I have assigned following string to a variable.
line="/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common/location.txt"
If I want to access common location (/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common)
how can I split this in last "/" ?
In most unix-style operating systems, there's a program called dirname which does this for you:
$ line="/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common/location.txt"
$ dirname "$line"
/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common
The command is of course available from any shell, since it's not part of the shell per-se, though you might need to assign the variable differently. For example, in csh/tcsh:
% setenv line "/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common/location.txt"
% dirname "$line"
/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common
If you want to strip off the file using shell commands alone, you'll need to specify what shell you're using, since commands vary. For example, in /bin/sh or similar shells (like bash), you could use "Parameter expansion" (look it up in the man page, there's lots of good stuff):
$ line="/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common/location.txt"
$ echo "${line%/*}
/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common
Hey you can use below command if your line variable contains same number of directories always
echo $line | cut -d "/" -f1-5
line="/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common/location.txt"
path="${line%/*}"
file="${line##*/}"
## contents of the variables after extraction
# path is '/remotepath/mypath/localpath/common'
# file is 'location.txt'
It's called parameter expansion/substring extraction in bash.
I'm thinking of writing a script for cygwin to cd into a windows directory which is copied from Windows explorer.
e.g.
cdw D:\working\test
equals to
cd /cygdrive/d/working/test
But it seems for shell script, all backslashs in parameters are ignored unless using single quote 'D:\working\test' or double backslashs D:\\working\\test.
But in my case it would be very inconvenience because I can't simply paste the directory name in the command line to execute the script.
Is there any way to make cdw D:\working\test working?
Well, you can do it, but you want something strange :)
cdw()
{
set $(history | tail -1 )
shift 2
path="$*"
cd $(cygpath "$path")
}
Example of usage:
$ cdw D:\working\test
$ pwd
/cygdrive/d/working/test
The main point here is the usage of history.
You don't use an argument directly, but get it from the history in the form it was typed.
$ rawarg() { set $(history | tail -1 ); shift 2; echo "$#"; }
$ rawarg C:\a\b\c\d
C:\a\b\c\d
Of course, you can use this trick in a interactive shell only (for obvious reasons).
The problem you deal with is related to the shell. Any argument you add to cdw on the command line, will be processed by the shell before cdw gets executed.
In order to prevent that processing to happen, you need at least one level of quoting,
either by enclosing the whole string in single quotes:
cd 'D:\working\test'
or with double backslashses:
cd D:\\working\test
A separate program will not help, because the damage is already done before it runs. ;-)
However, I have a possible function for cdw, which works in my AST UWIN ksh:
function cdw { typeset dir
read -r dir?"Paste Directory Path: "
cd ${dir:?}
}
And this one works in Bash (which does not support read var?prompt):
function cdw {
typeset dir
printf "Paste Directory Path: "
read -r dir || return
cd ${dir:?}
}
For me, I just type the two single quotes around the Pasted value.
The solution to add single quotes allows to copy paste
I want to make a script that takes a file path for argument, and cds into its folder.
Here is what I made :
#!/bin/bash
#remove the file name, and change every space into \space
shorter=`echo "$1" | sed 's/\/[^\/]*$//' | sed 's/\ /\\\ /g'`
echo $shorter
cd $shorter
I actually have 2 questions (I am a relative newbie to shell scripts) :
How could I make the cd "persistent" ? I want to put this script into /usr/bin, and then call it from wherever in the filesystem. Upon return of the script, I want to stay in the $shorter folder. Basically, if pwd was /usr/bin, I could make it by typing . script /my/path instead of ./script /my/path, but what if I am in an other folder ?
The second question is trickier. My script fails whenever there is a space in the given argument. Although $shorter is exactly what I want (for instance /home/jack/my\ folder/subfolder), cd fails whith the error /usr/bin/script : line 4 : cd: /home/jack/my\: no file or folder of this type. I think I have tried everything, using things like cd '$shorter' or cd "'"$shorter"'" doesn't help. What am I missing ??
Thanks a lot for your answers
in your .bashrc add the following line:
function shorter() { cd "${1%/*}"; }
% means remove the smaller pattern from the end
/* is the patern
Then in your terminal:
$ . ~/.bashrc # to refresh your bash configuration
$ type shorter # to check if your new function is available
shorter is a function
shorter ()
{
cd "${1%/*}"
}
$ shorter ./your/directory/filename # this will move to ./your/directory
The first part:
The change of directory won't be “persistent” beyond the lifetime of your script, because your script runs in a new shell process. You could, however, use a shell alias or a shell function. For example, you could embed the code in a shell function and define it in your .bash_profile or other source location.
mycdfunction () {
cd /blah/foo/"$1"
}
As for the “spaces in names” bit:
The general syntax for referring to a variable in Bourne shells is: "$var" — the "double quotes" tell the shell to expand any variables inside of them, but to group the outcome as a single parameter.
Omitting the double quotes around $var tells the shell to expand the variable, but then split the results into parameters (“words”) on whitespace. This is how the shell splits up parameters, normally.
Using 'single quotes' causes the shell to not expand any contents, but group the parameters togethers.
You can use \ (backslash-blank) to escape a space when you're typing (or in a script), but that's usually harder to read than using 'single quotes' or "double quotes"…
Note that the expansion phase includes: $variables wild?cards* {grouping,names}with-braces $(echo command substitution) and other effects.
| expansion | no expansion
-------------------------------------------------------
grouping | " " | ' '
splitting | (no punc.) | (not easily done)
For the first part, there is no need for the shorter variable at all. You can just do:
#!/bin/bash
cd "${1%/*}"
Explanation
Most shells, including bash, have what is called Parameter Expansion and they are very powerful and efficient as they allow you to manipulate variables nativly within the shell that would normally require a call to an external binary.
Two common examples of where you can use Parameter Expansion over an external call would be:
${var%/*} # replaces dirname
${var##*/} # replaces basename
See this FAQ on Parameter Expansion to learn more. In fact, while you're there might as well go over the whole FAQ
When you put your script inside /usr/bin you can call it anywhere. And to deal with whitespace in the shell just put the target between "" (but this doesn't matter !!).
Well here is a demo:
#!/bin/bash
#you can use dirname but that's not apropriate
#shorter=$(dirname $1)
#Use parameter expansion (too much better)
shorter=${1%/*}
echo $shorter
An alternate way to do it, since you have dirname on your Mac:
#!/bin/sh
cd "$(dirname "$1")"
Since you mentioned in the comments that you wanted to be able to drag files into a window and cd to them, you might want to make your script allow file or directory paths as arguments:
#!/bin/sh
[ -f "$1" ] && set "$(dirname "$1")" # convert a file to a directory
cd "$1"
To clarify, I am looking for a way to perform a global search and replace on the previous command used. ^word^replacement^ only seems to replace the first match.
Is there some set option that is eluding me?
Try this:
$ echo oneone
oneone
$ !!:gs/one/two/ # Repeats last command; substitutes 'one' --> 'two'.
twotwo
This solution uses Bash Substring Replacement:
$ SENTENCE="1 word, 2 words";echo "${SENTENCE//word/replacement}"
1 replacement, 2 replacements
Note the use of the double slashes denotes "global" string replacement.
This solution can be executed in one line.
Here's how to globally replace a string in a file named "myfile.txt":
$ sed -i -e "s/word/replacement/g" myfile.txt
Blending my answer here with John Feminella's you can do this if you want an alias:
$alias dothis='`history -p "!?monkey?:gs/jpg/png/"`'
$ls *.jpg
monkey.jpg
$dothis
monkey.png
The !! only does the previous command, while !?string? matches the most recent command containing "string".
A nasty way to get around this could be something like this:
Want to echo BAABAA rather than BLABLA by swapping L's for A's
$ echo "BLABLA"
BLABLA
$ `echo "!!" | sed 's/L/A/g'`
$(echo "echo "BLABLA" " | sed 's/L/A/g')
BAABAA
$
Unfortunately this technique doesn't seem to work in functions or aliases.
this question has many dupes and one elegant answer only appears in this answer of user #Mikel in unix se
fc -s pat=rep
this bash builtin is documented under the chapter 9.2 Bash History Builtins
In the second form, command is re-executed after each instance of pat
in the selected command is replaced by rep. command is interpreted the
same as first above.
A useful alias to use with the fc command is r='fc -s', so that typing
‘r cc’ runs the last command beginning with cc and typing ‘r’
re-executes the last command (see Aliases).
I test it on SUSE 10.1.
"^word^replacement^" doesn't work, while "^word^replacement" works well.
for a instance:
linux-geek:/home/Myworks # ls /etc/ld.so.conf
/etc/ld.so.conf
linux-geek:/home/Myworks # ^ls^cat
cat /etc/ld.so.conf
/usr/X11R6/lib/Xaw3d
/usr/X11R6/lib
/usr/i486-linux-libc5/lib=libc5
/usr/i386-suse-linux/lib
/usr/local/lib
/opt/kde3/lib
/opt/gnome/lib
include /etc/ld.so.conf.d/*.conf
linux-geek:/home/Myworks #
It's difficult to tell what is being asked here. This question is ambiguous, vague, incomplete, overly broad, or rhetorical and cannot be reasonably answered in its current form. For help clarifying this question so that it can be reopened, visit the help center.
Closed 11 years ago.
Locked. This question and its answers are locked because the question is off-topic but has historical significance. It is not currently accepting new answers or interactions.
We all know how to use <ctrl>-R to reverse search through history, but did you know you can use <ctrl>-S to forward search if you set stty stop ""? Also, have you ever tried running bind -p to see all of your keyboard shortcuts listed? There are over 455 on Mac OS X by default.
What is your single most favorite obscure trick, keyboard shortcut or shopt configuration using bash?
Renaming/moving files with suffixes quickly:
cp /home/foo/realllylongname.cpp{,-old}
This expands to:
cp /home/foo/realllylongname.cpp /home/foo/realllylongname.cpp-old
cd -
It's the command-line equivalent of the back button (takes you to the previous directory you were in).
Another favorite:
!!
Repeats your last command. Most useful in the form:
sudo !!
My favorite is '^string^string2' which takes the last command, replaces string with string2 and executes it
$ ehco foo bar baz
bash: ehco: command not found
$ ^ehco^echo
foo bar baz
Bash command line history guide
rename
Example:
$ ls
this_has_text_to_find_1.txt
this_has_text_to_find_2.txt
this_has_text_to_find_3.txt
this_has_text_to_find_4.txt
$ rename 's/text_to_find/been_renamed/' *.txt
$ ls
this_has_been_renamed_1.txt
this_has_been_renamed_2.txt
this_has_been_renamed_3.txt
this_has_been_renamed_4.txt
So useful
I'm a fan of the !$, !^ and !* expandos, returning, from the most recent submitted command line: the last item, first non-command item, and all non-command items. To wit (Note that the shell prints out the command first):
$ echo foo bar baz
foo bar baz
$ echo bang-dollar: !$ bang-hat: !^ bang-star: !*
echo bang-dollar: baz bang-hat: foo bang-star: foo bar baz
bang-dollar: baz bang-hat: foo bang-star: foo bar baz
This comes in handy when you, say ls filea fileb, and want to edit one of them: vi !$ or both of them: vimdiff !*. It can also be generalized to "the nth argument" like so:
$ echo foo bar baz
$ echo !:2
echo bar
bar
Finally, with pathnames, you can get at parts of the path by appending :h and :t to any of the above expandos:
$ ls /usr/bin/id
/usr/bin/id
$ echo Head: !$:h Tail: !$:t
echo Head: /usr/bin Tail: id
Head: /usr/bin Tail: id
When running commands, sometimes I'll want to run a command with the previous ones arguments. To do that, you can use this shortcut:
$ mkdir /tmp/new
$ cd !!:*
Occasionally, in lieu of using find, I'll break-out a one-line loop if I need to run a bunch of commands on a list of files.
for file in *.wav; do lame "$file" "$(basename "$file" .wav).mp3" ; done;
Configuring the command-line history options in my .bash_login (or .bashrc) is really useful. The following is a cadre of settings that I use on my Macbook Pro.
Setting the following makes bash erase duplicate commands in your history:
export HISTCONTROL="erasedups:ignoreboth"
I also jack my history size up pretty high too. Why not? It doesn't seem to slow anything down on today's microprocessors.
export HISTFILESIZE=500000
export HISTSIZE=100000
Another thing that I do is ignore some commands from my history. No need to remember the exit command.
export HISTIGNORE="&:[ ]*:exit"
You definitely want to set histappend. Otherwise, bash overwrites your history when you exit.
shopt -s histappend
Another option that I use is cmdhist. This lets you save multi-line commands to the history as one command.
shopt -s cmdhist
Finally, on Mac OS X (if you're not using vi mode), you'll want to reset <CTRL>-S from being scroll stop. This prevents bash from being able to interpret it as forward search.
stty stop ""
How to list only subdirectories in the current one ?
ls -d */
It's a simple trick, but you wouldn't know how much time I needed to find that one !
ESC.
Inserts the last arguments from your last bash command. It comes in handy more than you think.
cp file /to/some/long/path
cd ESC.
Sure, you can "diff file1.txt file2.txt", but Bash supports process substitution, which allows you to diff the output of commands.
For example, let's say I want to make sure my script gives me the output I expect. I can just wrap my script in <( ) and feed it to diff to get a quick and dirty unit test:
$ cat myscript.sh
#!/bin/sh
echo -e "one\nthree"
$
$ ./myscript.sh
one
three
$
$ cat expected_output.txt
one
two
three
$
$ diff <(./myscript.sh) expected_output.txt
1a2
> two
$
As another example, let's say I want to check if two servers have the same list of RPMs installed. Rather than sshing to each server, writing each list of RPMs to separate files, and doing a diff on those files, I can just do the diff from my workstation:
$ diff <(ssh server1 'rpm -qa | sort') <(ssh server2 'rpm -qa | sort')
241c240
< kernel-2.6.18-92.1.6.el5
---
> kernel-2.6.18-92.el5
317d315
< libsmi-0.4.5-2.el5
727,728d724
< wireshark-0.99.7-1.el5
< wireshark-gnome-0.99.7-1.el5
$
There are more examples in the
Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide at http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/process-sub.html.
My favorite command is "ls -thor"
It summons the power of the gods to list the most recently modified files in a conveniently readable format.
More of a novelty, but it's clever...
Top 10 commands used:
$ history | awk '{print $2}' | awk 'BEGIN {FS="|"}{print $1}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr | head
Sample output:
242 git
83 rake
43 cd
33 ss
24 ls
15 rsg
11 cap
10 dig
9 ping
3 vi
^R reverse search. Hit ^R, type a fragment of a previous command you want to match, and hit ^R until you find the one you want. Then I don't have to remember recently used commands that are still in my history. Not exclusively bash, but also: ^E for end of line, ^A for beginning of line, ^U and ^K to delete before and after the cursor, respectively.
I often have aliases for vi, ls, etc. but sometimes you want to escape the alias. Just add a back slash to the command in front:
Eg:
$ alias vi=vim
$ # To escape the alias for vi:
$ \vi # This doesn't open VIM
Cool, isn't it?
Here's a couple of configuration tweaks:
~/.inputrc:
"\C-[[A": history-search-backward
"\C-[[B": history-search-forward
This works the same as ^R but using the arrow keys instead. This means I can type (e.g.) cd /media/ then hit up-arrow to go to the last thing I cd'd to inside the /media/ folder.
(I use Gnome Terminal, you may need to change the escape codes for other terminal emulators.)
Bash completion is also incredibly useful, but it's a far more subtle addition. In ~/.bashrc:
if [ -f /etc/bash_completion ]; then
. /etc/bash_completion
fi
This will enable per-program tab-completion (e.g. attempting tab completion when the command line starts with evince will only show files that evince can open, and it will also tab-complete command line options).
Works nicely with this also in ~/.inputrc:
set completion-ignore-case on
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
set show-all-if-unmodified on
I use the following a lot:
The :p modifier to print a history result. E.g.
!!:p
Will print the last command so you can check that it's correct before running it again. Just enter !! to execute it.
In a similar vein:
!?foo?:p
Will search your history for the most recent command that contained the string 'foo' and print it.
If you don't need to print,
!?foo
does the search and executes it straight away.
I have got a secret weapon : shell-fu.
There are thousand of smart tips, cool tricks and efficient recipes that most of the time fit on a single line.
One that I love (but I cheat a bit since I use the fact that Python is installed on most Unix system now) :
alias webshare='python -m SimpleHTTPServer'
Now everytime you type "webshare", the current directory will be available through the port 8000. Really nice when you want to share files with friends on a local network without usb key or remote dir. Streaming video and music will work too.
And of course the classic fork bomb that is completely useless but still a lot of fun :
$ :(){ :|:& };:
Don't try that in a production server...
You can use the watch command in conjunction with another command to look for changes. An example of this was when I was testing my router, and I wanted to get up-to-date numbers on stuff like signal-to-noise ratio, etc.
watch --interval=10 lynx -dump http://dslrouter/stats.html
type -a PROG
in order to find all the places where PROG is available, usually somewhere in ~/bin
rather than the one in /usr/bin/PROG that might have been expected.
I like to construct commands with echo and pipe them to the shell:
$ find dir -name \*~ | xargs echo rm
...
$ find dir -name \*~ | xargs echo rm | ksh -s
Why? Because it allows me to look at what's going to be done before I do it. That way if I have a horrible error (like removing my home directory), I can catch it before it happens. Obviously, this is most important for destructive or irrevocable actions.
When downloading a large file I quite often do:
while ls -la <filename>; do sleep 5; done
And then just ctrl+c when I'm done (or if ls returns non-zero). It's similar to the watch program but it uses the shell instead, so it works on platforms without watch.
Another useful tool is netcat, or nc. If you do:
nc -l -p 9100 > printjob.prn
Then you can set up a printer on another computer but instead use the IP address of the computer running netcat. When the print job is sent, it is received by the computer running netcat and dumped into printjob.prn.
pushd and popd almost always come in handy
One preferred way of navigating when I'm using multiple directories in widely separate places in a tree hierarchy is to use acf_func.sh (listed below). Once defined, you can do
cd --
to see a list of recent directories, with a numerical menu
cd -2
to go to the second-most recent directory.
Very easy to use, very handy.
Here's the code:
# do ". acd_func.sh"
# acd_func 1.0.5, 10-nov-2004
# petar marinov, http:/geocities.com/h2428, this is public domain
cd_func ()
{
local x2 the_new_dir adir index
local -i cnt
if [[ $1 == "--" ]]; then
dirs -v
return 0
fi
the_new_dir=$1
[[ -z $1 ]] && the_new_dir=$HOME
if [[ ${the_new_dir:0:1} == '-' ]]; then
#
# Extract dir N from dirs
index=${the_new_dir:1}
[[ -z $index ]] && index=1
adir=$(dirs +$index)
[[ -z $adir ]] && return 1
the_new_dir=$adir
fi
#
# '~' has to be substituted by ${HOME}
[[ ${the_new_dir:0:1} == '~' ]] && the_new_dir="${HOME}${the_new_dir:1}"
#
# Now change to the new dir and add to the top of the stack
pushd "${the_new_dir}" > /dev/null
[[ $? -ne 0 ]] && return 1
the_new_dir=$(pwd)
#
# Trim down everything beyond 11th entry
popd -n +11 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null
#
# Remove any other occurence of this dir, skipping the top of the stack
for ((cnt=1; cnt <= 10; cnt++)); do
x2=$(dirs +${cnt} 2>/dev/null)
[[ $? -ne 0 ]] && return 0
[[ ${x2:0:1} == '~' ]] && x2="${HOME}${x2:1}"
if [[ "${x2}" == "${the_new_dir}" ]]; then
popd -n +$cnt 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null
cnt=cnt-1
fi
done
return 0
}
alias cd=cd_func
if [[ $BASH_VERSION > "2.05a" ]]; then
# ctrl+w shows the menu
bind -x "\"\C-w\":cd_func -- ;"
fi
Expand complicated lines before hitting the dreaded enter
Alt+Ctrl+e — shell-expand-line (may need to use Esc, Ctrl+e on your keyboard)
Ctrl+_ — undo
Ctrl+x, * — glob-expand-word
$ echo !$ !-2^ * Alt+Ctrl+e
$ echo aword someotherword * Ctrl+_
$ echo !$ !-2^ * Ctrl+x, *
$ echo !$ !-2^ LOG Makefile bar.c foo.h
&c.
I've always been partial to:
ctrl-E # move cursor to end of line
ctrl-A # move cursor to beginning of line
I also use shopt -s cdable_vars, then you can create bash variables to common directories. So, for my company's source tree, I create a bunch of variables like:
export Dcentmain="/var/localdata/p4ws/centaur/main/apps/core"
then I can change to that directory by cd Dcentmain.
pbcopy
This copies to the Mac system clipboard. You can pipe commands to it...try:
pwd | pbcopy
$ touch {1,2}.txt
$ ls [12].txt
1.txt 2.txt
$ rm !:1
rm [12].txt
$ history | tail -10
...
10007 touch {1,2}.txt
...
$ !10007
touch {1,2}.txt
$ for f in *.txt; do mv $f ${f/txt/doc}; done
Using 'set -o vi' from the command line, or better, in .bashrc, puts you in vi editing mode on the command line. You start in 'insert' mode so you can type and backspace as normal, but if you make a 'large' mistake you can hit the esc key and then use 'b' and 'f' to move around as you do in vi. cw to change a word. Particularly useful after you've brought up a history command that you want to change.
Similar to many above, my current favorite is the keystroke [alt]. (Alt and "." keys together) this is the same as $! (Inserts the last argument from the previous command) except that it's immediate and for me easier to type. (Just can't be used in scripts)
eg:
mkdir -p /tmp/test/blah/oops/something
cd [alt].
String multiple commands together using the && command:
./run.sh && tail -f log.txt
or
kill -9 1111 && ./start.sh