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#1 2008-10-09 18:48:25

Mashi
Member
Registered: 2007-02-19
Posts: 38

Post your handy self made command line utilities

I've just started playing with Linux again for the upteenth time, and I think this time it might stick. One of my favourite things is the powerful bash shell and the ease with which you can manipulate data using it.

It's really easy to make scripts to manipulate data using pipes and whatnot, here are a few of mine:

pyline
Take a statement as a parameter (enclosed in quotes), and execute it for each line on STDIN. Can use this for basic text manipulation. Could be extended to create additional context for processing. I know there we have awk and sed for this kind of thing but eh, I know python tongue

#!/usr/bin/python

import sys

i = 0
for line in sys.stdin:
    line = line[:-1]
    exec sys.argv[1]
    i += 1

eg print every third line:

cat txtfile | pyline "if i%3: print line"

try
Try a command until it executes successfully. Optionally takes the number of times to try until it is successful.

#!/bin/bash

COUNT=-1
if [[ $1 =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]; then
    COUNT=$1
    shift    
fi

STATUS=0

while [ "$COUNT" -ne 0 ]; do
    let COUNT-=1
    $*
    STATUS=$?
    if [ $STATUS -eq 0 ]; then
        exit $STATUS
    fi
done
exit $STATUS

eg to attempt to connect to a wireless network 5 times (sometimes dhcp times out):

try 5 netcfg mywireless

Post some of yours!

edit: bugfix big_smile

Last edited by Mashi (2008-10-10 01:11:19)

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#2 2008-10-09 19:41:37

rson451
Member
From: Annapolis, MD USA
Registered: 2007-04-15
Posts: 1,233
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Very nice idea.  If I find anything I've got that may be useful to anyone, I'll join in.

Mashi wrote:

eg to attempt to connect to a wireless network 5 times (sometimes dhcp times out):

Then you should increase your DHCP timeout in your profile wink

Last edited by rson451 (2008-10-09 19:43:22)


archlinux - please read this and this — twice — then ask questions.
--
http://rsontech.net | http://github.com/rson

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#3 2008-10-09 22:01:49

fukawi2
Ex-Administratorino
From: .vic.au
Registered: 2007-09-28
Posts: 6,229
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

In my crontab on my machines - checks all mounted partitions for free disk space

#!/bin/sh
### Monitor free disk space
# Send an email to $ADMIN, if the free percentage of space is >= $ALERT

#
# Static Config Variables
#
ADMIN="<<<YOUR@EMAIL.COM>>>"       # email to recieve alerts
ALERT=80                        # free space percentage to trigger an alert

#
# Static Binary Paths
#
DF='/bin/df'
GREP='/bin/grep'
AWK='/bin/awk'
CUT='/bin/cut'
MAIL='/usr/bin/mail'
HOSTNAME='/bin/hostname'
DATE='/bin/date'

#
# Static System Variables
#
THIS_HOST=`${HOSTNAME}`

#
# Check CLI Options
#
VERBOSE=false
for ARG in "$@" ; do
        case $ARG in
        "-v")
                VERBOSE=true
                ;;
        esac
done

[ $VERBOSE = true ] && echo "Checking free disk space on ${THIS_HOST}"
[ $VERBOSE = true ] && echo "Threshold for warning is ${ALERT}%"
[ $VERBOSE = true ] && echo "------------------------------------------------------------------"

# Dynamic Variables
DATE_STR=`${DATE} "+%d-%B-%y @ %H%Mhrs"`

# Call df to find the used percentages. Grep for only local disks (not remote mounts like nfs or smb)
# Pipe the output to awk to get the needed columns, then start a while loop to process each line.
$DF -HPl | $GREP -E "^/dev/" | $AWK '{ print $5 " " $6 " " $1 }' | while read OUTPUT ; do
    USED_PCENT=$(echo ${OUTPUT} | $AWK '{ print $1}' | $CUT -d'%' -f1  )    # Used space as a percentage
    PARTITION=$(echo ${OUTPUT} | $AWK '{ print $2 }' )                      # Mount Point (eg, /home)
    DEVICE=$(echo ${OUTPUT} | $AWK '{ print $3 }' )                         # Device (eg, /dev/sda1 or LABEL or UUID)
    if [ $VERBOSE = true ] ; then
        echo -e "Checking device ${DEVICE} which is mounted to ${PARTITION} \t${USED_PCENT}% used"
    fi
    if [ ${USED_PCENT} -ge $ALERT ]; then
        if [ $VERBOSE = true ] ; then
            echo "ALERT: ${PARTITION} (${DEVICE}) is ${USED_PCENT}% full on ${THIS_HOST} (${DATE_STR})"
        else
            echo "ALERT: ${PARTITION} (${DEVICE}) is ${USED_PCENT}% full on ${THIS_HOST} (${DATE_STR})" |
            $MAIL -s "SERVER DISK SPACE LOW" $ADMIN
        fi
    fi
done

exit 0

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#4 2008-10-09 22:10:57

Boris Bolgradov
Member
From: Bulgaria
Registered: 2008-07-27
Posts: 185

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

pyftp - Very, very simple FTP client. smile It helps me to upload files faster to my FTP server.

#!/usr/bin/env python

import ftplib
import os
import sys

if len(sys.argv) < 2:
    print "Usage: %s file [file2] [file3] ..." % os.path.split(sys.argv[0])[1]
    sys.exit()

# Clear the screen?
#os.system('clear')
print "Files to upload:"
print sys.argv[1:], "\n"
ftp = ftplib.FTP('myHost')
login  = "myLogin"
passwd = "myPassword"

ftp.login(login, passwd)
ftp.dir()
# Move to the desired upload directory.
dir = raw_input("\nType the directory name (leave empty to use the current dir): ")
if dir:
    ftp.cwd(dir)

print "\nCurrently in:", ftp.pwd()

for file in sys.argv[1:]: 
    name = os.path.split(file)[1]
    print "Uploading \"%s\" ..." % name,
    f = open(file, "rb")
    ftp.storbinary('STOR ' + name, f)
    f.close()
    print "OK"

print "Quitting..."
ftp.quit()

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#5 2008-10-10 02:18:22

Daenyth
Forum Fellow
From: Boston, MA
Registered: 2008-02-24
Posts: 1,244

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Well for one, I wrote pkgfile, which I think many people use now big_smile

Hmm... pyline. Boo to that!

#!/usr/bin/perl
use warnings;
use strict;

#while (my $line = <STDIN>) { # Cleaner
while (<>) # Easier, uses $_ instead of $line
    exec "$ARGV[0]";
}
__END__
foo | plline 'print if $. % 3'

Or simply

#!/usr/bin/perl -n
exec "$ARGV[0]"

Here we go.. I found a script I wrote to generate some very basic MPD stats

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;



open( MPC, "-|", "mpc playlist --format '%time% %artist%'" )
    or die "Unable to open mpc: $!\n";

my %stats;

while (<MPC>) {
        chomp;
        my ($min, $sec, $artist) = /^ \d+\) (\d+):(\d+) (.*)/ or next;

        $stats{$artist}->{time} += $min * 60 + $sec; # Time is in seconds
        $stats{$artist}->{number}++;
} 

foreach my $artist (sort {$stats{$b}->{time} <=> $stats{$a}->{time}} keys %stats) {
        my @parts = gmtime($stats{$artist}->{time});
        printf ("%0.2d:%0.2d:%0.2d ", $parts[7] * 24 + $parts[2], @parts[1,0]); # HH:MM:SS
        printf "%0.3d %s\n", $stats{$artist}->{number}, $artist;
}

Last edited by Daenyth (2008-10-10 02:33:30)

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#6 2008-10-10 02:43:00

dmz
Member
From: Sweden
Registered: 2008-08-27
Posts: 881
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Beware! Here's my amazingly advanced spam-mpd-now-playing script:

#/bin/bash
mpc | head -1 | xclip

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#7 2008-10-10 02:47:22

Daenyth
Forum Fellow
From: Boston, MA
Registered: 2008-02-24
Posts: 1,244

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

#!/bin/bash
mpc --format "http://my-server.tld/Musicroot/%file%" | head -n 1 | sed 's/ /%20/g'

Previously, I used the above, but rather than adding more seds to make it "safe", I extended it a bit:

#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use URI::Escape;
my $filename = `mpc --format %file% | head -n 1`;
chomp $filename;
my $baseurl = 'http://my-server.tld/Musicroot/';
print $baseurl, uri_escape($filename), "\n";

EDIT: Wow I totally meant to make this as a new post, overwrote all my old one that I thought I was quoting... lame

#!/bin/bash
mpc --format "np: [[%artist%] - [%title%] - #[[%album%] ##[%track%]#]]|[%file%]" | head -n 1

I put that in my PATH and then I can use it for irssi, pidgin, etc, through /exec.

Last edited by Daenyth (2008-11-19 03:03:33)

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#8 2008-10-10 04:09:13

Allan
Pacman
From: Brisbane, AU
Registered: 2007-06-09
Posts: 11,472
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Kill gnome-screensaver before starting mplayer

#!/usr/bin/env python 

import os
import os.path
import sys

os.system("killall gnome-screensaver")

command = '/usr/bin/mplayer %s "%s"' % (' '.join(sys.argv[1:-1]), os.path.normpath(sys.argv[-1]))
os.system(command)

os.system("gnome-screensaver")

I still do not understand the "command =" line but it works big_smile

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#9 2008-10-10 05:03:01

divineant
Member
From: Denmark
Registered: 2007-06-26
Posts: 11

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

I have a small box that i use for ices live stream encoding on our local studentradio, whenever broadcasting from outside the studio.
It has no graphics card, so in order to figure out which ip addres it gets from dhcp i have this script running when it recieves a new ip address.

It uses a bunch of wav files I found somewhere on the net with some lady pronouncing numbers.

#!/bin/bash
data="/opt/ipread/data"
ip=$1
let size=`expr length $ip`-1
index=0
for i in `seq 0 $size`; do
    if [ ${ip:$i:1} = '.' ]; then
        array[$index]="$data/$buffer.wav"
        let index=$index+1
        array[$index]="$data/point.wav"
        let index=$index+1
        unset buffer
    else
        buffer=$buffer${ip:$i:1}
    fi
done
array[$index]="$data/$buffer.wav"
sox ${array[@]} /tmp/output.wav && play /tmp/output.wav 2> /dev/null && rm /tmp/output.wav

Last edited by divineant (2008-10-10 05:08:40)

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#10 2008-10-10 05:56:14

Mashi
Member
Registered: 2007-02-19
Posts: 38

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

divineant wrote:

It has no graphics card, so in order to figure out which ip addres it gets from dhcp i have this script running when it recieves a new ip address.

It uses a bunch of wav files I found somewhere on the net with some lady pronouncing numbers.

Wow that looks really fun! Actually what came to mind was number stations, I think it would be really freaky to have your computer spell out it's IP with numbers from a numbers station (which tend to sound scary).

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#11 2008-10-10 06:14:35

Mashi
Member
Registered: 2007-02-19
Posts: 38

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Here's another one:

ptimer {command}
times a process

#!/bin/bash
STARTTIME=$(date "+%s.%N")
$*
PROCESSTIME=$(echo "$(date +%s.%N)-$STARTTIME" | bc)
echo "Process took $PROCESSTIME seconds."

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#12 2008-10-10 06:18:54

stojic
Member
From: Zagreb, Croatia
Registered: 2008-02-24
Posts: 51

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

A small script for setting CPU scaling governor. It requires /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_governor to be writable by whoever is going to use this script. I set it writable in rc.local.

#!/bin/bash
if test "$1" = "get"
then
        cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_governor
elif test "$1" = "set"
then
        if test "$2" = "powersave" || test "$2" = "conservative" || \
                test "$2" = "ondemand" || test "$2" = "performance"
        then
                echo -n "$2" > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_governor
        else
                echo "Unknown governor."
        fi
else
        echo "Usage:"
        echo "  $(basename $0) get"
        echo "  $(basename $0) set powersave|conservative|ondemand|performance"
fi

I call it "scaling", in that case usage is for instance:

$ scaling get
ondemand
$ scaling set powersave

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#13 2008-10-10 08:16:57

ArchArael
Member
Registered: 2005-06-14
Posts: 504

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

tmail.sh --> script for sending mails from terminal with thunderbird. Sort of old school mail. wink

#!/bin/bash
USAGE="tmail usage: tmail -t TO -c CC  -s SUBJECT -b BODY -a ATTACHMENT"

while getopts "t:c:s:b:a:" options; do
  case $options in
    t ) TO=$OPTARG;;
    c ) CC=$OPTARG;;
    s ) SUBJECT=$OPTARG;;
    b ) BODY=$OPTARG;; 
    a ) ATTACHMENT=$OPTARG;; 
    \? ) echo $USAGE
         exit 1;;
    * ) echo $USAGE
         exit 1;;
  esac
done

thunderbird -compose to=\'$TO\',cc=\'$CC\',subject=\'$SUBJECT\',body=\'$BODY\',attachment=\'file:///$ATTACHMENT\'

say.sh --> like osx "say" command

#!/bin/bash

string_to_say=""

for i in $@;
do
        string_to_say="$string_to_say $i"
done

echo $string_to_say | festival --tts

lamp.sh --> starts lamp big_smile. I'm a kind of web developer.

#!/bin/bash
#
#This script manages mysql and httpd deamons
if [ $1 = 'start' -o $1 = 'stop' -o $1 = 'restart' ]
then
        sudo /etc/rc.d/httpd $1
        sudo /etc/rc.d/mysqld $1 
else
        echo
        echo Please specify action: start, stop or restart
        echo
        exit 1
fi

I have a bunch of other scripts I use to automate some tasks but they are not so interesting because they are written to do some specific tasks. They are not general purpose scripts.

EDIT: misspelled word...I like English but it's not my mother tongue...sorry for mistakes.

Last edited by ArchArael (2008-10-13 08:08:21)

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#14 2008-10-10 14:30:03

gnud
Member
Registered: 2005-11-27
Posts: 182

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Ok, this monster is called 'wine-guard', and is used by some one-liner launcher scripts that launch d3d wine games. It often ( tongue ) restores correct gamma and resolution after the game exits (or crashes).

#!/bin/bash

#usage:
#    wine-guard [-m mode] [-d] program
#
#    options:
#        -m: Use xrandr to switch to the mode given, before invoking wine
#        -d: Turn on Wine debugging output
#


#settings
SCREEN="VGA-0"
#this is normally fine, but you can change it to a --mode cmd if you want
RESET_CMD="--preferred"
#the default resolution to run windows games in.
#If you normally dont want to change the resolution, leave this setting blank.
#A per-game resolution can be specified on the command line, using the -m option
MODE=
DEBUG="-all" #no debug output pr default
################
################
################

while getopts m:d o
do
    case "${o}" in
        m) MODE=${OPTARG} ;;
        d) DEBUG="all" ;;
        [?]) echo "Unknown option." ;;
    esac
done
shift $(($OPTIND-1))


# save gamma value
XGAMMA=$(xgamma 2>&1 | sed -e "s/.*Red \(.*\), Green \(.*\), Blue \(.*\)/\/usr\/bin\/xgamma -rgamma\1 -ggamma\2 -bgamma\3/")

#if specified, set resolution
if [ -n "${MODE}" ]
then
    echo "Setting mode $MODE"
    xrandr --output "${SCREEN}" --mode "${MODE}"
fi


#this function resets resolution and gamma
reset() {
    xrandr --output "${SCREEN}" "${RESET_CMD}"
    if [ -n "$XGAMMA" ]
    then
        exec "${XGAMMA}"
    fi
}

trap reset EXIT

WINEDEBUG="${DEBUG}" wine "$@"

I didn't use it for a while, but I think it should still work.

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#15 2008-10-10 15:10:53

Asgaroth
Member
From: Hesse, Germany
Registered: 2008-03-26
Posts: 58

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Mashi wrote:

Here's another one:

ptimer {command}
times a process

#!/bin/bash
STARTTIME=$(date "+%s.%N")
$*
PROCESSTIME=$(echo "$(date +%s.%N)-$STARTTIME" | bc)
echo "Process took $PROCESSTIME seconds."

You do realize, that there already is the 'time'-command which any shell that I know of provides, for example:

$ > time echo '2^223456' | bc > /dev/null
echo '2^223456'  0.00s user 0.00s system 0% cpu 0.001 total
bc > /dev/null  0.64s user 0.02s system 98% cpu 0.666 total

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#16 2008-10-10 18:55:40

gazj
Member
From: /home/gazj -> /uk/cambs
Registered: 2007-02-09
Posts: 681
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

My server and another I look after run this backup script via cron job

If you have a file called exclude in the root of your backup folder, it will exclude any files specified in the file.
I usually set cron to send me the log file later in the day using sendmail.

It is very basic, but I'm proud of it wink


syntax = backup /path/of/backup /path/of/log

#!/bin/bash
#backup script for $1
rm $2/backup*.txt
FN="$2/backup-`date +%d-%m-%y`.txt"
STIME=`date +%s`
export FN STIME
echo Setting backup options > $FN
mt -f /dev/st0 defcompression 1
mt -f /dev/st0 defdrvbuffer 1
mt -f /dev/st0 stoptions buffer-writes read-ahead async-writes scsi2logical can-bsr auto-lock
echo - >> $FN
echo Starting backup of $1 on `date` >> $FN
echo - >> $FN
tar cvpPWf /dev/st0 $1 -X $1/exclude >> $FN
ETIME=`date +%s`
export ETIME
BTIME=`expr $ETIME / 60 - $STIME / 60`
export BTIME
echo Backup of $1 complete and verified in $BTIME minuites>> $FN
#mt -f /dev/st0 offline

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#17 2008-10-11 17:27:14

divineant
Member
From: Denmark
Registered: 2007-06-26
Posts: 11

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Here's another one.
I needed to send some information from one server to another, and i couldn't use ssh so instead i sent it using HTTP GET to a php script.
That so easy if i had access to curl on the server, but that was not the case, instead I made this telnet script.

#!/bin/bash
if [ -z "$1" ]; then
    echo "Usage:"
    echo "$0 var1=value1 ... varN=valueN"
    exit
fi

host='hostname'
port='80'
reciever='/file/to/recieve/get/request.php'
retry=10

for i in ; do
    if [ -z "$params" ]; then
        params=$i;
    else
        params=$params'&'$i
    fi
done

cmd="GET $reciever?$params /HTTP/1.1\nHost: \n"
i=0
while [ "$output" != "statusUpdate OK" -a $i -ne $retry  ] ; do
    let i=+1
    output=`( echo open ${host} ${port} 
    /bin/perl -e 'sleep .1'
    echo ${cmd}
    /bin/perl -e 'sleep .1'
    echo -e "\n"
    /bin/perl -e 'sleep .1'
    echo exit) | telnet | grep statusUpdate` 2> /dev/null
    echo $i;
    sleep 1;
done

Last edited by divineant (2008-10-11 17:28:39)

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#18 2008-10-11 17:45:50

rine
Member
From: Germany
Registered: 2008-03-04
Posts: 217

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Here is my backup script. It's designed for daily use and saves the backups in a directory named after the date. It works with hardlinks, so there is a directory for every day, but not that much disk space is used.

#!/bin/bash
# Edit parameters here.
# Important: Don't forget the trailing slashes in SOURCES and TARGET
SOURCES="/etc/ /boot/ /home/rine/" 
TARGET="/media/e/archbackup/"
OPTIONS="--exclude-from=/home/rine/documents/scripts/exclude.list"

### Don't edit below ###

LASTBACKUP=`ls -d $TARGET* | sort -r | head -1`  
TODAY=`date +%y%m%d`

if [ "$LASTBACKUP" == "$TARGET$TODAY" ]; then
    echo "Backup for today is done, if there were errors, delete $TARGET$TODAY first"
    exit 1
fi

for src in $SOURCES
do
    if [ "$LASTBACKUP" ]; then
        LD="--link-dest=$LASTBACKUP$src"
    fi

    mkdir -p $TARGET$TODAY$src
    rsync -auv $OPTIONS $LD $src $TARGET$TODAY$src
done

When you want to exclude files, it's important to start them with a slash in exclude.list. If, for example, you want to exclude your "movies" directory, you type /movies. Otherwise, if you happened to have a file called movies somewhere else, it also would get excluded. Example exclude.list:

/.adobe
/.alsaplayer
/.cache
/.dbus
/.fontconfig
/.gstreamer-0.10
/.java
/.local
/.macromedia
/.mcop
/.mozilla
/.openoffice.org2
/.qt
/.quodlibet
/.session
/.texlive
/.texmf-var
/.thumbnails
/.xine
/serien
/tmp

Comments for improvement welcome.

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#19 2008-10-11 17:50:32

Asgaroth
Member
From: Hesse, Germany
Registered: 2008-03-26
Posts: 58

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

This one deletes all files with the some extensions in a directory and its subdirectories:

#!/usr/bin/env python
import os
import sys
types = [".rar",".zip",".ace"]
def recurseDirectory(dirname):
    list = os.listdir(dirname);
    for item in list:
        fn = dirname+os.path.sep+item
        if os.path.isfile(fn):
            #if item[len(item)-4:] in types:
            found = False
            for ext in types:
                if item[len(item)-len(ext):] == ext:
                    found = True
                    break
                
            if found:
                try:
                    #os.remove(fn)
                    os.system("rm -i \""+fn+"\"")
                except OSError, e:
                    print "Error: "+str(e)
                #print "Deleting "+fn
        elif os.path.isdir(fn):
            recurseDirectory(fn)
    return
if len(sys.argv) != 2:
    print "USAGE: python "+sys.argv[0]+" directory"
    sys.exit(1)
recurseDirectory(sys.argv[1])

(Would probably be shorter as a shell-script, though)

Last edited by Asgaroth (2008-10-11 19:57:06)

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#20 2008-10-11 19:55:54

rine
Member
From: Germany
Registered: 2008-03-04
Posts: 217

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Asgaroth wrote:

This one deletes all files with the some extensions in a directory and its subdirectories:
...
(Would probably be shorter as a shell-script, but I feel more comfortable with python)

find /path/in/which/to/delete -name '*.ext' -exec rm {} +

should do the trick

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#21 2008-10-11 20:25:02

Asgaroth
Member
From: Hesse, Germany
Registered: 2008-03-26
Posts: 58

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

I definitely should read the find manpage, until now I only used to _find_ files. big_smile

Last edited by Asgaroth (2008-10-11 20:25:26)

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#22 2008-10-12 08:55:05

ezzetabi
Member
Registered: 2006-08-27
Posts: 947

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

I usually use (but maybe it is the same)

find /path/in/which/to/delete -name '*.ext' -exec rm -f "{}" \+

and if I do not need the `force' option of rm I use

find /path/in/which/to/delete -name '*.ext' -delete

Edit:
About the topic
http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=17934

Last edited by ezzetabi (2008-10-12 09:02:45)

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#23 2008-10-12 13:35:17

catwell
Member
From: Bretagne, France
Registered: 2008-02-20
Posts: 207
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Change the bitrate of mp3 files. This one can be adapted to do almost everything on multiple files...

#! /usr/bin/env perl
use File::Find;

sub wanted {
if (/.mp3$/)
 {
  ($n) = /(.*).mp3$/ ;
  system('lame',"-b 64",$_,"$n"."_64.mp3","-S")
 }
}

find(\&wanted, ".");

Massive replacement of a string in text files.

#! /usr/bin/env python
# cw_int_replace by catwell
# USAGE : cw_int_replace.py old_string new_string file1 [file2...]
# advice : for i in `find`; do cw_int_replace.py old_string new_string $i; done
# S : skip ; a : auto ; m : manual

from sys import argv

m_old = argv[1]
m_new = argv[2]
m_red = "\033[31m"+m_old+"\033[0m"

for cible in argv[3:]:
 print "\033[1m== "+cible+" ==\033[0m"
 lignes = open(cible).readlines()
 F = open(cible,'w+')
 for L in lignes:
  S = L.split(m_old)
  while len(S) != 1:
   print S[0]+m_red+m_old.join(S[1:]).strip("\n"),
   r = raw_input('[S/a/m] ')
   if r in ('s',''):
    S[0] = S[0]+m_old+S[1]
    del S[1]
   elif r == 'a':
    S[0] = S[0]+m_new+S[1]
    del S[1]
   elif r == 'm':
    S[0] = S[0]+raw_input('Replace with? ')+S[1]
    del S[1]

A Perl one, a Python one, everybody's happy.

Last edited by catwell (2008-10-12 13:36:31)

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#24 2008-10-12 14:30:33

Barrucadu
Member
From: York, England
Registered: 2008-03-30
Posts: 1,158
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

I'm considering rewriting some of my utilities in Common Lisp as a learning exercise...

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#25 2008-10-13 08:11:27

ArchArael
Member
Registered: 2005-06-14
Posts: 504

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Barrucadu wrote:

I'm considering rewriting some of my utilities in Common Lisp as a learning exercise...

Sorry for the OT, just an info.

About Common Lisp....are you also Emacs or Stumpwm user? I'm really fascinated about the idea of changing my working environment in real time.

I would like to learn more about it. smile

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