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Bourne Shell Reference
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Bourne Shell Reference: | |
This file contains short tables of commonly used items in this shell. In | |
most cases the information applies to both the Bourne shell (sh) and the | |
newer bash shell. | |
Tests (for ifs and loops) are done with [ ] or with the test command. | |
Checking files: | |
-r file Check if file is readable. | |
-w file Check if file is writable. | |
-x file Check if we have execute access to file. | |
-f file Check if file is an ordinary file (as opposed to a directory, | |
a device special file, etc.) | |
-s file Check if file has size greater than 0. | |
-d file Check if file is a directory. | |
-e file Check if file exists. Is true even if file is a directory. | |
Example: | |
if [ -s file ] | |
then | |
such and such | |
fi | |
Checking strings: | |
s1 = s2 Check if s1 equals s2. | |
s1 != s2 Check if s1 is not equal to s2. | |
-z s1 Check if s1 has size 0. | |
-n s1 Check if s2 has nonzero size. | |
s1 Check if s1 is not the empty string. | |
Example: | |
if [ $myvar = "hello" ] | |
then | |
echo "We have a match" | |
fi | |
Checking numbers: | |
Note that a shell variable could contain a string that represents a number. | |
If you want to check the numerical value use one of the following: | |
n1 -eq n2 Check to see if n1 equals n2. | |
n1 -ne n2 Check to see if n1 is not equal to n2. | |
n1 -lt n2 Check to see if n1 < n2. | |
n1 -le n2 Check to see if n1 <= n2. | |
n1 -gt n2 Check to see if n1 > n2. | |
n1 -ge n2 Check to see if n1 >= n2. | |
Examples: | |
if [ $# -gt 1 ] | |
then | |
echo "ERROR: should have 0 or 1 command-line parameters" | |
fi | |
if [ num -gt 24 ] | |
then | |
echo "big number" | |
elif [ num -ge 8 ] | |
then | |
echo "medium number" | |
elif [ num -ge 0 ] | |
then | |
echo "small number" | |
else | |
echo "negative number" | |
fi | |
Boolean operators: | |
! not | |
-a and | |
-o or | |
Example: | |
if [ $num -lt 10 -o $num -gt 100 ] | |
then | |
echo "Number $num is out of range" | |
elif [ ! -w $filename ] | |
then | |
echo "Cannot write to $filename" | |
fi | |
Note that ifs can be nested. For example: | |
if [ $myvar = "y" ] | |
then | |
echo "Enter count of number of items" | |
read num | |
if [ $num -le 0 ] | |
then | |
echo "Invalid count of $num was given" | |
else | |
... do whatever ... | |
fi | |
fi | |
The above example also illustrates the use of read to read a string from | |
the keyboard and place it into a shell variable. Also note that most UNIX | |
commands return a true (nonzero) or false (0) in the shell variable status | |
to indicate whether they succeeded or not. This return value can be checked. | |
At the command line echo $status. In a shell script use something like this: | |
if grep -q shell bshellref | |
then | |
echo "true" | |
else | |
echo "false" | |
fi | |
Note that -q is the quiet version of grep. It just checks whether it is true | |
that the string shell occurs in the file bshellref. It does not print the | |
matching lines like grep would otherwise do. | |
I/O Redirection: | |
pgm > file Output of pgm is redirected to file. | |
pgm < file Program pgm reads its input from file. | |
pgm >> file Output of pgm is appended to file. | |
pgm1 | pgm2 Output of pgm1 is piped into pgm2 as the input to pgm2. | |
n > file Output from stream with descriptor n redirected to file. | |
n >> file Output from stream with descriptor n appended to file. | |
n >& m Merge output from stream n with stream m. | |
n <& m Merge input from stream n with stream m. | |
<< tag Standard input comes from here through next tag at start of line. | |
Note that file descriptor 0 is normally standard input, 1 is standard output, | |
and 2 is standard error output. | |
Shell Built-in Variables: | |
$0 Name of this shell script itself. | |
$1 Value of first command line parameter (similarly $2, $3, etc) | |
$# In a shell script, the number of command line parameters. | |
$* All of the command line parameters. | |
$- Options given to the shell. | |
$? Return the exit status of the last command. | |
$$ Process id of script (really id of the shell running the script) | |
Pattern Matching: | |
* Matches 0 or more characters. | |
? Matches 1 character. | |
[AaBbCc] Example: matches any 1 char from the list. | |
[^RGB] Example: matches any 1 char not in the list. | |
[a-g] Example: matches any 1 char from this range. | |
Quoting: | |
\c Take character c literally. | |
`cmd` Run cmd and replace it in the line of code with its output. | |
"whatever" Take whatever literally, after first interpreting $, `...`, \ | |
'whatever' Take whatever absolutely literally. | |
Example: | |
match=`ls *.bak` Puts names of .bak files into shell variable match. | |
echo \* Echos * to screen, not all filename as in: echo * | |
echo '$1$2hello' Writes literally $1$2hello on screen. | |
echo "$1$2hello" Writes value of parameters 1 and 2 and string hello. | |
Grouping: | |
Parentheses may be used for grouping, but must be preceded by backslashes | |
since parentheses normally have a different meaning to the shell (namely | |
to run a command or commands in a subshell). For example, you might use: | |
if test \( -r $file1 -a -r $file2 \) -o \( -r $1 -a -r $2 \) | |
then | |
do whatever | |
fi | |
Case statement: | |
Here is an example that looks for a match with one of the characters a, b, c. | |
If $1 fails to match these, it always matches the * case. A case statement | |
can also use more advanced pattern matching. | |
case "$1" in | |
a) cmd1 ;; | |
b) cmd2 ;; | |
c) cmd3 ;; | |
*) cmd4 ;; | |
esac | |
Shell Arithmetic: | |
In the original Bourne shell arithmetic is done using the expr command as in: | |
result=`expr $1 + 2` | |
result2=`expr $2 + $1 / 2` | |
result=`expr $2 \* 5` (note the \ on the * symbol) | |
With bash, an expression is normally enclosed using [ ] and can use the | |
following operators, in order of precedence: | |
* / % (times, divide, remainder) | |
+ - (add, subtract) | |
< > <= >= (the obvious comparison operators) | |
== != (equal to, not equal to) | |
&& (logical and) | |
|| (logical or) | |
= (assignment) | |
Arithmetic is done using long integers. | |
Example: | |
result=$[$1 + 3] | |
In this example we take the value of the first parameter, add 3, and place | |
the sum into result. | |
Order of Interpretation: | |
The bash shell carries out its various types of interpretation for each line | |
in the following order: | |
brace expansion (see a reference book) | |
~ expansion (for login ids) | |
parameters (such as $1) | |
variables (such as $var) | |
command substitution (Example: match=`grep DNS *` ) | |
arithmetic (from left to right) | |
word splitting | |
pathname expansion (using *, ?, and [abc] ) | |
Other Shell Features: | |
$var Value of shell variable var. | |
${var}abc Example: value of shell variable var with string abc appended. | |
# At start of line, indicates a comment. | |
var=value Assign the string value to shell variable var. | |
cmd1 && cmd2 Run cmd1, then if cmd1 successful run cmd2, otherwise skip. | |
cmd1 || cmd2 Run cmd1, then if cmd1 not successful run cmd2, otherwise skip. | |
cmd1; cmd2 Do cmd1 and then cmd2. | |
cmd1 & cmd2 Do cmd1, start cmd2 without waiting for cmd1 to finish. | |
(cmds) Run cmds (commands) in a subshell. | |
See a good reference book for information on traps, signals, exporting of | |
variables, functions, eval, source, etc. |
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