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Yay, another shell! Infinite diversity in infinite combinations. Surak is pleased.
Remember 90's TVs with Picture-in-Picture?
I altered pulse.out, to get $app by clicking a window and $out from a xenity radiolist. The one thing I could never get to work with PIP was a split audio output for the subscreen. Now that is easy.
Last edited by quequotion (2017-03-10 11:37:35)
makepkg-optimize · indicator-powersave · pantheon-{3d,lite} · {pantheon,higan}-qq
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Awebb wrote:Yay, another shell! Infinite diversity in infinite combinations. Surak is pleased.
Remember 90's TVs with Picture-in-Picture?
I used to complain about the lack of even more splits, because I wanted to watch all the shows.
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I thought we were supposed to have that two years ago.
"UNIX is simple and coherent" - Dennis Ritchie; "GNU's Not Unix" - Richard Stallman
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I thought we were supposed to have that two years ago.
I wanted to watch all the shows.
Last edited by quequotion (2017-03-12 01:58:33)
makepkg-optimize · indicator-powersave · pantheon-{3d,lite} · {pantheon,higan}-qq
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Awebb: Well, as of 1989, yes (-:
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I do have a Github Repository with all the scripts I wrote which can be used by others.
Link
From: Ankit R Gadiya <https://ankitrgadiya.in>
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I would like to share some handy shell functions that I use daily. I find these very useful and I think many more would enjoy these!
The always-up-to-date versions can be found in my dotfiles@Github!
Git overlay which adds a command to cd to the root of a git repo.
Example:
$ cd /git-repo
$ cd some/sub/dir
$ git root
$ # back in /git-repo now
git() {
local gitbin=/usr/bin/git
if [ "$1" = root ]; then
local root="$($gitbin rev-parse --show-cdup)"
[ -n "$root" ] && cd "$root"
else
$gitbin $*
fi
}
Wrapper around the classic 'vi with ack' with search highlighting, i.e. open files matching a given search term by ack in vim.
Example: $ viack -i search_term
Last argument is the search string. Preceding arguments are for ack.
viack() {
local search
# Get the last argument. Source: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1853946/getting-the-last-argument-passed-to-a-shell-script
for search; do true; done
vim -p $(ack -l $@) -c 1 +/$search # Go to first line then search downwards.
}
# Wrapper around the classic 'vi with grep'.
vigrep() {
local search
for search; do true; done
vim -p $(grep -Rl $@) -c 1 +/$search
}
Source file if it exists. Usefull for shell startup scripts used across many systems.
Example: sourceifexist $HOME/src/someproj/init.sh
sourceifexists() {
[ -f "$1" ] && [ -r "$1" ] && . "$1"
}
cd into the directory containing the program found in PATH.
Example: $ cdw some_script.sh
cdw() {
local prog="$1"
type "$prog" &>/dev/null
if [ "$?" -ne 0 ]; then
echo "\"${prog}\" not found in \$PATH." >&2
else
dir=$(dirname $(which "$prog"))
echo "$dir"
cd "$dir"
fi
}
The function names says it all...
epoch2iso8601() {
local epoch="$1"
date -d @$epoch +%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z
}
iso86012epoch() {
local iso="$1"
date -d "$iso" +%s
}
pz
Last edited by erikw (2017-03-15 19:20:36)
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type "$prog" &>/dev/null ??
-edit
got it.
Last edited by kokoko3k (2017-03-15 21:38:27)
Help me to improve ssh-rdp !
Retroarch User? Try my koko-aio shader !
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It checks the value of $? on the following line, so it's a complicated way to do if type foo; then bar; fi. Since we seem to be interested in PATH, type -P is also more suited (and >/dev/null 2>&1 is less ambiguous, see http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/scripting/obsolete).
Other things to nitpick at: [ (use [[), $* (use "$@"), do true (???), echo (use printf), assorted quoting errors
Last edited by Alad (2017-03-15 21:43:12)
Mods are just community members who have the occasionally necessary option to move threads around and edit posts. -- Trilby
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If [[ -r "$1" ]] is true [[ -f "$1" ]] is implied, no need to test both.
Arch is home!
https://github.com/Docbroke
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None of those conditionals do much anyhow. Just do "source $1" (or ". $1") and redirect stderr if you want and it will have the same result. If $1 is not set, `source` will fail and return an error. If $1 is set but not a file, `source` will fail and return an error. If $1 is a file but not readable, `source` will fail and return an error. `source` will only successfully source $1 if $1 is set, is a file, and is readable - so the checks are all redundant.
"UNIX is simple and coherent" - Dennis Ritchie; "GNU's Not Unix" - Richard Stallman
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If [[ -r "$1" ]] is true [[ -f "$1" ]] is implied, no need to test both.
No, it's not.
$ [[ -r /dev/fd/1 ]]
$ echo $?
0
$ [[ -f /dev/fd/1 ]]
$ echo $?
1
But I agree to just let Bash deal with the errors.
Mods are just community members who have the occasionally necessary option to move threads around and edit posts. -- Trilby
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If anyone can use this:
Needs community/linuxtv-dvb-apps
https://www.linuxtv.org/docs/libdvbv5/index.html
Simple tv-tuner and recorder using dvbv5-zap
Use dvbv5-scan to make a channels.conf, or make one in this format
[49.1]
VCHANNEL = 49.1
SERVICE_ID = 3
VIDEO_PID = 49
AUDIO_PID = 52
FREQUENCY = 213028615
MODULATION = VSB/8
DELIVERY_SYSTEM = ATSC
[49.2]
VCHANNEL = 49.2
SERVICE_ID = 4
VIDEO_PID = 65
AUDIO_PID = 68
FREQUENCY = 213028615
MODULATION = VSB/8
DELIVERY_SYSTEM = ATSC
[49.3]
VCHANNEL = 49.3
SERVICE_ID = 5
VIDEO_PID = 81
AUDIO_PID = 84
FREQUENCY = 213028615
MODULATION = VSB/8
DELIVERY_SYSTEM = ATSC
[49.4]
VCHANNEL = 49.4
SERVICE_ID = 6
VIDEO_PID = 97
AUDIO_PID = 100
FREQUENCY = 213028615
MODULATION = VSB/8
DELIVERY_SYSTEM = ATSC
[49.5]
VCHANNEL = 49.5
SERVICE_ID = 7
VIDEO_PID = 113
AUDIO_PID = 116
FREQUENCY = 213028615
MODULATION = VSB/8
DELIVERY_SYSTEM = ATSC
I put one ATSC channel with 5 streams as the example. All channels follow the
same format as above. You don't even need to scan for channels if you don't want.
You need to find the center frequency for each channel that you put in your
.conf file and follow the above example for the other numbers.
The channel identifier can be anything [49.1] [WABC] [CH1], it will list in
the script that way.
#! /usr/bin/env bash
# dvb:// tuner-player. Requires dvbv5-zap and a dvb_channel.conf
# made with dvbv5-scan. One of mplayer, mpv or ffplay.
#Path to channels.conf
conf="$HOME/.mplayer/dvb_channel.conf"
#Get channels ID's from conf
channels=$(grep -oP '\[\K[^\]]+' < "$conf")
PS3="
Enter channel number: "
message="
Select channel then adjust antenna for best signal quality while
watching signal meter. Press (enter) to play that channel once
good signal is acquired.
During play press (q) to quit station, (f) for fullscreen.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Select a channel. Ctrl C to exit.
"
while :; do
clear
echo "$message"
select opt in $channels; do
dvbv5-zap -ss -r -c "$conf" "$opt" &
read
clear
echo "Wait I'm tuning "$opt""
mplayer -vf scale=720:480 -cache 4096 \
-cache-min 80 /dev/dvb/adapter0/dvr0 &> /dev/null
#mpv --vf=scale=720:480 /dev/dvb/adapter0/dvr0 &> /dev/null
#ffplay /dev/dvb/adapter0/dvr0 &> /dev/null
pkill dvbv5-zap
break
done
done
#! /usr/bin/env bash
# dvb:// tuner-recorder. Requires dvbv5-zap and a dvb_channel.conf
# made with dvbv5-scan
#Path for output file
cd $HOME/tel
#Path to channels.conf
conf="$HOME/.mplayer/dvb_channel.conf"
#Get channels ID's from conf
channels=$(grep -oP '\[\K[^\]]+' < "$conf")
PS3="
Enter channel number: "
message="$(tput setaf 3)
Select channel then adjust antenna for best signal quality
while watching signal output. Press (enter) to record that
channel once good signal is acquired. (enter) again to stop.
-----------------------------------------------------
Select a channel. Ctrl C to exit.$(tput sgr0)
"
while :; do
clear
echo "$message"
select opt in $channels; do
#No Overwrite
num=1
until [ ! -e tv$num.ts ]; do
num=$(( $num + 1 ))
done
#Output to tv"$num".ts
dvbv5-zap -ss -r -c "$conf" "$opt" -o tv"$num".ts &
read
pkill dvbv5-zap
break
done
done
Edit: Formatting on indents
Last edited by teckk (2017-03-17 19:58:39)
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@Alad: Thanks for feedback. type -P seems to be a bash feature though (I use zsh).
Last edited by erikw (2017-03-19 12:36:35)
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Then use command -V, which works in any POSIX shell.
Mods are just community members who have the occasionally necessary option to move threads around and edit posts. -- Trilby
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Added some more logic to my previous script for running wpa_supplicant in loop. Now it automatically starts mobile_broadband if my wifi-network is not available. Note: there is no use of sudo, now.
crontab (for root user)
## start and keep connected to wifi at boot ##
@reboot /home/sharad/bin/netstart
* * * * * [[ ! -f /tmp/stopwifi ]] && /home/sharad/bin/netstart
netstart script
#!/bin/bash
connectbsnl() {
touch /tmp/stopwifi ## stop cronjob
killall wpa_supplicant ## avoid polluting conky output
pon bsnl
}
restartwifi() {
if [[ "$(pidof wpa_supplicant)" ]]; then
wpa_cli reassociate
else
wpa_supplicant -B -i wlan0 -c /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
fi
[[ ! "$(pidof dhcpcd)" ]] && dhcpcd -4 wlan0
sleep 5
# if wifi-network (hotspot) is not available start mobile_broadband
# comment-out below line when using other wifi-networks
wpa_cli scan && wpa_cli scan_results | grep hotspot >/dev/null || connectbsnl
}
[[ -f /tmp/stopwifi ]] && rm /tmp/stopwifi ## starts cronjob manually, avoids use of sudo
[[ "$(pidof pppd)" ]] && poff -a ## kill mobile_broadband if running (when started manually)
ping -c 1 8.8.8.8 || restartwifi
Arch is home!
https://github.com/Docbroke
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This is a small oneliner to check if you need to reboot after a kernel upgrade.
alias kernel-check="[[ -f \"/proc/modules\" && ! -d \"/usr/lib/modules/$(uname -r)\" ]] && printf '==> WARNING: %s\n -> %s\n' 'Running kernel has been updated or removed.' 'Reboot in the new kernel is required.'"
I run the same as a pacman hook:
/etc/pacman.d/hooks/99-z-kernel-reboot.hook
[Trigger]
Operation = Install
Operation = Upgrade
Operation = Remove
Type = File
Target = usr/lib/modules/*
[Action]
Description = Check for upgrade of running kernel
When = PostTransaction
Exec = /bin/bash -c "[[ -f \"/proc/modules\" && ! -d \"/usr/lib/modules/$(uname -r)\" ]] && printf '==> WARNING: %s\n -> %s\n' 'Running kernel has been updated or removed.' 'Reboot in the new kernel is required.'"
| alias CUTF='LANG=en_XX.UTF-8@POSIX ' |
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[[ ! "$(pidof dhcpcd)" ]] && ...
That is strange-looking logic. I thik it would be better as:
pidof dhcpcd > /dev/null || ...
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Docbroke wrote:[[ ! "$(pidof dhcpcd)" ]] && ...
That is strange-looking logic. I thik it would be better as:
pidof dhcpcd > /dev/null || ...
I'm curious which performs better. How would one go about testing if either is faster?
makepkg-optimize · indicator-powersave · pantheon-{3d,lite} · {pantheon,higan}-qq
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time might show the difference. To get enough significant digits, you might need to iterate a few times .
Nothing is too wonderful to be true, if it be consistent with the laws of nature -- Michael Faraday
Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine. -- Alan Turing
---
How to Ask Questions the Smart Way
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Breb's version is *definitely* faster. However it is likely so trivial of a difference as to not show up without many iterations. But there's no way your version could be faster. The simplification of the boolean logic might not make much difference (!A && B -> A || B) but Brebs version is cleaner in that regard. More importantly, though, it doesn't spawn an additional subshell.
"UNIX is simple and coherent" - Dennis Ritchie; "GNU's Not Unix" - Richard Stallman
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I love using the command line and I find Midnight Commander to be an indispensable tool. Having migrated from Ubuntu / Mint, I was use to mc dropping me to the current active directory on exit. After switching to Arch, I lost that functionality. For whatever reason /usr/lib/mc/mc-wrapper.sh didn't work as it was suppose to. After playing around I finally regained a feature that I find quite valuable, I created an alias that performed the same function as mc-wrapper.sh.
alias mc='mc -P "/tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$" ~ "$PWD"; DIR=$(cat /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$); cd "$DIR"; \rm -f /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$; unset DIR'
mc -P "/tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$" ~ "$PWD" # This starts mc while creating a temporary file to hold the last working directory on exit. the "~ "$PWD"" loads the users home directory in the left pane and current working directory (Where mc was started) in the right pane. If you want mc to start with both panes pointing at the current working directory, remove the ~ "$PWD".
DIR=$(cat /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$) # This copies the contents for the temporary file /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$ in to an environment variable DIR.
cd "$DIR" # Changes to the directory pointed to by $DIR, which should be the current working directory when exiting mc.
\rm -f /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$ # This removes the temporary file by calling /usr/bin/rm, bypassing any alias definitions you may have called rm. Remove the \ if you have an alias called rm that you want used instead of calling the binary directly.
unset DIR # This removes the variable DIR from the environment.
I hope this helps someone.
Not being familiar with the community yet, I overly explained this simple alias for those that may not understand. If I went overboard, I apologize in advance.
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There's really no need for the DIR variable. First simplification:
alias mc='mc -P "/tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$" ~ "$PWD"; cd $(cat /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$); \rm -f /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$'
You can also get rid of the cat and just have the shell read the contents of the file:
alias mc='mc -P "/tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$" ~ "$PWD"; cd $(</tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$); \rm -f /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$'
EDIT: I'd also second the below comment. This does seem like an odd workaground. My coments were just to streamline what was there - I don't use mc.
"UNIX is simple and coherent" - Dennis Ritchie; "GNU's Not Unix" - Richard Stallman
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idk, the wrapper works for me. You probably want to investigate why it doesn't work for you rather than come up with an ad-hoc replacement.
Last edited by Alad (2017-03-25 12:01:46)
Mods are just community members who have the occasionally necessary option to move threads around and edit posts. -- Trilby
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There's really no need for the DIR variable. First simplification:
alias mc='mc -P "/tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$" ~ "$PWD"; cd $(cat /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$); \rm -f /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$'
You can also get rid of the cat and just have the shell read the contents of the file:
alias mc='mc -P "/tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$" ~ "$PWD"; cd $(</tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$); \rm -f /tmp/mc-$USER/mc.pwd.$$'
EDIT: I'd also second the below comment. This does seem like an odd workaground. My coments were just to streamline what was there - I don't use mc.
There actually is a need for the $DIR variable. If you try to change in to a directory containing spaces with the refinements you posted you get : bash: cd: too many arguments.
idk, the wrapper works for me. You probably want to investigate why it doesn't work for you rather than come up with an ad-hoc replacement.
Normally I would agree, except it doesn't work for me.
For the record, I did investigate. The temp file is created and populated with the correct directory. It passes all of the tests, at which point it executes the cd command without generating any errors but doesn't change to the directory. I thought it would be cleaner and easier to just make an alias that works and not run the risk of it breaking if mc is ever updated. Since editing the script itself would be the only way to get it to work.
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