So this takes a single $op, such as "-z", and a single $arg, which is supposed to be a literal value? Feed them into the test external to test them outside the shell:
test won't support the full extended zsh syntax, just the basic bourne. It won't evaluate any shell code or variables whatsoever and will never make your program quit from syntax error. If someone tries inserting multiple things into $op to be tricky, it just won't work.
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to Corona688 For This Post:
hi,
In bash,
$ bind -P | grep yank-last
yank-last-arg can be found on "\M-.", "\M-_".
this allows me to press ALT key and the period (.) to yank the last argument of
the previous command line into the current command line.
How can I get the same behavior in zsh ?
Thanks ... (0 Replies)
Hi all
i am forced to use tcsh at work but i want to use zsh, so i have added this to my .cshrc
if (! $?STARTTCSH) then
if ("$tty" != "" && -x /bin/zsh) exec /bin/zsh
exit
endif
but this now stopped me going back to tcsh if i need to, is there a way to do this, i would... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
some small script with eval turned me to crazy.
my OS is linux
Linux s10-1310 2.6.16.53-0.8.PTF.434477.3.TDC.0-smp #1 SMP Fri Aug 31 06:07:27 PDT 2007 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
below script works well
#!/bin/bash
eval ssh remotehost date
eval ssh remotehost ls
below... (1 Reply)
Inside a zsh function, I create a local array with local -a arrayname and a local associative array with local -A arrayname.
I also can create an array using set, like this:
set -A arrayname value1 value2 value3In this form, I can not explicitly declare that an array is associative or... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rovf
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
shunit2
SHUNIT2(1)SHUNIT2(1)NAME
shunit2 - A unit test framework for shell scripts
SYNOPSIS
shunit2 unitfile
DESCRIPTION
shUnit2 is a xUnit unit test framework for Bourne based shell scripts, and it is designed to work in a similar manner to JUnit, PyUnit,
etc.. If you have ever had the desire to write a unit test for a shell script, shUnit2 can do the job.
You can either run shunit2 directly from the commandline and specify the unit file or directly source the shunit2 executable.
If you directly execute shunit2 and don't specify a unitfile shunit2 assumes a empty testfile and will return without an error message.
EXAMPLE
Simple script to test if 1 equals 1
#! /bin/sh
testEquality()
{
assertEquals 1 1
}
# load shunit2
. shunit2
Execute shUnit2 unit tests directly from the commandline
shunit2 /path/to/unit/file
OPTIONS
shunit2 does not support any commandline options at all. You can either source shunit2 to execute your unit tests or directly run shunit2
as a commandline script.
SEE ALSO
For more information see http://code.google.com/p/shunit2/ or have a look at the installed documentation in /usr/share/doc/shunit2/
AUTHOR
shunit2 was written by Kate Ward <kate.ward@forestent.com>. This manpage was written by Ulrich Dangel <mru@spamt.net>.
2.1.6 03/25/2012 SHUNIT2(1)