Skip to content

SimonBaeumer/shell-tricks

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

27 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Shell tricks

Switch to previous directory

Switch between the current and previous branch / directory.

git

$ git branch
* master
development

$ git checkout development
Switched to branch 'development'
$ git checkout - # Switch to previous
Switched to branch 'master'
$ git checkout -
Switched to branch 'development'

cd

$ pwd
/
$ cd /tmp
$ cd - # Switch to previous
/
$ cd -
/tmp

Get global ip

$ curl ifconfig.co # IPv4
50.110.14.21
$ curl -6 ifconfig.co # IPv6
2010:3f3f:113f:0:ea57:4497:7291:e422

Simple commands

Create a script which calls functions by its` first argument. This is very useful to create simple scripts which could be a wrapper for other commands.

#!/usr/bin/env bash

function do_this () { echo "call do_this function"; }

function do_sth() { echo "call do_sth function" }

case "$1" in
    do_this|do_sth) "$1" ;;
esac

Execute it:

$ ./simple-commands.sh do_this
call do_this function

Loop

Write simple one liner loops if you need to do some batch tasks.

$ for i in {1..10}; do echo "$i"; done

# List disk usage by directories
$ for file in */ .*/ ; do du -sh $file; done

Loop with specified increment each iteration

for i in {1..100..2}; do echo $i; done
1
3
5
7
...

Sequences of letters or numbers

Brace expansion is great for lots of things.

$ touch file{a..c}
$ ls
$ command ls
filea fileb filec
$ touch file-{1..15}
$ ls
file-1	file-10	file-11	file-12	file-13	file-14	file-15	file-2	file-3	file-4	file-5	file-6	file-7	file-8	file-9
$ ls file-{9..12}
file-10	file-11	file-12	file-9
$ printf "%s\n" file-{a..c}{1..3}
file-a1
file-a2
file-a3
file-b1
file-b2
file-b3
file-c1
file-c2
file-c3

(If you give printf more arguments than it expects, it automatically loops.)

Reuse arguments

$ ls /tmp
some_file.txt some_archive.tar.gz
$ cd !$
/tmp

Reuse commands

$ echo "reuse me"
reuse me
$ !!
echo "reuse me"
reuse me

Compare output of two commands

diff <(echo "1 2 4") <(echo "1 2 3 4")
1c1
< 1 2 4
---
 > 1 2 3 4

Fix last command

$ ehco foo bar bar
bash: ehco: command not found
$ ^ehco^echo   
foo bar baz 

Accept interactive commands

$ yes | ./interactive-command.sh
Are you sure (y/n)
Accepted
yes: standard output: Broken pipe

The error message is printed because yes gets killed by SIGPIPE signal. This happens if the pipe to ./interactive-command.sh gets closed but yes still wants to write into it.

Ignore error message:

$ yes 2>/dev/null | ./interactive-command.sh

Last exit code

$ ls /tmp
some_file.txt
$ echo $?
0

Easy backup

$ cp file.txt{,.bak}
$ ls -1
file.txt
file.txt.bak

Print to stderr

$ >&2 echo hello
hello

Debugging

Add -xv to your bash scripts, i.e.:

/usr/bin/env bash
set -xv

or /bin/bash -xv script.sh

Useful readline tricks

If you use the standard bash readline bindings.

  • C-a (aka CTRL+A) move cursor to beginning of line
  • C-e (aka CTRL+E) move cursor to end of line
  • M-. (aka ALT+.) insert last argument of previous command (like !$, but you can edit it)

Repeat command

Execute a command every two seconds and monitor its` output. This is especially useful for waiting until a deployment or infrastructure provisioning is completed, i.e. on aws.

watch -n2 echo hello `

Substrings

$ a="apple orange"

$ echo ${a#* }
orange
$ echo ${a#*p}
ple orange
$ echo ${a##*p}
le orange

$ echo ${a% *}
apple
$ echo ${a%p*}
ap
$ echo ${a%%p*}
a

The # for finding first occurence from the start and % for the first occurence from the end. * for matching any pattern. For greedy matching ## and %%.

More resources

  • BashFAQ - A full FAQ of useful stuff

About

Simple bash tricks which make your life easier.

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •  

Languages