These scripts, while not fitting into the text of this document, do illustrate some interesting shell programming techniques. They are useful, too. Have fun analyzing and running them.
Example A-1. manview: A script for viewing formatted man pages
#!/bin/bash # Formats the source of a man page for viewing in a user directory. # This is useful when writing man page source and you want to # look at the intermediate results on the fly while working on it. if [ -z $1 ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` [filename]" exit 1 fi groff -Tascii -man $1 | less # From the man page for groff. exit 0 |
Example A-2. manview: A script for uploading to an ftp site, using a locally encrypted password
#!/bin/bash # Example 3-71 modified to use encrypted password. if [ -z $1 ] then echo "Usage: `basename $0` filename" exit 1 fi Username=bozo # Change to suit. Filename=`basename $1` # Strips pathname out of file name Server="XXX" Directory="YYY" # Change above to actual server name & directory. password=`cruft <pword` # "pword" is the file containing encrypted password. # Uses the author's own "cruft" file encryption package, # based on onetime pad algorithm, # and obtainable from: # Primary-site: ftp://metalab.unc.edu /pub/Linux/utils/file # cruft-0.2.tar.gz [16k] ftp -n $Server <<End-Of-Session # -n option disables auto-logon user $Username $Password binary bell # Ring 'bell' after each file transfer cd $Directory put $Filename bye End-Of-Session exit 0 |
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The following two scripts are by Mark Moraes of the University of Toronto. See the enclosed file "Moraes-COPYRIGHT" for permissions and restrictions.
Example A-3. behead: A script for removing mail and news message headers
#! /bin/sh # Strips off the header from a mail/News message i.e. till the first # empty line # Mark Moraes, University of Toronto # --> These comments added by author of HOWTO. if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then # --> If no command line args present, then works on file redirected to stdin. sed -e '1,/^$/d' -e '/^[ ]*$/d' # --> Delete empty lines and all lines until # --> first one beginning with white space. else # --> If command line args present, then work on files named. for i do sed -e '1,/^$/d' -e '/^[ ]*$/d' $i # --> Ditto, as above. done fi # --> Exercise for the reader: Add error checking and other options. # --> # --> Note that the small sed script repeats, except for the arg passed. # --> Does it make sense to embed it in a function? Why or why not? |
Example A-4. ftpget: A script for downloading files via ftp
#! /bin/sh # $Id: ftpget,v 1.2 91/05/07 21:15:43 moraes Exp $ # Script to perform batch anonymous ftp. Essentially converts a list of # of command line arguments into input to ftp. # Simple, and quick - written as a companion to ftplist # -h specifies the remote host (default prep.ai.mit.edu) # -d specifies the remote directory to cd to - you can provide a sequence # of -d options - they will be cd'ed to in turn. If the paths are relative, # make sure you get the sequence right. Be careful with relative paths - # there are far too many symlinks nowadays. # (default is the ftp login directory) # -v turns on the verbose option of ftp, and shows all responses from the # ftp server. # -f remotefile[:localfile] gets the remote file into localfile # -m pattern does an mget with the specified pattern. Remember to quote # shell characters. # -c does a local cd to the specified directory # For example, # ftpget -h expo.lcs.mit.edu -d contrib -f xplaces.shar:xplaces.sh \ # -d ../pub/R3/fixes -c ~/fixes -m 'fix*' # will get xplaces.shar from ~ftp/contrib on expo.lcs.mit.edu, and put it in # xplaces.sh in the current working directory, and get all fixes from # ~ftp/pub/R3/fixes and put them in the ~/fixes directory. # Obviously, the sequence of the options is important, since the equivalent # commands are executed by ftp in corresponding order # # Mark Moraes ([email protected]), Feb 1, 1989 # --> Angle brackets changed to parens, so Docbook won't get indigestion. # # --> These comments added by author of HOWTO. # 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]... \ [-c localdirectory] [-m filepattern] [-v]" ftpflags="-i -n" verbflag= set -f # So we can use globbing in -m set x `getopt vh:d:c:m:f: $*` if [ $? != 0 ]; then echo $usage exit 1 fi shift trap 'rm -f ${TMPFILE} ; exit' 0 1 2 3 15 echo "user anonymous ${USER-gnu}@${SITE} > ${TMPFILE}" # --> Added quotes (recommended in complex echoes). echo binary >> ${TMPFILE} for i in $* # --> Parse command line args. do case $i in -v) verbflag=-v; echo hash >> ${TMPFILE}; shift;; -h) remhost=$2; shift 2;; -d) echo cd $2 >> ${TMPFILE}; if [ x${verbflag} != x ]; then echo pwd >> ${TMPFILE}; fi; shift 2;; -c) echo lcd $2 >> ${TMPFILE}; shift 2;; -m) echo mget "$2" >> ${TMPFILE}; shift 2;; -f) f1=`expr "$2" : "\([^:]*\).*"`; f2=`expr "$2" : "[^:]*:\(.*\)"`; echo get ${f1} ${f2} >> ${TMPFILE}; shift 2;; --) shift; break;; esac done if [ $# -ne 0 ]; then echo $usage exit 2 fi if [ x${verbflag} != x ]; then ftpflags="${ftpflags} -v" fi if [ x${remhost} = x ]; then remhost=prep.ai.mit.edu # --> Rewrite to match your favorite ftp site. fi echo quit >> ${TMPFILE} # --> All commands saved in tempfile. ftp ${ftpflags} ${remhost} < ${TMPFILE} # --> Now, tempfile batch processed by ftp. rm -f ${TMPFILE} # --> Finally, tempfile deleted (you may wish to copy it to a logfile). # --> Exercises for reader: # --> 1) Add error checking. # --> 2) Add bells & whistles. |
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