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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting restoring file to its default location... Post 302378008 by AbhijitIT on Sunday 6th of December 2009 10:42:05 AM
Old 12-06-2009
restoring file to its default location...

Hello everyone,
I am new to unix shell.

I have a file called Path.txt....and i have data in that as

1 abhi
2 avi
3 ash so on.....

1 ,2 ,3 is the index.....

my concern is user will give me input as

restore 1

then i have to restore abhi file to its default location..
if restore 2
then again same thing....

user can give restore 1 2 3
in this case all three files are suppose to get restored to the
default location.

what i am doing is

using for loop


fname=`grep -w "^$index" $HOME/UnixCw/backup/Path.txt`
echo "FILE: $fname"

in FILE if user said restore 11 then FILE will contain

11 filename

now i want to restore the filename

i think i have to take this file name in some variable.
and by using mv i can restore..but i am not sure about how i
can do this...please help me out
 

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ATF-SH(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 ATF-SH(1)

NAME
atf-sh [-s shell] -- interpreter for shell-based test programs SYNOPSIS
atf-sh script DESCRIPTION
atf-sh is an interpreter that runs the test program given in script after loading the atf-sh(3) library. atf-sh is not a real interpreter though: it is just a wrapper around the system-wide shell defined by ATF_SHELL. atf-sh executes the inter- preter, loads the atf-sh(3) library and then runs the script. You must consider atf-sh to be a POSIX shell by default and thus should not use any non-standard extensions. The following options are available: -s shell Specifies the shell to use instead of the value provided by ATF_SHELL. ENVIRONMENT
ATF_LIBEXECDIR Overrides the builtin directory where atf-sh is located. Should not be overridden other than for testing purposes. ATF_PKGDATADIR Overrides the builtin directory where libatf-sh.subr is located. Should not be overridden other than for testing purposes. ATF_SHELL Path to the system shell to be used in the generated scripts. Scripts must not rely on this variable being set to select a specific interpreter. EXAMPLES
Scripts using atf-sh(3) should start with: #! /usr/bin/env atf-sh Alternatively, if you want to explicitly choose a shell interpreter, you cannot rely on env(1) to find atf-sh. Instead, you have to hardcode the path to atf-sh in the script and then use the -s option afterwards as a single parameter: #! /path/to/bin/atf-sh -s/bin/bash ENVIRONMENT
ATF_SHELL Path to the system shell to be used in the generated scripts. SEE ALSO
atf-sh(3) BSD
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