Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Environment
- 3. Shell Scripting
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- 3.1. Shell Scripting Introduction
- 3.2. Shell Scripting Basics
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- 3.2.1. Command Redirection and Pipelines
- 3.2.2. Variables
- 3.2.3. Control Constructs
- 3.2.4. Functions
In order to peruse this tutorial with ease it is probably necessary to know a little bit about how Unix works, if you are new to Unix you should read the documentation: Configuring A Unix Working Environment, if you are not new to Unix you should browse it to check that you know everything it discusses.
Unix contains many wonderful and strange commands that can be very useful in the world of scripting, the more of the tools you know and the better you know them, the more use you will find for them in your scripting. Most of the Unix commands and many of the builtin commands have man pages, man pages contain the usage instructions and other stuff pertaining to the parent tool. They are not always very clear and may require reading several times. In order to access a man page in Unix the following command sequence is applied:
If a man page exists for the command specified the internal viewer will be invoked and you will be able to read about the various options and usage instructions etc.
Unix contains many wonderful and strange commands that can be very useful in the world of scripting, the more of the tools you know and the better you know them, the more use you will find for them in your scripting. Most of the Unix commands and many of the builtin commands have man pages, man pages contain the usage instructions and other stuff pertaining to the parent tool. They are not always very clear and may require reading several times. In order to access a man page in Unix the following command sequence is applied:
man command |
Unix uses shells to accept commands given by the user, there are quite a few different shells available. The most commonly used shells are SH(Bourne SHell) CSH(C SHell) and KSH(Korn SHell), most of the other shells you encounter will be variants of these shells and will share the same syntax, KSH is based on SH and so is BASH(Bourne again shell). TCSH(Extended C SHell) is based on CSH.
The various shells all have built in functions which allow for the creation of shell scripts, that is, the stringing together of shell commands and constructs to automate what can be automated in order to make life easier for the user.
With all these different shells available, what shell should we script in? That is debatable. For the purpose of this tutorial we will be using SH because it is practically guaranteed to be available on most Unix systems you will encounter or be supported by the SH based shells. Your default shell may not be SH. Fortunately we do not have to be using a specific shell in order to exploit its features because we can specify the shell we want to interpret our shell script within the script itself by including the following in the first line.
Usually anything following (#) is interpreted as a comment and ignored but if it occurs on the first line with a (!) following it is treated as being special and the filename following the (!) is considered to point to the location of the shell that should interpret the script.
When a script is "executed" it is being interpreted by an invocation of the shell that is running it. Hence the shell is said to be running non-interactively, when the shell is used "normally" it is said to be running interactively.
The various shells all have built in functions which allow for the creation of shell scripts, that is, the stringing together of shell commands and constructs to automate what can be automated in order to make life easier for the user.
With all these different shells available, what shell should we script in? That is debatable. For the purpose of this tutorial we will be using SH because it is practically guaranteed to be available on most Unix systems you will encounter or be supported by the SH based shells. Your default shell may not be SH. Fortunately we do not have to be using a specific shell in order to exploit its features because we can specify the shell we want to interpret our shell script within the script itself by including the following in the first line.
#!/path/to/shell |
When a script is "executed" it is being interpreted by an invocation of the shell that is running it. Hence the shell is said to be running non-interactively, when the shell is used "normally" it is said to be running interactively.
Note | |
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There are many variations on the basic commands and extra information which is too specific to be mentioned in this short tutorial, you should read the man page for your shell to get a more comprehensive idea of the options available to you. This tutorial will concentrate on highlighting the most often used and useful commands and constructs. |
By default a normal command accepts input from standard input, which we abbreviate to stdin, standard input is the command line in the form of arguments passed to the command. By default a normal command directs its output to standard output, which we abbreviate to stdout, standard output is usually the console display. For some commands this may be the desired action but other times we may wish to get our input for a command from somewhere other than stdin and direct our output to somewhere other than stdout. This is done by redirection:
Pipelines are another form of redirection that are used to chain commands so that powerful composite commands can be constructed, the pipe symbol '|' takes the stdout from the command preceding it and redirects it to the command following it:
The example above firsts requests a long (-l directory listing of the current directory using the ls command, the output from this is then piped to grep which filters out all the listings containing the searchword and then finally pipes this through to sort which then sorts the output in reverse (-r, sort then passes the output on normally to stdout.
- We use > to redirect stdout to a file, for instance, if we wanted to redirect a directory listing generated by the ls we could do the following:
ls > file
- We use < to specify that we want the command immediately before the redirection symbol to get its input from the source specified immediately after the symbol, for instance, we could redirect the input togrep(which searches for strings within files) so that it comes from a file like this:
grep searchterm < file
- We use >> to append stdout to a file, for instance, if we wanted to append the date to the end of a file we could redirect the output from date like so:
date >> file
- One can redirect standard error (stderr) to a file by using 2>, if we wanted to redirect the standard error from commandA to a file we would use:
commmandA 2>
ls -l | grep searchword | sort -r |
When a script starts all environment variables are turned into shell variables. New variables can be instantiated like this:
You must do it exactly like that, with no spaces either side of the equals sign, the name must only be made up of alphabetic characters, numeric characters and underscores, it cannot begin with a numeric character. You should avoid using keywords like for or anything like that, the interpreter will let you use them but doing so can lead to obfuscated code ;)
Variables are referenced like this: $name, here is an example:
This would echo "Hello There!" to the console display, if you want to assign a string to a variable and the string contains spaces you should enclose the string in double quotes ("), the double quotes tell the shell to take the contents literally and ignore keywords, however, a few keywords are still processed. You can still use $ within a (") quoted string to include variables:
Would echo "one two three" to the screen. The escape character can also be used within a double quoted section to output special characters, the escape character is "\", it outputs the character immediately following it literally so \\ would output \. A special case is when the escape character is followed by a newline, the shell ignores the newline character which allows the spreading of long commands that must be executed on a single line in reality over multiple lines within the script. The escape character can be used anywhere else too. Except within single quotes.
Surrounding anything within single quotes causes it to be treated as literal text that is it will be passed on exactly as intended, this can be useful for sending command sequences to other files in order to create new scripts because the text between the single quotes will remain untouched. For example:
This would cause "msg="Hello World!" to be echoed and redirected to the file hello, "echo $msg" would then be echoed and redirected to the file hello but this time appended to the end. The chmod line changes the file permissions of hello so that we can execute it. The final line executes hello causing it output "Hello World". If we had not used literal quotes we never would have had to use escape characters to ensure that ($) and (") were echoed to the file, this makes the code a little clearer.
A variable may be referenced like so ${VARIABLENAME}, this allows one to place characters immediately preceding the variable like ${VARIABLENAME}aaa without the shell interpreting aaa as being part of the variable name.
name=value |
Variables are referenced like this: $name, here is an example:
#!/bin/sh msg1=Hello msg2=There! echo $msg1 $msg2 |
#!/bin/sh msg1="one" msg2="$msg1 two" msg3="$msg2 three" echo $msg3 |
Surrounding anything within single quotes causes it to be treated as literal text that is it will be passed on exactly as intended, this can be useful for sending command sequences to other files in order to create new scripts because the text between the single quotes will remain untouched. For example:
#!/bin/sh echo 'msg="Hello World!"' > hello echo 'echo $msg' >> hello chmod 700 hello ./hello |
A variable may be referenced like so ${VARIABLENAME}, this allows one to place characters immediately preceding the variable like ${VARIABLENAME}aaa without the shell interpreting aaa as being part of the variable name.
Command line arguments are treated as special variables within the script, the reason I am calling them variables is because they can be changed with the shift command. The command line arguments are enumerated in the following manner $0, $1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6, $7, $8 and $9. $0 is special in that it corresponds to the name of the script itself. $1 is the first argument, $2 is the second argument and so on. To reference after the ninth argument you must enclose the number in brackets like this ${nn}. You can use the shift command to shift the arguments 1 variable to the left so that $2 becomes $1, $1 becomes $0 and so on, $0 gets scrapped because it has nowhere to go, this can be useful to process all the arguments using a loop, using one variable to reference the first argument and shifting until you have exhausted the arguments list.
As well as the commandline arguments there are some special builtin variables:
As well as the commandline arguments there are some special builtin variables:
- $# represents the parameter count. Useful for controlling loop constructs that need to process each parameter.
- $@ expands to all the parameters separated by spaces. Useful for passing all the parameters to some other function or program.
- $- expands to the flags(options) the shell was invoked with. Useful for controlling program flow based on the flags set.
- $$ expands to the process id of the shell innovated to run the script. Useful for creating unique temporary filenames relative to this instantiation of the script.
Note | |
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The commandline arguments will be referred to as parameters from now on, this is because SH also allows the definition of functions which can take parameters and when called the $n family will be redefined, hence these variables are always parameters, its just that in the case of the parent script the parameters are passed via the command line. One exception is $0 which is always set to the name of the parent script regardless of whether it is inside a function or not. |
In the words of the SH manual “Command substitution allows the output of a command to be substituted in place of the command name itself”. There are two ways this can be done. The first is to enclose the command like this:
The second is to enclose the command in back quotes like this:
The command will be executed in a sub-shell environment and the standard output of the shell will replace the command substitution when the command completes.
$(command) |
`command` |
Arithmetic expansion is also allowed and comes in the form:
The value of the expression will replace the substitution. Eg:
Will echo "8" to stdout
$((expression)) |
!#/bin/sh echo $((1 + 3 + 4)) |
The flow of control within SH scripts is done via four main constructs; if...then...elif..else, do...while, for and case.
This construct takes the following generic form, The parts enclosed within ([) and (]) are optional:
When a Unix command exits it exits with what is known as an exit status, this indicates to anyone who wants to know the degree of success the command had in performing whatever task it was supposed to do, usually when a command executes without error it terminates with an exit status of zero. An exit status of some other value would indicate that some error had occurred, the details of which would be specific to the command. The commands' manual pages detail the exit status messages that they produce.
A list is defined in the SH as "a sequence of zero or more commands separated by newlines, semicolons, or ampersands, and optionally terminated by one of these three characters.", hence in the generic definition of the ifabove the list will determine which of the execution paths the script takes. For example, there is a command called test on Unix which evaluates an expression and if it evaluates to true will return zero and will return one otherwise, this is how we can test conditions in the list part(s) of the if construct because test is a command.
We do not actually have to type the test command directly into the list to use it, it can be implied by encasing the test case within ([) and (]) characters, as illustrated by the following (silly) example:
What this example does is compare the first parameter (command line argument in this case) with the strings "1", "2" and "3" using tests' (=) test which compares two strings for equality, if any of them match it prints out the corresponding message. If none of them match it prints out the final case. OK the example is silly and actually flawed (the user still wins even if they type in (4) or something) but it illustrates how the if statement works.
Notice that there are spaces between (if) and ([), ([) and the test and the test and (]), these spaces must be present otherwise the shell will complain. There must also be spaces between the operator and operands of the test otherwise it will not work properly. Notice how it starts with (if) and ends with (fi), also, notice how (then) is on a separate line to the test above it and that (else) does not require a (then) statement. You must construct this construct exactly like this for it to work properly.
It is also possible to integrate logical AND and OR into the testing, by using two tests separated by either "&&" or "||" respectively. For example we could replace the third test case in the example above with:
The script would print out "The third choice is excellent" if the first parameter was either "3" OR "4". To illustrate the use of "&&" we could replace the third test case with:
The script would print out "The third choice is excellent" if and only if the first parameter was "3" AND the second parameter was "4".
"&&" and "||" are both lazily evaluating which means that in the case of "&&", if the first test fails it wont bother evaluating the second because the list will only be true if they BOTH pass and since one has already failed there is no point wasting time evaluating the second. In the case of "||" if the first test passes it wont bother evaluating the second test because we only need ONE of the tests to pass for the whole list to pass. See the test manual page for the list of tests possible (other than the string equality test mentioned here).
if list then list [elif list then list] ... [else list] fi |
A list is defined in the SH as "a sequence of zero or more commands separated by newlines, semicolons, or ampersands, and optionally terminated by one of these three characters.", hence in the generic definition of the ifabove the list will determine which of the execution paths the script takes. For example, there is a command called test on Unix which evaluates an expression and if it evaluates to true will return zero and will return one otherwise, this is how we can test conditions in the list part(s) of the if construct because test is a command.
We do not actually have to type the test command directly into the list to use it, it can be implied by encasing the test case within ([) and (]) characters, as illustrated by the following (silly) example:
#!/bin/sh if [ "$1" = "1" ] then echo "The first choice is nice" elif [ "$1" = "2" ] then echo "The second choice is just as nice" elif [ "$1" = "3" ] then echo "The third choice is excellent" else echo "I see you were wise enough not to choose" echo "You win" fi |
Notice that there are spaces between (if) and ([), ([) and the test and the test and (]), these spaces must be present otherwise the shell will complain. There must also be spaces between the operator and operands of the test otherwise it will not work properly. Notice how it starts with (if) and ends with (fi), also, notice how (then) is on a separate line to the test above it and that (else) does not require a (then) statement. You must construct this construct exactly like this for it to work properly.
It is also possible to integrate logical AND and OR into the testing, by using two tests separated by either "&&" or "||" respectively. For example we could replace the third test case in the example above with:
elif [ "$1" = "3"] || [ "$1" = "4" ] then echo "The third choi... |
elif [ "$1" = "3"] || [ "$2" = "4" ] then echo "The third choi... |
"&&" and "||" are both lazily evaluating which means that in the case of "&&", if the first test fails it wont bother evaluating the second because the list will only be true if they BOTH pass and since one has already failed there is no point wasting time evaluating the second. In the case of "||" if the first test passes it wont bother evaluating the second test because we only need ONE of the tests to pass for the whole list to pass. See the test manual page for the list of tests possible (other than the string equality test mentioned here).
The Do...While takes the following generic form:
In the words of the SH manual "The two lists are executed repeatedly while the exit status of the first list is zero." there is a variation on this that uses until in place of while which executes until the exit status of the first list is zero. Here is an example use of the while statement:
If called from the commandline with an argument of 4 this script will output
You can see that this time we have used the -gt of the test command implicitly called via '[' and ']', which stands for greater than. Pay careful attention to the formatting and spacing.
while list do list done |
#!/bin/sh count=$1 # Initialise count to first parameter while [ $count -gt 0 ] # while count is greater than 10 do do echo $count seconds till supper time! count=$(expr $count -1) # decrement count by 1 sleep 1 # sleep for a second using the Unix sleep command done echo Supper time!!, YEAH!! # were finished |
4 seconds till supper time! 3 seconds till supper time! 2 seconds till supper time! 1 seconds till supper time! Supper time!!, YEAH!! |
The syntax of the for command is:
The SH manual states “The words are expanded, and then the list is executed repeatedly with the variable set to each word in turn.”. A word is essentially some other variable that contains a list of values of some sort, thefor construct assigns each of the values in the word to variable and then variable can be used within the body of the construct, upon completion of the body variable will be assigned the next value in word until there are no more values in word. An example should make this clearer:
In this example, fruitlist is word, fruit is variable and the body of the statement outputs how much this person loves various fruits but includes an if...then..else statement to deal with the correct addition of letters to describe the plural version of the fruit, notice that the variable fruit was expressed like ${fruit} because otherwise the shell would have interpreted the preceding letter(s) as being part of the variable and echoed nothing because we have not defined the variables fruits and fruites When executed this script will output:
Within the for construct, do and done may be replaced by '{' and '}'. This is not allowed for while.
for variable in word ... do list done |
#!/bin/sh fruitlist="Apple Pear Tomato Peach Grape" for fruit in $fruitlist do if [ "$fruit" = "Tomato" ] || [ "$fruit" = "Peach" ] then echo "I like ${fruit}es" else echo "I like ${fruit}s" fi done |
I like Apples I like Pears I like Tomatoes I like Peachs I like Grapes |
The case construct has the following syntax:
An example of this should make things clearer:
"1", "2" and "*" are patterns, word is compared to each pattern and if a match is found the body of the corresponding pattern is executed, we have used "*" to represent everything, since this is checked last we will still catch "1" and "2" because they are checked first. In our example word is "$1", the first parameter, hence if the script is ran with the argument "1" it will output "First Choice", "2" "Second Choice" and anything else "Other Choice". In this example we compared against numbers (essentially still a string comparison however) but the pattern can be more complex, see the SH man page for more information.
case word in pattern) list ;; ... esac |
!#/bin/sh case $1 in 1) echo 'First Choice';; 2) echo 'Second Choice';; *) echo 'Other Choice';; esac |
The syntax of an SH function is defined as follows:
It is usually laid out like this:
A function will return with a default exit status of zero, one can return different exit status' by using the notation return exit status. Variables can be defined locally within a function using local name=value. The example below shows the use of a user defined increment function:
We will show another quick example to illustrate the scope of variables:
name ( ) command |
name() { commands } |
Example�1.�Increment Function Example
Example�2.�Variable Scope, Example
#!/bin/sh inc() { local value=4 echo "value is $value within the function\\n" echo "\\b\$1 is $1 within the function" } value=5 echo value is $value before the function echo "\$1 is $1 before the function" echo echo -e $(inc $value) echo echo value is $value after the function echo "\$1 is $1 after the function" |
If we just echo the lines we want to be returned by the function it will not pass the newline character onto the buffer even if we explicitly include it with an escape character reference so what we do is actually include the sequence of characters that will produce a new line within the string so that when it is echoed by the calling code with the -e the escape characters will be processed and the newlines will be placed where we want them.
The output from this script called with 2 as the first argument is:
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Tip | |||
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You can use ". DIRECTORY/common.sh" to import functions from a script called common.sh in DIRECTORY, a quick example is shown below, first is test.sh:
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