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Day1.5 ShellProgramming

Shell programming

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Rishav Dhama
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views

Day1.5 ShellProgramming

Shell programming

Uploaded by

Rishav Dhama
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Module 9: Shell

Programming
Shell Scripts (1)
• Basically, a shell script is a text file with Unix
commands in it.
• Shell scripts usually begin with a #! and a shell name
– For example: #!/bin/sh
– If they do not, the user's current shell will be used
• Any Unix command can go in a shell script
– Commands are executed in order or in the flow
determined by control statements.
• Different shells have different control structures
– The #! line is very important
– We will write shell scripts with the Bourne shell (sh)
Shell Scripts (2)
• Why write shell scripts?
– To avoid repetition:
• If you do a sequence of steps with standard Unix
commands over and over, why not do it all with
just one command?

– To automate difficult tasks:


• Many commands have subtle and difficult options
that you don’t want to figure out or remember
every time.
A Simple Example (1)
• tr abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz \
thequickbrownfxjmpsvalzydg < file1 > file2
– “encrypts” file1 into file2
• Record this command into shell script files:
– myencrypt
#!/bin/sh
tr abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz \
thequickbrownfxjmpsvalzydg
– mydecrypt
#!/bin/sh
tr thequickbrownfxjmpsvalzydg \
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
A Simple Example (2)
• chmod the files to be executable; otherwise,
you couldn’t run the scripts
obelix[3] > chmod u+x myencrypt mydecrypt

• Run them as normal commands:


obelix[4] > ./myencrypt < file1 > file2
obelix[5] > ./mydecrypt < file2 > file3
obelix[6] > diff file1 file3
Remember: This is needed when
“.” is not in the path
Bourne Shell Variables
• Remember: Bourne shell variables are different
from variables in csh and tcsh!
– Examples in sh:
PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin Note: no space
HA=$1 around =
PHRASE="House on the hill"
export PHRASE Make PHRASE an
environment variable
Assigning Command Output to a
Variable
• Using backquotes, we can assign the output of
a command to a variable:
#!/bin/sh
files=`ls`
echo $files
• Very useful in numerical computation:
#!/bin/sh
value=`expr 12345 + 54321`
echo $value
Using expr for Calculations
• Variables as arguments:
% count=5
% count=`expr $count + 1`
% echo $count
6
– Variables are replaced with their values by the shell!
• expr supports the following operators:
– arithmetic operators: +,-,*,/,%
– comparison operators: <, <=, ==, !=, >=, >
– boolean/logical operators: &, |
– parentheses: (, )
– precedence is the same as C, Java
Control Statements
• Without control statements, execution within a
shell scripts flows from one statement to the next
in succession.
• Control statements control the flow of execution in
a programming language
• The three most common types of control
statements:
– conditionals: if/then/else, case, ...
– loop statements: while, for, until, do, ...
– branch statements: subroutine calls (good), goto
(bad)
for Loops
• for loops allow the repetition of a command
for a specific set of values
• Syntax:
for var in value1 value2 ...
do
command_set
done
– command_set is executed with each value of var
(value1, value2, ...) in sequence
for Loop Example (1)
#!/bin/sh
# timestable – print out a multiplication table
for i in 1 2 3
do
for j in 1 2 3
do
value=`expr $i \* $j`
echo -n "$value "
done
echo
done
for Loop Example (2)
#!/bin/sh
# file-poke – tell us stuff about files
files=`ls`
for i in $files
do
echo -n "$i "
grep $i $i
done

– Find filenames in files in current directory


for Loop Example (3)
#!/bin/sh
# file-poke – tell us stuff about files
for i in *; do
echo -n "$i "
grep $i $i
done

– Same as previous slide, only a little more


condensed.
Conditionals
• Conditionals are used to “test” something.
– In Java or C, they test whether a Boolean variable is true
or false.
– In a Bourne shell script, the only thing you can test is
whether or not a command is “successful”
• Every well behaved command returns back a return
code.
– 0 if it was successful
– Non-zero if it was unsuccessful (actually 1..255)
– We will see later that this is different from true/false
conditions in C.
The if Statement
• Simple form:
if decision_command_1
then grep returns 0 if it finds something
command_set_1 returns non-zero otherwise

fi
• Example:
if grep unix myfile >/dev/null
then
echo "It's there"
redirect to /dev/null so that
fi "intermediate" results do not get
printed
if and else
if grep "UNIX" myfile >/dev/null
then
echo UNIX occurs in myfile
else
echo No!
echo UNIX does not occur in myfile
fi
if and elif
if grep "UNIX" myfile >/dev/null
then
echo "UNIX occurs in file"
elif grep "DOS" myfile >/dev/null
then
echo "Unix does not occur, but DOS does"
else
echo "Nobody is there"
fi
Use of Semicolons
• Instead of being on separate lines, statements
can be separated by a semicolon (;)
– For example:
if grep "UNIX" myfile; then echo "Got it"; fi
– This actually works anywhere in the shell.
% cwd=`pwd`; cd $HOME; ls; cd $cwd
Use of Colon
• Sometimes it is useful to have a command which does
“nothing”.
• The : (colon) command in Unix does nothing
#!/bin/sh
if grep unix myfile
then
:
else
echo "Sorry, unix was not found"
fi
The test Command – File Tests
• test –f filedoes file exist and is not a directory?
• test -d file does file exist and is a directory?
• test –x file does file exist and is executable?
• test –s file does file exist and is longer than 0 bytes?
#!/bin/sh
count=0
for i in *; do
if test –x $i; then
count=`expr $count + 1`
fi
done
echo Total of $count files executable.
The test Command – String Tests
• test –z string is string of length 0?
• test string1 = string2 does string1 equal string2?
• test string1 != string2 not equal?
• Example:
if test -z $REMOTEHOST
then
:
else
DISPLAY="$REMOTEHOST:0"
export DISPLAY
fi
The test Command – Integer Tests
• Integers can also be compared:
– Use -eq, -ne, -lt, -le, -gt, -ge
• For example:
#!/bin/sh
smallest=10000
for i in 5 8 19 8 7 3; do
if test $i -lt $smallest; then
smallest=$i
fi
done
echo $smallest
Use of [ ]
• The test program has an alias as [ ]
– Each bracket must be surrounded by spaces!
– This is supposed to be a bit easier to read.
• For example:
#!/bin/sh
smallest=10000
for i in 5 8 19 8 7 3; do
if [ $i -lt $smallest ] ; then
smallest=$i
fi
done
echo $smallest
The while Loop
• While loops repeat statements as long as the next
Unix command is successful.
• For example:
#!/bin/sh
i=1
sum=0
while [ $i -le 100 ]; do
sum=`expr $sum + $i`
i=`expr $i + 1`
done
echo The sum is $sum.
The until Loop
• Until loops repeat statements until the next
Unix command is successful.
• For example:

#!/bin/sh
x=1
until [ $x -gt 3 ]; do
echo x = $x
x=`expr $x + 1`
done
Command Line Arguments (1)
• Shell scripts would not be very useful if we could not
pass arguments to them on the command line
• Shell script arguments are “numbered” from left to
right
– $1 - first argument after command
– $2 - second argument after command
– ... up to $9
– They are called “positional parameters”.
Command Line Arguments (2)
• Example: get a particular line of a file
– Write a command with the format:
getlineno linenumber filename
#!/bin/sh
head -$1 $2 | tail -1
• Other variables related to arguments:
• $0 name of the command running
• $* All the arguments (even if there are more than
9)
• $# the number of arguments
Command Line Arguments (3)
• Example: print the oldest files in a directory
#! /bin/sh
# oldest -- examine the oldest parts of a directory
HOWMANY=$1
shift
ls -lt $* | tail +2 | tail $HOWMANY
• The shift command shifts all the arguments to the left
– $1 = $2, $2 =$3, $3 = $4, ...
– $1 is lost (but we have saved it in $HOWMANY)
– The value of $# is changed ($# - 1)
– useful when there are more than 9 arguments
• The “tail +2” command removes the first line.
More on Bourne Shell Variables (1)
• There are three basic types of variables in a
shell script:
– Positional variables ...
• $1, $2, $3, ..., $9
– Keyword variables ...
• Like $PATH, $HOWMANY, and anything else we
may define.
– Special variables ...
More on Bourne Shell Variables (2)
• Special variables:
– $*, $# -- all the arguments, the number of
the arguments
– $$ -- the process id of the current shell
– $? -- return value of last foreground
process to finish
-- more on this one later
– There are others you can find out about with man
sh
Reading Variables From Standard
Input (1)
• The read command reads one line of input from the
terminal and assigns it to variables give as
arguments

• Syntax: read var1 var2 var3 ...


• Action: reads a line of input from standard input
• Assign first word to var1, second word to var2, ...
• The last variable gets any excess words on the line.
Reading Variables from Standard Input
(2)
• Example:
% read X Y Z
Here are some words as input
% echo $X
Here
% echo $Y
are
% echo $Z
some words as input
The case Statement
• The case statement supports multiway branching based
on the value of a single string.
• General form:
case string in
pattern1)
command_set_11
;;
pattern2)
command_set_2
;;

esac
case Example
#!/bin/sh
echo -n 'Choose command [1-4] > '
read reply
echo
case $reply in
Use the pipe symbol “|” as a logical
"1")
date or between several choices.
;;
"2"|"3")
pwd
;;
"4")
ls
;; Provide a default case when no
*)
other cases are matched.
echo Illegal choice!
;;
esac
Redirection in Bourne Shell Scripts (1)
• Standard input is redirected the same (<).
• Standard output can be redirected the same (>).
– Can also be directed using the notation 1>
– For example: cat x 1> ls.txt (only stdout)
• Standard error is redirected using the notation 2>
– For example: cat x y 1> stdout.txt 2> stderr.txt
• Standard output and standard error can be redirected
to the same file using the notation 2>&1
– For example: cat x y > xy.txt 2>&1
• Standard output and standard error can be piped to
the same command using similar notation
– For example: cat x y 2>&1 | grep text
Redirection in Bourne Shell Scripts (2)
• Shell scripts can also supply standard input to commands
from text embedded in the script itself.
• General form: command << word
– Standard input for command follows this line up to, but not
including, the line beginning with word.
• Example:
#!/bin/sh
grep 'hello' << EOF
This is some sample text. Only these two lines will be
matched and displayed.
Here is a line with hello in it.
Here is another line with hello.
No more lines with that word.
EOF
A Shell Script Example (1)
• Suppose we have a file called marks.txt containing
the following student grades:

091286899 90 H. White
197920499 80 J. Brown
899268899 75 A. Green
……

• We want to calculate some statistics on the grades


in this file.
A Shell Script Example (2)
#!/bin/sh
sum=0; countfail=0; count=0;
while read studentnum grade name; do
sum=`expr $sum + $grade`
count=`expr $count + 1`
if [ $grade -lt 50 ]; then
countfail=`expr $countfail + 1`
fi
done
echo The average is `expr $sum / $count`.
echo $countfail students failed.
A Shell Script Example (3)
• Suppose the previous shell script was saved in
a file called statistics.
• How could we execute it?
• As usual, in several ways ...
– % cat marks.txt | statistics
– % statistics < marks.txt
• We could also just execute statistics and
provide marks through standard input.

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