Book Image

Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Clif Flynt, Sarath Lakshman, Shantanu Tushar
Book Image

Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook - Third Edition

By: Clif Flynt, Sarath Lakshman, Shantanu Tushar

Overview of this book

The shell is the most powerful tool your computer provides. Despite having it at their fingertips, many users are unaware of how much the shell can accomplish. Using the shell, you can generate databases and web pages from sets of files, automate monotonous admin tasks such as system backups, monitor your system's health and activity, identify network bottlenecks and system resource hogs, and more. This book will show you how to do all this and much more. This book, now in its third edition, describes the exciting new features in the newest Linux distributions to help you accomplish more than you imagine. It shows how to use simple commands to automate complex tasks, automate web interactions, download videos, set up containers and cloud servers, and even get free SSL certificates. Starting with the basics of the shell, you will learn simple commands and how to apply them to real-world issues. From there, you'll learn text processing, web interactions, network and system monitoring, and system tuning. Software engineers will learn how to examine system applications, how to use modern software management tools such as git and fossil for their own work, and how to submit patches to open-source projects. Finally, you'll learn how to set up Linux Containers and Virtual machines and even run your own Cloud server with a free SSL Certificate from letsencrypt.org.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Posting to a web page and reading the response

POST and GET are two types of request in HTTP to send information to or retrieve information from a website. In a GET request, we send parameters (name-value pairs) through the web page URL itself. The POST command places the key/value pairs in the message body instead of the URL. POST is commonly used when submitting long forms or to conceal information submitted from a casual glance.

Getting ready

For this recipe, we will use the sample guestbook website included in the tclhttpd package. You can download tclhttpd from http://sourceforge.net/projects/tclhttpd and then run it on your local system to create a local web server. The guestbook page requests a name and URL which it adds to a guestbook to show who has visited...