Book Image

Bash Cookbook

By : Ron Brash, Ganesh Sanjiv Naik
Book Image

Bash Cookbook

By: Ron Brash, Ganesh Sanjiv Naik

Overview of this book

In Linux, one of the most commonly used and most powerful tools is the Bash shell. With its collection of engaging recipes, Bash Cookbook takes you through a series of exercises designed to teach you how to effectively use the Bash shell in order to create and execute your own scripts. The book starts by introducing you to the basics of using the Bash shell, also teaching you the fundamentals of generating any input from a command. With the help of a number of exercises, you will get to grips with the automation of daily tasks for sysadmins and power users. Once you have a hands-on understanding of the subject, you will move on to exploring more advanced projects that can solve real-world problems comprehensively on a Linux system. In addition to this, you will discover projects such as creating an application with a menu, beginning scripts on startup, parsing and displaying human-readable information, and executing remote commands with authentication using self-generated Secure Shell (SSH) keys. By the end of this book, you will have gained significant experience of solving real-world problems, from automating routine tasks to managing your systems and creating your own scripts.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Basic searching for strings and files


Imagine searching for a four leaf clover in a big garden. It would be really hard (and it is still really hard for computers). Thankfully, words are not images and text on a computer is easily searchable depending on the format. The term format has to be used because if your tool cannot understand a given type of text (encoding), then you might have trouble recognizing a pattern or even detecting that there is text at all!

Typically, when you are looking at the console, text files, source code (C, C++, Bash, HTML), spreadsheets, XML, and other types, you are looking at it in ASCII or UTF. ASCII is a commonly used format in the *NIX world on the console. There is also the UTF encoding scheme, which is an improvement upon ASCII and can support a variety of extended characters that were not present in computing originally. It comes in a number of formats such as UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF32.

Note

When you hear the words encoding and decoding, it is similar to...