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Passing args from the bash script to the function in the script
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Passing args from the bash script to the function in the script
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}
My script:
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local ENV="${1}"
local VERB="${2}"
local SERVICE="${3}"
local CMD="docker-compose -f ${ENV}.yml"
case "${VERB}" in
(exec)
shift "$#" # remove args passed to this fn
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "${SERVICE}" ]; then
${CMD} "${VERB}" "${SERVICE}" "$@"
else
echo "## Err: You must specify service name..."
exit 1
fi
;;
esac
}
compose_fn "${1}" "${2}" "${3}"
Is giving me a hard time with the following error:
$ ./tst.sh dev exec django sh
+ compose_fn dev exec django
+ local ENV=dev
+ local VERB=exec
+ local SERVICE=django
+ local 'CMD=docker-compose -f dev.yml'
+ case "${VERB}" in
+ shift 3
+ '[' -n django ']'
+ docker-compose -f dev.yml exec django
Execute a command in a running container
Usage: exec [options] [-e KEY=VAL...] SERVICE COMMAND [ARGS...]
Options:
....
Where is my mistake? How can it be done better?
As far as I can tell I've passed 4 args [dev, exec, django, sh]
to the script, then within the script removed 3 (shift 3
), therefore sh
should have been left in the $@
var.
bash shell-script shell
add a comment |
My script:
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local ENV="${1}"
local VERB="${2}"
local SERVICE="${3}"
local CMD="docker-compose -f ${ENV}.yml"
case "${VERB}" in
(exec)
shift "$#" # remove args passed to this fn
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "${SERVICE}" ]; then
${CMD} "${VERB}" "${SERVICE}" "$@"
else
echo "## Err: You must specify service name..."
exit 1
fi
;;
esac
}
compose_fn "${1}" "${2}" "${3}"
Is giving me a hard time with the following error:
$ ./tst.sh dev exec django sh
+ compose_fn dev exec django
+ local ENV=dev
+ local VERB=exec
+ local SERVICE=django
+ local 'CMD=docker-compose -f dev.yml'
+ case "${VERB}" in
+ shift 3
+ '[' -n django ']'
+ docker-compose -f dev.yml exec django
Execute a command in a running container
Usage: exec [options] [-e KEY=VAL...] SERVICE COMMAND [ARGS...]
Options:
....
Where is my mistake? How can it be done better?
As far as I can tell I've passed 4 args [dev, exec, django, sh]
to the script, then within the script removed 3 (shift 3
), therefore sh
should have been left in the $@
var.
bash shell-script shell
add a comment |
My script:
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local ENV="${1}"
local VERB="${2}"
local SERVICE="${3}"
local CMD="docker-compose -f ${ENV}.yml"
case "${VERB}" in
(exec)
shift "$#" # remove args passed to this fn
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "${SERVICE}" ]; then
${CMD} "${VERB}" "${SERVICE}" "$@"
else
echo "## Err: You must specify service name..."
exit 1
fi
;;
esac
}
compose_fn "${1}" "${2}" "${3}"
Is giving me a hard time with the following error:
$ ./tst.sh dev exec django sh
+ compose_fn dev exec django
+ local ENV=dev
+ local VERB=exec
+ local SERVICE=django
+ local 'CMD=docker-compose -f dev.yml'
+ case "${VERB}" in
+ shift 3
+ '[' -n django ']'
+ docker-compose -f dev.yml exec django
Execute a command in a running container
Usage: exec [options] [-e KEY=VAL...] SERVICE COMMAND [ARGS...]
Options:
....
Where is my mistake? How can it be done better?
As far as I can tell I've passed 4 args [dev, exec, django, sh]
to the script, then within the script removed 3 (shift 3
), therefore sh
should have been left in the $@
var.
bash shell-script shell
My script:
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local ENV="${1}"
local VERB="${2}"
local SERVICE="${3}"
local CMD="docker-compose -f ${ENV}.yml"
case "${VERB}" in
(exec)
shift "$#" # remove args passed to this fn
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "${SERVICE}" ]; then
${CMD} "${VERB}" "${SERVICE}" "$@"
else
echo "## Err: You must specify service name..."
exit 1
fi
;;
esac
}
compose_fn "${1}" "${2}" "${3}"
Is giving me a hard time with the following error:
$ ./tst.sh dev exec django sh
+ compose_fn dev exec django
+ local ENV=dev
+ local VERB=exec
+ local SERVICE=django
+ local 'CMD=docker-compose -f dev.yml'
+ case "${VERB}" in
+ shift 3
+ '[' -n django ']'
+ docker-compose -f dev.yml exec django
Execute a command in a running container
Usage: exec [options] [-e KEY=VAL...] SERVICE COMMAND [ARGS...]
Options:
....
Where is my mistake? How can it be done better?
As far as I can tell I've passed 4 args [dev, exec, django, sh]
to the script, then within the script removed 3 (shift 3
), therefore sh
should have been left in the $@
var.
bash shell-script shell
bash shell-script shell
edited 1 hour ago
NarūnasK
asked 1 hour ago
NarūnasKNarūnasK
9171722
9171722
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
With shift $#
you empty $@
completely. The $@
in the function is separate from the $@
in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local env="$1"
local verb="$2"
local service="$3"
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
compose_fn "$@"
I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV
is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.
I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.
You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
env="$1"
verb="$2"
service="$3"
shift 3
compose_fn "$@"
You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ]
test with
service=${3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'}
The parameter expansion ${parameter:?word}
will exit the shell with the message defined by word
if parameter
is unset or empty. The bash
shell would format this as
script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...
Related:
- When is double-quoting necessary?
- How can we run a command stored in a variable?
- Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?
add a comment |
Your Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
With shift $#
you empty $@
completely. The $@
in the function is separate from the $@
in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local env="$1"
local verb="$2"
local service="$3"
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
compose_fn "$@"
I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV
is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.
I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.
You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
env="$1"
verb="$2"
service="$3"
shift 3
compose_fn "$@"
You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ]
test with
service=${3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'}
The parameter expansion ${parameter:?word}
will exit the shell with the message defined by word
if parameter
is unset or empty. The bash
shell would format this as
script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...
Related:
- When is double-quoting necessary?
- How can we run a command stored in a variable?
- Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?
add a comment |
With shift $#
you empty $@
completely. The $@
in the function is separate from the $@
in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local env="$1"
local verb="$2"
local service="$3"
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
compose_fn "$@"
I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV
is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.
I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.
You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
env="$1"
verb="$2"
service="$3"
shift 3
compose_fn "$@"
You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ]
test with
service=${3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'}
The parameter expansion ${parameter:?word}
will exit the shell with the message defined by word
if parameter
is unset or empty. The bash
shell would format this as
script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...
Related:
- When is double-quoting necessary?
- How can we run a command stored in a variable?
- Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?
add a comment |
With shift $#
you empty $@
completely. The $@
in the function is separate from the $@
in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local env="$1"
local verb="$2"
local service="$3"
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
compose_fn "$@"
I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV
is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.
I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.
You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
env="$1"
verb="$2"
service="$3"
shift 3
compose_fn "$@"
You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ]
test with
service=${3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'}
The parameter expansion ${parameter:?word}
will exit the shell with the message defined by word
if parameter
is unset or empty. The bash
shell would format this as
script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...
Related:
- When is double-quoting necessary?
- How can we run a command stored in a variable?
- Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?
With shift $#
you empty $@
completely. The $@
in the function is separate from the $@
in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local env="$1"
local verb="$2"
local service="$3"
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
compose_fn "$@"
I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV
is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.
I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.
You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.
#! /bin/bash --
set -x
## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn() {
local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )
case $verb in
exec)
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$service" ]; then
"${cmd[@]}" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
else
echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
exit 1
esac
}
env="$1"
verb="$2"
service="$3"
shift 3
compose_fn "$@"
You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ]
test with
service=${3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'}
The parameter expansion ${parameter:?word}
will exit the shell with the message defined by word
if parameter
is unset or empty. The bash
shell would format this as
script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...
Related:
- When is double-quoting necessary?
- How can we run a command stored in a variable?
- Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?
edited 43 mins ago
answered 1 hour ago
Kusalananda♦Kusalananda
143k18267445
143k18267445
add a comment |
add a comment |
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