Bash Tips and Pitfalls: Difference between revisions

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=== Parsing Command-Line Option Parameters ===
=== Parsing Command-Line Option Parameters ===
* To ease parsing, pre-parse with executable '''getopt''' or Bash/sh built-in '''getopts''', see [http://aplawrence.com/Unix/getopts.html here for more information and examples].
* To ease parsing, pre-parse with executable '''getopt''' (see [http://aplawrence.com/Unix/getopts.html here for more information and examples]).
<div style="padding-left:2em;"><source lang="bash">
#!/bin/bash
# (old version)
args=`getopt abc: $*`
if test $? != 0
then
echo 'Usage: -a -b -c file'
exit 1
fi
set -- $args
for i
do
case "$i" in
-c) shift;echo "flag c set to $1";shift;;
-a) shift;echo "flag a set";;
-b) shift;echo "flag b set";;
esac
done
</source></div>


<div style="padding-left:2em;"><source lang="bash">
* To parse option like <tt>-value=name</tt> ([http://www.opensourcery.co.uk/2008/04/parsing-parameters-bash-shell-script/])
$ ./g -abc "foo"
flag a set
flag b set
flag c set to foo
</source></div>

* Better yet, parse using Bash/sh built-in '''getopts''' (see [http://aplawrence.com/Unix/getopts.html here for more information and examples]).
<div style="padding-left:2em;"><source lang="bash">
#!/bin/bash
while getopts "abc:" flag
do
echo "$flag" $OPTIND $OPTARG
done
</source></div>

<div style="padding-left:2em;"><source lang="bash">
$ ./g -abc "foo"
a 1
b 1
c 3 foo
</source></div>

* To parse option like <tt>--value=name</tt> ([http://www.opensourcery.co.uk/2008/04/parsing-parameters-bash-shell-script/])
<div style="padding-left:2em;"><source lang="bash">
<div style="padding-left:2em;"><source lang="bash">
until [[ ! "$*" ]]; do
until [[ ! "$*" ]]; do

Revision as of 12:32, 12 October 2009

Tips

Parsing Command-Line Option Parameters

#!/bin/bash
# (old version)
args=`getopt abc: $*`
if test $? != 0
  then
    echo 'Usage: -a -b -c file'
    exit 1
fi
set -- $args
for i
do
  case "$i" in
    -c) shift;echo "flag c set to $1";shift;;
    -a) shift;echo "flag a set";;
    -b) shift;echo "flag b set";;
  esac
done
$ ./g -abc "foo"
flag a set
flag b set
flag c set to foo
#!/bin/bash
while getopts  "abc:" flag
do
  echo "$flag" $OPTIND $OPTARG
done
$ ./g -abc "foo"
a 1
b 1
c 3 foo
  • To parse option like --value=name ([1])
until [[ ! "$*" ]]; do
  if [[ ${1:0:2} = '--' ]]; then
    PAIR=${1:2}
    PARAMETER=`echo ${PAIR%=*} | tr [:lower:] [:upper:]`
    eval P_$PARAMETER=${PAIR##*=}
  fi
  shift
done

Miscellaneous

Empty a file named filename, keeping the same permission and user/group:

>filename

Print multi-lines text with echo:

$ echo -e "Some text\n...on 2 lines..."                    # Enable interpretation of backslash escapes (must be quoted!)
Some text
...on 2 lines...

The different ways to extract file size in a Bash script:

SIZE=$(stat -c%s "$FILENAME")                              # Using stat
SIZE=$(ls -l $FILENAME | awk -F" "'{ print $5 }')          # Using ls / awk
SIZE=$(du -b $FILENAME | sed 's/\([0-9]*\)\(.*\)/\1/')     # Using du
SIZE=$(cat $FILENAME | wc -c)                              # Using cat / wc
SIZE=$(ls -l $FILENAME | cut -d " " -f 6)                  # Using ls / cut

Read the content of a file into an environment variable:

PID=`cat $PIDFILE`
read PID < $PIDFILE

Getting the pid of a new process (when other processes with same name are already running)

oldPID=`pidofproc /usr/bin/ssh`
/usr/bin/ssh -f -N -n -q -D 1080 noekeon
RETVAL=$?
newPID=`pidofproc /usr/bin/ssh`
uniqPID=`echo $oldPID $newPID|sed -e 's/ /\n/g'|sort|uniq -u`
echo $uniqPID

Getting the pid of a running process

pid=$(pidof -o $$ -o $PPID - o %PPID -x /bin/ssh)

Pits

Description Example
Space! - Don't forget to add spaces whenever necessary, in particular around brace in function definition, or in test conditions for ifs.

if -space- [ -space- -f /etc/foo -space- ]; then ...
function myfunc() { -space- echo Hello, World!; }

Quote - Always quote parameters, variables passed to test in if ... then ... else:

if [ "$name" -eq 5 ]; then ...

For loops with file - Use simply * to list files in for loops, not `ls *`:
for file in *; cat "$file"; done       # SUCCEEDS, even if white space
for file in `ls *`; cat "$file"; done  # FAILS miserably
Space variable setting - There must be no space between the variable name and the subsequent equal sign. Also the variable name must not be prefixed with a $
srcDir = $1        # WRONG - spaces around = sign
$srcDir=$1         # WRONG - variable name must not have $ prefix
srcDir=$1          # CORRECT
srcDir="$1"        # BEST
Semi-colon in find - Semi-colon in find commands must be escaped !
find . -exec echo {} ;        # WRONG - semi-colon not escaped
find . -exec echo {} \;       # CORRECT
Variable not exported outside parens
( read pid < $PID_FILE ) 2> /dev/null   # WRONG - var pid not kept
read pid 2> /dev/null < $PID_FILE       # CORRECT
Wrong redirection order
read pid < $PID_FILE 2> /dev/null  # WRONG - error msg if $PID_FILE
                                   #   doesn't exist
read pid 2> /dev/null < $PID_FILE  # CORRECT