The main shell forks off a copy of itself to run while read independently of the echo so they can both run while connected by a pipe. The copy, or "sub-shell", runs successfully, setting all your variables and such as you please, until the pipe runs out of information and returns EOF. Then the loop quits.
Then the subshell dies. Control is returned to the main shell, which remains unchanged. You set all your variables in the subshell, not the main one.
In short: It's the pipe that does it. Your shell and everything behind the pipe are different processes and don't share variables.
Pipes are overkill if you have substring operators anyway. This way of getting a single character ought to work identically in bash and ksh:
Hi,
I have file abc.txt which has keys and emails addresses
abc.txt
emailkey1:sam@abc.com
emailkey1:tom@abc.com
emailkey2:rqw@abc.com
emailkey2:tut@abc.com
I have a shell script where i pass key as the parameter and i want all the email addresses within that key concatenated by a comma... (21 Replies)
I have a set of variables:
f1="./someFolder"
.
.
f10="./someOtherFolder"
And I'm trying to use the following loop
for (( i = 0; i <= 10; i++ ))
do
temp=f$i
done
I'm trying the get the values from my set of variable to make directories, but I can't seem the get those value... (3 Replies)
- I m retreving values from database and wish to use those values later in my shell script. I m placing these values in an array da_data but outside loop array is empty.Problem is its treating array as local inside loop hence array is empty outside loop.
Plz go through the script and suggest how... (1 Reply)
I need to do something like this:
for i in 1 2 3 4 5; do
arr=$(awk 'NR="$i" { print $2 }' file_with_5_records)
done
That is, parse a file and assign values to an array in an ascending order relative to the number of record in the file that is being processed on each loop.
Is my... (2 Replies)
I'm a programming noob. I'm trying to run a memory intensive process for many files. But when I use the following script, it runs fine for the first 5-7 files, then runs out of memory. Monitoring the output files, it's clear the processes are going on in parallel. Once 5-7 of the files are being... (18 Replies)
Hi All
I am trying to fetch the size of three files into three separate variables within a for loop and am doing something like this:
for i in ATT1 ATT2 ATT3
do
size_$i=`ls -ltr $i | awk '{print $5}'`
echo ${size_$i}
done
but am getting the below error:
ksh: size_ATT1=522: not... (3 Replies)
array=( 8 5 6 2 3 4 7 1 9 0 )
for i in "${array}"
do
echo $i
done
# i need the output like this by swapping of array values
0
9
1
7
4
3
2
6
5
8 (7 Replies)
I have a headerless array of 1000 columns x 100000 rows. The array only contains 4 values; 0/0, 0/1, 1/1, ./.
Here I am showing the 1st 3 rows and columns of the input array
0/0 0/0 1/1
0/1 0/1 0/1
0/0 ./. 0/0
0/0 0/0 0/0
I would like to convert the values in... (9 Replies)
Hello!
I'm making an English to Morse Code translator and I was able to mostly get it all working by looking through older posts here; however, I have one small problem.
When I run it it's just printing spaces for where the characters should be. It runs the right amount of times, and if I try... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: arcoleman10
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
script
SCRIPT(1) BSD General Commands Manual SCRIPT(1)NAME
script -- make typescript of terminal session
SYNOPSIS
script [-adkpqr] [-F pipe] [-t time] [file [command ...]]
DESCRIPTION
The script utility makes a typescript of everything printed on your terminal. It is useful for students who need a hardcopy record of an
interactive session as proof of an assignment, as the typescript file can be printed out later with lpr(1).
If the argument file is given, script saves all dialogue in file. If no file name is given, the typescript is saved in the file typescript.
If the argument command is given, script will run the specified command with an optional argument vector instead of an interactive shell.
The following options are available:
-a Append the output to file or typescript, retaining the prior contents.
-d When playing back a session with the -p flag, do not sleep between records when playing back a timestamped session.
-F pipe
Immediately flush output after each write. This will allow a user to create a named pipe using mkfifo(1) and another user may watch
the live session using a utility like cat(1).
-k Log keys sent to the program as well as output.
-p Play back a session recorded with the -r flag in real time.
-q Run in quiet mode, omit the start, stop and command status messages.
-r Record a session with input, output, and timestamping.
-t time
Specify the interval at which the script output file will be flushed to disk, in seconds. A value of 0 causes script to flush after
every character I/O event. The default interval is 30 seconds.
The script ends when the forked shell (or command) exits (a control-D to exit the Bourne shell (sh(1)), and exit, logout or control-D (if
ignoreeof is not set) for the C-shell, csh(1)).
Certain interactive commands, such as vi(1), create garbage in the typescript file. The script utility works best with commands that do not
manipulate the screen. The results are meant to emulate a hardcopy terminal, not an addressable one.
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables are utilized by script:
SCRIPT
The SCRIPT environment variable is added to the sub-shell. If SCRIPT already existed in the users environment, its value is overwrit-
ten within the sub-shell. The value of SCRIPT is the name of the typescript file.
SHELL If the variable SHELL exists, the shell forked by script will be that shell. If SHELL is not set, the Bourne shell is assumed. (Most
shells set this variable automatically).
SEE ALSO csh(1)HISTORY
The script command appeared in 3.0BSD.
The -d, -p and -r options first appeared in NetBSD 2.0 and were ported to FreeBSD 9.2.
BUGS
The script utility places everything in the log file, including linefeeds and backspaces. This is not what the naive user expects.
It is not possible to specify a command without also naming the script file because of argument parsing compatibility issues.
When running in -k mode, echo cancelling is far from ideal. The slave terminal mode is checked for ECHO mode to check when to avoid manual
echo logging. This does not work when the terminal is in a raw mode where the program being run is doing manual echo.
If script reads zero bytes from the terminal, it switches to a mode when it only attempts to read once a second until there is data to read.
This prevents script from spinning on zero-byte reads, but might cause a 1-second delay in processing of user input.
BSD December 4, 2013 BSD