Book Image

Mastering Linux Shell Scripting - Second Edition

By : Mokhtar Ebrahim, Andrew Mallett
5 (1)
Book Image

Mastering Linux Shell Scripting - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Mokhtar Ebrahim, Andrew Mallett

Overview of this book

In this book, you’ll discover everything you need to know to master shell scripting and make informed choices about the elements you employ. Grab your favorite editor and start writing your best Bash scripts step by step. Get to grips with the fundamentals of creating and running a script in normal mode, and in debug mode. Learn about various conditional statements' code snippets, and realize the power of repetition and loops in your shell script. You will also learn to write complex shell scripts. This book will also deep dive into file system administration, directories, and system administration like networking, process management, user authentications, and package installation and regular expressions. Towards the end of the book, you will learn how to use Python as a BASH Scripting alternative. By the end of this book, you will know shell scripts at the snap of your fingers and will be able to automate and communicate with your system with keyboard expressions.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Using case statements

Rather than using multiple elif statements, a case statement may provide a simpler mechanism when evaluations are made on a single expression.

The basic layout of a case statement is listed as follows, using pseudocode:

case expression in 
 case1)  
  statement1 
  statement2 
 ;; 
 case2) 
  statement1 
  statement2 
 ;; 
 *) 
  statement1 
 ;; 
esac 

The statement layout that we see is not dissimilar to the switch statements that exist in other languages. In bash, we can use the case statement to test for simple values, such as strings or integers. Case statements can cater for a wide range of letters, such as [a-f] or a through to f, but they cannot easily deal with integer ranges such as [1-20].

The case statement will first expand the expression and then it will try to match it with each item in turn. When a match is found, all the statements are executed...