Date: Sun, 30 Sep 2001 16:19:04 -0500 From: jacks@sage-american.com To: Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org> Cc: questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Scripting question Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.20010930161904.03f12c60@mail.sage-american.com> In-Reply-To: <15287.35274.798595.307311@guru.mired.org> References: <72642935@toto.iv>
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Hello & thanks for the reply, Mike and sorry for not being very clear. The script is to run under "/bin/sh". The file name appears several times in a script file in the following suffix date form as part of a string and also as a separate string: BEFORE CHANGE "/usr/local/bin/myfile.01.09" and again as just "myfile.01.09" I want to roll the suffix over to a new year & month on the first day of each month, so the file would be changed to read: AFTER CHANGE "usr/local/bin/myfile.01.10" and again as just "myfile.01.10" So, the script will need to search/replace to change the suffix in the above two forms using the date variable as a suffix using `date +%y.%m` on the first day of each month via a cron job. Hope that is a little more clear.... At 04:08 PM 9.30.2001 -0500, Mike Meyer wrote: >jacks@sage-american.com types: >> I'm putting the finishing touches on a automated cron script & some of its >> scripting makes calls on other scripts that contain file names that need to >> be changed each month, but cannot necessarily use the "date" command to >> create the variable needed. > >Want to describe how they need to be changed? You can do quite a bit >with the date command and a little script magic. > >> What I need sounds pretty simple. I need to change a sub-script's string >> without having to manually open the script file. e.g. change content string >> "myfile.old" to "myfile.new"... for example: >> #subscript >> cp /usr/local/bin/myfile.old /somewhere/else >> to read >> cp /usr/local/bin/myfile.new /somewhere/else >> >> Thus, when the cron script calls this sub-script file (containing >> "myfile.xxx)", it will have the new file reference name "myfile.new" when >> it is supposed to be there. > >Well, passing the file name in as an argument is one easy way to do >it. If you can't change the argument handling of the subscript for >some reason, you can use an environment variable, like so: > >#script >TARGETFILE=myfile.new subscript > >#subscript >${TARGETFILE:=myfile.old} >cp /usr/local/bin/$TARGETFILE /somewhere/else > >In the extreme case, you cram one or more commands into a variable and >eval the variable: > >#script >VARIABLECOMMAND='cp /usr/local/bin/myfile.new /seomwhere/else' subscript > >#subscript >eval ${VARIABLECOMMAND:-'cp /usr/local/bin/myfile.old /somewhere/else'} > > > <mike > >-- >Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org> http://www.mired.org/home/mwm/ >Q: How do you make the gods laugh? A: Tell them your plans. > >To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org >with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message > > Best regards, Jack L. Stone, Server Admin Sage-American http://www.sage-american.com jacks@sage-american.com To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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