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Linux Command Line and Shell Scripting Techniques

You're reading from   Linux Command Line and Shell Scripting Techniques Master practical aspects of the Linux command line and then use it as a part of the shell scripting process

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800205192
Length 552 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Jasmin Redzepagic Jasmin Redzepagic
Author Profile Icon Jasmin Redzepagic
Jasmin Redzepagic
Vedran Dakic Vedran Dakic
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Vedran Dakic
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Basics of Shell and Text Terminal 2. Chapter 2: Using Text Editors FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Using Commands and Services for Process Management 4. Chapter 4: Using Shell to Configure and Troubleshoot a Network 5. Chapter 5: Using Commands for File, Directory, and Service Management 6. Chapter 6: Shell-Based Software Management 7. Chapter 7: Network-Based File Synchronization 8. Chapter 8: Using the Command Line to Find, Extract, and Manipulate Text Content 9. Chapter 9: An Introduction to Shell Scripting 10. Chapter 10: Using Loops 11. Chapter 11: Working with Variables 12. Chapter 12: Using Arguments and Functions 13. Chapter 13: Using Arrays 14. Chapter 14: Interacting with Shell Scripts 15. Chapter 15: Troubleshooting Shell Scripts 16. Chapter 16: Shell Script Examples for Server Management, Network Configuration, and Backups 17. Chapter 17: Advanced Shell Script Examples 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

The case loop

Up until now, we have dealt with basic commands that allow us to do things we need when trying to write a script, such as looping, branching, breaking, and continuing program flow. A case loop, the topic of this recipe, is not strictly necessary, since the logic behind it can be created using a multi-nested group of individual if commands. The reason we are even mentioning this is simply because case is something that we are going to use a lot in our scripts, and the alternative of using if statements is both difficult to write and read, and complicated to debug.

Getting ready

One could simply say that a case loop or case statement is just another way of writing multiple if then else tests. Case is not something that can be used in place of a normal if statement, but there is a common situation in which a case statement makes our lives a lot less complicated and our scripts much easier to debug and understand. But before we go into that, we need to understand a...

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