Difference between revisions of "Sample Scripts"
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./cleanupscript | ./cleanupscript | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== Read exif data from file== | == Read exif data from file== | ||
mdls filename.jpg | mdls filename.jpg | ||
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</pre> | </pre> | ||
*First part is the path where your files are located. Don’t use wildcard * if you have a lot of files because you will get Argument list too long error. | *First part is the path where your files are located. Don’t use wildcard * if you have a lot of files because you will get Argument list too long error. |
Revision as of 15:24, 24 July 2020
Script using if
#!/bin/bash echo -e "This program adds entries to a family database file . \n" echo -e "Would you like to add an entry to the family database file? \n" read ANSWER1 if [ $ANSWER1 = "y" -o $ANSWER1 = "Y" ] then echo -e "Please enter the name of the family member --> \c" read NAME echo -e "Please enter the family menber's relation to you (i.e. mother) -->\c" read RELATION echo -e "Please enter the family member's telephone number -->\c" read PHONE echo -e "$NAME\t$RELATION\t$PHONE">>database fi echo -e "Would you like to search an entry in the family databae file?\n" read ANSWER2 if [ $ANSWER2="y" -o $ANSWER2="Y" ] then echo -e "What word would you like to look for? -->\c" read WORD grep "$WORD" database fi
Script using CASE
#!/bin/bash while true do clear echo -e "What would you like to do? Add and entry (a) Search an entry (s) Quit (q) Enter your choice (a/s/q)-->\c" read ANSWER case $ANSWER in a|A) echo -e "Please enter the name of the family member -->\c" read NAME echo -e "Please enter the family member's relation to you (i.e. mother) -->\c" read RELATION echo -e "Please enter the family member's telephone number -->\c" read PHONE echo -e "$NAME\t$RELATION\t$PHONE" >>database ;; s|S) echo -e "What word would you like to look for?-->\c" read WORD grep "$WORD" database sleep 4 ;; q|Q) exit ;; *) echo "You must enter either the letter a or s" sleep 4 ;; esac done
While Loop
#!/bin/bash index=1 while [ $index -lt 6 ] do echo "hello ${index}" ((index++)) done
while [ "$correct" != "y" ] do read -p "enter your name:" name read -p "is ${name} matched" correct done
Files in folder to html
echo "print directory conents to file" echo -e "what is the title---->\c" read title sleep 1 echo -e '<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <title>' > index.html sleep 2 echo -e $title >> index.html sleep 2 echo '</title>' >> index.html sleep 2 echo -e '</head> <body>' >> index.html sleep 2 echo '<h1>' >> index.html sleep 2 echo $title >> index.html sleep 2 echo '</h1>' >> index.html sleep 2 ls | awk -F: '{print "<p> <a href=\""$1 "\">"$1 "</a></p>"}' >> index.html sleep 2 echo -e '</body></html' >> index.html
Reading a file, line by line
read -p "Enter Filename " FILENAME grep [rR]obert $FILENAME | while read LINE do echo "<p> ${LINE}</p>" done
Send Find and replace to a separate file
read -p "Enter Filename " FILENAME sed 's/[rR]obert'xor/g' > two.txt sleep 2 #clear output file echo " Cleaned file " > three.txt grep -n -i xor two.txt | while read LINE do echo "<p> ${LINE} </p>" >> three.txt done clear echo "--------- two.txt -------------" cat two.txt echo "" echo "------three.txt ----------------" cat three.txt
Backup MYSQL Database
#!/bin/bash mdate=`date +%F` echo "================ backing up databasename database ==============" mysqldump -u username -ppassword databasename > databasename-$mdate.sql sleep 5 echo "================ backing up databasename ====================" mysqldump -u username -ppassword databasename > databasename-$mdate.sql sleep 5 echo "=============== Backing up databasename database =============" mysqldump -u username -ppassword databasename > databasename-$mdate.sql sleep 5 echo " ========= done =========" ls *.sql > /var/www/sqlfiles.txt sleep 5 # calls another script which does the actual backup to amazon cd /var/dirtoscripts/ ./bksql.sh
Backup HTML Directory
#!/bin/bash bkdate = `date +%F` cd /var/www/ sleep 1 filename=outwaterphotogallery-$bkdate.zip #zip html folder zip -r $filename /var/www/html sleep 5 if [ "$filename" ]; then aws s3 cp --region us-east-1 $filename s3://websitebackup-opi/web/ fi sleep 4 count=`ls -l *.zip | wc -l 2> /dev/null` if [ $count -ge 1 ]; then mv *.zip /var/www/backups/web/ fi
Script that backs up to Amazon S3
#!/bin/bash echo "--------- backing up to s3 --------------" set -e if [ -f sqlfiles.txt ]; then while read line do aws s3 cp --region us-east-1 $line s3://bucketname done < sqlfiles.txt echo "++++++++++= Done =+++++++++++++++" else echo " XXXXXXXXXXX File Does not exist XXXXXXX" fi cd /var/www/dirtoscripts/ # call script that counts the num of sql files in dir and move them to an archive folder ./cleanupscript
Read exif data from file
mdls filename.jpg
find creation date of file in exif data
mdls filename | grep -i kMDItemContentCreationDate -m 1 | awk '{print $3}'
- the m1 will return the 1 result
exiftool filename.jgp
Using rename command
If its not installed in MacOS, use brew to install it
rename 's/dem/rob/g' * jpg
Will change dem and replace it with rob /g is global which will replace all occurrence of dem in the file name
rename 's/\+/_/g' *.tif
use the \ escape character with the + sign
Replace multiple characters
rename 's/[_,-,a,b,c,]//g'
rename '/.jpg/.tif/' *.jpg
Change jpg extension to tif
Deleting part of a filename
rename 's/dem//' *.jpg
Searching with Groupings
rename 's/(dem|rob)ng/bac/' *.jpg
The central expression of this rename command will search for strings within filenames that have the character sequence “dem” or “rob” where those sequences are immediately followed by “ng”. In other words, our search term is going to look for “string” and “demng”. The substitution term is “bacng”.
Example: demng.jpg, robmg.jpg
Changing case of filename
rename 'y/a-z/A-Z/' *.jpg
Use the -n option to print names without renaming them
rename -n 's/.html/.php/' *.html
Rename files adding sequential numbers Mac Only
rename -N 03000 's/find/$N/gi' *.jpg
You have to add the 0 at the beginning otherwise it wont work
Rename Delete string Mac Only
rename -d '0' *.jpg
Result
030020-abc.jpg 30020-abc.jpg
Find and Rename
find . -type f -name '*2019*' -print0 | rename -0 's/2019/2020/gi'
Rename Prepend Mac Only
rename -A 'xxxx-' *.jpg
metacharacters meaning ^ Matches the beginning of a string. $ Matches the end of a string. . Matches any character, except a newline. * Matches occurrences of the preceding character, or group of characters, zero or more times. + Matches occurrences of the preceding character, or group of characters, one or more times. ? Match occurrences of the preceding character, or group of characters, zero or one times. If used after a repetition modifier, '?' specifies that the shortest possible match should be used. For instance, 'a{2,4}?' will match 'aa' even if 'aaa' and 'aaaa' would also match. See repetition modifiers, below. | Alternation; behaves like a boolean 'OR'. For instance, 'butter|jelly' will match either butter or jelly. (...) Grouping. For instance, '(eg|le)gs' will match either 'eggs' or 'legs'. [...] A set of characters. For instance, '[abc]' will match either 'a' or 'b' or 'c'. Character sets can be defined as: [characters] Matches any one of the characters listed. [x-y] Matches any in a range of characters between x and y, inclusive. For instance, '[c-e]' will match either c, d, or e, and '[a-z]' will match any lowercase letter. [^characters] Does not match characters; in other words, matches any character except those listed. Can also negate a character range; for instance, '[^a-d]' matches any character except a, b, c, or d. [\-] Matches the hyphen character ("-"). [x-yX-Z] Multiple character ranges can be placed in a character set consecutively. For instance, '[a-zA-Z]' matches any letter, uppercase or lowercase. {m[,[n]]} A repetition modifier which matches at least m and at most n of the preceding characters. For instance, 'a{2}' will match 'aa', 'a{2,4}' will match either 'aa', 'aaa', or 'aaaa', and 'b{2,}' will match two or more consecutive b characters. \ Escapes a metacharacter so that it is treated literally. For instance, '\+' matches a literal '+' (instead of the plus symbol having its special metacharacter meaning). \t Matches a tab character. \n Matches a newline character. \r Matches a carriage return character. \w Matches any single character classified as a "word" character (either an alphanumeric character or an underscore '_'). \W Matches any single non-"word" character. \s Matches any single whitespace character (space, tab, newline). \S Matches any single non-whitespace character. \d Matches any digit character. This switch is equivalent to the character set '[0-9]' \D Matches any non-digit character. \b A "zero-width" matching assertion which matches any "word boundary". \B A "zero-width" matching assertion which matches any non-"word boundary".
- First part is the path where your files are located. Don’t use wildcard * if you have a lot of files because you will get Argument list too long error.
- Second part -type is the file type f stands for files
- Third part -name is limiting *,jpg files
- Fourth part -mtime gets how many days the files older than will be listed. +30 is for files older then 30 days.
- Fifth part -exec executes a command. In this case mv is the command, {} gets the filelist, path where to move the files and \; closes the command
Find files over a certain size
$ find . -type f -size -4G
You can use size switch for other formats, such as
- `c’ for bytes
- ‘w’ for two-byte words
- `k’ for Kilobytes
- `M’ for Megabytes
- `G’ for Gigabytes
Find Directory sizes
du -h --max-depth=2 | sort -hr