Difference between revisions of "Bash operators"
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+ | You have a shell script and wonder what these operators do? Then this article is for you. | ||
+ | |||
+ | = * and ? = | ||
+ | You may already know these used for so called "shell globbing" (pattern matching). * replaces an arbitrary amount of characters (including none), while ? replaces exactly one character. | ||
+ | |||
+ | These wildcards are actually bash operators! Imagine, we have the files a1, a2: | ||
+ | cp a* | ||
+ | |||
+ | now is a valid bash command which overrides one of these files with the other one. | ||
+ | |||
= $() = | = $() = | ||
The operator $() in the bash shell is replaced by the output of the command enclosed in the parentheses. It is equivalent to backticks (``), but can be cascaded more easily. | The operator $() in the bash shell is replaced by the output of the command enclosed in the parentheses. It is equivalent to backticks (``), but can be cascaded more easily. | ||
− | Examples | + | Examples |
rpm -ql $(rpm -qa) | rpm -ql $(rpm -qa) | ||
for i in $(seq 1 1 100); do echo $i; done | for i in $(seq 1 1 100); do echo $i; done | ||
+ | |||
+ | = $(()) = | ||
+ | The operator $(()) in the bash shell is replaced by the arithmetic result of the expression enclosed in the parentheses. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Examples: | ||
+ | # echo $((2*2)) | ||
+ | 4 | ||
+ | |||
+ | = $$ = | ||
+ | The operator $$ delivers the id of the currently-running process. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Example: | ||
+ | # kill -9 $$ | ||
+ | |||
+ | kills the current process | ||
+ | |||
+ | = $! = | ||
+ | The operator $! delivers the id of the process that has most recently sent to the [[background]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Example: | ||
+ | # [[xosview]] & [[sleep]] 5; [[kill]] $! | ||
+ | |||
+ | shows xosview for 5 seconds and stops it | ||
+ | |||
+ | = > and >> = | ||
+ | |||
+ | > and >> can be used to redirect the output (only stdout, not stderr, for that see below) of a command to a file. The difference between them is, that >> appends to the given files, while > will truncate it. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Examples: | ||
+ | ls -alh > files-in-directory.txt | ||
+ | ls -alh /otherdir >> files-in-directory.txt # Append list of files in other directory | ||
+ | |||
+ | = 2> or 2>> = | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[stderr]] can be redirected by using 2> or 2>>. | ||
+ | |||
+ | But sometimes, you need stderr to be included in stdout for certain purpose, e.g. when another program is parsing/logging only stdout and you need errors to be in there, too. In these cases, you can redirect stderr to stdout with "2>&1". (Of course, it is also possible to redirect stdout to stderr this way, if you need to silence a program on stdout for some purpose). | ||
+ | |||
+ | Examples: | ||
+ | cat notexisting 2> test # Writes "File or directory not found." to test | ||
+ | cat notexisting 2>&1 # Outputs "File or directory not found." to stdout | ||
+ | |||
+ | = | = | ||
+ | | is used to pipe the stdout of one programm to the stdin of another one. | ||
+ | tail -n 100 ''foo'' | sort -r # Reverse sort the last 100 lines of the file ''foo'' | ||
+ | |||
+ | = && = | ||
+ | && evaluates the binary result of the command left of it and ands it with the binary result right of it if it is not already false, where false!=0. In other words, if you write | ||
+ | command1 && command2 | ||
+ | |||
+ | command2 will only be executed if command1 returned success. | ||
+ | |||
+ | = See also = | ||
+ | * [[bash operator]] | ||
+ | * [[shell Programming]] |
Latest revision as of 13:22, 21 March 2021
You have a shell script and wonder what these operators do? Then this article is for you.
Contents
* and ?
You may already know these used for so called "shell globbing" (pattern matching). * replaces an arbitrary amount of characters (including none), while ? replaces exactly one character.
These wildcards are actually bash operators! Imagine, we have the files a1, a2:
cp a*
now is a valid bash command which overrides one of these files with the other one.
$()
The operator $() in the bash shell is replaced by the output of the command enclosed in the parentheses. It is equivalent to backticks (``), but can be cascaded more easily.
Examples
rpm -ql $(rpm -qa)
for i in $(seq 1 1 100); do echo $i; done
$(())
The operator $(()) in the bash shell is replaced by the arithmetic result of the expression enclosed in the parentheses.
Examples:
# echo $((2*2)) 4
$$
The operator $$ delivers the id of the currently-running process.
Example:
# kill -9 $$
kills the current process
$!
The operator $! delivers the id of the process that has most recently sent to the background.
Example:
# xosview & sleep 5; kill $!
shows xosview for 5 seconds and stops it
> and >>
> and >> can be used to redirect the output (only stdout, not stderr, for that see below) of a command to a file. The difference between them is, that >> appends to the given files, while > will truncate it.
Examples:
ls -alh > files-in-directory.txt ls -alh /otherdir >> files-in-directory.txt # Append list of files in other directory
2> or 2>>
stderr can be redirected by using 2> or 2>>.
But sometimes, you need stderr to be included in stdout for certain purpose, e.g. when another program is parsing/logging only stdout and you need errors to be in there, too. In these cases, you can redirect stderr to stdout with "2>&1". (Of course, it is also possible to redirect stdout to stderr this way, if you need to silence a program on stdout for some purpose).
Examples:
cat notexisting 2> test # Writes "File or directory not found." to test cat notexisting 2>&1 # Outputs "File or directory not found." to stdout
|
| is used to pipe the stdout of one programm to the stdin of another one.
tail -n 100 foo | sort -r # Reverse sort the last 100 lines of the file foo
&&
&& evaluates the binary result of the command left of it and ands it with the binary result right of it if it is not already false, where false!=0. In other words, if you write
command1 && command2
command2 will only be executed if command1 returned success.