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OPS235 Lab 1 - CentOS7

20 bytes added, 14:47, 1 April 2015
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# Open a Shell terminal and use a text editor (such as <b><code><span style="color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">vi</span></code></b> or <b><code><span style="color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">nano</span></code></b>) to create a Bash Shell script called: <b><code><span style="color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">report.bash</span></code></b> in your current directory.
# Enter the following text content into your text-editing session:
<codestyle="color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">
&#35;!/bin/bash # Forces script to run in the bash shell<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
if [ $USER != "root" ] # checks to see only runs if user is logged in as root, and exits script if not<br>
then<br>
&nbsp;echo "You must be logged in as root to run the command." >&2 # >&2 is a "redirection trick" to convert output as stderr<br>
&nbsp;echo "Either login as root or issue command \"sudo ./report1.bash\"" >&2<br>
&nbsp;exit 1<br>
<ol><li value="4">Save your editing session, assign your report.bash file read and execute permissions (at least for the owner) and run by typing: <b><code><span style="color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">./report.bash</span></code></b></li><li>Did it run? If not what do you think you need to do in order to run the Bash Shell Script?</li><li>Issue the command <b><code><span style="color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">su</span></code></b> and run the Bash shell again. Did it work?</li><li>Reopen your text-editing session for report.bash and add the following lines of code to the bottom of the shell script file:</ol>
<codestyle="color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">
&#35; Create report title<br>
<br>
<ol><li value="8">Save and run the bash shell script. View the contents of the file called "report.txt" that was generated. Notice how the redirection symbol &gt; is used at the beginning of the report, and then the other redirection symbol &gt;&gt; is used to help "grow" the report with the other content.</li><li>The only remaining content of the report would be the system information. We can use a shell scripting trick called "command substitution" $( .. ) in order place results from an command to be used by another command (like echo). Re-edit the shell script and add the following code at the bottom of the shell script file:</li></ol>
<codestyle="color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">
echo >> /root/report.txt<br>
echo "Hostname: $(hostname)" >> /root/report.txt<br>
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