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Learn Linux Shell Scripting – Fundamentals of Bash 4.4

You're reading from   Learn Linux Shell Scripting – Fundamentals of Bash 4.4 A comprehensive guide to automating administrative tasks with the Bash shell

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788995597
Length 452 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sebastiaan Tammer Sebastiaan Tammer
Author Profile Icon Sebastiaan Tammer
Sebastiaan Tammer
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting Up Your Local Environment 3. Choosing the Right Tools 4. The Linux Filesystem 5. Understanding the Linux Permissions Scheme 6. File Manipulation 7. Hello World! 8. Variables and User Input 9. Error Checking and Handling 10. Regular Expressions 11. Conditional Testing and Scripting Loops 12. Using Pipes and Redirection in Scripts 13. Functions 14. Scheduling and Logging 15. Parsing Bash Script Arguments with getopts 16. Bash Parameter Substitution and Expansion 17. Tips and Tricks with Cheat Sheet 18. Assessments 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Archiving

Now that we have a grasp on common file operations in Linux, we'll move on to archiving. While it might sound fancy, archiving refers simply to creating archives. An example most of you will be familiar with is creating a ZIP file, which is an archive. ZIP is not Windows-specific; it is an archive file format with different implementations for Windows, Linux, macOS, and so on.

As you might expect, there are many archive file formats. On Linux, the most commonly used is the tarball, which is created by using the tar command (which is derived from the term tape archive). A tarball file, which ends in .tar, is uncompressed. In practice, tarballs will almost always be compressed with Gzip, which stands for GNU zip. This can be done either directly with the tar command (most common) or afterwards using the gzip command (less common, but can be used to compress files...

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