Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Case Statement Troubles
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Case Statement Troubles Post 302594948 by tekster2 on Wednesday 1st of February 2012 03:27:35 PM
Old 02-01-2012
Case Statement Troubles

Hi,
I'm attempting to create case statement in a ksh script that does the following:

Run a uname command against the box and use that value for $HOSTNAME object. Then, if hostname has AIX in it, then use the lsldap command to try to bind, then print $HOSTNAME:yes or $HOSTNAME:no, depending on bind results. Then, if AIX wasn't in the $HOSTNAME, look for RHEL and do the same. It keeps errororing and I have tried so many examples and beat my head against it for so long I thought maybe someone with more experience could help.

Here's the script:
Code:
HOSTNAME=$(uname -n)

cd /tmp

echo "Line to catch HHLD Connectivity status"

case ${HOSTNAME} in

[AIX]*) 
	lsldap -a passwd rzttwp > /dev/null 2>&1
ret=$?
 
if [ $ret -ne 0 ]; then
	echo "!!!:${HOSTNAME}:no"
	    else
	echo "!!!:${HOSTNAME}:yes"
	

[RHEL]*)
	getent passwd rzttwp > /dev/null 2>&1    
ret=$?
 
if [ $ret -ne 0 ]; then
	echo "!!!:${HOSTNAME}:no"
	    else
	echo "!!!:${HOSTNAME}:yes"

I've tried it with and without the *), with and without ;; in between the :yes" and [RHEL]*), tried using |, tried all kinds of permutations. It keeps erroring out. I'm trying to run this on RHEL5.3.

Any help, insights, or pointers you may be able to provide is greatly appreciated!

Thank you,

D

Last edited by Scott; 02-01-2012 at 04:31 PM.. Reason: Please use code tags
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

case statement

Hi all, is it possible to create a 'dynamic' case statement. ie select option in `ls` do case satement depending on results of the above `ls` done I hope I have explained this ok! Thanks Helen (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Bab00shka
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Case Statement

Can anyone please tell me why this wont work! Thanks so much! #!/bin/sh for file do case $file in *.*.*) echo Cannot have more than 1 dot exit ;; *'**'*) echo Cannot have more than 1 asterisk exit ;; *'*'*|?.) echo this is a target (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: Zeta_Acosta
19 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

case statement

hi all i'm writing a script and in it i need to prompt the user if the entered value is correct or not ,i wrote the following and its not working ,its executing the script even if i enter Y/N pls any help is appreciated echo "\nAre you sure you entered the right Destination Environment? y :... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bkan77
5 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

If or Case Statement

I want to write a program with the following variables: a=7000 b=24000 c=613.8 The user can enter two words: Vivid or Blue for example. The challenge is that the user might not want to write the words the way they appear. The user can write V or v or vivid or Vivid or write Blue or blue, or B,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Ernst
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

CASE statement

Hi, I am writing a bash shell script. My script has a few user defined parameters. When the script runs the first thing it does is make sure that these parameters are valid. One of the parameters is called YEAR. A valid input for YEAR can be 1997-2000. One way I have come up with to ensure... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: msb65
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

help with case statement

I am writing a script to pull diskspace information from our servers. Here is the script that I wrote: #!/bin/ksh for host in `cat /oper/hosts/esc.misc` do ssh -q -o ConnectTimeout=10 operator@$host df -h|grep "/dev/" |egrep '8%|9%|100%' | awk '{print H " " "at " $5 " with " $4 "... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rkruck
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

if-statement troubles

I try to compare the day and month of someones birthday with the day and month of today, so my little bash script can send a mail to the person that has its birthday that day. The first line of the file birthdays looks like this: firstname,lastname,01/01/1990,.... The variable birthday's... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: doc.arne
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

case statement

Hi, I am writing case statement to execute some finction, my requirement is once one of the case statement is executed again it has to prompt for the option. for script in `echo "$Script_Selected"` do case $script in 1) getNoOFActUsers ;; 2) moveServerrOORotation ;; ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Satyak
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Case Statement

Hey, guys I really need some help with a project. "Write a shell program that examines the command line arguments, counts and collects the number of options. Basically it has to collect and count the arguments that start with a "-" and the one's that don't start with a - I know I have to use... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sk192010`
2 Replies

10. Homework & Coursework Questions

Case Statement

Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted! 1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data: Hey, guys I really need some help with a project. "Write a shell program that examines the command line... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: sk192010`
8 Replies
RDUP-BACKUPS(7) 						       rdup							   RDUP-BACKUPS(7)

NAME
rdup-backups - introduction into making backups with rdup INTRODUCTION
rdup is a simple program that prints out a list of files and directories that are changed changed on a filesystem. It is more sophisticated than for instance find, because rdup will find files that are removed or directories that are renamed. A long time ago rdup included a bunch of shell and Perl scripts that implemented a backup policy. These could be used in a pipeline to per- form a backup. Currently rdup consists out of three basic utilities: rdup With rdup you create the file list on which later programs in the pipeline can work. The default output format also includes the files' content. rdup can be seen as a tar replacement in this respect, but rdup also allows for all kinds of transformations of the content (encryption, compression, reversal), see the -P switch in rdup(1) for more information. rdup-tr With rdup-tr you can transform the files rdup delivers to you. You can create tar, cpio or pax files. You can encrypt pathnames. rdup-tr is filter that reads from standard input and writes to standard output. See rdup-tr(1) for more information. With rdup and rdup-tr you can create an encrypted archive which is put in a directory structure that is also encrypted. rdup-up With rdup-up you can update an existing directory structure with the updates as described by rdup. rdup-up reads rdup input and will create the files, symbolic links, hard links and directories (and sockets, pipes and devices) in the file system. See rdup-up(1) for more information. So the general backup pipeline for rdup will look something like this: create filelist | transform | update filesystem ( rdup | rdup-tr | rdup-up ) Note 1: The same sequence is used for restoring. In both cases you want to move files from location A to B. The only difference is that the transformation is reversed when you restore. Note 2: The use of rdup-tr is optional. BACKUPS AND RESTORES
For rdup there is no difference between backups and restores. If you think about this for a minute you understand why. Making a backup means copying a list of files somewhere else. Restoring files is copying a list of files back to the place they came from. Same difference. So rdup can be used for both, if you did any transformation with rdup during the backup you just need to reverse those operations during the restore. BACKUPS
It is always best to backup to another medium, be it a different local harddisk or a NFS/CIFS mounted filesystem. You can also use ssh to store file on a remote server, ala rsync (although not as network efficient). If you backup to a local disk you can just as well use rsync or plain old tar, but if you store your files at somebody else's disk you will need encryption. This is where you go beyond rsync and rdup comes in. Rsync cannot do per-file encryption, sure you can encrypt the network traffic with ssh, but at the remote side your files are kept in plain view. If you implement remote backups, the easy route is to allow root access on the backup medium. If the backup runs without root access the created files will not have their original ownership. For NFS this can be achieved by using no_root_squash, for ssh you could enable PermitRootLogin. Note that this may be a security risk. SNAPSHOT BACKUPS
We need a little help here in the form of the rdup-simple script. Keep in mind that the following scripts can also be run remotely with the help of ssh. The following script implements the algorithm of rdup-simple. #!/bin/bash # some tmp files are saved in ~/.rdup. This directory must exist DIR=/home # what to backup BACKUP=/vol/backup TODAY=$(date +%Y%m/%d) LIST=~/.rdup/list-$HOSTNAME STAMP=~/.rdup/timestamp-$HOSTNAME # for remote backup, this has to run on the remote host! BUGBUG RET=$? case $RET in 2|*) echo Error >&2 exit 1 ;; 1) # full dump, remove file-list and time-stamp file rm $LIST $STAMP ;; 0) # inc dump # do nothing here ;; esac # this is the place where you want to modify the command line # right now, nothing is translated we just use 'cat' rdup -N $STAMP -Pcat $LIST $DIR | rdup-up $BACKUP/$HOSTNAME/$TODAY # or do a remote backup #rdup -N $STAMP -Pcat $LIST $DIR | ssh root@remotehost # rdup-up $BACKUP/$HOSTNAME/$TODAY LOCAL BACKUPS
With rdup-simple you can easily create backups. Backing up my home directory to a backup directory: rdup-simple ~ /vol/backup/$HOSTNAME This will create a backup in /vol/backup/$HOSTNAME/200705/15. So each day will have its own directory. Multiple sources are allowed, so: rdup-simple ~ /etc/ /var/lib /vol/backup/$HOSTNAME Will backup your home directory, /etc and /var/lib to the backup location. Also if you need to compress your backup, simple add a '-z' switch: rdup-simple -z ~ /etc/ /var/lib /vol/backup/$HOSTNAME REMOTE BACKUPS
For a remote backup to work, both the sending machine and the receiving machine must have rdup installed. The currently implemented proto- col is ssh. Dumping my homedir to the remote server: rdup-simple ~ ssh://miekg@remote/vol/backup/$HOSTNAME The syntax is almost identical, only the destination starts with the magic string 'ssh://'. Compression and encryption are just as easily enabled as with a local backup, just add '-z' and/or a '-k keyfile' argument: rdup-simple -z -k 'secret-file' ~ ssh://miekg@remote/vol/backup/$HOSTNAME Remember though, that because of these advanced features (compression, encryption, etc, ...) the network transfer can never be as efficient as rsync. ALSO SEE
rdup(1), rdup-tr(1), rdup-up(1) and http://www.miek.nl/projects/rdup/ 1.1.x 15 Dec 2008 RDUP-BACKUPS(7)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:16 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy