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Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook

You're reading from   Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook Do amazing things with the shell and automate tedious tasks

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785881985
Length 552 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Clif Flynt Clif Flynt
Author Profile Icon Clif Flynt
Clif Flynt
Sarath Lakshman Sarath Lakshman
Author Profile Icon Sarath Lakshman
Sarath Lakshman
Shantanu Tushar Shantanu Tushar
Author Profile Icon Shantanu Tushar
Shantanu Tushar
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Shell Something Out FREE CHAPTER 2. Have a Good Command 3. File In, File Out 4. Texting and Driving 5. Tangled Web? Not At All! 6. Repository Management 7. The Backup Plan 8. The Old-Boy Network 9. Put On the Monitors Cap 10. Administration Calls 11. Tracing the Clues 12. Tuning a Linux System 13. Containers, Virtual Machines, and the Cloud

Function to prepend to environment variables

Environment variables are often used to store a list of paths of where to search for executables, libraries, and so on. Examples are $PATH and  $LD_LIBRARY_PATH, which will typically resemble this:

PATH=/usr/bin;/bin 
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib;/lib

This means that whenever the shell has to execute an application (binary or script), it will first look in /usr/bin and then search /bin.

When building and installing a program from source, we often need to add custom paths for the new executable and libraries. For example, we might install myapp in /opt/myapp, with binaries in a /opt/myapp/bin folder and libraries in /opt/myapp/lib.

How to do it...

This example shows how to add new paths to the beginning of an environment variable. The first example shows how to do this with what's been covered so far, the second demonstrates creating a function to simplify modifying the variable. Functions are covered later in this chapter.

export PATH=/opt/myapp/bin:$PATH 
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/myapp/lib;$LD_LIBRARY_PATH

The PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH variables should now look something like this:

PATH=/opt/myapp/bin:/usr/bin:/bin 
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/myapp/lib:/usr/lib;/lib

We can make adding a new path easier by defining a prepend function in the .bashrc file.

prepend() { [ -d "$2" ] && eval $1=\"$2':'\$$1\" && export $1; }

This can be used in the following way:

prepend PATH /opt/myapp/bin 
prepend LD_LIBRARY_PATH /opt/myapp/lib

How it works...

The prepend() function first confirms that the directory specified by the second parameter to the function exists. If it does, the eval expression sets the variable, with the name in the first parameter equal to the second parameter string, followed by : (the path separator), and then the original value for the variable.

If the variable is empty when we try to prepend, there will be a trailing : at the end. To fix this, modify the function to this:

prepend() { [ -d "$2" ] && eval $1=\"$2\$\{$1:+':'\$$1\}\" && export $1 ; }
In this form of the function, we introduce a shell parameter expansion of the form:
${parameter:+expression}
This expands to expression if parameter is set and is not null.
With this change, we take care to try to append : and the old value if, and only if, the old value existed when trying to prepend.
You have been reading a chapter from
Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook - Third Edition
Published in: May 2017
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781785881985
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