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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

Introduction

In the beginning, computers read a program from cards or tape and generated a single report. There was no operating system, no graphics monitors, not even an interactive prompt.

By the 1960s, computers supported interactive terminals (frequently a teletype or glorified typewriter) to invoke commands.

When Bell Labs created an interactive user interface for the brand new Unix operating system, it had a unique feature. It could read and evaluate the same commands from a text file (called a shell script), as it accepted being typed on a terminal.

This facility was a huge leap forward in productivity. Instead of typing several commands to perform a set of operations, programmers could save the commands in a file and run them later with just a few keystrokes. Not only does a shell script save time, it also documents what you did.

Initially, Unix supported one interactive shell, written by Stephen Bourne, and named it the Bourne Shell (sh).

In 1989, Brian Fox of the GNU Project took features from many user interfaces and created a new shell—the Bourne Again Shell (bash). The bash shell understands all of the Bourne shell constructs and adds features from csh, ksh, and others.

As Linux has become the most popular implementation of Unix like operating systems, the bash shell has become the de-facto standard shell on Unix and Linux.

This book focuses on Linux and bash. Even so, most of these scripts will run on both Linux and Unix, using bash, sh, ash, dash, ksh, or other sh style shells.

This chapter will give readers an insight into the shell environment and demonstrate some basic shell features.

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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