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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Getting error in command line arguments Post 302181478 by ag79 on Thursday 3rd of April 2008 04:58:57 AM
Old 04-03-2008
this is wrong
if [[ $1 != "dm5admin" ]]
here's what is going wrong: shell cant understand the following when u dont pass anything:
if [[ != "dm5admin" ]]


this is what you need
if [ "$1" != "dm5admin" ]

the shell will see this when u dont pass anything
if [ "" != "dm5admin" ]

which it will understand.

*Always* use double quotes when using shell script variable, unless you have a *very* good reason not to.

i dont know what you're trying to do with this script, but putting a password in it is not a great idea. anyway, thats your business.
 

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getopt(1)						      General Commands Manual							 getopt(1)

NAME
getopt - Parses command line flags and arguments SYNOPSIS
getopt format tokens DESCRIPTION
The getopt command is used to parse a list of tokens using a format that specifies expected flags and arguments. A flag is a single ASCII letter and, when followed by a : (colon), is expected to take a modifying argument that may or may not be separated from it by one or more tabs or spaces. (You can include multi-byte characters in arguments, but not as flag letters.) The getopt command completes processing when it has read all tokens or when it encounters the special token -- (double dash). It then out- puts the processed flags, a --, and any remaining tokens. If a token fails to match a flag, getopt writes a message to standard error. NOTES
In the csh, use the following command to run getopt: set argv=`getopt flag_string $*` EXAMPLES
The following is an example of the use of getopt in a skeleton shell script to parse options: #!/bin/sh # parse command line into arguments set -- `getopt a:bc $*` # check result of parsing if [ $? != 0 ] then exit 1 fi while [ $1 != -- ] do case $1 in -a) # set up the -a flag AFLG=1 AARG=$2 shift;; -b) # set up the -b flag BFLG=1;; -c) # set up the -c flag CFLG=1;; esac shift # next flag done shift # skip double dash # now do the work . . . The following are all equivalent arguments to the script: -a ARG -b -c -- A B C -a ARG -bc -- A B C -aARG -b -c -- A B C -b -c -a ARG -- A B C SEE ALSO
Commands: sh(1) Functions: getopt(3) getopt(1)
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