OPS245 Scripting Exercises

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Revision as of 19:55, 17 January 2021 by Peter.callaghan (talk | contribs) (Conditional statements)
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Things on this page

Terminal vs script file

A shell script is nothing more than a sequence of shell commands. Any command you put in a shell script can be executed just as well in a terminal. In fact no matter how complex your script is - you can run the entire thing from a terminal window without executing the script.

Runnning a command

  • How to run a command in the current directory or another directory or a directory in the $PATH
  • That programs you run need to have execute permission
  • What your $PWD is, pwd command
  • Check the return code from a command by examining $?

Variables

  • How to create a variable and set a value in it
  • How to get the value from a variable
  • Differences in how bash and python handle variables

Getting input from the user

  • The read command in bash
  • the input() function in python

Quotes

  • Why use single or double quotes
  • The difference between single and double quotes
  • Backquotes

Redirecting output

  • How to redirect output from a command to a file
  • How to pipe output from one command to another command

Basic commands

  • cat
  • grep
  • cut

Conditional statements

Bash

  • if
  • test, [

Python

  • Python has conditional statements, we just haven't covered them yet.

Exercises

You can do these exercises in any order, and change them in any way you like.

  • Create a bash script that will print Hello, then list the contents of the / directory, then print Good Bye.
  • Create a bash script that will run your other script twice.
    • Run this new script from different locations, and see if it always works. Fix it if it doesn't.
  • reate a bash script to display the contents of /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ens33
    • Pipe the output to cat
      • Pipe that output to cat. See if you understand why that doesn't seem to do anything
  • Create a bash script which will use cat and grep to find the line with BOOTPROTO in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ens33
    • Modify that script so that it doesn't need cat anymore.
  • Create a bash script in which you will create a variable called BP.
    • Assign to that variable the value BOOTPROTO="dhcp" (the equal sign and quotes are part of the value).
    • Use the cut command to retrieve the part between the double-quotes (in this case that's: dhcp).
    • Save the result in a variable, and print that variable.
  • Combine the two scripts above into one. The script should tell you what the value of BOOTPROTO from /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ens33 is.
  • Use the ls and wc commands to find how many log files there are in /var/log/
    • Add a grep command to find how many of a certain type of log file there are (e.g. vmware-network log files)
  • Use the history and grep commands to find any command you ran in the past that contained a certain keyword (like .sh or cat)
  • Write a bash script which will use the whoami, hostname, date, and lvs commands to create a report.txt file containing all that information.
    • Set it up so that the date (in YYYY-MM-DD format) is in the filename of the report, e.g. report-YYYY-MM-DD.txt
  • Write a bash script that will ask the user for a process name, will check whether that process is running, and if it is: it will print "The process is running". If it isn't: it will print "The process is not running".
    • Modify that script to include the number of processes with that name that are running.
  • Write a script that will use a for loop and the cut command to get a list of usernames from the /etc/passwd file and print one username perline.
    • For each user: using an if statement check whether the directory /home/thatusername exists and then each line will look like: "user1: home directory does not exist" or "user2: home directory exists".
    • Instead of checking for /home/thatusername check for the home directory in the passwd file line for that user.