions described above. POSIX Character Classes. [:class:] This is an alternate method of specifying a range of characters to match. [:alnum:] matches alphabetic or numeric characters. This is equivalent to [AZaz09]. [:alpha:] matches alphabetic characters. This is equivalent to [AZaz]. [:blank:] matches a space or a tab. [:cntrl:] matches control characters. [:digit:] matches (decimal) digits. This is equivalent to [09]. [:graph:] (graphic printable characters). Matches characters in the range of ASCII 33 126. This is the same as [:print:], below, but excluding the space character. [:lower:] matches lowercase alphabetic characters. This is equivalent to [az]. [:print:] (printable characters). Matches characters in the range of ASCII 32 126. This is the same as [:graph:], above, but adding the space character. [:space:] matches whitespace characters (space and horizontal tab). [:upper:] matches uppercase alphabetic characters. This is equivalent to [AZ]. [:xdigit:] matches hexadecimal digits. This is equivalent to [09AFaf]. POSIX character classes generally require quoting or double brackets ([[ ]]).
bash$ grep [[:digit:]] test.file abc=723
These character classes may even be used with globbing, to a limited extent.
bash$ ls l ?[[:digit:]][[:digit:]]? rwrwr 1 bozo bozo 0 Aug 21 14:47 a33b
To see POSIX character classes used in scripts, refer to Example 1214 and Example 1215. Chapter 19. Regular Expressions 267
Advanced BashScripting Guide Sed, awk, and Perl, used as filters in scripts, take REs as arguments when "sifting" or transforming files or I/O streams. See Example A13 and Example A18 for illustrations of this. "Sed & Awk", by Dougherty and Robbins gives a very complete and lucid treatment of REs (see the Bibliography).
19.2. Globbing
Bash itself cannot recognize Regular Expressions. In scripts, commands and utilities, such as sed and awk, interpret RE's. Bash does carry out filename expansion, a process known as "globbing", but this does not use the standard RE set. Instead, globbing recognizes and expands wildcards. Globbing interprets the standard wildcard characters, * and ?, character lists in square brackets, and certain other special characters (such as ^ for negating the sense of a match). There are some important limitations on wildcard characters in globbing, however. Strings containing * will not match filenames that start with a dot, as, for example, .bashrc. [49] Likewise, the ? has a different meaning in globbing than as part of an RE.
bash$ ls l total 2 rwrwr rwrwr rwrwr rwrwr rwrwr
1 1 1 1 1
0 0 0 466 758
bozo
466 Aug
6 17:48 t2.sh
bash$ ls l [ab]* rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo bash$ ls l [ac]* rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo bash$ ls l [^ab]* rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo bash$ ls l {b*,c*,*est*} rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo rwrwr 1 bozo bozo
0 Aug 6 18:42 c.1 466 Aug 6 17:48 t2.sh 758 Jul 30 09:02 test1.txt
0 Aug 6 18:42 b.1 0 Aug 6 18:42 c.1 758 Jul 30 09:02 test1.txt
bash$ echo * a.1 b.1 c.1 t2.sh test1.txt bash$ echo t* t2.sh test1.txt
Even an echo command performs wildcard expansion on filenames. Chapter 19. Regular Expressions 268
269
Advanced BashScripting Guide Directory changes made in a subshell do not carry over to the parent shell.
for home in `awk F: '{print $6}' /etc/passwd` do [ d "$home" ] || continue # If no home directory, go to next. [ r "$home" ] || continue # If not readable, go to next. (cd $home; [ e $FILE ] && less $FILE) done # When script terminates, there is no need to 'cd' back to original directory, #+ because 'cd $home' takes place in a subshell. exit 0
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Processes may execute in parallel within different subshells. This permits breaking a complex task into subcomponents processed concurrently.
Redirecting I/O to a subshell uses the "|" pipe operator, as in ls al | (command). A command block between curly braces does not launch a subshell. { command1; command2; command3; ... }
272
273
274
Bash creates a pipe with two file descriptors, fIn and fOut. The stdin of true connects to fOut (dup2(fOut, 0)), then Bash passes a /dev/fd/fIn argument to echo. On systems lacking /dev/fd/<n> files, Bash may use temporary files. (Thanks, S.C.)
cat <(ls l) # Same as
ls l | cat
sort k 9 <(ls l /bin) <(ls l /usr/bin) <(ls l /usr/X11R6/bin) # Lists all the files in the 3 main 'bin' directories, and sorts by filename. # Note that three (count 'em) distinct commands are fed to 'sort'.
tar cf >(bzip2 c > file.tar.bz2) $directory_name # Calls "tar cf /dev/fd/?? $directory_name", and "bzip2 c > file.tar.bz2". # # Because of the /dev/fd/<n> system feature, # the pipe between both commands does not need to be named. # # This can be emulated. # bzip2 c < pipe > file.tar.bz2& tar cf pipe $directory_name rm pipe # or exec 3>&1 tar cf /dev/fd/4 $directory_name 4>&1 >&3 3>& | bzip2 c > file.tar.bz2 3>&
275
# Thanks, S.C.
A reader of this document sent in the following interesting example of process substitution.
# Script fragment taken from SuSE distribution: while read des what mask iface; do # Some commands ... done < <(route n)
# To test it, let's make it do something. while read des what mask iface; do echo $des $what $mask $iface done < <(route n) # # # # Output: Kernel IP routing table Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface 127.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 0 lo
# As S.C. points out, an easiertounderstand equivalent is: route n | while read des what mask iface; do # Variables set from output of pipe. echo $des $what $mask $iface done # This yields the same output as above. # However, as Ulrich Gayer points out . . . #+ this simplified equivalent uses a subshell for the while loop, #+ and therefore the variables disappear when the pipe terminates.
276
The function definition must precede the first call to it. There is no method of "declaring" the function, as, for example, in C.
f1 # Will give an error message, since function "f1" not yet defined. declare f f1 # This doesn't help either.
277
f1 () { echo "Calling function \"f2\" from within function \"f1\"." f2 } f2 () { echo "Function \"f2\"." } f1 # Function "f2" is not actually called until this point, #+ although it is referenced before its definition. # This is permissable. # Thanks, S.C.
It is even possible to nest a function within another function, although this is not very useful.
f1 () { f2 () # nested { echo "Function \"f2\", inside \"f1\"." } } f2 # # Gives an error message. Even a preceding "declare f f2" wouldn't help.
echo f1 f2 # Does nothing, since calling "f1" does not automatically call "f2". # Now, it's all right to call "f2", #+ since its definition has been made visible by calling "f1". # Thanks, S.C.
Function declarations can appear in unlikely places, even where a command would otherwise go.
ls l | foo() { echo "foo"; } # Permissable, but useless.
if [ "$USER" = bozo ] then bozo_greet () # Function definition embedded in an if/then construct. { echo "Hello, Bozo." } fi bozo_greet # Works only for Bozo, and other users get an error.
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# Something like this might be useful in some contexts. NO_EXIT=1 # Will enable function definition below. [[ $NO_EXIT eq 1 ]] && exit() { true; } # Function definition in an "andlist". # If $NO_EXIT is 1, declares "exit ()". # This disables the "exit" builtin by aliasing it to "true". exit # Invokes "exit ()" function, not "exit" builtin.
# Thanks, S.C.
The function refers to the passed arguments by position (as if they were positional parameters), that is, $1, $2, and so forth.
# #+ # # #+
What does parameter substitution show? It distinguishes between no param and a null param.
if [ "$2" ] then echo "Parameter #2 is \"$2\"." fi return 0 } echo echo "Nothing passed." func2 echo
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echo "Zerolength parameter passed." func2 "" # Called with zerolength param echo echo "Null parameter passed." func2 "$uninitialized_param" echo
echo "One parameter passed." func2 first # Called with one param echo echo "Two parameters passed." func2 first second # Called with two params echo echo "\"\" \"second\" passed." func2 "" second # Called with zerolength first parameter echo # and ASCII string as a second one. exit 0
The shift command works on arguments passed to functions (see Example 3410). In contrast to certain other programming languages, shell scripts normally pass only value parameters to functions. [51] Variable names (which are actually pointers), if passed as parameters to functions, will be treated as string literals and cannot be dereferenced. Functions interpret their arguments literally. Exit and Return exit status Functions return a value, called an exit status. The exit status may be explicitly specified by a return statement, otherwise it is the exit status of the last command in the function (0 if successful, and a nonzero error code if not). This exit status may be used in the script by referencing it as $?. This mechanism effectively permits script functions to have a "return value" similar to C functions. return Terminates a function. A return command [52] optionally takes an integer argument, which is returned to the calling script as the "exit status" of the function, and this exit status is assigned to the variable $?.
max2 () # Returns larger of two numbers. { # Note: numbers compared must be less than 257. if [ z "$2" ] then return $E_PARAM_ERR
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exit 0 # # # #+ Exercise (easy): Convert this to an interactive script, that is, have the script ask for input (two numbers).
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to_roman num=$? to_roman num=$? to_roman num=$? to_roman num=$? to_roman num=$? to_roman num=$? to_roman num=$? to_roman num=$? to_roman
$num 100 C $num 90 LXXXX $num 50 L $num 40 XL $num 10 X $num 9 IX $num 5 V $num 4 IV $num 1 I
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See also Example 1028. The largest positive integer a function can return is 256. The return command is closely tied to the concept of exit status, which accounts for this particular limitation. Fortunately, there are various workarounds for those situations requiring a large integer return value from a function.
# o.k. # Returns 27. # Still o.k. # Returns 256. # Error! # Returns 1 (return code for miscellaneous error). # However, large negative numbers work. # Returns 151896.
As we have seen, a function can return a large negative value. This also permits returning large positive integer, using a bit of trickery. An alternate method of accomplishing this is to simply assign the "return value" to a global variable.
Return_Val= # Global variable to hold oversize return value of function.
alt_return_test () { fvar=$1 Return_Val=$fvar return # Returns 0 (success). } alt_return_test 1 echo $? echo "return value = $Return_Val"
# 0 # 1
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# 257
#25701
max2 () # Returns larger of two numbers. { if [ z "$2" ] then return $E_PARAM_ERR fi if [ "$1" eq "$2" ] then return $EQUAL else if [ "$1" gt "$2" ] then retval=$1 else retval=$2 fi fi # # # This is a workaround to enable returning a large integer # from this function. if [ "$retval" gt "$MAXRETVAL" ] # If out of range, then # then let "retval = (( 0 $retval ))" # adjust to a negative value. # (( 0 $VALUE )) changes the sign of VALUE. fi # Large *negative* return values permitted, fortunately. # # return $retval } max2 33001 33997 return_val=$? # # if [ "$return_val" lt 0 ] # If "adjusted" negative number,
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if [ "$return_val" eq "$E_NPARAM_ERR" ] then # Parameter error "flag" gets sign changed, too. echo "Error: Too few parameters." elif [ "$return_val" eq "$EQUAL" ] then echo "The two numbers are equal." else echo "The larger of the two numbers is $return_val." fi exit 0
See also Example A8. Exercise: Using what we have just learned, extend the previous Roman numerals example to accept arbitrarily large input. Redirection Redirecting the stdin of a function A function is essentially a code block, which means its stdin can be redirected (as in Example 31).
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There is an alternative, and perhaps less confusing method of redirecting a function's stdin. This involves redirecting the stdin to an embedded bracketed code block within the function.
# Instead of: Function () { ... } < file # Try this: Function () { { ... } < file } # Similarly, Function () # This works. { { echo $* } | tr a b } Function () { echo $* } | tr a b # This doesn't work.
# Thanks, S.C.
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Before a function is called, all variables declared within the function are invisible outside the body of the function, not just those explicitly declared as local.
#!/bin/bash func () { global_var=37 }
# Visible only within the function block #+ before the function has been called. # END OF FUNCTION # global_var = # Function "func" has not yet been called, #+ so $global_var is not visible here.
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if [ z "$1" ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` number" exit $E_WRONG_ARGS fi if [ "$1" gt $MAX_ARG ] then echo "Out of range (5 is maximum)." # Let's get real now. # If you want greater range than this, # rewrite it in a real programming language. exit $E_RANGE_ERR fi fact () { local number=$1 # Variable "number" must be declared as local, # otherwise this doesn't work. if [ "$number" eq 0 ] then factorial=1 # Factorial of 0 = 1. else let "decrnum = number 1" fact $decrnum # Recursive function call. let "factorial = $number * $?" fi return $factorial } fact $1 echo "Factorial of $1 is $?." exit 0
See also Example A17 for an example of recursion in a script. Be aware that recursion is resourceintensive and executes slowly, and is therefore generally not appropriate to use in a script.
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# First, some fun. alias Jesse_James='echo "\"Alias Jesse James\" was a 1959 comedy starring Bob Hope."' Jesse_James echo; echo; echo; alias ll="ls l" # May use either single (') or double (") quotes to define an alias. echo "Trying aliased \"ll\":" ll /usr/X11R6/bin/mk* #* Alias works. echo directory=/usr/X11R6/bin/ prefix=mk* # See if wildcard causes problems. echo "Variables \"directory\" + \"prefix\" = $directory$prefix" echo alias lll="ls l $directory$prefix" echo "Trying aliased \"lll\":" lll # Long listing of all files in /usr/X11R6/bin stating with mk. # Alias handles concatenated variables, including wildcard o.k.
TRUE=1
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xyz # This seems to work, #+ although the Bash documentation suggests that it shouldn't. # # However, as Steve Jacobson points out, #+ the "$0" parameter expands immediately upon declaration of the alias. exit 0
bozo
3072 Feb
6 14:04 .
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Each command executes in turn provided that the previous command has given a return value of true (zero). At the first false (nonzero) return, the command chain terminates (the first command returning false is the last one to execute). Example 251. Using an "and list" to test for commandline arguments
#!/bin/bash # "and list" if [ ! z "$1" ] && echo "Argument #1 = $1" && [ ! z "$2" ] && echo "Argument #2 = $2" then echo "At least 2 arguments passed to script." # All the chained commands return true. else echo "Less than 2 arguments passed to script." # At least one of the chained commands returns false. fi # Note that "if [ ! z $1 ]" works, but its supposed equivalent, # if [ n $1 ] does not. However, quoting fixes this. # if [ n "$1" ] works. Careful! # It is best to always quote tested variables.
accomplishes the same thing, using "pure" if/then statements. z "$1" ] "Argument #1 = $1" z "$2" ] "Argument #2 = $2" "At least 2 arguments passed to script." "Less than 2 arguments passed to script." longer and less elegant than using an "and list".
exit 0
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test $# ne $ARGS && echo "Usage: `basename $0` $ARGS argument(s)" && exit $E_BADARGS # If condition1 true (wrong number of args passed to script), # then the rest of the line executes, and script terminates. # Line below executes only if the above test fails. echo "Correct number of arguments passed to this script." exit 0 # To check exit value, do a "echo $?" after script termination.
or list
command1 || command2 || command3 || ... commandn
Each command executes in turn for as long as the previous command returns false. At the first true return, the command chain terminates (the first command returning true is the last one to execute). This is obviously the inverse of the "and list". Example 253. Using "or lists" in combination with an "and list"
#!/bin/bash # # delete.sh, notsocunning file deletion utility. Usage: delete filename
E_BADARGS=65 if [ z "$1" ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` filename" exit $E_BADARGS # No arg? Bail out. else file=$1 # Set filename. fi
[ ! f "$file" ] && echo "File \"$file\" not found. \ Cowardly refusing to delete a nonexistent file." # AND LIST, to give error message if file not present. # Note echo message continued on to a second line with an escape. [ ! f "$file" ] || (rm f $file; echo "File \"$file\" deleted.") # OR LIST, to delete file if present. # Note logic inversion above.
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If the first command in an "or list" returns true, it will execute. The exit status of an and list or an or list is the exit status of the last command executed. Clever combinations of "and" and "or" lists are possible, but the logic may easily become convoluted and require extensive debugging.
false && true || echo false # Same result as ( false && true ) || echo false # But *not* false && ( true || echo false ) # false
# Note lefttoright grouping and evaluation of statements, #+ since the logic operators "&&" and "||" have equal precedence. # # It's best to avoid such complexities, unless you know what you're doing. Thanks, S.C.
See Example A8 and Example 74 for illustrations of using an and / or list to test variables.
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area[11]=23 area[13]=37 area[51]=UFOs # Array members need not be consecutive or contiguous. # Some members of the array can be left uninitialized. # Gaps in the array are o.k.
echo n "area[11] = " echo ${area[11]} # echo n "area[13] = " echo ${area[13]}
echo "Contents of area[51] are ${area[51]}." # Contents of uninitialized array variable print blank. echo n "area[43] = " echo ${area[43]} echo "(area[43] unassigned)" echo # Sum of two array variables assigned to third area[5]=`expr ${area[11]} + ${area[13]}` echo "area[5] = area[11] + area[13]" echo n "area[5] = " echo ${area[5]} area[6]=`expr ${area[11]} + ${area[51]}` echo "area[6] = area[11] + area[51]" echo n "area[6] = " echo ${area[6]} # This fails because adding an integer to a string is not permitted. echo; echo; echo # # # # Another array, "area2". Another way of assigning array variables... array_name=( XXX YYY ZZZ ... )
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area3=([17]=seventeen [24]=twentyfour) echo n "area3[17] = " echo ${area3[17]} echo n "area3[24] = " echo ${area3[24]} # exit 0
Bash permits array operations on variables, even if the variables are not explicitly declared as arrays.
string=abcABC123ABCabc echo ${string[@]} echo ${string[*]} echo ${string[0]} echo ${string[1]} echo ${#string[@]}
# # # # # # # #
abcABC123ABCabc abcABC123ABCabc abcABC123ABCabc No output! Why? 1 One element in the array. The string itself.
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Array variables have a syntax all their own, and even standard Bash commands and operators have special options adapted for array use.
array=( zero one two three four five ) echo ${array[0]} echo ${array:0} echo ${array:1} # # # # # #+ # # zero zero Parameter expansion of first element. ero Parameter expansion of first element, starting at position #1 (2nd character). 4 Length of first element of array.
echo ${#array}
array2=( [0]="first element" [1]="second element" [3]="fourth element" ) echo ${array2[0]} echo ${array2[1]} echo ${array2[2]} echo ${array2[3]} # # # # # first element second element Skipped in initialization, therefore null. fourth element
In an array context, some Bash builtins have a slightly altered meaning. For example, unset deletes array elements, or even an entire array.
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echo; echo n "Colors gone." echo ${colors[@]} # List array again, now empty. exit 0
As seen in the previous example, either ${array_name[@]} or ${array_name[*]} refers to all the elements of the array. Similarly, to get a count of the number of elements in an array, use either ${#array_name[@]} or ${#array_name[*]}. ${#array_name} is the length (number of characters) of ${array_name[0]}, the first element of the array.
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(surprise!)
# =================================================================== ListArray # Try extending those arrays # Adding array0=( array1=( array2=( an element to an array. "${array0[@]}" "new1" ) "${array1[@]}" "new1" ) "${array2[@]}" "new1" )
ListArray # or array0[${#array0[*]}]="new2" array1[${#array1[*]}]="new2" array2[${#array2[*]}]="new2" ListArray # When extended as above; arrays are 'stacks' # The above is the 'push' # The stack 'height' is: height=${#array2[@]} echo echo "Stack height for array2 = $height" # The 'pop' is: unset array2[${#array2[@]}1] # Arrays are zero based height=${#array2[@]} echo echo "POP" echo "New stack height for array2 = $height" ListArray # List only 2nd and 3rd elements of array0 from=1 # Zero based numbering to=2 # declare a array3=( ${array0[@]:1:2} )
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# Works like a string (array of characters) # Try some other "string" forms # Replacement declare a array4=( ${array0[@]/second/2nd} ) echo echo "Elements in array4: ${array4[@]}" # Replace all matching wildcarded string declare a array5=( ${array0[@]//new?/old} ) echo echo "Elements in array5: ${array5[@]}" # Just when you are getting the feel for this... declare a array6=( ${array0[@]#*new} ) echo # This one might surprise you echo "Elements in array6: ${array6[@]}" declare a array7=( ${array0[@]#new1} ) echo # After array6 this should not be a surprise echo "Elements in array7: ${array7[@]}" # Which looks a lot like... declare a array8=( ${array0[@]/new1/} ) echo echo "Elements in array8: ${array8[@]}" # # #+ # # #+ # So what can one say about this? The string operations are performed on each of the elements in var[@] in succession. Therefore : BASH supports string vector operations If the result is a zero length string, that element disappears in the resulting assignment. Question, are those strings hard or soft quotes?
zap='new*' declare a array9=( ${array0[@]/$zap/} ) echo echo "Elements in array9: ${array9[@]}" # Just when you thought you where still in Kansas... declare a array10=( ${array0[@]#$zap} ) echo echo "Elements in array10: ${array10[@]}" # Compare array7 with array10 # Compare array8 with array9 # Answer, must be soft quotes. exit 0
The relationship of ${array_name[@]} and ${array_name[*]} is analogous to that between $@ and $*. This powerful array notation has a number of uses.
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The array=( element1 element2 ... elementN ) initialization operation, with the help of command substitution, makes it possible to load the contents of a text file into an array.
#!/bin/bash filename=sample_file # # # # cat sample_file 1 a b c 2 d e fg
declare a array1 array1=( `cat "$filename" | tr '\n' ' '`) # # # Loads contents # of $filename into array1.
echo ${array1[@]} # List the array. # 1 a b c 2 d e fg # # Each whitespaceseparated "word" in the file #+ has been assigned to an element of the array. element_count=${#array1[*]} echo $element_count
# 8
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# That could all be a single command. # Matter of style only. } declare f CopyArray CopyArray=CpArray_Mac Hype() { # Hype the array named $1. # (Splice it together with array containing "Really Rocks".) # Return in array named $2. local a TMP local a hype=( Really Rocks ) $($CopyArray $1 TMP) TMP=( ${TMP[@]} ${hype[@]} ) $($CopyArray TMP $2) } declare a before=( Advanced Bash Scripting ) declare a after echo "Array Before = ${before[@]}" Hype before after echo "Array After = ${after[@]}" # Too much hype? echo "What ${after[@]:3:2}?" declare a modest=( ${after[@]:2:1} ${after[@]:3:2} ) # substring extraction echo "Array Modest = ${modest[@]}" # What happened to 'before' ? echo "Array Before = ${before[@]}" exit 0 # Function "Pointer" # Statement Builder
Arrays permit deploying old familiar algorithms as shell scripts. Whether this is necessarily a good idea is left to the reader to decide.
Example 266. An old friend: The Bubble Sort Chapter 26. Arrays 302
exchange() { # Swaps two members of the array. local temp=${Countries[$1]} # Temporary storage #+ for element getting swapped out. Countries[$1]=${Countries[$2]} Countries[$2]=$temp return } declare a Countries # Declare array, #+ optional here since it's initialized below.
# Is it permissable to split an array variable over multiple lines #+ using an escape (\)? # Yes. Countries=(Netherlands Ukraine Zaire Turkey Russia Yemen Syria \ Brazil Argentina Nicaragua Japan Mexico Venezuela Greece England \ Israel Peru Canada Oman Denmark Wales France Kenya \ Xanadu Qatar Liechtenstein Hungary) # "Xanadu" is the mythical place where, according to Coleridge, #+ Kubla Khan did a pleasure dome decree.
number_of_elements=${#Countries[@]} let "comparisons = $number_of_elements 1" count=1 # Pass number. while [ "$comparisons" gt 0 ] do index=0 # Beginning of outer loop
while [ "$index" lt "$comparisons" ] # Beginning of inner loop do if [ ${Countries[$index]} \> ${Countries[`expr $index + 1`]} ] # If out of order... # Recalling that \> is ASCII comparison operator #+ within single brackets.
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let "comparisons = 1" # Since "heaviest" element bubbles to bottom, #+ we need do one less comparison each pass. echo echo "$count: ${Countries[@]}" echo let "count += 1" done
# Print resultant array at end of each pass. # Increment pass count. # End of outer loop # All done.
exit 0
Embedded arrays in combination with indirect references create some fascinating possibilities
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ARRAY1=( VAR1_1=value11 VAR1_2=value12 VAR1_3=value13 ) ARRAY2=( VARIABLE="test" STRING="VAR1=value1 VAR2=value2 VAR3=value3" ARRAY21=${ARRAY1[*]} ) # Embed ARRAY1 within this second array. function print () { OLD_IFS="$IFS" IFS=$'\n'
# To print each array element #+ on a separate line. TEST1="ARRAY2[*]" local ${!TEST1} # See what happens if you delete this line. # Indirect reference. # This makes the components of $TEST1 #+ accessible to this function.
# Let's see what we've got so far. echo echo "\$TEST1 = $TEST1" # Just the name of the variable. echo; echo echo "{\$TEST1} = ${!TEST1}" # Contents of the variable. # That's what an indirect #+ reference does. echo echo ""; echo echo
# Print variable echo "Variable VARIABLE: $VARIABLE" # Print a string element IFS="$OLD_IFS" TEST2="STRING[*]" local ${!TEST2} # Indirect reference (as above). echo "String element VAR2: $VAR2 from STRING" # Print an array element TEST2="ARRAY21[*]" local ${!TEST2} # Indirect reference (as above). echo "Array element VAR1_1: $VAR1_1 from ARRAY21" } print echo exit 0 # As the author of the script notes, #+ "you can easily expand it to create namedhashes in bash." # (Difficult) exercise for the reader: implement this.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Arrays enable implementing a shell script version of the Sieve of Eratosthenes. Of course, a resourceintensive application of this nature should really be written in a compiled language, such as C. It runs excruciatingly slowly as a script.
initialize () { # Initialize the array. i=$LOWER_LIMIT until [ "$i" gt "$UPPER_LIMIT" ] do Primes[i]=$PRIME let "i += 1" done # Assume all array members guilty (prime) # until proven innocent. } print_primes () { # Print out the members of the Primes[] array tagged as prime. i=$LOWER_LIMIT until [ "$i" gt "$UPPER_LIMIT" ] do if [ "${Primes[i]}" eq "$PRIME" ] then printf "%8d" $i
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# Invoke the functions sequentially. initialize sift print_primes # This is what they call structured programming. echo exit 0
# # # Code below line will not execute. # This improved version of the Sieve, by Stephane Chazelas, # executes somewhat faster. # Must invoke with commandline argument (limit of primes). UPPER_LIMIT=$1 let SPLIT=UPPER_LIMIT/2 # From command line. # Halfway to max number.
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Compare this arraybased prime number generator with an alternative that does not use arrays, Example A17. Arrays lend themselves, to some extent, to emulating data structures for which Bash has no native support.
SP=$BP
Data=
declare a stack
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# This also keeps SP from getting past 100, #+ i.e., prevents a runaway stack.
status_report() # Find out what's happening. { echo "" echo "REPORT" echo "Stack Pointer = $SP" echo "Just popped \""$Data"\" off the stack." echo "" echo }
# ======================================================= # Now, for some fun. echo # See if you can pop anything off empty stack. pop status_report echo push garbage pop status_report
value1=23; push $value1 value2=skidoo; push $value2 value3=FINAL; push $value3 pop status_report pop status_report pop status_report # FINAL # skidoo # 23 # Lastin, firstout!
# Notice how the stack pointer decrements with each push, #+ and increments with each pop. echo # =======================================================
# Exercises:
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Fancy manipulation of array "subscripts" may require intermediate variables. For projects involving this, again consider using a more powerful programming language, such as Perl or C.
# Number of terms to calculate # Number of terms printed per line # First two terms of series are 1.
echo echo "Qseries [$LIMIT terms]:" echo n "${Q[1]} " # Output first two terms. echo n "${Q[2]} " for ((n=3; n <= $LIMIT; n++)) # Clike loop conditions. do # Q[n] = Q[n Q[n1]] + Q[n Q[n2]] for n>2 # Need to break the expression into intermediate terms, # since Bash doesn't handle complex array arithmetic very well. let "n1 = $n 1" let "n2 = $n 2" t0=`expr $n ${Q[n1]}` t1=`expr $n ${Q[n2]}` T0=${Q[t0]} T1=${Q[t1]} # n1 # n2 # n Q[n1] # n Q[n2] # Q[n Q[n1]] # Q[n Q[n2]]
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if [ `expr $n % $LINEWIDTH` eq 0 ] # Format output. then # mod echo # Break lines into neat chunks. fi done echo exit 0 # This is an iterative implementation of the Qseries. # The more intuitive recursive implementation is left as an exercise. # Warning: calculating this series recursively takes a *very* long time.
Bash supports only onedimensional arrays, however a little trickery permits simulating multidimensional ones.
for i in A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y do local row=`expr $rc / $Columns` local column=`expr $rc % $Rows` let "index = $row * $Rows + $column" alpha[$index]=$i # alpha[$row][$column] let "rc += 1" done # Simpler would be # declare a alpha=( A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ) # but this somehow lacks the "flavor" of a twodimensional array. } print_alpha () {
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if [[ "$1" ge 0 && "$1" lt "$Rows" && "$2" ge 0 && "$2" lt "$Columns" ]] then let "index = $1 * $Rows + $2" # Now, print it rotated. echo n " ${alpha[index]}" # alpha[$row][$column] fi }
rotate () # Rotate the array 45 degrees { # ("balance" it on its lower lefthand corner). local row local column for (( row = Rows; row > Rows; row )) do # Step through the array backwards.
for (( column = 0; column < Columns; column++ )) do if [ "$row" then let "t1 = let "t2 = else let "t1 = ge 0 ] $column $row" $column" $column"
312
## load_alpha # Load the array. print_alpha # Print it out. rotate # Rotate it 45 degrees counterclockwise. ##
# # # # # # # # #
This is a rather contrived, not to mention kludgy simulation. Exercises: 1) Rewrite the array loading and printing functions + in a more intuitive and elegant fashion. 2) Figure out how the array rotation functions work. Hint: think about the implications of backwardsindexing an array.
exit 0
A twodimensional array is essentially equivalent to a onedimensional one, but with additional addressing modes for referencing and manipulating the individual elements by "row" and "column" position. For an even more elaborate example of simulating a twodimensional array, see Example A11.
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28.1. /dev
The /dev directory contains entries for the physical devices that may or may not be present in the hardware. [57] The hard drive partitions containing the mounted filesystem(s) have entries in /dev, as a simple df shows.
bash$ df Filesystem Mounted on /dev/hda6 /dev/hda1 /dev/hda8 /dev/hda5
Used Available Use% 222748 3887 13262 1123624 247527 44248 334803 503704 48% 9% 4% 70% / /boot /home /usr
Among other things, the /dev directory also contains loopback devices, such as /dev/loop0. A loopback device is a gimmick that allows an ordinary file to be accessed as if it were a block device. [58] This enables mounting an entire filesystem within a single large file. See Example 136 and Example 135. A few of the pseudodevices in /dev have other specialized uses, such as /dev/null, /dev/zero and /dev/urandom.
28.2. /proc
The /proc directory is actually a pseudofilesystem. The files in the /proc directory mirror currently running system and kernel processes and contain information and statistics about them.
bash$ cat /proc/devices Character devices: 1 mem 2 pty 3 ttyp 4 ttyS 5 cua 7 vcs 10 misc 14 sound 29 fb 36 netlink 128 ptm 136 pts 162 raw 254 pcmcia Block devices: 1 ramdisk 2 fd 3 ide0 9 md
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bash$ cat /proc/interrupts CPU0 0: 84505 XTPIC 1: 3375 XTPIC 2: 0 XTPIC 5: 1 XTPIC 8: 1 XTPIC 12: 4231 XTPIC 14: 109373 XTPIC NMI: 0 ERR: 0
bash$ cat /proc/partitions major minor #blocks name 3 3 3 3 ... 0 1 2 4 3007872 52416 1 165280
rio rmerge rsect ruse wio wmerge wsect wuse running use aveq
hda 4472 22260 114520 94240 3551 18703 50384 549710 0 111550 644030 hda1 27 395 844 960 4 2 14 180 0 800 1140 hda2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 hda4 10 0 20 210 0 0 0 0 0 210 210
Shell scripts may extract data from certain of the files in /proc. [59]
bash$ cat /proc/filesystems | grep iso9660 iso9660
kernel_version=$( awk '{ print $3 }' /proc/version ) CPU=$( awk '/model name/ {print $4}' < /proc/cpuinfo ) if [ $CPU = Pentium ] then run_some_commands ... else run_different_commands ... fi
The /proc directory contains subdirectories with unusual numerical names. Every one of these names maps to the process ID of a currently running process. Within each of these subdirectories, there are a number of files that hold useful information about the corresponding process. The stat and status files keep running statistics on the process, the cmdline file holds the commandline arguments the process was invoked with, and the exe file is a symbolic link to the complete path name of the invoking process. There are a few more such files, but these seem to be the most interesting from a scripting standpoint. Chapter 28. /dev and /proc 316
Advanced BashScripting Guide Example 281. Finding the process associated with a PID
#!/bin/bash # pididentifier.sh: Gives complete path name to process associated with pid. ARGNO=1 # Number of arguments the script expects. E_WRONGARGS=65 E_BADPID=66 E_NOSUCHPROCESS=67 E_NOPERMISSION=68 PROCFILE=exe if [ $# ne $ARGNO ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` PIDnumber" >&2 exit $E_WRONGARGS fi
pidno=$( ps ax | grep $1 | awk '{ print $1 }' | grep $1 ) # Checks for pid in "ps" listing, field #1. # Then makes sure it is the actual process, not the process invoked by this script. # The last "grep $1" filters out this possibility. if [ z "$pidno" ] # If, after all the filtering, the result is a zerolength string, then # no running process corresponds to the pid given. echo "No such process running." exit $E_NOSUCHPROCESS fi # Alternatively: # if ! ps $1 > /dev/null 2>&1 # then # no running process corresponds to the pid given. # echo "No such process running." # exit $E_NOSUCHPROCESS # fi # To simplify the entire process, use "pidof".
r "/proc/$1/$PROCFILE" ]
"Process $1 running, but..." "Can't get read permission on /proc/$1/$PROCFILE." $E_NOPERMISSION # Ordinary user can't access some files in /proc.
# The last two tests may be replaced by: # if ! kill 0 $1 > /dev/null 2>&1 # '0' is not a signal, but # this will test whether it is possible # to send a signal to the process. # then echo "PID doesn't exist or you're not its owner" >&2 # exit $E_BADPID # fi
exe_file=$( ls l /proc/$1 | grep "exe" | awk '{ print $11 }' ) # Or exe_file=$( ls l /proc/$1/exe | awk '{print $11}' ) # # /proc/pidnumber/exe is a symbolic link # to the complete path name of the invoking process. if [ e "$exe_file" ] # If /proc/pidnumber/exe exists...
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# # # # # # # # #
This elaborate script can *almost* be replaced by ps ax | grep $1 | awk '{ print $5 }' However, this will not work... because the fifth field of 'ps' is argv[0] of the process, not the executable file path. However, either of the following would work. find /proc/$1/exe printf '%l\n' lsof aFn p $1 d txt | sed ne 's/^n//p'
pidno=$( ps ax | grep v "ps ax" | grep v grep | grep $PROCNAME | awk '{ print $1 }' ) # Finding the process number of 'pppd', the 'ppp daemon'. # Have to filter out the process lines generated by the search itself. # # However, as Oleg Philon points out, #+ this could have been considerably simplified by using "pidof". # pidno=$( pidof $PROCNAME ) # # Moral of the story: #+ When a command sequence gets too complex, look for a shortcut.
if [ z "$pidno" ] # If no pid, then process is not running. then echo "Not connected." exit $NOTCONNECTED else echo "Connected."; echo fi while [ true ] do # Endless loop, script can be improved here.
if [ ! e "/proc/$pidno/$PROCFILENAME" ] # While process running, then "status" file exists. then echo "Disconnected." exit $NOTCONNECTED fi
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sleep $INTERVAL echo; echo done exit 0 # As it stands, this script must be terminated with a ControlC. # # # # Exercises: Improve the script so it exits on a "q" keystroke. Make the script more userfriendly in other ways.
In general, it is dangerous to write to the files in /proc, as this can corrupt the filesystem or crash the machine.
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Deleting contents of a file, but preserving the file itself, with all attendant permissions (from Example 21 and Example 22):
cat /dev/null > /var/log/messages # : > /var/log/messages has same effect, but does not spawn a new process. cat /dev/null > /var/log/wtmp
Automatically emptying the contents of a logfile (especially good for dealing with those nasty "cookies" sent by Web commercial sites):
ln s /dev/null ~/.netscape/cookies
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Uses of /dev/zero Like /dev/null, /dev/zero is a pseudo file, but it actually contains nulls (numerical zeros, not the ASCII kind). Output written to it disappears, and it is fairly difficult to actually read the nulls in /dev/zero, though it can be done with od or a hex editor. The chief use for /dev/zero is in creating an initialized dummy file of specified length intended as a temporary swap file.
blocks=${1:$MINBLOCKS} # # # # # # # # #
# Set to default of 40 blocks, #+ if nothing specified on command line. This is the equivalent of the command block below. if [ n "$1" ] then blocks=$1 else blocks=$MINBLOCKS fi
echo "Creating swap file of size $blocks blocks (KB)." dd if=/dev/zero of=$FILE bs=$BLOCKSIZE count=$blocks # Zero out file. mkswap $FILE $blocks swapon $FILE # Designate it a swap file. # Activate swap file.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Another application of /dev/zero is to "zero out" a file of a designated size for a special purpose, such as mounting a filesystem on a loopback device (see Example 136) or securely deleting a file (see Example 1242).
# 2K blocks (change as appropriate) # 1K (1024 byte) block size # First ram device
username=`id nu` if [ "$username" != "$ROOTUSER_NAME" ] then echo "Must be root to run \"`basename $0`\"." exit $E_NON_ROOT_USER fi if [ ! d "$MOUNTPT" ] then mkdir $MOUNTPT fi # Test whether mount point already there, #+ so no error if this script is run #+ multiple times.
dd if=/dev/zero of=$DEVICE count=$SIZE bs=$BLOCKSIZE # Zero out RAM device. mke2fs $DEVICE # Create an ext2 filesystem on it. mount $DEVICE $MOUNTPT # Mount it. chmod 777 $MOUNTPT # So ordinary user can access ramdisk. # However, must be root to unmount it. echo "\"$MOUNTPT\" now available for use." # The ramdisk is now accessible for storing files, even by an ordinary user. # Caution, the ramdisk is volatile, and its contents will disappear #+ on reboot or power loss. # Copy anything you want saved to a regular directory. # After reboot, run this script again to set up ramdisk. # Remounting /mnt/ramdisk without the other steps will not work. exit 0
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What's wrong with the above script (hint: after the if)? Example 302. Missing keyword
#!/bin/bash # missingkeyword.sh: What error message will this generate? for a in 1 2 3 do echo "$a" # done # Required keyword 'done' commented out in line 7. exit 0
Note that the error message does not necessarily reference the line in which the error occurs, but the line where the Bash interpreter finally becomes aware of the error. Error messages may disregard comment lines in a script when reporting the line number of a syntax error. What if the script executes, but does not work as expected? This is the all too familiar logic error.
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Try to find out what's wrong with Example 303 by uncommenting the echo "$badname" line. Echo statements are useful for seeing whether what you expect is actually what you get. In this particular case, rm "$badname" will not give the desired results because $badname should not be quoted. Placing it in quotes ensures that rm has only one argument (it will match only one filename). A partial fix is to remove to quotes from $badname and to reset $IFS to contain only a newline, IFS=$'\n'. However, there are simpler ways of going about it.
# Correct methods of deleting filenames containing spaces. rm *\ * rm *" "* rm *' '* # Thank you. S.C.
Summarizing the symptoms of a buggy script, 1. It bombs with a "syntax error" message, or 2. It runs, but does not work as expected (logic error). 3. It runs, works as expected, but has nasty side effects (logic bomb). Tools for debugging nonworking scripts include 1. echo statements at critical points in the script to trace the variables, and otherwise give a snapshot of what is going on. 2. using the tee filter to check processes or data flows at critical points. 3. setting option flags n v x sh n scriptname checks for syntax errors without actually running the script. This is the equivalent of inserting set n or set o noexec into the script. Note that certain types of syntax errors can slip past this check. sh v scriptname echoes each command before executing it. This is the equivalent of inserting set v or set o verbose in the script. The n and v flags work well together. sh nv scriptname gives a verbose syntax check.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide sh x scriptname echoes the result each command, but in an abbreviated manner. This is the equivalent of inserting set x or set o xtrace in the script. Inserting set u or set o nounset in the script runs it, but gives an unbound variable error message at each attempt to use an undeclared variable. 4. Using an "assert" function to test a variable or condition at critical points in a script. (This is an idea borrowed from C.) Example 304. Testing a condition with an "assert"
#!/bin/bash # assert.sh assert () { E_PARAM_ERR=98 E_ASSERT_FAILED=99 # If condition false, #+ exit from script with error message.
if [ ! $1 ] then echo "Assertion failed: \"$1\"" echo "File \"$0\", line $lineno" exit $E_ASSERT_FAILED # else # return # and continue executing script. fi }
# Error message and exit from script. # Try setting "condition" to something else, #+ and see what happens.
assert "$condition" $LINENO # The remainder of the script executes only if the "assert" does not fail.
# Some commands. # ... echo "This statement echoes only if the \"assert\" does not fail." # ... # Some more commands. exit 0
5. trapping at exit. The exit command in a script triggers a signal 0, terminating the process, that is, the script itself. [61] It is often useful to trap the exit, forcing a "printout" of variables, for example. The trap must be the Chapter 30. Debugging 325
Advanced BashScripting Guide first command in the script. Trapping signals trap Specifies an action on receipt of a signal; also useful for debugging. A signal is simply a message sent to a process, either by the kernel or another process, telling it to take some specified action (usually to terminate). For example, hitting a ControlC, sends a user interrupt, an INT signal, to a running program.
trap '' 2 # Ignore interrupt 2 (ControlC), with no action specified. trap 'echo "ControlC disabled."' 2 # Message when ControlC pressed.
TRUE=1 LOGFILE=/var/log/messages # Note that $LOGFILE must be readable (chmod 644 /var/log/messages). TEMPFILE=temp.$$ # Create a "unique" temp file name, using process id of the script. KEYWORD=address # At logon, the line "remote IP address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx" # appended to /var/log/messages. ONLINE=22 USER_INTERRUPT=13 CHECK_LINES=100 # How many lines in log file to check. trap 'rm f $TEMPFILE; exit $USER_INTERRUPT' TERM INT # Cleans up the temp file if script interrupted by controlc. echo
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# Note: if you change the KEYWORD variable to "Exit", # this script can be used while online to check for an unexpected logoff. # Exercise: Change the script, as per the above note, # and prettify it. exit 0
# Nick Drage suggests an alternate method: while true do ifconfig ppp0 | grep UP 1> /dev/null && echo "connected" && exit 0 echo n "." # Prints dots (.....) until connected. sleep 2 done # Problem: Hitting ControlC to terminate this process may be insufficient. # (Dots may keep on echoing.) # Exercise: Fix this.
# Stephane Chazelas has yet another alternative: CHECK_INTERVAL=1 while ! tail 1 "$LOGFILE" | grep q "$KEYWORD" do echo n . sleep $CHECK_INTERVAL done echo "Online" # Exercise: Discuss the strengths and weaknesses # of each of these various approaches.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide The DEBUG argument to trap causes a specified action to execute after every command in a script. This permits tracing variables, for example. Example 307. Tracing a variable
#!/bin/bash trap 'echo "VARIABLETRACE> \$variable = \"$variable\""' DEBUG # Echoes the value of $variable after every command. variable=29 echo "Just initialized \"\$variable\" to $variable." let "variable *= 3" echo "Just multiplied \"\$variable\" by 3." # # # # The "trap 'commands' DEBUG" construct would be more useful in the context of a complex script, where placing multiple "echo $variable" statements might be clumsy and timeconsuming.
trap '' SIGNAL (two adjacent apostrophes) disables SIGNAL for the remainder of the script. trap SIGNAL restores the functioning of SIGNAL once more. This is useful to protect a critical portion of a script from an undesirable interrupt.
trap '' 2 command command command trap 2 # Signal 2 is ControlC, now disabled.
# Reenables ControlC
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set v # Command echoing on. command ... command set +v # Command echoing off. command exit 0
An alternate method of enabling options in a script is to specify them immediately following the #! script header.
#!/bin/bash x # # Body of script follows.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide It is also possible to enable script options from the command line. Some options that will not work with set are available this way. Among these are i, force script to run interactive. bash v scriptname bash o verbose scriptname The following is a listing of some useful options. They may be specified in either abbreviated form or by complete name.
Table 311. Bash options Abbreviation C D a b c ... f i p r u v x e n s t Name noclobber (none) allexport notify (none) noglob interactive privileged restricted nounset verbose xtrace errexit noexec stdin (none) (none) (none) Effect Prevent overwriting of files by redirection (may be overridden by >|) List doublequoted strings prefixed by $, but do not execute commands in script Export all defined variables Notify when jobs running in background terminate (not of much use in a script) Read commands from ... Filename expansion (globbing) disabled Script runs in interactive mode Script runs as "suid" (caution!) Script runs in restricted mode (see Chapter 21). Attempt to use undefined variable outputs error message, and forces an exit Print each command to stdout before executing it Similar to v, but expands commands Abort script at first error (when a command exits with nonzero status) Read commands in script, but do not execute them (syntax check) Read commands from stdin Exit after first command End of options flag. All other arguments are positional parameters. Unset positional parameters. If arguments given ( arg1 arg2), positional parameters set to arguments.
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Using the same name for a variable and a function. This can make a script difficult to understand.
do_something () { echo "This function does something with \"$1\"." } do_something=do_something do_something do_something # All this is legal, but highly confusing.
Using whitespace inappropriately. In contrast to other programming languages, Bash can be quite finicky about whitespace.
var1 = 23 # 'var1=23' is correct. # On line above, Bash attempts to execute command "var1" # with the arguments "=" and "23". let c = $a $b # 'let c=$a$b' or 'let "c = $a $b"' are correct.
Assuming uninitialized variables (variables before a value is assigned to them) are "zeroed out". An uninitialized variable has a value of "null", not zero.
#!/bin/bash
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Mixing up = and eq in a test. Remember, = is for comparing literal variables and eq for integers.
if [ "$a" = 273 ] if [ "$a" eq 273 ] # Is $a an integer or string? # If $a is an integer.
a=273.0
# Not an integer.
if [ "$a" = 273 ] then echo "Comparison works." else echo "Comparison does not work." fi # Comparison does not work. # Same with a=" 273" and a="0273".
# Likewise, problems trying to use "eq" with noninteger values. if [ "$a" eq 273.0 ] then echo "a = $a' fi # Aborts with an error message. # test.sh: [: 273.0: integer expression expected
# Attempt to run this bombs with the error message: # badop.sh: 5: No such file or directory
Sometimes variables within "test" brackets ([ ]) need to be quoted (double quotes). Failure to do so may cause unexpected behavior. See Example 76, Example 164, and Example 96. Commands issued from a script may fail to execute because the script owner lacks execute permission for them. If a user cannot invoke a command from the command line, then putting it into a script will likewise fail. Try changing the attributes of the command in question, perhaps even setting the suid bit (as root, of course). Attempting to use as a redirection operator (which it is not) will usually result in an unpleasant surprise. Chapter 32. Gotchas 332
# Also futile.
Using Bash version 2+ functionality may cause a bailout with error messages. Older Linux machines may have version 1.XX of Bash as the default installation.
#!/bin/bash minimum_version=2 # Since Chet Ramey is constantly adding features to Bash, # you may set $minimum_version to 2.XX, or whatever is appropriate. E_BAD_VERSION=80 if [ "$BASH_VERSION" \< "$minimum_version" ] then echo "This script works only with Bash, version $minimum or greater." echo "Upgrade strongly recommended." exit $E_BAD_VERSION fi ...
Using Bashspecific functionality in a Bourne shell script (#!/bin/sh) on a nonLinux machine may cause unexpected behavior. A Linux system usually aliases sh to bash, but this does not necessarily hold true for a generic UNIX machine. A script with DOStype newlines (\r\n) will fail to execute, since #!/bin/bash\r\n is not recognized, not the same as the expected #!/bin/bash\n. The fix is to convert the script to UNIXstyle newlines.
#!/bin/bash echo "Here" unix2dos $0 chmod 755 $0 # Script changes itself to DOS format. # Change back to execute permission. # The 'unix2dos' command removes execute permission. # Script tries to run itself again. # But it won't work as a DOS file.
./$0
A shell script headed by #!/bin/sh may not run in full Bashcompatibility mode. Some Bashspecific functions might be disabled. Scripts that need complete access to all the Bashspecific extensions should start with #!/bin/bash. Putting whitespace in front of the terminating limit string of a here document will cause unexpected behavior in a script. A script may not export variables back to its parent process, the shell, or to the environment. Just as we Chapter 32. Gotchas 333
Advanced BashScripting Guide learned in biology, a child process can inherit from a parent, but not vice versa.
WHATEVER=/home/bozo export WHATEVER exit 0 bash$ echo $WHATEVER bash$
Sure enough, back at the command prompt, $WHATEVER remains unset. Setting and manipulating variables in a subshell, then attempting to use those same variables outside the scope of the subshell will result an unpleasant surprise.
# Unset. # Unchanged.
Piping echooutput to a read may produce unexpected results. In this scenario, the read acts as if it were running in a subshell. Instead, use the set command (as in Example 1114).
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# # Try the following alternative. var=`echo "one two three"` set $var a=$1; b=$2; c=$3 echo "" echo "a = $a" echo "b = $b" echo "c = $c" # Reassignment
# # # Note also that an echo to a 'read' works within a subshell. However, the value of the variable changes *only* within the subshell. # Starting all over again.
echo; echo echo "one two three" | ( read a b c; echo "Inside subshell: "; echo "a = $a"; echo "b = $b"; echo "c = $c" ) # a = one # b = two # c = three echo "" echo "Outside subshell: " echo "a = $a" # a = aaa echo "b = $b" # b = bbb echo "c = $c" # c = ccc echo exit 0
Using "suid" commands within scripts is risky, as it may compromise system security. [62] Using shell scripts for CGI programming may be problematic. Shell script variables are not "typesafe", and this can cause undesirable behavior as far as CGI is concerned. Moreover, it is difficult to "crackerproof" shell scripts. Bash does not handle the double slash (//) string correctly.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Bash scripts written for Linux or BSD systems may need fixups to run on a commercial UNIX machine. Such scripts often employ GNU commands and filters which have greater functionality than their generic UNIX counterparts. This is particularly true of such text processing utilites as tr. Danger is near thee Beware, beware, beware, beware. Many brave hearts are asleep in the deep. So beware Beware. A.J. Lamb and H.W. Petrie
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# # cleanup_pfiles () # Removes all files in designated directory. # Parameter: $target_directory # Returns: 0 on success, $BADDIR if something went wrong. # cleanup_pfiles () { if [ ! d "$1" ] # Test if target directory exists. then echo "$1 is not a directory." return $BADDIR fi rm f "$1"/* return 0 # Success. } cleanup_pfiles $projectdir exit 0
Be sure to put the #!/bin/bash at the beginning of the first line of the script, preceding any comment headers. Avoid using "magic numbers", [63] that is, "hardwired" literal constants. Use meaningful variable Chapter 33. Scripting With Style 337
Advanced BashScripting Guide names instead. This makes the script easier to understand and permits making changes and updates without breaking the application.
if [ f /var/log/messages ] then ... fi # A year later, you decide to change the script to check /var/log/syslog. # It is now necessary to manually change the script, instance by instance, # and hope nothing breaks. # A better way: LOGFILE=/var/log/messages if [ f "$LOGFILE" ] then ... fi
MAXVAL=10 # All caps used for a script constant. while [ "$index" le "$MAXVAL" ] ...
E_NOTFOUND=75 if [ ! e "$filename" ] then echo "File $filename not found." exit $E_NOTFOUND fi
_uservariable=23 # Permissable, but not recommended. # It's better for userdefined variables not to start with an underscore. # Leave that for system variables.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide See also Appendix D. Break complex scripts into simpler modules. Use functions where appropriate. See Example 354. Don't use a complex construct where a simpler one will do.
COMMAND if [ $? eq 0 ] ... # Redundant and nonintuitive. if COMMAND ... # More concise (if perhaps not quite as legible).
... reading the UNIX source code to the Bourne shell (/bin/sh). I was shocked at how much simple algorithms could be made cryptic, and therefore useless, by a poor choice of code style. I asked myself, "Could someone be proud of this code?" Landon Noll
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Let us consider an interactive script to be one that requires input from the user, usually with read statements (see Example 112). "Real life" is actually a bit messier than that. For now, assume an interactive script is bound to a tty, a script that a user has invoked from the console or an xterm. Init and startup scripts are necessarily noninteractive, since they must run without human intervention. Many administrative and system maintenance scripts are likewise noninteractive. Unvarying repetitive tasks cry out for automation by noninteractive scripts. Noninteractive scripts can run in the background, but interactive ones hang, waiting for input that never comes. Handle that difficulty by having an expect script or embedded here document feed input to an interactive script running as a background job. In the simplest case, redirect a file to supply input to a read statement (read variable <file). These particular workarounds make possible general purpose scripts that run in either interactive or noninteractive modes. If a script needs to test whether it is running in an interactive shell, it is simply a matter of finding whether the prompt variable, $PS1 is set. (If the user is being prompted for input, then the script needs to display a prompt.)
if [ z $PS1 ] # no prompt? then # noninteractive ... else
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Alternatively, the script can test for the presence of option "i" in the $ flag.
case $ in *i*) # interactive shell ;; *) # noninteractive shell ;; # (Courtesy of "UNIX F.A.Q.," 1993)
Scripts may be forced to run in interactive mode with the i option or with a #!/bin/bash i header. Be aware that this can cause erratic script behavior or show error messages even when no error is present.
# Same as # sed e '/^$/d' filename # invoked from the command line. sed e /^$/d "$1" # The 'e' means an "editing" command follows (optional here). # '^' is the beginning of line, '$' is the end. # This match lines with nothing between the beginning and the end, #+ blank lines.
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# Quoting the commandline arg permits #+ whitespace and special characters in the filename. exit 0
if [ $# ne "$ARGS" ] # Test number of arguments to script (always a good idea). then echo "Usage: `basename $0` oldpattern newpattern filename" exit $E_BADARGS fi old_pattern=$1 new_pattern=$2 if [ f "$3" ] then file_name=$3 else echo "File \"$3\" does not exist." exit $E_BADARGS fi # Here is where the heavy work gets done. sed e "s/$old_pattern/$new_pattern/g" $file_name # 's' is, of course, the substitute command in sed, # and /pattern/ invokes address matching. # The "g", or global flag causes substitution for *every* # occurence of $old_pattern on each line, not just the first. # Read the literature on 'sed' for a more indepth explanation. exit 0 # Successful invocation of the script returns 0.
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# Begin awk script. # awk ' { total += $'"${column_number}"' } END { print total } ' "$filename" # # End awk script.
# # # # # # # # # #
It may not be safe to pass shell variables to an embedded awk script, so Stephane Chazelas proposes the following alternative: awk v column_number="$column_number" ' { total += $column_number } END { print total }' "$filename"
exit 0
For those scripts needing a single doitall tool, a Swiss army knife, there is Perl. Perl combines the capabilities of sed and awk, and throws in a large subset of C, to boot. It is modular and contains support for everything ranging from objectoriented programming up to and including the kitchen sink. Short Perl scripts lend themselves to embedding in shell scripts, and there may even be some substance to the claim that Perl can totally replace shell scripting (though the author of this document remains skeptical).
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It is even possible to combine a Bash script and Perl script within the same file. Depending on how the script is invoked, either the Bash part or the Perl part will execute.
bash$ perl x bashandperl.sh Greetings from the Perl part of the script.
# "and list"
city="New York" # Again, all of the comparisons below are equivalent. test "$city" \< Paris && echo "Yes, Paris is greater than $city" # Greater ASCII order. /bin/test "$city" \< Paris && echo "Yes, Paris is greater than $city" [ "$city" \< Paris ] && echo "Yes, Paris is greater than $city" [[ $city < Paris ]] && echo "Yes, Paris is greater than $city" # Need not quote $city.
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34.4. Recursion
Can a script recursively call itself? Indeed.
if [ "$i" lt "$MAXVAL" ] then echo "i = $i" ./$0 # Script recursively spawns a new instance of itself. fi # Each child script does the same, until #+ a generated $i equals $MAXVAL. # # Using a "while" loop instead of an "if/then" test causes problems. Explain why.
exit 0
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# # Sample "phonebook" datafile: John Doe 1555 Main St., Baltimore, MD 21228 (410) 2223333 Mary Moe 9899 Jones Blvd., Warren, NH 03787 (603) 8983232 Richard Roe 856 E. 7th St., New York, NY 10009 (212) 3334567 Sam Roe 956 E. 8th St., New York, NY 10009 (212) 4445678 Zoe Zenobia 4481 N. Baker St., San Francisco, SF 94338 (415) 5011631 # $bash pb.sh Roe Richard Roe 856 E. 7th St., New York, NY 10009 Sam Roe 956 E. 8th St., New York, NY 10009 $bash pb.sh Roe Sam Sam Roe 956 E. 8th St., New York, NY 10009 # When more than one argument passed to script, #+ prints *only* the line(s) containing all the arguments.
(212) 4445678
Too many levels of recursion can exhaust the script's stack space, causing a segfault.
clear
echo n " " echo e '\E[37;44m'"\033[1mContact List\033[0m" # White on blue background echo; echo echo e "\033[1mChoose one of the following persons:\033[0m" # Bold tput sgr0 echo "(Enter only the first letter of name.)" echo echo en '\E[47;34m'"\033[1mE\033[0m" # Blue tput sgr0 # Reset colors to "normal." echo "vans, Roland" # "[E]vans, Roland" echo en '\E[47;35m'"\033[1mJ\033[0m" # Magenta
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# Green
# Red
read person case "$person" in # Note variable is quoted. "E" | "e" ) # Accept upper or lowercase input. echo echo "Roland Evans" echo "4321 Floppy Dr." echo "Hardscrabble, CO 80753" echo "(303) 7349874" echo "(303) 7349892 fax" echo "[email protected]" echo "Business partner & old friend" ;; "J" | "j" ) echo echo "Mildred Jones" echo "249 E. 7th St., Apt. 19" echo "New York, NY 10009" echo "(212) 5332814" echo "(212) 5339972 fax" echo "[email protected]" echo "Girlfriend" echo "Birthday: Feb. 11" ;; # Add info for Smith & Zane later. * ) # Default option. # Empty input (hitting RETURN) fits here, too. echo echo "Not yet in database." ;; esac tput sgr0 echo exit 0 # Reset colors to "normal."
The simplest, and perhaps most useful ANSI escape sequence is bold text, \033[1m ... \033[0m. The \033 represents an escape, the "[1" turns on the bold attribute, while the "[0" switches it off. The "m" terminates each term of the escape sequence.
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A similar escape sequence switches on the underline attribute (on an rxvt and and an aterm).
bash$ echo e "\033[4mThis is underlined text.\033[0m"
With an echo, the e option enables the escape sequences. Other escape sequences change the text and/or background color.
bash$ echo e '\E[34;47mThis prints in blue.'; tput sgr0
The tput sgr0 restores the terminal settings to normal. Omitting this lets all subsequent output from that particular terminal remain blue.
Use the following template for writing colored text on a colored background. echo e '\E[COLOR1;COLOR2mSome text goes here.' The "\E[" begins the escape sequence. The semicolonseparated numbers "COLOR1" and "COLOR2" specify a foreground and a background color, according to the table below. (The order of the numbers does not matter, since the foreground and background numbers fall in nonoverlapping ranges.) The "m" terminates the escape sequence, and the text begins immediately after that. Note also that single quotes enclose the remainder of the command sequence following the echo e. The numbers in the following table work for an rxvt terminal. Results may vary for other terminal emulators.
Table 341. Numbers representing colors in Escape Sequences Color black red green yellow blue magenta cyan white Foreground 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Background 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47
cecho ()
{ local default_msg="No message passed." # Doesn't really need to be a local variable. message=${1:$default_msg} color=${2:$black} echo e "$color" echo "$message" Reset return } # Defaults to default message. # Defaults to black, if not specified.
# Reset to normal.
# Now, let's try it out. # cecho "Feeling blue..." $blue cecho "Magenta looks more like purple." $magenta cecho "Green with envy." $green cecho "Seeing red?" $red cecho "Cyan, more familiarly known as aqua." $cyan cecho "No color passed (defaults to black)." # Missing $color argument. cecho "\"Empty\" color passed (defaults to black)." "" # Empty $color argument. cecho # Missing $message and $color arguments. cecho "" "" # Empty $message and $color arguments. # echo exit 0 # Exercises: # # 1) Add the "bold" attribute to the 'cecho ()' function.
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There is, however, a major problem with all this. ANSI escape sequences are emphatically nonportable. What works fine on some terminal emulators (or the console) may work differently, or not at all, on others. A "colorized" script that looks stunning on the script author's machine may produce unreadable output on someone else's. This greatly compromises the usefulness of "colorizing" scripts, and possibly relegates this technique to the status of a gimmick or even a "toy". Moshe Jacobson's color utility (http://runslinux.net/projects/color) considerably simplifies using ANSI escape sequences. It substitutes a clean and logical syntax for the clumsy constructs just discussed.
34.6. Optimizations
Most shell scripts are quick 'n dirty solutions to noncomplex problems. As such, optimizing them for speed is not much of an issue. Consider the case, though, where a script carries out an important task, does it well, but runs too slowly. Rewriting it in a compiled language may not be a palatable option. The simplest fix would be to rewrite the parts of the script that slow it down. Is it possible to apply principles of code optimization even to a lowly shell script? Check the loops in the script. Time consumed by repetitive operations adds up quickly. If at all possible, remove timeconsuming operations from within loops. Use builtin commands in preference to system commands. Builtins execute faster and usually do not launch a subshell when invoked. Avoid unnecessary commands, particularly in a pipe.
cat "$file" | grep "$word" grep "$word" "$file" # The above command lines have an identical effect, #+ but the second runs faster since it launches one fewer subprocess.
The cat command seems especially prone to overuse in scripts. Use the time and times tools to profile computationintensive commands. Consider rewriting timecritical code sections in C, or even in assembler. Try to minimize file I/O. Bash is not particularly efficient at handling files, so consider using more appropriate tools for this within the script, such as awk or Perl. Write your scripts in a structured, coherent form, so they can be reorganized and tightened up as necessary. Some of the optimization techniques applicable to highlevel languages may work for scripts, but others, such as loop unrolling, are mostly irrelevant. Above all, use common sense. For an excellent demonstration of how optimization can drastically reduce the execution time of a script, see Example 1232.
350
# Of course, SAVE_FILE defined and exported as environmental variable in ~/.bashrc # (something like ~/.scriptsrun)
The >> operator appends lines to a file. What if you wish to prepend a line to an existing file, that is, to paste it in at the beginning?
file=data.txt title="***This is the title line of data text file***" echo $title | cat $file >$file.new # "cat " concatenates stdout to $file. # End result is #+ to write a new file with $title appended at *beginning*.
Of course, sed can also do this. A shell script may act as an embedded command inside another shell script, a Tcl or wish script, or even a Makefile. It can be invoked as an external shell command in a C program using the system() call, i.e., system("script_name");. Put together files containing your favorite and most useful definitions and functions. As necessary, "include" one or more of these "library files" in scripts with either the dot (.) or source command.
# SCRIPT LIBRARY # # Note: # No "#!" here. # No "live code" either.
# Useful variable definitions ROOT_UID=0 E_NOTROOT=101 MAXRETVAL=256 SUCCESS=0 FAILURE=1 # Root has $UID 0. # Not root user error. # Maximum (positive) return value of a function.
351
Check_if_root () # Check if root running script. { # From "ex39.sh" example. if [ "$UID" ne "$ROOT_UID" ] then echo "Must be root to run this script." exit $E_NOTROOT fi }
CreateTempfileName () # Creates a "unique" temp filename. { # From "ex51.sh" example. prefix=temp suffix=`eval date +%s` Tempfilename=$prefix.$suffix }
isalpha2 () # Tests whether *entire string* is alphabetic. { # From "isalpha.sh" example. [ $# eq 1 ] || return $FAILURE case $1 in *[!azAZ]*|"") return $FAILURE;; *) return $SUCCESS;; esac # Thanks, S.C. }
abs () { E_ARGERR=999999 if [ z "$1" ] then return $E_ARGERR fi if [ "$1" ge 0 ] then absval=$1 else let "absval = (( 0 $1 ))" fi return $absval }
# # # # #
tolower () { if [ z "$1" ]
352
echo "$@" | tr AZ az # Translate all passed arguments ($@). return # Use command substitution to set a variable to function output. # For example: # oldvar="A seT of miXedcaSe LEtTerS" # newvar=`tolower "$oldvar"` # echo "$newvar" # a set of mixedcase letters # # Exercise: Rewrite this function to change lowercase passed argument(s) # to uppercase ... toupper() [easy]. }
## The "rf" options to "rm" are very dangerous, ##+ especially with wildcards.
#+ # #+ #+
Line continuation. This is line 1 of a multiline comment, and this is the final line.
#* Note. #o List item. #> Another point of view. while [ "$var1" != "end" ]
353
Compare this with using here documents to comment out code blocks. Using the $? exit status variable, a script may test if a parameter contains only digits, so it can be treated as an integer.
#!/bin/bash SUCCESS=0 E_BADINPUT=65 test "$1" ne 0 o "$1" eq 0 2>/dev/null # An integer is either equal to 0 or not equal to 0. # 2>/dev/null suppresses error message. if [ $? ne "$SUCCESS" ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` integerinput" exit $E_BADINPUT fi let "sum = $1 + 25" echo "Sum = $sum" # Would give error if $1 not integer.
# Any variable, not just a command line parameter, can be tested this way. exit 0
The 0 255 range for function return values is a severe limitation. Global variables and other workarounds are often problematic. An alternative method for a function to communicate a value back to the main body of the script is to have the function write to stdout the "return value", and assign this to a variable. Example 3410. Return value trickery
#!/bin/bash # multiplication.sh multiply () { local product=1 until [ z "$1" ] do let "product *= $1" shift done echo $product } mult1=15383; mult2=25211 val1=`multiply $mult1 $mult2` echo "$mult1 X $mult2 = $val1" # 387820813 mult1=25; mult2=5; mult3=20 val2=`multiply $mult1 $mult2 $mult3` echo "$mult1 X $mult2 X $mult3 = $val2" # Until uses up arguments passed... # Multiplies params passed. # Will accept a variable number of args.
354
The same technique also works for alphanumeric strings. This means that a function can "return" a nonnumeric value.
capitalize_ichar () { string0="$@" firstchar=${string0:0:1} string1=${string0:1} # Capitalizes initial character #+ of argument string(s) passed. # Accepts multiple arguments. # First character. # Rest of string(s).
FirstChar=`echo "$firstchar" | tr az AZ` # Capitalize first character. echo "$FirstChar$string1" } newstring=`capitalize_ichar "each sentence should start with a capital letter."` echo "$newstring" # Each sentence should start with a capital letter. # Output to stdout.
It is even possible for a function to "return" multiple values with this method.
355
Next in our bag of trick are techniques for passing an array to a function, then "returning" an array back to the main body of the script. Passing an array involves loading the spaceseparated elements of the array into a variable with command substitution. Getting an array back as the "return value" from a function uses the previously mentioned strategem of echoing the array in the function, then invoking command substitution and the ( ... ) operator to assign it to an array.
Pass_Array () { local passed_array # Local variable. passed_array=( `echo "$1"` ) echo "${passed_array[@]}" # List all the elements of the new array #+ declared and set within the function. }
original_array=( element1 element2 element3 element4 element5 ) echo echo "original_array = ${original_array[@]}" # List all elements of original array.
# This is the trick that permits passing an array to a function. # ********************************** argument=`echo ${original_array[@]}` # ********************************** # Pack a variable #+ with all the spaceseparated elements of the original array. # # Note that attempting to just pass the array itself will not work.
# This is the trick that allows grabbing an array as a "return value". # ***************************************** returned_array=( `Pass_Array "$argument"` ) # ***************************************** # Assign 'echoed' output of function to array variable. echo "returned_array = ${returned_array[@]}" echo "=============================================================" # Now, try it again, #+ attempting to access (list) the array from outside the function.
356
For a more elaborate example of passing arrays to functions, see Example A11. Using the double parentheses construct, it is possible to use Clike syntax for setting and incrementing variables and in for and while loops. See Example 1012 and Example 1017. A useful scripting technique is to repeatedly feed the output of a filter (by piping) back to the same filter, but with a different set of arguments and/or options. Especially suitable for this are tr and grep.
# From "wstrings.sh" example. wlist=`strings "$1" | tr AZ az | tr '[:space:]' Z | \ tr cs '[:alpha:]' Z | tr s '\173\377' Z | tr Z ' '`
See also Example 282, Example 1218, and Example A10. Use "anonymous here documents" to comment out blocks of code, to save having to individually comment out each line with a #. See Example 1711. Running a script on a machine that relies on a command that might not be installed is dangerous. Use whatis to avoid potential problems with this.
CMD=command1 PlanB=command2 # First choice. # Fallback option.
357
# Check whether command present. # Run command1 with options. # Otherwise, #+ run command2.
The runparts command is handy for running a set of command scripts in sequence, particularly in combination with cron or at. It would be nice to be able to invoke XWindows widgets from a shell script. There happen to exist several packages that purport to do so, namely Xscript, Xmenu, and widtools. The first two of these no longer seem to be maintained. Fortunately, it is still possible to obtain widtools here. The widtools (widget tools) package requires the XForms library to be installed. Additionally, the Makefile needs some judicious editing before the package will build on a typical Linux system. Finally, three of the six widgets offered do not work (and, in fact, segfault).
The dialog family of tools offers a method of calling "dialog" widgets from a shell script. The original dialog utility works in a text console, but its successors, gdialog, Xdialog, and kdialog use XWindowsbased widget sets.
#Input error in dialog box. E_INPUT=65 # Dimensions of display, input widgets. HEIGHT=50 WIDTH=60 # Output file name (constructed out of script name). OUTFILE=$0.output # Display this script in a text widget. gdialog title "Displaying: $0" textbox $0 $HEIGHT $WIDTH
# Now, we'll try saving input in a file. echo n "VARIABLE=\"" > $OUTFILE # Quote it, in case of whitespace #+ in the input.
358
if [ "$?" eq 0 ] # It's good practice to check exit status. then echo "Executed \"dialog box\" without errors." else echo "Error(s) in \"dialog box\" execution." # Or, clicked on "Cancel", instead of "OK" button. rm $OUTFILE exit $E_INPUT fi
echo n "\"" >> $OUTFILE # End quotes on saved variable. # This command stuck down here in order not to mess up #+ exit status, above.
# Now, we'll retrieve and display the saved variable. . $OUTFILE # 'Source' the saved file. echo "The variable input in the \"input box\" was: "$VARIABLE"" rm $OUTFILE # Clean up by removing the temp file. # Some applications may need to retain this file.
exit 0
For other methods of scripting with widgets, try Tk or wish (Tcl derivatives), PerlTk (Perl with Tk extensions), tksh (ksh with Tk extensions), XForms4Perl (Perl with XForms extensions), GtkPerl (Perl with Gtk extensions), or PyQt (Python with Qt extensions).
Advanced BashScripting Guide 1003.2 standard. Invoking Bash with the posix option or inserting a set o posix at the head of a script causes Bash to conform very closely to this standard. Even lacking this measure, most Bash scripts will run asis under ksh, and viceversa, since Chet Ramey has been busily porting ksh features to the latest versions of Bash. On a commercial UNIX machine, scripts using GNUspecific features of standard commands may not work. This has become less of a problem in the last few years, as the GNU utilities have pretty much displaced their proprietary counterparts even on "bigiron" UNIX. Caldera's release of the source to many of the original UNIX utilities has accelerated the trend. Bash has certain features that the traditional Bourne shell lacks. Among these are: Certain extended invocation options Command substitution using $( ) notation Certain string manipulation operations Process substitution Bashspecific builtins See the Bash F.A.Q. for a complete listing.
360
This update of the classic Bash scripting language added array variables, [66] string and parameter expansion, and a better method of indirect variable references, among other features. Example 351. String expansion
#!/bin/bash # String expansion. # Introduced with version 2 of Bash. # Strings of the form $'xxx' # have the standard escaped characters interpreted. echo $'Ringing bell 3 times \a \a \a' echo $'Three form feeds \f \f \f' echo $'10 newlines \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n' exit 0
echo "Now a = ${!a}" # Indirect reference. # The ${!variable} notation is greatly superior to the old "eval var1=\$$var2" echo t=table_cell_3 table_cell_3=24 echo "t = ${!t}" # t = 24 table_cell_3=387 echo "Value of t changed to ${!t}"
# 387
# This is useful for referencing members of an array or table, # or for simulating a multidimensional array. # An indexing option would have been nice (sigh).
361
echo PS3='Enter catalog number: ' echo select catalog_number in "B1723" "B1724" "B1725" do Inv=${catalog_number}_inventory Val=${catalog_number}_value Pdissip=${catalog_number}_powerdissip Loc=${catalog_number}_loc Ccode=${catalog_number}_colorcode echo echo echo echo echo break done echo; echo # Exercise: #
"Catalog number $catalog_number:" "There are ${!Inv} of [${!Val} ohm / ${!Pdissip} watt] resistors in stock." "These are located in bin # ${!Loc}." "Their color code is \"${!Ccode}\"."
362
# Notes: # # Shell scripts are inappropriate for anything except the most simple #+ database applications, and even then it involves workarounds and kludges. # Much better is to use a language with native support for data structures, #+ such as C++ or Java (or even Perl). exit 0
Example 354. Using arrays and other miscellaneous trickery to deal four random hands from a deck of cards
#!/bin/bash # May need to be invoked with
#!/bin/bash2
on older machines.
# Cards: # deals four random hands from a deck of cards. UNPICKED=0 PICKED=1 DUPE_CARD=99 LOWER_LIMIT=0 UPPER_LIMIT=51 CARDS_IN_SUIT=13 CARDS=52 declare a Deck declare a Suits declare a Cards # It would have been easier and more intuitive # with a single, 3dimensional array. # Perhaps a future version of Bash will support multidimensional arrays.
initialize_Deck () { i=$LOWER_LIMIT until [ "$i" gt $UPPER_LIMIT ] do Deck[i]=$UNPICKED # Set each card of "Deck" as unpicked. let "i += 1" done echo } initialize_Suits () { Suits[0]=C #Clubs Suits[1]=D #Diamonds Suits[2]=H #Hearts Suits[3]=S #Spades } initialize_Cards ()
363
364
# Structured programming: # entire program logic modularized in functions. #================ seed_random initialize_Deck initialize_Suits initialize_Cards deal_cards exit 0 #================
# Exercise 1: # Add comments to thoroughly document this script. # Exercise 2: # Revise the script to print out each hand sorted in suits. # You may add other bells and whistles if you like. # Exercise 3: # Simplify and streamline the logic of the script.
365
Advanced BashScripting Guide 1565925807). This is the standard reference for anyone attempting to write a document in Docbook SGML format.
36.4. Credits
Community participation made this project possible. The author gratefully acknowledges that writing this book would have been an impossible task without help and feedback from all you people out there. Philippe Martin translated this document into DocBook/SGML. While not on the job at a small French company as a software developer, he enjoys working on GNU/Linux documentation and software, reading literature, playing music, and for his peace of mind making merry with friends. You may run across him somewhere in France or in the Basque Country, or email him at [email protected]. Philippe Martin also pointed out that positional parameters past $9 are possible using {bracket} notation, see Example 45. Stephane Chazelas sent a long list of corrections, additions, and example scripts. More than a contributor, he has, in effect, taken on the role of editor for this document. Merci beaucoup! I would like to especially thank Patrick Callahan, Mike Novak, and Pal Domokos for catching bugs, pointing out ambiguities, and for suggesting clarifications and changes. Their lively discussion of shell scripting and general documentation issues inspired me to try to make this document more readable. I'm grateful to Jim Van Zandt for pointing out errors and omissions in version 0.2 of this document. He also contributed an instructive example script. Many thanks to Jordi Sanfeliu for giving permission to use his fine tree script (Example A18). Likewise, thanks to Michel Charpentier for permission to use his dc factoring script (Example 1237). Kudos to Noah Friedman for permission to use his string function script (Example A19). Emmanuel Rouat suggested corrections and additions on command substitution and aliases. He also contributed a very nice sample .bashrc file (Appendix H). Heiner Steven kindly gave permission to use his base conversion script, Example 1233. He also made a number of corrections and many helpful suggestions. Special thanks. Rick Boivie contributed the delightfully recursive pb.sh script (Example 347) and suggested performance improvements for the monthlypmt.sh script (Example 1232). Florian Wisser enlightened me on some of the fine points of testing strings (see Example 76), and on other matters. Oleg Philon sent suggestions concerning cut and pidof. Michael Zick extended the empty array example to demonstrate some surprising array properties. He also provided other examples of this. MarcJano Knopp sent corrections on DOS batch files. Chapter 36. Endnotes 367
Advanced BashScripting Guide Hyun Jin Cha found several typos in the document in the process of doing a Korean translation. Thanks for pointing these out. Andreas Abraham sent in a long list of typographical errors and other corrections. Special thanks! Others making helpful suggestions and pointing out errors were Gabor Kiss, Leopold Toetsch, Peter Tillier, Marcus Berglof, Tony Richardson, Nick Drage (script ideas!), Rich Bartell, Jess Thrysoee, Adam Lazur, Bram Moolenaar, Baris Cicek, Greg Keraunen, Keith Matthews, Sandro Magi, Albert Reiner, Dim Segebart, Rory Winston, Lee Bigelow, Wayne Pollock, "jipe", Emilio Conti, Dennis Leeuw, Dan Jacobson, Aurelio Marinho Jargas, Edward Scholtz, Jean Helou, and David Lawyer (himself an author of 4 HOWTOs). My gratitude to Chet Ramey and Brian Fox for writing Bash, an elegant and powerful scripting tool. Very special thanks to the hardworking volunteers at the Linux Documentation Project. The LDP hosts a repository of Linux knowledge and lore, and has, to a large extent, enabled the publication of this book. Thanks and appreciation to IBM, Red Hat, the Free Software Foundation, and all the good people fighting the good fight to keep Open Source software free and open. Thanks most of all to my wife, Anita, for her encouragement and emotional support.
368
Bibliography
Edited by Peter Denning, Computers Under Attack: Intruders, Worms, and Viruses, ACM Press, 1990, 0201530678. This compendium contains a couple of articles on shell script viruses. *
Dale Dougherty and Arnold Robbins, Sed and Awk, 2nd edition, O'Reilly and Associates, 1997, 11565922255. To unfold the full power of shell scripting, you need at least a passing familiarity with sed and awk. This is the standard tutorial. It includes an excellent introduction to "regular expressions". Read this book. *
Aeleen Frisch, Essential System Administration, 3rd edition, O'Reilly and Associates, 2002, 0596003439. This excellent sys admin manual has a decent introduction to shell scripting for sys administrators and does a nice job of explaining the startup and initialization scripts. The long overdue third edition of this classic has finally been released. *
Stephen Kochan and Patrick Woods, Unix Shell Programming, Hayden, 1990, 067248448X. The standard reference, though a bit dated by now. *
Neil Matthew and Richard Stones, Beginning Linux Programming, Wrox Press, 1996, 1874416680. Good indepth coverage of various programming languages available for Linux, including a fairly strong chapter on shell scripting. *
Herbert Mayer, Advanced C Programming on the IBM PC, Windcrest Books, 1989, 0830693637. Excellent coverage of algorithms and general programming practices. *
Bibliography
369
Advanced BashScripting Guide David Medinets, Unix Shell Programming Tools, McGrawHill, 1999, 0070397333. Good info on shell scripting, with examples, and a short intro to Tcl and Perl. *
Cameron Newham and Bill Rosenblatt, Learning the Bash Shell, 2nd edition, O'Reilly and Associates, 1998, 1565923472. This is a valiant effort at a decent shell primer, but somewhat deficient in coverage on programming topics and lacking sufficient examples. *
Anatole Olczak, Bourne Shell Quick Reference Guide, ASP, Inc., 1991, 093573922X. A very handy pocket reference, despite lacking coverage of Bashspecific features. *
Jerry Peek, Tim O'Reilly, and Mike Loukides, Unix Power Tools, 2nd edition, O'Reilly and Associates, Random House, 1997, 1565922603. Contains a couple of sections of very informative indepth articles on shell programming, but falls short of being a tutorial. It reproduces much of the regular expressions tutorial from the Dougherty and Robbins book, above. *
Clifford Pickover, Computers, Pattern, Chaos, and Beauty, St. Martin's Press, 1990, 0312041233. A treasure trove of ideas and recipes for computerbased exploration of mathematical oddities. *
George Polya, How To Solve It, Princeton University Press, 1973, 0691023565. The classic tutorial on problem solving methods (i.e., algorithms). *
Arnold Robbins, Bash Reference Card, SSC, 1998, 1587310105. Excellent Bash pocket reference (don't leave home without it). A bargain at $4.95, but also available for free download online in pdf format. Bibliography 370
Arnold Robbins, Effective Awk Programming, Free Software Foundation / O'Reilly and Associates, 2000, 1882114264. The absolute best awk tutorial and reference. The free electronic version of this book is part of the awk documentation, and printed copies of the latest version are available from O'Reilly and Associates. This book has served as an inspiration for the author of this document. *
Bill Rosenblatt, Learning the Korn Shell, O'Reilly and Associates, 1993, 1565920546. This wellwritten book contains some excellent pointers on shell scripting. *
Paul Sheer, LINUX: Rute User's Tutorial and Exposition, 1st edition, , 2002, 0130333514. Very detailed and readable introduction to Linux system administration. The book is available in print, or online. *
Ellen Siever and the staff of O'Reilly and Associates, Linux in a Nutshell, 2nd edition, O'Reilly and Associates, 1999, 1565925858. The allaround best Linux command reference, even has a Bash section. *
The UNIX CD Bookshelf, 3rd edition, O'Reilly and Associates, 2003, 0596003927. An array of seven UNIX books on CD ROM, including UNIX Power Tools, Sed and Awk, and Learning the Korn Shell. A complete set of all the UNIX references and tutorials you would ever need at about $130. Buy this one, even if it means going into debt and not paying the rent. *
Bibliography
371
Advanced BashScripting Guide Fioretti, Marco, "Scripting for X Productivity," LINUX JOURNAL, Issue 113, September, 2003, pp. 869.
Ben Okopnik's wellwritten introductory Bash scripting articles in issues 53, 54, 55, 57, and 59 of the Linux Gazette , and his explanation of "The Deep, Dark Secrets of Bash" in issue 56.
Chet Ramey's bash The GNU Shell, a twopart series published in issues 3 and 4 of the Linux Journal, JulyAugust 1994.
Very nice sed, awk, and regular expression tutorials at The UNIX Grymoire.
The GNU gawk reference manual (gawk is the extended GNU version of awk available on Linux and BSD systems).
Bibliography
372
There is some nice material on I/O redirection in chapter 10 of the textutils documentation at the University of Alberta site.
Rick Hohensee has written the osimpa i386 assembler entirely as Bash scripts.
Aurelio Marinho Jargas has written a Regular expression wizard. He has also written an informative book on Regular Expressions, in Portuguese.
The excellent "Bash Reference Manual", by Chet Ramey and Brian Fox, distributed as part of the "bash2doc" package (available as an rpm). See especially the instructive example scripts in this package.
The manpages for bash and bash2, date, expect, expr, find, grep, gzip, ln, patch, tar, tr, bc, xargs. The texinfo documentation on bash, dd, m4, gawk, and sed.
Bibliography
373
374
# Delete carets and tabs at beginning of lines, #+ then fold lines to $MAXWIDTH characters. sed ' s/^>// s/^ *>// s/^ *// s/ *// ' $1 | fold s width=$MAXWIDTH # s option to "fold" breaks lines at whitespace, if possible. # #+ # # #+ This script was inspired by an article in a wellknown trade journal extolling a 164K Windows utility with similar functionality. An nice set of text processing utilities and an efficient scripting language provide an alternative to bloated executables.
exit 0
Example A3. rn: A simpleminded file rename utility This script is a modification of Example 1215.
#! /bin/bash # # Very simpleminded filename "rename" utility (based on "lowercase.sh"). # # The "ren" utility, by Vladimir Lanin ([email protected]), #+ does a much better job of this.
if [ $# ne "$ARGS" ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` oldpattern newpattern" # As in "rn gif jpg", which renames all gif files in working directory to jpg. exit $E_BADARGS fi number=0 # Keeps track of how many files actually renamed.
for filename in *$1* #Traverse all matching files in directory. do if [ f "$filename" ] # If finds match... then fname=`basename $filename` # Strip off path. n=`echo $fname | sed e "s/$1/$2/"` # Substitute new for old in filename. mv $fname $n # Rename.
375
# Exercises: # # What type of files will this not work on? # How can this be fixed? # # Rewrite this script to process all the files in a directory #+ containing spaces in their names, and to rename them, #+ substituting an underscore for each space.
Example A4. blankrename: renames filenames containing blanks This is an even simplerminded version of previous script.
#! /bin/bash # blankrename.sh # # Substitutes underscores for blanks in all the filenames in a directory. ONE=1 number=0 FOUND=0 # For getting singular/plural right (see below). # Keeps track of how many files actually renamed. # Successful return value.
for filename in * #Traverse all files in directory. do echo "$filename" | grep q " " # Check whether filename if [ $? eq $FOUND ] #+ contains space(s). then fname=$filename # Strip off path. n=`echo $fname | sed e "s/ /_/g"` # Substitute underscore for blank. mv "$fname" "$n" # Do the actual renaming. let "number += 1" fi done if [ "$number" eq "$ONE" ] then echo "$number file renamed." else echo "$number files renamed." fi exit 0 # For correct grammar.
Example A5. encryptedpw: Uploading to an ftp site, using a locally encrypted password Appendix A. Contributed Scripts 376
Password=`cruft <$pword` # Decrypt password. # Uses the author's own "cruft" file encryption package, #+ based on the classic "onetime pad" algorithm, #+ and obtainable from: #+ Primarysite: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/utils/file #+ cruft0.2.tar.gz [16k]
ftp n $Server user $Username binary bell cd $Directory put $Filename bye EndOfSession # n option to # "bell" rings exit 0
<<EndOfSession $Password
echo; echo "Insert source CD, but do *not* mount it." echo "Press ENTER when ready. "
377
echo; echo "Copying the source CD to $OF." echo "This may take a while. Please be patient." dd if=$CDROM of=$OF bs=$BLOCKSIZE # Raw device copy.
echo; echo "Remove data CD." echo "Insert blank CDR." echo "Press ENTER when ready. " read ready echo "Copying $OF to CDR."
cdrecord v isosize speed=$SPEED dev=0,0 $OF # Uses Joerg Schilling's "cdrecord" package (see its docs). # http://www.fokus.gmd.de/nthp/employees/schilling/cdrecord.html
echo; echo "Done copying $OF to CDR on device $CDROM." echo "Do you want to erase the image file (y/n)? " read answer case "$answer" in [yY]) rm f $OF echo "$OF erased." ;; *) echo "$OF not erased.";; esac echo # Exercise: # Change the above "case" statement to also accept "yes" and "Yes" as input. exit 0 # Probably a huge file.
378
MAX_ITERATIONS=200 # For large seed numbers (>32000), increase MAX_ITERATIONS. h=${1:$$} # Seed # Use $PID as seed, #+ if not specified as commandline arg.
echo echo "C($h) $MAX_ITERATIONS Iterations" echo for ((i=1; i<=MAX_ITERATIONS; i++)) do echo n "$h " # ^^^^^ # tab let "remainder = h % 2" if [ "$remainder" eq 0 ] then let "h /= 2" else let "h = h*3 + 1" fi
COLUMNS=10 # Output 10 values per line. let "line_break = i % $COLUMNS" if [ "$line_break" eq 0 ] then echo fi done echo # For more information on this mathematical function, #+ see "Computers, Pattern, Chaos, and Beauty", by Pickover, p. 185 ff., #+ as listed in the bibliography. exit 0
379
# Largest permissable # positive return value from a function. # Declare global variable for date difference. # Declare global variable for absolute value. # Declare globals for day, month, year.
Param_Error () # Command line parameters wrong. { echo "Usage: `basename $0` [M]M/[D]D/YYYY [M]M/[D]D/YYYY" echo " (date must be after 1/3/1600)" exit $E_PARAM_ERR }
# Day and month. # Not a filename, but works just the same.
check_date () # Checks for invalid date(s) passed. { [ "$day" gt "$DIM" ] || [ "$month" gt "$MIY" ] || [ "$year" lt "$REFYR" ] && Param_Error # Exit script on bad value(s). # Uses "orlist / andlist". # # Exercise: Implement more rigorous date checking. }
strip_leading_zero () # Better to strip { # from day and/or val=${1#0} # since otherwise return $val # as octal values }
possible leading zero(s) month Bash will interpret them (POSIX.2, sect 2.9.2.1).
let "month = $month 2" if [ "$month" le 0 ] then let "month += 12" let "year = 1" fi
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let "Days = $DIY*$year + $year/$LEAPCYCLE $indexyr + $indexyr/$LEAPCYCLE + $ADJ_DIY*$month/$M # For an indepth explanation of this algorithm, see # http://home.tonline.de/home/berndt.schwerdtfeger/cal.htm
if [ "$Days" gt "$MAXRETVAL" ] then let "dindex = 0 $Days" else let "dindex = $Days" fi return $dindex }
# If greater than 256, # then change to negative value # which can be returned from function.
abs () { if [ "$1" lt 0 ] then let "value = 0 $1" else let "value = $1" fi }
# # # # # # #
Absolute value Uses global "value" variable. If negative then change sign, else leave it alone.
if [ $# ne "$ARGS" ] then Param_Error fi Parse_Date $1 check_date $day $month $year strip_leading_zero $day day=$? strip_leading_zero $month month=$? day_index $day $month $year date1=$? abs $date1 date1=$value Parse_Date $2 check_date $day $month $year strip_leading_zero $day
# See if valid date. # Remove any leading zeroes # on day and/or month.
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[make dictionary]
# Modification of /usr/sbin/mkdict script. # Original script copyright 1993, by Alec Muffett. # # This modified script included in this document in a manner #+ consistent with the "LICENSE" document of the "Crack" package #+ that the original script is a part of. # #+ # #+ This script processes text files to produce a sorted list of words found in the files. This may be useful for compiling dictionaries and for lexicographic research.
E_BADARGS=65 if [ ! r "$1" ] then echo "Usage: $0 filestoprocess" exit $E_BADARGS fi # Need at least one #+ valid file argument.
# SORT="sort"
# No longer necessary to define options #+ to sort. Changed from original script. # Contents of specified files to stdout. # Convert to lowercase. # New: change spaces to newlines. # Get rid of everything nonalphanumeric #+ (original script). # Rather than deleting #+ now change nonalpha to newlines. # $SORT options unnecessary now. # Remove duplicates.
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ARGCOUNT=1 E_WRONGARGS=70
# Exceptionally clever use of 'tr' follows. # Try to figure out what is going on here. value=$( echo "$1" \ | tr d wh \ | tr $val1 1 | tr $val2 2 | tr $val3 3 \ | tr $val4 4 | tr $val5 5 | tr $val6 6 \ | tr s 123456 \ | tr d aeiouy ) # # # # Assign Remove Ignore Ignore letter values. duplicate numbers, except when separated by vowels. vowels, except as separators, so delete them last. 'w' and 'h', even as separators, so delete them first.
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# Change all characters of name input to lowercase. # name=$( echo $input_name | tr AZ az ) # # Just in case argument to script is mixed case.
char_pos=0 # Initialize character position. prefix0=${name:$char_pos:1} prefix=`echo $prefix0 | tr az AZ` # Uppercase 1st letter of soundex. let "char_pos += 1" name1=${name:$char_pos} # Bump character position to 2nd letter of name.
# ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Exception Patch +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ # Now, we run both the input name and the name shifted one char to the right #+ through the valueassigning function. # If we get the same value out, that means that the first two characters #+ of the name have the same value assigned, and that one should cancel. # However, we also need to test whether the first letter of the name #+ is a vowel or 'w' or 'h', because otherwise this would bollix things up. char1=`echo $prefix | tr AZ az` assign_value $name s1=$value assign_value $name1 s2=$value assign_value $char1 s3=$value s3=9$s3 # First letter of name, lowercased.
# #+ #+ #+ #+
If first letter of name is a vowel or 'w' or 'h', then its "value" will be null (unset). Therefore, set it to 9, an otherwise unused value, which can be tested for.
if [[ "$s1" ne "$s2" || "$s3" eq 9 ]] then suffix=$s2 else suffix=${s2:$char_pos} fi # ++++++++++++++++++++++ end Exception Patch +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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The soundex code is a method of indexing and classifying names by grouping together the ones that sound alike. The soundex code for a given name is the first letter of the name, followed by a calculated threenumber code. Similar sounding names should have almost the same soundex codes. Examples: Smith and Smythe both have a "S530" soundex. Harrison = H625 Hargison = H622 Harriman = H655 This works out fairly well in practice, but there are numerous anomalies.
The U.S. Census and certain other governmental agencies use soundex, as do genealogical researchers. For more information, see the "National Archives and Records Administration home page", http://www.nara.gov/genealogy/soundex/soundex.html
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startfile=gen0
# Read the starting generation from the file "gen0". # Default, if no other file specified when invoking script. # # Specify another "generation 0" file.
ALIVE1=. DEAD1=_ # Represent living and "dead" cells in the startup file. # This script uses a 10 x 10 grid (may be increased, #+ but a large grid will will cause very slow execution). ROWS=10 COLS=10 GENERATIONS=10 # How many generations to cycle through. # Adjust this upwards, #+ if you have time on your hands. # Exit status on premature bailout, #+ if no cells left alive.
# =================================================================
let "cells = $ROWS * $COLS" # How many cells. declare a initial declare a current display () { alive=0 # How many cells "alive". # Initially zero. # Arrays containing "cells".
declare a arr
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element_count=${#arr[*]} local i local rowcheck for ((i=0; i<$element_count; i++)) do # Insert newline at end of each row. let "rowcheck = $i % ROWS" if [ "$rowcheck" eq 0 ] then echo # Newline. echo n " " # Indent. fi cell=${arr[i]} if [ "$cell" = . ] then let "alive += 1" fi echo n "$cell" | sed e 's/_/ /g' # Print out array and change underscores to spaces. done return } IsValid () { if [ z "$1" o z "$2" ] then return $FALSE fi local local local local local row lower_limit=0 upper_limit left right # Test whether cell coordinate valid.
if [ "$1" lt "$lower_limit" o "$1" gt "$upper_limit" ] then return $FALSE # Out of array bounds. fi row=$2 let "left = $row * $ROWS" let "right = $left + $COLS 1"
if [ "$1" lt "$left" o "$1" gt "$right" ] then return $FALSE # Beyond row boundary.
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# Test whether cell is alive. # Takes array, cell number, state of cell as arguments. # Get alive cell count in neighborhood.
if [ "$3" = "." a "$nhbd" eq "$SURVIVE" ] then # Alive only if previously alive. return $ALIVE fi return $DEAD } # Default.
GetCount ()
# # # #
Count live cells in passed cell's neighborhood. Two arguments needed: $1) variable holding array $2) cell number
{ local local local local local local local local local local local local local cell_number=$2 array top center bottom r row i t_top t_cen t_bot count=0 ROW_NHBD=3
array=( `echo "$1"` ) let let let let "top = $cell_number $COLS 1" # Set up cell neighborhood. "center = $cell_number 1" "bottom = $cell_number + $COLS 1" "r = $cell_number / $ROWS" # Traverse from left to right.
for ((i=0; i<$ROW_NHBD; i++)) do let "t_top = $top + $i" let "t_cen = $center + $i" let "t_bot = $bottom + $i"
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if [ ${array[$cell_number]} = "$ALIVE1" ] then let "count = 1" # Make sure value of tested cell itself fi #+ is not counted.
return $count } next_gen () { local array local i=0 array=( `echo "$1"` ) # Convert passed arg to array. # Update generation array.
while [ "$i" lt "$cells" ] do IsAlive "$1" $i ${array[$i]} if [ $? eq "$ALIVE" ] then array[$i]=. else array[$i]="_" fi let "i += 1" done
# Is cell alive? # If alive, then #+ represent the cell as a period. # Otherwise underscore #+ (which will later be converted to space).
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# Set variable to pass as parameter to "display" function. avar=`echo ${array[@]}` # Convert array back to string variable. display "$avar" # Display it. echo; echo echo "Generation $generation $alive alive" if [ "$alive" eq 0 ] then echo echo "Premature exit: no more cells alive!" exit $NONE_ALIVE # No point in continuing fi #+ if no live cells. }
# ========================================================= # main () # Load initial array with contents of startup file. initial=( `cat "$startfile" | sed e '/#/d' | tr d '\n' |\ sed e 's/\./\. /g' e 's/_/_ /g'` ) # Delete lines containing '#' comment character. # Remove linefeeds and insert space between elements. clear echo echo echo echo echo echo # Clear screen.
# Title "=======================" " $GENERATIONS generations" " of" "\"Life in the Slow Lane\"" "======================="
# Display first generation. Gen0=`echo ${initial[@]}` display "$Gen0" # Display only. echo; echo echo "Generation $generation $alive alive" #
# Display second generation. Cur=`echo ${initial[@]}` next_gen "$Cur" # Update & display. # let "generation += 1" # Increment generation count.
# Main loop for displaying subsequent generations while [ "$generation" le "$GENERATIONS" ] do Cur="$avar"
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+++ The following two scripts are by Mark Moraes of the University of Toronto. See the enclosed file "MoraesCOPYRIGHT" for permissions and restrictions.
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# ==> These comments added by author of this document. # PATH=/local/bin:/usr/ucb:/usr/bin:/bin # export PATH # ==> Above 2 lines from original script probably superfluous. TMPFILE=/tmp/ftp.$$ # ==> Creates temp file, using process id of script ($$) # ==> to construct filename. SITE=`domainname`.toronto.edu # ==> 'domainname' similar to 'hostname' # ==> May rewrite this to parameterize this for general use. usage="Usage: $0 [h remotehost] [d remotedirectory]... [f remfile:localfile]... \
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# # # #
+ Antek Sawicki contributed the following script, which makes very clever use of the parameter substitution operators discussed in Section 9.3. Appendix A. Contributed Scripts 393
Advanced BashScripting Guide Example A15. password: Generating random 8character passwords
#!/bin/bash # May need to be invoked with #!/bin/bash2 on older machines. # # Random password generator for bash 2.x by Antek Sawicki <[email protected]>, # who generously gave permission to the document author to use it here. # # ==> Comments added by document author ==>
MATRIX="0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" LENGTH="8" # ==> May change 'LENGTH' for longer password, of course.
while [ "${n:=1}" le "$LENGTH" ] # ==> Recall that := is "default substitution" operator. # ==> So, if 'n' has not been initialized, set it to 1. do PASS="$PASS${MATRIX:$(($RANDOM%${#MATRIX})):1}" # ==> Very clever, but tricky. # ==> Starting from the innermost nesting... # ==> ${#MATRIX} returns length of array MATRIX. # ==> $RANDOM%${#MATRIX} returns random number between 1 # ==> and length of MATRIX 1. # # # # ==> ==> ==> ==> ${MATRIX:$(($RANDOM%${#MATRIX})):1} returns expansion of MATRIX at random position, by length 1. See {var:pos:len} parameter substitution in Section 3.3.1 and following examples.
# ==> PASS=... simply pastes this result onto previous PASS (concatenation). # # # # ==> To visualize this more clearly, uncomment the following line ==> echo "$PASS" ==> to see PASS being built up, ==> one character at a time, each iteration of the loop.
let n+=1 # ==> Increment 'n' for next pass. done echo "$PASS" exit 0 # ==> Or, redirect to file, as desired.
+ James R. Van Zandt contributed this script, which uses named pipes and, in his words, "really exercises quoting and escaping".
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HERE=`uname n` # ==> hostname THERE=bilbo echo "starting remote backup to $THERE at `date +%r`" # ==> `date +%r` returns time in 12hour format, i.e. "08:08:34 PM". # make sure /pipe really is a pipe and not a plain file rm rf /pipe mkfifo /pipe # ==> Create a "named pipe", named "/pipe". # ==> 'su xyz' runs commands as user "xyz". # ==> 'ssh' invokes secure shell (remote login client). su xyz c "ssh $THERE \"cat >/home/xyz/backup/${HERE}daily.tar.gz\" < /pipe"& cd / tar czf bin boot dev etc home info lib man root sbin share usr var >/pipe # ==> Uses named pipe, /pipe, to communicate between processes: # ==> 'tar/gzip' writes to /pipe and 'ssh' reads from /pipe. # ==> The end result is this backs up the main directories, from / on down. # ==> What are the advantages of a "named pipe" in this situation, # ==> as opposed to an "anonymous pipe", with |? # ==> Will an anonymous pipe even work here?
exit 0
+ Stephane Chazelas contributed the following script to demonstrate that generating prime numbers does not require arrays.
LIMIT=1000 Primes() { (( n = $1 + 1 )) shift # echo "_n=$n i=$i_" if (( n == LIMIT )) then echo $* return fi
# Primes 2 1000
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# Recursion outside loop. # Successively accumulate positional parameters. # "$@" is the accumulating list of primes.
} Primes 1 exit 0 # Uncomment lines 17 and 25 to help figure out what is going on. # Compare the speed of this algorithm for generating primes # with the Sieve of Eratosthenes (ex68.sh). # Exercise: Rewrite this script without recursion, for faster execution.
@(#) tree
1.1
30/11/95
1.0 30/11/95 1.1 24/02/97 Now, with symbolic links Ian Kjos, to support unsearchable dirs email: [email protected]
# ==> 'Tree' script used here with the permission of its author, Jordi Sanfeliu. # ==> Comments added by the author of this document. # ==> Argument quoting added.
search () { for dir in `echo *` # ==> `echo *` lists all the files in current working directory, without line breaks. # ==> Similar effect to for dir in * # ==> but "dir in `echo *`" will not handle filenames with blanks. do if [ d "$dir" ] ; then # ==> If it is a directory (d)... zz=0 # ==> Temp variable, keeping track of directory level. while [ $zz != $deep ] # Keep track of inner nested loop. do echo n "| " # ==> Display vertical connector symbol, # ==> with 2 spaces & no line feed in order to indent.
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; then # ==> No args to script, then use current working directory. # ==> Otherwise, move to indicated directory. directory = `pwd`" ==> Search finished flag. ==> Depth of listing.
while [ "$swfi" != 1 ] # While flag not set... do search # ==> Call function after initializing variables. done echo "Total directories = $numdirs" exit 0 # ==> Challenge: try to figure out exactly how this script works.
Noah Friedman gave permission to use his string function script, which essentially reproduces some of the Clibrary string manipulation functions.
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398
399
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# ========================================================================== # # ==> Everything below here added by the document author. # ==> Suggested use of this script is to delete everything below here, # ==> and "source" this file into your own scripts. # strcat string0=one string1=two echo echo "Testing \"strcat\" function:" echo "Original \"string0\" = $string0" echo "\"string1\" = $string1" strcat string0 string1 echo "New \"string0\" = $string0" echo # strlen echo
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# Exercise: # # Add code to test all the other string functions above.
exit 0
Michael Zick's complex array example uses the md5sum check sum command to encode directory information.
# Default location for content addressed file descriptors. MD5UCFS=${1:${MD5UCFS:'/tmpfs/ucfs'}} # Directory paths never to list or enter declare a \ EXCLUDE_PATHS=${2:${EXCLUDE_PATHS:'(/proc /dev /devfs /tmpfs)'}} # Directories never to list or enter declare a \ EXCLUDE_DIRS=${3:${EXCLUDE_DIRS:'(ucfs lost+found tmp wtmp)'}} # Files never to list or enter declare a \ EXCLUDE_FILES=${3:${EXCLUDE_FILES:'(core "Name with Spaces")'}}
# Here document used as a comment block. : << LSfieldsDoc # # # # # List Filesystem Directory Information # # # # # #
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String format description based on: ls (GNU fileutils) version 4.0.36 Produces a line (or more) formatted: inode permissions hardlinks owner group ... 32736 rw 1 mszick mszick size day month date hh:mm:ss year path 2756608 Sun Apr 20 08:53:06 2003 /home/mszick/core Unless it is formatted: inode permissions hardlinks owner group ... 266705 crwrw 1 root uucp major minor day month date hh:mm:ss year path 4, 68 Sun Apr 20 09:27:33 2003 /dev/ttyS4 NOTE: that pesky comma after the major number NOTE: the 'path' may be multiple fields: /home/mszick/core /proc/982/fd/0 > /dev/null /proc/982/fd/1 > /home/mszick/.xsessionerrors /proc/982/fd/13 > /tmp/tmpfZVVOCs (deleted) /proc/982/fd/7 > /tmp/kdemszick/ksycoca /proc/982/fd/8 > socket:[11586] /proc/982/fd/9 > pipe:[11588] If that isn't enough to keep your parser guessing, either or both of the path components may be relative: ../BuiltShared > BuiltStatic ../linux2.4.20.tar.bz2 > ../../../SRCS/linux2.4.20.tar.bz2 The first character of the 11 (10?) character permissions field: 's' Socket 'd' Directory 'b' Block device 'c' Character device 'l' Symbolic link NOTE: Hard links not marked test for identical inode numbers on identical filesystems. All information about hard linked files are shared, except for the names and the name's location in the directory system. NOTE: A "Hard link" is known as a "File Alias" on some systems. '' An undistingushed file Followed by three groups of letters for: User, Group, Others Character 1: '' Not readable; 'r' Readable Character 2: '' Not writable; 'w' Writable Character 3, User and Group: Combined execute and special '' Not Executable, Not Special 'x' Executable, Not Special 's' Executable, Special 'S' Not Executable, Special Character 3, Others: Combined execute and sticky (tacky?) '' Not Executable, Not Tacky 'x' Executable, Not Tacky 't' Executable, Tacky
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case "$#" in 3) case "$1" in of) of=1 ; shift ;; * ) return 1 ;; esac ;; 2) : ;; # Poor man's "continue" *) return 1 ;; esac # NOTE: the (ls) command is NOT quoted (") T=( $(ls inode ignorebackups almostall directory \ fulltime color=none time=status sort=none \ format=long $1) ) case $of in # Assign T back to the array whose name was passed as $2 0) eval $2=\( \"\$\{T\[@\]\}\" \) ;; # Write T into filename passed as $2 1) echo "${T[@]}" > "$2" ;; esac return 0 } # # # # # Is that string a legal number? # # # # # # # IsNumber "Var" # # # # # There has to be a better way, sigh... IsNumber() { local i int if [ $# eq 0 ] then return 1 else (let int=$1) return $? fi }
# # # # # Index Filesystem Directory Information # # # # # # # IndexList "FieldArrayName" "IndexArrayName" # or # IndexList if FieldArrayFilename IndexArrayName # IndexList of FieldArrayName IndexArrayFilename
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a a i i
case "$#" in # Simplistic option testing 0) return 1 ;; 1) return 1 ;; 2) : ;; # Poor man's continue 3) case "$1" in if) if=1 ;; of) of=1 ;; * ) return 1 ;; esac ; shift ;; 4) if=1 ; of=1 ; shift ; shift ;; *) return 1 esac # Make local copy of list case "$if" in 0) eval LIST=\( \"\$\{$1\[@\]\}\" \) ;; 1) LIST=( $(cat $1) ) ;; esac # Grok (grope?) the array Lcnt=${#LIST[@]} Lidx=0 until (( Lidx >= Lcnt )) do if IsNumber ${LIST[$Lidx]} then local i inode name local ft
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case "$#" in 3) case "$1" in if) if=1 ; shift ;; * ) return 1 ;; esac ;; 2) : ;; # Poor man's "continue" *) return 1 ;; esac case $if in 0) eval T1=\( \"\$\{$1\[@\]\}\" \) T2=( $(echo ${T1[@]} | md5sum ) ) ;; 1) T2=( $(md5sum $1) ) ;; esac case ${#T2[@]} in 0) return 1 ;; 1) return 1 ;; 2) case ${T2[1]:0:1} in # SanScrit2.0.5 \*) T2[${#T2[@]}]=${T2[1]:1} T2[1]=\* ;; *) T2[${#T2[@]}]=${T2[1]} T2[1]=" " ;; esac ;; 3) : ;; # Assume it worked *) return 1 ;; esac local i len=${#T2[0]} if [ $len ne 32 ] ; then return 1 ; fi eval $2=\( \"\$\{T2\[@\]\}\" \) } # # # # # Locate File # # # # # # # LocateFile [l] FileName LocationArrayName # or # LocateFile [l] of FileName LocationArrayFileName # # # # #
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** Per: Return code: 0 Size of array: 11 Contents of array Element 0: /home/mszick Element 1: 0 Element 2: 0 Element 3: 255 Element 4: ef53 Element 5: 2581445 Element 6: 2277180 Element 7: 2146050 Element 8: 4096 Element 9: 1311552 Element 10: 1276425 StatFieldsDoc
# #
LocateFile() { local a LOC LOC1 LOC2 local lk="" of=0 case "$#" in 0) return 1 ;; 1) return 1 ;; 2) : ;; *) while (( "$#" > 2 )) do case "$1" in l) lk=1 ;; of) of=1 ;; *) return 1 ;; esac shift done ;; esac # More Sanscrit2.0.5 # LOC1=( $(stat t $lk $1) ) # LOC2=( $(stat tf $lk $1) ) # Uncomment above two lines if system has "stat" command installed. LOC=( ${LOC1[@]:0:1} ${LOC1[@]:3:11} ${LOC2[@]:1:2} ${LOC2[@]:4:1} ) case "$of" in 0) eval $2=\( \"\$\{LOC\[@\]\}\" \) ;;
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# And then there was some test code ListArray() # ListArray Name { local a Ta eval Ta=\( \"\$\{$1\[@\]\}\" \) echo echo "** List of Array **" echo "Size of array $1: ${#Ta[*]}" echo "Contents of array $1:" for (( i=0 ; i<${#Ta[*]} ; i++ )) do echo e "\tElement $i: ${Ta[$i]}" done return 0 } declare a CUR_DIR # For small arrays ListDirectory "${PWD}" CUR_DIR ListArray CUR_DIR declare a DIR_DIG DigestFile CUR_DIR DIR_DIG echo "The new \"name\" (checksum) for ${CUR_DIR[9]} is ${DIR_DIG[0]}" declare a DIR_ENT # BIG_DIR # For really big arrays use a temporary file in ramdisk # BIGDIR # ListDirectory of "${CUR_DIR[11]}/*" "/tmpfs/junk2" ListDirectory "${CUR_DIR[11]}/*" DIR_ENT declare a DIR_IDX # BIGDIR # IndexList if "/tmpfs/junk2" DIR_IDX IndexList DIR_ENT DIR_IDX
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person.new() # Looks almost like a class declaration in C++. { local obj_name=$1 name=$2 firstname=$3 birthdate=$4 eval "$obj_name.set_name() { eval \"$obj_name.get_name() { echo \$1 }\" }" eval "$obj_name.set_firstname() { eval \"$obj_name.get_firstname() { echo \$1 }\" }" eval "$obj_name.set_birthdate() { eval \"$obj_name.get_birthdate() { echo \$1 }\" eval \"$obj_name.show_birthdate() { echo \$(date d \"1/1/1970 0:0:\$1 GMT\") }\" eval \"$obj_name.get_age() { echo \$(( (\$(date +%s) \$1) / 3600 / 24 / 365 )) }\" }" $obj_name.set_name $name $obj_name.set_firstname $firstname $obj_name.set_birthdate $birthdate } echo
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Table B2. TEST Operators: Binary Comparison Operator Meaning Operator String Comparison = == ! \< \> z n Arithmetic Comparison within double parentheses (( ... )) > Greater than >= Greater than or equal to < Less than <= Less than or equal to Meaning
Arithmetic Comparison eq Equal to ne lt le gt ge Not equal to Less than Less than or equal to Greater than Greater than or equal to
Equal to Equal to Not equal to Less than (ASCII) * Greater than (ASCII) * String is empty String is not empty
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Advanced BashScripting Guide * If within a doublebracket [[ ... ]] test construct, then no escape \ is needed.
Table B3. TEST Operators: Files Operator e f d h L b c p S t N O G Tests Whether File exists File is a regular file File is a directory File is a symbolic link File is a symbolic link File is a block device File is a character device File is a pipe File is a socket File is associated with a terminal File modified since it was last read You own the file Group id of file same as yours Operator s r w x g u k Tests Whether File is not zero size File has read permission File has write permission File has execute permission sgid flag set suid flag set "sticky bit" set
F1 nt F2 F1 ot F2 F1 ef F2
File F1 is newer than F2 * File F1 is older than F2 * Files F1 and F2 are hard links to the same file *
Table B4. Parameter Substitution and Expansion Expression ${var} ${varDEFAULT} ${var:DEFAULT} ${var=DEFAULT} ${var:=DEFAULT} ${var+OTHER} ${var:+OTHER} ${var?ERR_MSG} ${var:?ERR_MSG} Meaning Value of var, same as $var If var not set, evaluate expression as $DEFAULT * If var not set, evaluate expression as $DEFAULT * If var not set, evaluate expression as $DEFAULT * If var not set, evaluate expression as $DEFAULT * If var set, evaluate expression as $OTHER, otherwise as null string If var set, evaluate expression as $OTHER, otherwise as null string If var not set, print $ERR_MSG * If var not set, print $ERR_MSG *
Advanced BashScripting Guide Expression ${#string} {$string:position} {$string:position:length} Meaning Length of $string Extract substring from $string at $position Extract $length characters substring from $string at $position Strip shortest match of $substring from front of $string Strip longest match of $substring from front of $string Strip shortest match of $substring from back of $string Strip longest match of $substring from back of $string Replace first match of $substring with $replacement Replace all matches of $substring with $replacement If $substring matches front end of $string, substitute $replacement for $substring If $substring matches back end of $string, substitute $replacement for $substring
expr match "$string" '$substring' expr "$string" : '$substring' expr index "$string" $substring
expr substr $string $position $length expr match "$string" '\($substring\)' expr "$string" : '\($substring\)' Extract $substring* at beginning of $string expr match "$string" Extract $substring* at end of $string '.*\($substring\)' expr "$string" : '.*\($substring\)' Extract $substring* at end of $string * Where $substring is a regular expression.
Length of matching $substring* at beginning of $string Length of matching $substring* at beginning of $string Numerical position in $string of first character in $substring that matches Extract $length characters from $string starting at $position Extract $substring* at beginning of $string
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C.1. Sed
Sed is a noninteractive line editor. It receives text input, whether from stdin or from a file, performs certain operations on specified lines of the input, one line at a time, then outputs the result to stdout or to a file. Within a shell script, sed is usually one of several tool components in a pipe. Sed determines which lines of its input that it will operate on from the address range passed to it. [69] Specify this address range either by line number or by a pattern to match. For example, 3d signals sed to delete line 3 of the input, and /windows/d tells sed that you want every line of the input containing a match to "windows" deleted. Of all the operations in the sed toolkit, we will focus primarily on the three most commonly used ones. These are printing (to stdout), deletion, and substitution.
Table C1. Basic sed operators Operator [addressrange]/p [addressrange]/d s/pattern1/pattern2/ [addressrange]/s/pattern1/pattern2/ Name print delete substitute substitute Effect Print [specified address range] Delete [specified address range] Substitute pattern2 for first instance of pattern1 in a line Substitute pattern2 for first instance of pattern1 in a line, over addressrange replace any character in pattern1 with the corresponding character in pattern2, over 416
[addressrange]/y/pattern1/pattern2/
transform
Advanced BashScripting Guide addressrange (equivalent of tr) Operate on every pattern match within each matched line of input
global
Unless the g (global) operator is appended to a substitute command, the substitution operates only on the first instance of a pattern match within each line. From the command line and in a shell script, a sed operation may require quoting and certain options.
sed e '/^$/d' $filename # The e option causes the next string to be interpreted as an editing instruction. # (If passing only a single instruction to "sed", the "e" is optional.) # The "strong" quotes ('') protect the RE characters in the instruction #+ from reinterpretation as special characters by the body of the script. # (This reserves RE expansion of the instruction for sed.) # # Operates on the text contained in file $filename.
In certain cases, a sed editing command will not work with single quotes.
filename=file1.txt pattern=BEGIN sed "/^$pattern/d" "$filename" # Works as specified. # sed '/^$pattern/d' "$filename" has unexpected results. # In this instance, with strong quoting (' ... '), #+ "$pattern" will not expand to "BEGIN".
Sed uses the e option to specify that the following string is an instruction or set of instructions. If there is only a single instruction contained in the string, then this option may be omitted.
sed n '/xzy/p' # The n option # Otherwise all # The e option $filename tells sed to print only those lines matching the pattern. input lines would print. not necessary here since there is only a single editing instruction.
Table C2. Examples of sed operators Notation 8d /^$/d 1,/^$/d /Jones/p s/Windows/Linux/ s/BSOD/stability/g s/ *$// s/00*/0/g Effect Delete 8th line of input. Delete all blank lines. Delete from beginning of input up to, and including first blank line. Print only lines containing "Jones" (with n option). Substitute "Linux" for first instance of "Windows" found in each input line. Substitute "stability" for every instance of "BSOD" found in each input line. Delete all spaces at the end of every line. Compress all consecutive sequences of zeroes into a single zero.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide /GUI/d s/GUI//g Delete all lines containing "GUI". Delete all instances of "GUI", leaving the remainder of each line intact.
Substituting a zerolength string for another is equivalent to deleting that string within a line of input. This leaves the remainder of the line intact. Applying s/GUI// to the line
The most important parts of any application are its GUI and sound effects
results in
The most important parts of any application are its and sound effects
The backslash represents a newline as a substitution character. In this special case, the replacement expression continues on the next line.
s/^ /g */\
This substitution replaces linebeginning spaces with a newline. The net result is to replace paragraph indents with a blank line between paragraphs. An address range followed by one or more operations may require open and closed curly brackets, with appropriate newlines.
/[09AZaz]/,/^$/{ /^$/d }
This deletes only the first of each set of consecutive blank lines. That might be useful for singlespacing a text file, but retaining the blank line(s) between paragraphs. A quick way to doublespace a text file is sed G filename. For illustrative examples of sed within shell scripts, see: 1. Example 341 2. Example 342 3. Example 122 4. Example A3 5. Example 1212 6. Example 1220 7. Example A13 8. Example A18 9. Example 1224 10. Example 109 11. Example 1233 12. Example A2 13. Example 1210 14. Example 128 15. Example A11 16. Example 1712 Appendix C. A Sed and Awk MicroPrimer 418
Advanced BashScripting Guide For a more extensive treatment of sed, check the appropriate references in the Bibliography.
C.2. Awk
Awk is a fullfeatured text processing language with a syntax reminiscent of C. While it possesses an extensive set of operators and capabilities, we will cover only a couple of these here the ones most useful for shell scripting. Awk breaks each line of input passed to it into fields. By default, a field is a string of consecutive characters separated by whitespace, though there are options for changing the delimiter. Awk parses and operates on each separate field. This makes awk ideal for handling structured text files, especially tables, data organized into consistent chunks, such as rows and columns. Strong quoting (single quotes) and curly brackets enclose segments of awk code within a shell script.
awk '{print $3}' $filename # Prints field #3 of file $filename to stdout. awk '{print $1 $5 $6}' $filename # Prints fields #1, #5, and #6 of file $filename.
We have just seen the awk print command in action. The only other feature of awk we need to deal with here is variables. Awk handles variables similarly to shell scripts, though a bit more flexibly.
{ total += ${column_number} }
This adds the value of column_number to the running total of "total". Finally, to print "total", there is an END command block, executed after the script has processed all its input.
END { print total }
Corresponding to the END, there is a BEGIN, for a code block to be performed before awk starts processing its input. For examples of awk within shell scripts, see: 1. Example 1110 2. Example 167 3. Example 1224 4. Example 343 5. Example 922 6. Example 1116 7. Example 281 8. Example 282 9. Example 103 10. Example 1242 11. Example 926 12. Example 123 13. Example 912 14. Example 3411 15. Example 108 Appendix C. A Sed and Awk MicroPrimer 419
Advanced BashScripting Guide That's all the awk we'll cover here, folks, but there's lots more to learn. See the appropriate references in the Bibliography.
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let "var1 = 1/0" miscellaneous errors, such as "divide by zero" misuse of shell builtins, according to Seldom seen, usually defaults to exit Bash documentation code 1 command invoked cannot execute permission problem or command is not an executable "command not found" possible problem with $PATH or a typo invalid argument to exit exit 3.14159 exit takes only integer args in the range 0 255 fatal error signal "n" kill 9 $PPID $? returns 137 (128 + 9) of script script terminated by ControlC ControlC is fatal error signal 2, (130 = 128 + 2, see above) exit status out of range exit 1 exit takes only integer args in the range 0 255
According to the table, exit codes 1 2, 126 165, and 255 [70] have special meanings, and should therefore be avoided as userspecified exit parameters. Ending a script with exit 127 would certainly cause confusion when troubleshooting (is the error a "command not found" or a userdefined one?). However, many scripts use an exit 1 as a general bailout upon error. Since exit code 1 signifies so many possible errors, this might not add any additional ambiguity, but, on the other hand, it probably would not be very informative either. There has been an attempt to systematize exit status numbers (see /usr/include/sysexits.h), but this is intended for C and C++ programmers. A similar standard for scripting might be appropriate. The author of this document proposes restricting userdefined exit codes to the range 64 113 (in addition to 0, for success), to conform with the C/C++ standard. This would allot 50 valid codes, and make troubleshooting scripts more straightforward. All userdefined exit codes in the accompanying examples to this document now conform to this standard, except where overriding circumstances exist, as in Example 92. Issuing a $? from the command line after a shell script exits gives results consistent with the table above only from the Bash or sh prompt. Running the Cshell or tcsh may give different values in some cases.
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For example, when xterm runs, it first initializes itself. Before running the user's shell, xterm opens the terminal device (/dev/pts/<n> or something similar) three times. At this point, Bash inherits these three file descriptors, and each command (child process) run by Bash inherits them in turn, except when you redirect the command. Redirection means reassigning one of the file descriptors to another file (or a pipe, or anything permissible). File descriptors may be reassigned locally (for a command, a command group, a subshell, a while or if or case or for loop...), or globally, for the remainder of the shell (using exec). ls > /dev/null means running ls with its fd 1 connected to /dev/null.
bash$ lsof a p $$ d0,1,2 COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE NODE NAME bash 363 bozo 0u CHR 136,1 3 /dev/pts/1 bash 363 bozo 1u CHR 136,1 3 /dev/pts/1 bash 363 bozo 2u CHR 136,1 3 /dev/pts/1
bash$ exec 2> /dev/null bash$ lsof a p $$ d0,1,2 COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE NODE NAME bash 371 bozo 0u CHR 136,1 3 /dev/pts/1 bash 371 bozo 1u CHR 136,1 3 /dev/pts/1 bash 371 bozo 2w CHR 1,3 120 /dev/null
bash$ bash c 'lsof a p $$ d0,1,2' | cat COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE NODE NAME lsof 379 root 0u CHR 136,1 3 /dev/pts/1 lsof 379 root 1w FIFO 0,0 7118 pipe lsof 379 root 2u CHR 136,1 3 /dev/pts/1
bash$ echo "$(bash c 'lsof a p $$ d0,1,2' 2>&1)" COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE NODE NAME lsof 426 root 0u CHR 136,1 3 /dev/pts/1
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This works for different types of redirection. Exercise: Analyze the following script.
#! /usr/bin/env bash mkfifo /tmp/fifo1 /tmp/fifo2 while read a; do echo "FIFO1: $a"; done < /tmp/fifo1 & exec 7> /tmp/fifo1 exec 8> >(while read a; do echo "FD8: $a, to fd7"; done >&7)
exec 3>&1 ( ( ( while read a; do echo "FIFO2: $a"; done < /tmp/fifo2 | tee /dev/stderr | tee /dev/fd/4 | tee / exec 3> /tmp/fifo2 echo 1st, sleep 1 echo 2nd, sleep 1 echo 3rd, sleep 1 echo 4th, sleep 1 echo 5th, sleep 1 echo 6th, sleep 1 echo 7th, sleep 1 echo 8th, sleep 1 echo 9th, to stdout to stderr >&2 to fd 3 >&3 to fd 4 >&4 to fd 5 >&5 through a pipe | sed 's/.*/PIPE: &, to fd 5/' >&5 to fd 6 >&6 to fd 7 >&7 to fd 8 >&8
) 4>&1 >&3 3>& | while read a; do echo "FD4: $a"; done 1>&3 5>& 6>& ) 5>&1 >&3 | while read a; do echo "FD5: $a"; done 1>&3 6>& ) 6>&1 >&3 | while read a; do echo "FD6: $a"; done 3>& rm f /tmp/fifo1 /tmp/fifo2
# For each command and subshell, figure out which fd points to what. exit 0
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Appendix F. Localization
Localization is an undocumented Bash feature. A localized shell script echoes its text output in the language defined as the system's locale. A Linux user in Berlin, Germany, would get script output in German, whereas his cousin in Berlin, Maryland, would get output from the same script in English. To create a localized script, use the following template to write all messages to the user (error messages, prompts, etc.).
#!/bin/bash # localized.sh E_CDERROR=65 error() { printf "$@" >&2 exit $E_CDERROR } cd $var || error $"Can't cd to %s." "$var" read p $"Enter the value: " var # ... bash$ bash D localized.sh "Can't cd to %s." "Enter the value: "
This lists all the localized text. (The D option lists doublequoted strings prefixed by a $, without executing the script.)
bash$ bash dumppostrings localized.sh #: a:6 msgid "Can't cd to %s." msgstr "" #: a:7 msgid "Enter the value: " msgstr ""
The dumppostrings option to Bash resembles the D option, but uses gettext "po" format. Now, build a language.po file for each language that the script will be translated into, specifying the msgstr. As an example: fr.po:
#: a:6 msgid "Can't cd to %s." msgstr "Impossible de se positionner dans le rpertoire %s." #: a:7 msgid "Enter the value: " msgstr "Entrez la valeur : "
Appendix F. Localization
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Then, run msgfmt. msgfmt o localized.sh.mo fr.po Place the resulting localized.sh.mo file in the /usr/local/share/locale/fr/LC_MESSAGES directory, and at the beginning of the script, insert the lines:
TEXTDOMAINDIR=/usr/local/share/locale TEXTDOMAIN=localized.sh
If a user on a French system runs the script, she will get French messages. With older versions of Bash or other shells, localization requires gettext, using the s option. In this case, the script becomes:
#!/bin/bash # localized.sh E_CDERROR=65 error() { local format=$1 shift printf "$(gettext s "$format")" "$@" >&2 exit $E_CDERROR } cd $var || error "Can't cd to %s." "$var" read p "$(gettext s "Enter the value: ")" var # ...
The TEXTDOMAIN and TEXTDOMAINDIR variables need to be exported to the environment. This appendix written by Stephane Chazelas.
Appendix F. Localization
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Internal variables associated with Bash history commands: 1. $HISTCMD 2. $HISTCONTROL 3. $HISTIGNORE 4. $HISTFILE 5. $HISTFILESIZE 6. $HISTSIZE 7. !! 8. !$ 9. !# 10. !N 11. !N 12. !STRING 13. !?STRING? 14. ^STRING^string^ Unfortunately, the Bash history tools find no use in scripting.
#!/bin/bash # history.sh # Attempt to use 'history' command in a script. history # Script produces no output. # History commands do not work within a script. bash$ ./history.sh (no output)
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options: cdspell cdable_vars checkhash checkwinsize mailwarn sourcepath no_empty_cmd_completion # bash>=2.04 only cmdhist histappend histreedit histverify extglob # necessary for programmable completion
export TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal %3R\tuser %3U\tsys %3S\tpcpu %P\n' export HISTIGNORE="&:bg:fg:ll:h" export HOSTFILE=$HOME/.hosts # Put a list of remote hosts in ~/.hosts
# # Greeting, motd etc... # # Define some colors first: red='\e[0;31m' RED='\e[1;31m' blue='\e[0;34m'
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#=============================================================== # # ALIASES AND FUNCTIONS # # Arguably, some functions defined here are quite big # (ie 'lowercase') but my workstation has 512Meg of RAM, so ..... # If you want to make this file smaller, these functions can # be converted into scripts. # # Many functions were taken (almost) straight from the bash2.04 # examples. # #=============================================================== # # Personnal Aliases # alias rm='rm i' alias cp='cp i' alias mv='mv i' # > Prevents accidentally clobbering files. alias mkdir='mkdir p' alias alias alias alias alias alias alias alias alias alias alias # The alias alias alias alias alias alias alias alias alias alias h='history' j='jobs l' r='rlogin' which='type all' ..='cd ..' path='echo e ${PATH//:/\\n}' print='/usr/bin/lp o nobanner d $LPDEST' pjet='enscript h G fCourier9 d $LPDEST' background='xv root quit max rmode 5' du='du kh' df='df kTh' 'ls' family (this assumes la='ls Al' ls='ls hF color' lx='ls lXB' lk='ls lSr' lc='ls lcr' lu='ls lur' lr='ls lR' lt='ls ltr' lm='ls al |more' tree='tree Csu'
# Assumes LPDEST is defined # Prettyprint using enscript # Put a picture in the background
you use the GNU ls) # show hidden files # add colors for filetype recognition # sort by extension # sort by size # sort by change time # sort by access time # recursive ls # sort by date # pipe through 'more' # nice alternative to 'ls'
# tailoring 'less' alias more='less' export PAGER=less export LESSCHARSET='latin1' export LESSOPEN='|/usr/bin/lesspipe.sh %s 2>&' # Use this if lesspipe.sh exists export LESS='i N w z4 g e M X F R P%t?f%f \ :stdin .?pb%pb\%:?lbLine %lb:?bbByte %bb:...' # spelling typos highly personnal :) alias xs='cd'
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# # a few fun ones # function xtitle () { case "$TERM" in *term | rxvt) echo n e "\033]0;$*\007" ;; *) ;; esac } # aliases... alias top='xtitle Processes on $HOST && top' alias make='xtitle Making $(basename $PWD) ; make' alias ncftp="xtitle ncFTP ; ncftp" # .. and functions function man () { for i ; do xtitle The $(basename $1|tr d .[:digit:]) manual command man F a "$i" done } function ll(){ ls l "$@"| egrep "^d" ; ls lXB "$@" 2>&| egrep v "^d|total "; } function te() # wrapper around xemacs/gnuserv { if [ "$(gnuclient batch eval t 2>&)" == "t" ]; then gnuclient q "$@"; else ( xemacs "$@" &); fi } # # File & strings related functions: # # Find a file with a pattern in name: function ff() { find . type f iname '*'$*'*' ls ; } # Find a file with pattern $1 in name and Execute $2 on it: function fe() { find . type f iname '*'$1'*' exec "${2:file}" {} \; # find pattern in a set of filesand highlight them: function fstr() { OPTIND=1 local case="" local usage="fstr: find string in files. Usage: fstr [i] \"pattern\" [\"filename pattern\"] " while getopts :it opt do case "$opt" in i) case="i " ;;
; }
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# # Process/system related functions: # function my_ps() { ps $@ u $USER o pid,%cpu,%mem,bsdtime,command ; } function pp() { my_ps f | awk '!/awk/ && $0~var' var=${1:".*"} ; } # This function is roughly the same as 'killall' on linux # but has no equivalent (that I know of) on Solaris function killps() # kill by process name { local pid pname sig="TERM" # default signal if [ "$#" lt 1 ] || [ "$#" gt 2 ]; then echo "Usage: killps [SIGNAL] pattern"
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helptopic help # currently same as builtins shopt shopt stopped P '%' bg job P '%' fg jobs disown mkdir rmdir o default cd
# Compression complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X # Postscript,pdf,dvi..... complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X # Multimedia complete f o default X complete f o default X complete f o default X
'!*.ps' gs ghostview ps2pdf ps2ascii '!*.dvi' dvips dvipdf xdvi dviselect dvitype '!*.pdf' acroread pdf2ps '!*.+(pdf|ps)' gv '!*.texi*' makeinfo texi2dvi texi2html texi2pdf '!*.tex' tex latex slitex '!*.lyx' lyx '!*.+(htm*|HTM*)' lynx html2ps '!*.+(jp*g|gif|xpm|png|bmp)' xv gimp '!*.+(mp3|MP3)' mpg123 mpg321 '!*.+(ogg|OGG)' ogg123
perl perl5
# This is a 'universal' completion function it works when commands have # a socalled 'long options' mode , ie: 'ls all' instead of 'ls a' _get_longopts () { $1 help | sed e '//!d' e 's/.*\([^[:space:].,]*\).*/\1/'| \ grep ^"$2" |sort u ; } _longopts_func () { case "${2:*}" in *) ;;
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case "$1" in \~*) eval cmd="$1" ;; *) cmd="$1" ;; esac COMPREPLY=( $(_get_longopts ${1} ${2} ) ) } complete complete o default F _longopts_func configure bash o default F _longopts_func wget id info a2ps ls recode
_make_targets () { local mdef makef gcmd cur prev i COMPREPLY=() cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]} prev=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD1]} # if prev argument is f, return possible filename completions. # we could be a little smarter here and return matches against # `makefile Makefile *.mk', whatever exists case "$prev" in *f) COMPREPLY=( $(compgen f $cur ) ); return 0;; esac # if we want an option, return the possible posix options case "$cur" in ) COMPREPLY=(e f i k n p q r S s t); return 0;; esac # make reads `makefile' before `Makefile' if [ f makefile ]; then mdef=makefile elif [ f Makefile ]; then mdef=Makefile else mdef=*.mk # local convention fi # before we scan for targets, see if a makefile name was specified # with f for (( i=0; i < ${#COMP_WORDS[@]}; i++ )); do if [[ ${COMP_WORDS[i]} == *f ]]; then eval makef=${COMP_WORDS[i+1]} # eval for tilde expansion break fi done [ z "$makef" ] && makef=$mdef # if we have a partial word to complete, restrict completions to # matches of that word if [ n "$2" ]; then gcmd='grep "^$2"' ; else gcmd=cat ; fi # if we don't want to use *.mk, we can take out the cat and use # test f $makef and input redirection COMPREPLY=( $(cat $makef 2>/dev/null | awk 'BEGIN {FS=":"} /^[^.# }
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# cvs(1) completion _cvs () { local cur prev COMPREPLY=() cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]} prev=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD1]} if [ $COMP_CWORD eq 1 ] || [ COMPREPLY=( $( compgen W export history import log tag update' $cur )) else COMPREPLY=( $( compgen f fi return 0 } complete F _cvs cvs _killall () { local cur prev COMPREPLY=() cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]} # get a list of processes (the first sed evaluation # takes care of swapped out processes, the second # takes care of getting the basename of the process) COMPREPLY=( $( /usr/bin/ps u $USER o comm | \ sed e '1,1d' e 's#[]\[]##g' e 's#^.*/##'| \ awk '{if ($0 ~ /^'$cur'/) print $0}' )) return 0 } complete F _killall killall killps "${prev:0:1}" = "" ]; then 'add admin checkout commit diff \ rdiff release remove rtag status \
$cur ))
# # # #
A metacommand completion function for commands like sudo(8), which need to first complete on a command, then complete according to that command's own completion definition currently not quite foolproof (e.g. mount and umount don't work properly), but still quite useful By Ian McDonald, modified by me.
_my_command() { local cur func cline cspec COMPREPLY=() cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]} if [ $COMP_CWORD = 1 ]; then COMPREPLY=( $( compgen c $cur ) ) elif complete p ${COMP_WORDS[1]} &>/dev/null; then cspec=$( complete p ${COMP_WORDS[1]} ) if [ "${cspec%%F *}" != "${cspec}" ]; then # complete F <function> # # COMP_CWORD and COMP_WORDS() are not readonly, # so we can set them before handing off to regular
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complete o default F _my_command nohup exec eval trace truss strace sotruss gdb complete o default F _my_command command type which man nice # # # # Local Variables: mode:shellscript shshell:bash End:
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Table I1. Batch file keywords / variables / operators, and their shell equivalents Batch File Operator Shell Script Equivalent % $ / \ / == = !==! != | | @ set +v * * > > >> >> < < %VAR% $VAR REM # NOT ! NUL /dev/null ECHO echo ECHO. echo ECHO OFF set +v FOR %%VAR IN (LIST) DO for var in [list]; do :LABEL none (unnecessary) GOTO none (use a function) PAUSE sleep CHOICE case or select IF if IF EXIST FILENAME if [ e filename ] IF !%N==! if [ z "$N" ] CALL source or . (dot operator) COMMAND /C source or . (dot operator) SET export Meaning commandline parameter prefix command option flag directory path separator (equalto) string comparison test (not equalto) string comparison test pipe do not echo current command filename "wild card" file redirection (overwrite) file redirection (append) redirect stdin environmental variable comment negate following test "black hole" for burying command output echo (many more option in Bash) echo blank line do not echo command(s) following "for" loop label jump to another location in the script pause or wait an interval menu choice iftest test if file exists if replaceable parameter "N" not present "include" another script "include" another script (same as CALL) set an environmental variable 438
Advanced BashScripting Guide SHIFT SGN ERRORLEVEL CON PRN LPT1 COM1 shift lt or gt $? stdin /dev/lp0 /dev/lp0 /dev/ttyS0 left shift commandline argument list sign (of integer) exit status "console" (stdin) (generic) printer device first printer device first serial port
Batch files usually contain DOS commands. These must be translated into their UNIX equivalents in order to convert a batch file into a shell script.
Table I2. DOS commands and their UNIX equivalents DOS Command ASSIGN ATTRIB CD CHDIR CLS COMP COPY CtlC CtlZ DEL DELTREE DIR ERASE EXIT FC FIND MD MKDIR MORE MOVE PATH REN RENAME RD RMDIR SORT TIME TYPE UNIX Equivalent ln chmod cd cd clear diff, comm, cmp cp CtlC CtlD rm rm rf ls l rm exit comm, cmp grep mkdir mkdir more mv $PATH mv mv rmdir rmdir sort date cat Effect link file or directory change file permissions change directory change directory clear screen file compare file copy break (signal) EOF (endoffile) delete file(s) delete directory recursively directory listing delete file(s) exit current process file compare find strings in files make directory make directory text file paging filter move path to executables rename (move) rename (move) remove directory remove directory sort file display system time output file to stdout 439
Virtually all UNIX and shell operators and commands have many more options and enhancements than their DOS and batch file equivalents. Many DOS batch files rely on auxiliary utilities, such as ask.com, a crippled counterpart to read. DOS supports a very limited and incompatible subset of filename wildcard expansion, recognizing only the * and ? characters. Converting a DOS batch file into a shell script is generally straightforward, and the result ofttimes reads better than the original.
@ECHO OFF IF !%1==! GOTO VIEWDATA REM IF NO COMMANDLINE ARG... FIND "%1" C:\BOZO\BOOKLIST.TXT GOTO EXIT0 REM PRINT LINE WITH STRING MATCH, THEN EXIT. :VIEWDATA TYPE C:\BOZO\BOOKLIST.TXT | MORE REM SHOW ENTIRE FILE, 1 PAGE AT A TIME. :EXIT0
# :EXIT0
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Ted Davis' Shell Scripts on the PC site has a set of comprehensive tutorials on the oldfashioned art of batch file programming. Certain of his ingenious techniques could conceivably have relevance for shell scripts.
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Appendix J. Exercises
J.1. Analyzing Scripts
Examine the following script. Run it, then explain what it does. Annotate the script, then rewrite it in a more compact and elegant manner.
#!/bin/bash MAX=10000
for((nr=1; nr<$MAX; nr++)) do let "t1 = nr % 5" if [ "$t1" ne 3 ] then continue fi let "t2 = nr % 7" if [ "$t2" ne 4 ] then continue fi let "t3 = nr % 9" if [ "$t3" ne 5 ] then continue fi break done echo "Number = $nr" # What heppens when you comment out this line? Why?
exit 0
He wished to write a script tracking changes to the system log file, /var/log/messages. Unfortunately, the above code block hangs and does nothing useful. Why? Fix this so it does work (hint: rather than redirecting the stdin of the loop, try a pipe). Appendix J. Exercises 442
Advanced BashScripting Guide Analyze Example A11, and reorganize it in a simplified and more logical style. See how many of its variables can be eliminated and try to optimize the script to speed up its execution time. Alter the script so that it accepts any ordinary ASCII text file as input for its initial "generation". The script will read the first $ROW*$COL characters, and set the occurrences of vowels as "living" cells. Hint: be sure to translate the spaces in the input file to underscore characters.
Advanced BashScripting Guide Lottery Numbers One type of lottery involves picking five different numbers, in the range of 1 50. Write a script that generates five pseudorandom numbers in this range, with no duplicates. The script will give the option of echoing the numbers to stdout or saving them to a file, along with the date and time the particular number set was generated. Intermediate Managing Disk Space List, one at a time, all files larger than 100K in the /home/username directory tree. Give the user the option to delete or compress the file, then proceed to show the next one. Write to a logfile the names of all deleted files and the deletion times. Safe Delete Write, as a script, a "safe" delete command, srm.sh. Filenames passed as commandline arguments to this script are not deleted, but instead gzipped if not already compressed (use file to check), then moved to a /home/username/trash directory. At invocation, the script checks the "trash" directory for files older than 48 hours and deletes them. Making Change What is the most efficient way to make change for $1.68, using only coins in common circulations (up to 25c)? It's 6 quarters, 1 dime, a nickel, and three cents. Given any arbitrary command line input in dollars and cents ($*.??), calculate the change, using the minimum number of coins. If your home country is not the United States, you may use your local currency units instead. The script will need to parse the command line input, then change it to multiples of the smallest monetary unit (cents or whatever). Hint: look at Example 234. Quadratic Equations Solve a "quadratic" equation of the form Ax^2 + Bx + C = 0. Have a script take as arguments the coefficients, A, B, and C, and return the solutions to four decimal places. Hint: pipe the coefficients to bc, using the wellknown formula, x = ( B +/ sqrt( B^2 4AC ) ) / 2A. Sum of Matching Numbers Find the sum of all fivedigit numbers (in the range 10000 99999) containing exactly two out of the following set of digits: { 4, 5, 6 }. These may repeat within the same number, and if so, they count once for each occurrence. Some examples of matching numbers are 42057, 74638, and 89515. Lucky Numbers A "lucky number" is one whose individual digits add up to 7, in successive additions. For example, 62431 is a "lucky number" (6 + 2 + 4 + 3 + 1 = 16, 1 + 6 = 7). Find all the "lucky numbers" between 1000 and 10000. Alphabetizing a String Alphabetize (in ASCII order) an arbitrary string read from the command line. Parsing Parse /etc/passwd, and output its contents in nice, easytoread tabular form. PrettyPrinting a Data File Certain database and spreadsheet packages use savefiles with commaseparated values (CSVs). Other applications often need to parse these files. Given a data file with commaseparated fields, of the form:
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Reformat the data and print it out to stdout in labeled, evenlyspaced columns. Justification Given ASCII text input either from stdin or a file, by adjusting the word spacing rightjustify each line to a userspecified linewidth and send the output to stdout. Mailing List Using the mail command, write a script that manages a simple mailing list. The script automatically emails the monthly company newsletter, read from a specified text file, and sends it to all the addresses on the mailing list, which the script reads from another specified file. Passwords Generate pseudorandom 8character passwords, using characters in the ranges [09], [AZ], [az]. Each password must contain at least two digits. Difficult Logging File Accesses Log all accesses to the files in /etc during the course of a single day. This information should include the filename, user name, and access time. If any alterations to the files take place, that should be flagged. Write this data as neatly formatted records in a logfile. Strip Comments Strip all comments from a shell script whose name is specified on the command line. Note that the "#! line" must not be stripped out. HTML Conversion Convert a given text file to HTML. This noninteractive script automatically inserts all appropriate HTML tags into a file specified as an argument. Strip HTML Tags Strip all HTML tags from a specified HTML file, then reformat it into lines between 60 and 75 characters in length. Reset paragraph and block spacing, as appropriate, and convert HTML tables to their approximate text equivalent. XML Conversion Convert an XML file to both HTML and text format. Chasing Spammers Write a script that analyzes a spam email by doing DNS lookups on the IP addresses in the headers to identify the relay hosts as well as the originating ISP. The script will forward the unaltered spam message to the responsible ISPs. Of course, it will be necessary to filter out your own ISP's IP address, so you don't end up complaining about yourself. As necessary, use the appropriate network analysis commands. Morse Code Convert a text file to Morse code. Each character of the text file will be represented as a corresponding Morse code group of dots and dashes (underscores), separated by whitespace from the next. For example, "script" ===> "... _._. ._. .. .__. _". Hex Dump Do a hex(adecimal) dump on a binary file specified as an argument. The output should be in neat tabular fields, with the first field showing the address, each of the next 8 fields a 4byte hex number, and the final field the ASCII equivalent of the previous 8 fields. Emulating a Shift Register
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Advanced BashScripting Guide Using Example 269 as an inspiration, write a script that emulates a 64bit shift register as an array. Implement functions to load the register, shift left, and shift right. Finally, write a function that interprets the register contents as eight 8bit ASCII characters. Determinant Solve a 4 x 4 determinant. Hidden Words Write a "wordfind" puzzle generator, a script that hides 10 input words in a 10 x 10 matrix of random letters. The words may be hidden across, down, or diagonally. Anagramming Anagram 4letter input. For example, the anagrams of word are: do or rod row word. You may use /usr/share/dict/linux.words as the reference list. Fog Index The "fog index" of a passage of text estimates its reading difficulty, as a number corresponding roughly to a school grade level. For example, a passage with a fog index of 12 should be comprehensible to anyone with 12 years of schooling. The Gunning version of the fog index uses the following algorithm. 1. Choose a section of the text at least 100 words in length. 2. Count the number of sentences (a portion of a sentence truncated by the boundary of the text section counts as one). 3. Find the average number of words per sentence. AVE_WDS_SEN = TOTAL_WORDS / SENTENCES 4. Count the number of "difficult" words in the segment those containing at least 3 syllables. Divide this quantity by total words to get the proportion of difficult words. PRO_DIFF_WORDS = LONG_WORDS / TOTAL_WORDS 5. The Gunning fog index is the sum of the above two quantities, multiplied by 0.4, then rounded to the nearest integer. G_FOG_INDEX = int ( 0.4 * ( AVE_WDS_SEN + PRO_DIFF_WORDS ) ) Step 4 is by far the most difficult portion of the exercise. There exist various algorithms for estimating the syllable count of a word. A ruleofthumb formula might consider the number of letters in a word and the vowelconsonant mix. A strict interpretation of the Gunning Fog index does not count compound words and proper nouns as "difficult" words, but this would enormously complicate the script. Calculating PI using Buffon's Needle The Eighteenth Century French mathematician de Buffon came up with a novel experiment. Repeatedly drop a needle of length "n" onto a wooden floor composed of long and narrow parallel boards. The cracks separating the equalwidth floorboards are a fixed distance "d" apart. Keep track of the total drops and the number of times the needle intersects a crack on the floor. The ratio of these two quantities turns out to be a fractional multiple of PI. In the spirit of Example 1235, write a script that runs a Monte Carlo simulation of Buffon's Needle. To simplify matters, set the needle length equal to the distance between the cracks, n = d. Hint: there are actually two critical variables: the distance from the center of the needle to the nearest crack to it, and the angle of the needle to that crack. You may use bc to handle the calculations. Playfair Cipher Appendix J. Exercises 446
Advanced BashScripting Guide Implement the Playfair (Wheatstone) Cipher in a script. The Playfair Cipher encrypts text by substitution of each 2letter "digram" (grouping). Traditionally, one would use a 5 x 5 letter scrambled alphabet code key square for the encryption and decryption.
C A I P V O B K Q W D F L R X E G M T Y S H N U Z
Each letter of the alphabet appears once, except "I" also represents "J". The arbitrarily chosen key word, "CODES" comes first, then all the rest of the alphabet, skipping letters already used. To encrypt, separate the plaintext message into digrams (2letter groups). If a group has two identical letters, delete the second, and form a new group. If there is a single letter left over at the end, insert a "null" character, typically an "X". THIS IS A TOP SECRET MESSAGE TH IS IS AT OP SE CR ET ME SA GE For each digram, there are three possibilities. 1) Both letters will be on the same row of the key square For each letter, substitute the one immediately to the right, in that row. If necessary, wrap around left to the beginning of the row. or 2) Both letters will be in the same column of the key square For each letter, substitute the one immediately below it, in that row. If necessary, wrap around to the top of the column. or 3) Both letters will form the corners of a rectangle within the key square. For each letter, substitute the one on the other corner the rectangle which lies on the same row.
The "TH" digram falls under case #3. G H M N T U (Rectangle with "T" and "H" at corners) T > U H > G
The "SE" digram falls under case #1. C O D E S (Row containing "S" and "E") S > C E > S (wraps around left to beginning of row)
========================================================================= To decrypt encrypted text, reverse the above procedure under cases #1
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Helen Fouche Gaines' classic work, "Elementary Cryptoanalysis" (1939), gives a fairly detailed rundown on the Playfair Cipher and its solution methods.
This script will have three main sections I. Generating the "key square", based on a userinput keyword. II. Encrypting a "plaintext" message. III. Decrypting encrypted text. The script will make extensive use of arrays and functions. Please do not send the author your solutions to these exercises. There are better ways to impress him with your cleverness, such as submitting bugfixes and suggestions for improving this book.
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Appendix K. Copyright
The "Advanced BashScripting Guide" is copyright 2000, by Mendel Cooper. The author also asserts copyright on all previous versions of this document. This document may only be distributed subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the Open Publication License (version 1.0 or later), http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/. The following license options also apply.
A. Distribution of substantively modified versions of this document is prohibited without the explicit permission of the copyright holder. Distribution of the work or derivative of the work in any standard (paper) book form is prohibited unless prior permission is obtained from the copyright holder.
B.
Provision A, above, explicitly prohibits relabeling this document. An example of relabeling is the insertion of company logos or navigation bars into the cover, title page, or the text. The author grants the following exemptions. 1. Nonprofit organizations, such as the Linux Documentation Project and Sunsite. 2. "Pureplay" Linux distributors, such as Debian, Red Hat, Mandrake, and others. Without explicit written permission from the author, distributors and publishers (including online publishers) are prohibited from imposing any additional conditions, strictures, or provisions on this document or any previous version of it. As of this update, the author asserts that he has not entered into any contractual obligations that would alter the foregoing declarations. Essentially, you may freely distribute this book in unaltered electronic form. You must obtain the author's permission to distribute a substantially modified version or derivative work. The purpose of this restriction is to preserve the artistic integrity of this document and to prevent "forking". If you display or distribute this document or any previous version thereof under any license except the one above, then you are required to obtain the author's written permission. Failure to do so may terminate your distribution rights. These are very liberal terms, and they should not hinder any legitimate distribution or use of this book. The author especially encourages the use of this book for classroom and instructional purposes. The commercial print and other rights to this book are available. Please contact the author if interested. The author produced this book in a manner consistent with the spirit of the LDP Manifesto.
Linux is a trademark registered to Linus Torvalds. Unix and UNIX are trademarks registered to the Open Group. MS Windows is a trademark registered to the Microsoft Corp.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide All other commercial trademarks mentioned in the body of this work are registered to their respective owners. Hyun Jin Cha has done a Korean translation of version 1.0.11 of this book. Spanish, Portuguese, French, German, Italian, and Chinese translations are underway. If you wish to translate this document into another language, please feel free to do so, subject to the terms stated above. The author wishes to be notified of such efforts. Notes [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] These are referred to as builtins, features internal to the shell. Many of the features of ksh88, and even a few from the updated ksh93 have been merged into Bash. By convention, userwritten shell scripts that are Bourne shell compliant generally take a name with a .sh extension. System scripts, such as those found in /etc/rc.d, do not follow this guideline. Some flavors of UNIX (those based on 4.2BSD) take a fourbyte magic number, requiring a blank after the ! #! /bin/sh. The #! line in a shell script will be the first thing the command interpreter (sh or bash) sees. Since this line begins with a #, it will be correctly interpreted as a comment when the command interpreter finally executes the script. The line has already served its purpose calling the command interpreter. If, in fact, the script includes an extra #! line, then bash will interpret it as a comment.
#!/bin/bash echo "Part 1 of script." a=1 #!/bin/bash # This does *not* launch a new script. echo "Part 2 of script." echo $a # Value of $a stays at 1.
[6]
Also, try starting a README file with a #!/bin/more, and making it executable. The result is a selflisting documentation file. Portable Operating System Interface, an attempt to standardize UNIXlike OSes. Caution: invoking a Bash script by sh scriptname turns off Bashspecific extensions, and the script may therefore fail to execute. A script needs read, as well as execute permission for it to run, since the shell needs to be able to read 450
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Advanced BashScripting Guide it. [10] Why not simply invoke the script with scriptname? If the directory you are in ($PWD) is where scriptname is located, why doesn't this work? This fails because, for security reasons, the current directory, "." is not included in a user's $PATH. It is therefore necessary to explicitly invoke the script in the current directory with a ./scriptname. [11] The shell does the brace expansion. The command itself acts upon the result of the expansion. [12] Exception: a code block in braces as part of a pipe may be run as a subshell.
ls | { read firstline; read secondline; } # Error. The code block in braces runs as a subshell, # so the output of "ls" cannot be passed to variables within the block. echo "First line is $firstline; second line is $secondline" # Will not work. # Thanks, S.C.
[13] The process calling the script sets the $0 parameter. By convention, this parameter is the name of the script. See the manpage for execv. [14] Encapsulating "!" within double quotes gives an error when used from the command line. Apparently this is interpreted as a history command. Within a script, though, this problem does not occur. Of more concern is the inconsistent behavior of "\" within double quotes.
bash$ echo hello\! hello!
(Thank you, Wayne Pollock, for pointing this out.) "Word splitting", in this context, means dividing a character string into a number of separate and discrete arguments. Be aware that suid binaries may open security holes and that the suid flag has no effect on shell scripts. On modern UNIX systems, the sticky bit is no longer used for files, only on directories. As S.C. points out, in a compound test, even quoting the string variable might not suffice. [ n "$string" o "$a" = "$b" ] may cause an error with some versions of Bash if $string is empty. The safe way is to append an extra character to possibly empty variables, [ "x$string" != x o "x$a" = "x$b" ] (the "x's" cancel out). The pid of the currently running script is $$, of course. The words "argument" and "parameter" are often used interchangeably. In the context of this document, they have the same precise meaning, that of a variable passed to a script or function. This applies to either command line arguments or parameters passed to a function. 451
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Advanced BashScripting Guide [22] If $parameter is null in a noninteractive script, it will terminate with a 127 exit status (the Bash error code code for "command not found"). [23] These are shell builtins, whereas other loop commands, such as while and case, are keywords. [24] An exception to this is the time command, listed in the official Bash documentation as a keyword. [25] A option is an argument that acts as a flag, switching script behaviors on or off. The argument associated with a particular option indicates the behavior that the option (flag) switches on or off. [26] The C source for a number of loadable builtins is typically found in the /usr/share/doc/bash?.??/functions directory. Note that the f option to enable is not portable to all systems. The same effect as autoload can be achieved with typeset fu. These are files whose names begin with a dot, such as ~/.Xdefaults. Such filenames do not show up in a normal ls listing, and they cannot be deleted by an accidental rm rf *. Dotfiles are generally used as setup and configuration files in a user's home directory. This is only true of the GNU version of tr, not the generic version often found on commercial UNIX systems. A tar czvf archive_name.tar.gz * will include dotfiles in directories below the current working directory. This is an undocumented GNU tar "feature". This is a symmetric block cipher, used to encrypt files on a single system or local network, as opposed to the "public key" cipher class, of which pgp is a wellknown example. A daemon is a background process not attached to a terminal session. Daemons perform designated services either at specified times or explicitly triggered by certain events. The word "daemon" means ghost in Greek, and there is certainly something mysterious, almost supernatural, about the way UNIX daemons silently wander about behind the scenes, carrying out their appointed tasks. This is actually a script adapted from the Debian Linux distribution. The print queue is the group of jobs "waiting in line" to be printed. For an excellent overview of this topic, see Andy Vaught's article, Introduction to Named Pipes, in the September, 1997 issue of Linux Journal. EBCDIC (pronounced "ebbsidic") is an acronym for Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code. This is an IBM data format no longer in much use. A bizarre application of the conv=ebcdic option of dd is as a quick 'n easy, but not very secure text file encoder.
cat $file | dd conv=swab,ebcdic > $file_encrypted # Encode (looks like gibberish). # Might as well switch bytes (swab), too, for a little extra obscurity. cat $file_encrypted | dd conv=swab,ascii > $file_plaintext # Decode.
[27] [28]
[37] A macro is a symbolic constant that expands into a command string or a set of operations on parameters. [38] This is the case on a Linux machine or a UNIX system with disk quotas. [39] The userdel command will fail if the particular user being deleted is still logged on. [40] For more detail on burning CDRs, see Alex Withers' article, Creating CDs, in the October, 1999 issue of Linux Journal.
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Advanced BashScripting Guide [41] [42] [43] [44] [45] [46] The c option to mke2fs also invokes a check for bad blocks. Operators of singleuser Linux systems generally prefer something simpler for backups, such as tar. NAND is the logical "notand" operator. Its effect is somewhat similar to subtraction. For purposes of command substitution, a command may be an external system command, an internal scripting builtin, or even a script function. A file descriptor is simply a number that the operating system assigns to an open file to keep track of it. Consider it a simplified version of a file pointer. It is analogous to a file handle in C. Using file descriptor 5 might cause problems. When Bash creates a child process, as with exec, the child inherits fd 5 (see Chet Ramey's archived email, SUBJECT: RE: File descriptor 5 is held open). Best leave this particular fd alone. The simplest type of Regular Expression is a character string that retains its literal meaning, not containing any metacharacters. Since sed, awk, and grep process single lines, there will usually not be a newline to match. In those cases where there is a newline in a multiple line expression, the dot will match the newline.
#!/bin/bash sed e 'N;s/.*/[&]/' << EOF line1 line2 EOF # OUTPUT: # [line1 # line2] # Here Document
[47] [48]
echo awk '{ $0=$1 "\n" $2; if (/line.1/) {print}}' << EOF line 1 line 2 EOF # OUTPUT: # line # 1
[49] Filename expansion can match dotfiles, but only if the pattern explicitly includes the dot.
~/[.]bashrc ~/?bashrc # Will not expand to ~/.bashrc # Neither will this. # Wild cards and metacharacters will not expand to a dot in globbing. # Will expand to ~./bashrc # Likewise. # Likewise.
Advanced BashScripting Guide This has the same effect as a named pipe (temp file), and, in fact, named pipes were at one time used in process substitution. [51] Indirect variable references (see Example 352) provide a clumsy sort of mechanism for passing variable pointers to functions.
#!/bin/bash ITERATIONS=3 icount=1 # How many times to get input.
my_read () { # Called with my_read varname, # outputs the previous value between brackets as the default value, # then asks for a new value. local local_var echo eval read [ n n "Enter a value " 'echo n "[$'$1'] "' # Previous value. local_var "$local_var" ] && eval $1=\$local_var
# "Andlist": if "local_var" then set "$1" to its value. } echo while [ "$icount" le "$ITERATIONS" ] do my_read var echo "Entry #$icount = $var" let "icount += 1" echo done
[52] The return command is a Bash builtin. [53] Herbert Mayer defines recursion as "...expressing an algorithm by using a simpler version of that same algorithm..." A recursive function is one that calls itself. [54] Too many levels of recursion may crash a script with a segfault.
#!/bin/bash recursive_function () { (( $1 < $2 )) && f $(( $1 + 1 )) $2; # As long as 1st parameter is less than 2nd, #+ increment 1st and recurse. } recursive_function 1 50000 # Segfaults, of course. # Recurse 50,000 levels!
# Recursion this deep might cause even a C program to segfault, #+ by using up all the memory allotted to the stack.
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[55] However, aliases do seem to expand positional parameters. [56] This does not apply to csh, tcsh, and other shells not related to or descended from the classic Bourne shell (sh). [57] The entries in /dev provide mount points for physical and virtual devices. These entries use very little drive space. Some devices, such as /dev/null, /dev/zero, and /dev/urandom are virtual. They are not actual physical devices and exist only in software. A block device reads and/or writes data in chunks, or blocks, in contrast to a character device, which acesses data in character units. Examples of block devices are a hard drive and CD ROM drive. An example of a character device is a keyboard. Certain system commands, such as procinfo, free, vmstat, lsdev, and uptime do this as well. Rocky Bernstein's Bash debugger partially makes up for this lack. By convention, signal 0 is assigned to exit. Setting the suid permission on the script itself has no effect. In this context, " magic numbers" have an entirely different meaning than the magic numbers used to designate file types. ANSI is, of course, the acronym for the American National Standards Institute. See Marius van Oers' article, Unix Shell Scripting Malware, and also the Denning reference in the bibliography. Chet Ramey promises associative arrays (a Perl feature) in a future Bash release. This is the notorious "flog it to death" technique. Those who can, do. Those who can't... get an MCSE. If no address range is specified, the default is all lines. Out of range exit values can result in unpredictable exit codes. For example, exit 3809 gives an exit code of 225.
[58]
[59] [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] [65] [66] [67] [68] [69] [70]
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