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OS-Linux-commands-Shell-scripting

Operating systems Lab exercise

Linux commands-Shell scripting

Linux commands-Shell scripting

AIM:

To practice Linux Commands and Shell Scripting

DESIGN STEPS:

Step 1:

Navigate to any Linux environment installed on the system or installed inside a virtual environment like virtual box/vmware or online linux JSLinux (https://bellard.org/jslinux/vm.html?url=alpine-x86.cfg&mem=192) or docker.

Step 2:

Execute the following commands

Step 3:

Testing the commands for the desired output.

COMMANDS:

Create the following files file1, file2 as follows:

cat > file1

chanchal singhvi
c.k. shukla
s.n. dasgupta
sumit chakrobarty
^d

image

cat > file2

anil aggarwal
barun sengupta
c.k. shukla
lalit chowdury
s.n. dasgupta
^d

image

Display the content of the files

cat < file1

OUTPUT

image

cat < file2

OUTPUT

image

Comparing Files

cmp file1 file2

OUTPUT

image comm file1 file2

OUTPUT

image diff file1 file2

OUTPUT

image

#Filters

Create the following files file11, file22 as follows:

cat > file11

Hello world
This is my world
^d

image cat > file22

1001 | Ram | 10000 | HR
1002 | tom |  5000 | Admin
1003 | Joe |  7000 | Developer
^d

image

cut -c1-3 file11

OUTPUT

image

cut -d "|" -f 1 file22

OUTPUT

image

cut -d "|" -f 2 file22

OUTPUT

image

cat < newfile

Hello world
hello world
^d

s13

cat > newfile

Hello world
hello world

s14


grep Hello newfile

grep hello newfile

OUTPUT

s15

OUTPUT

grep -v hello newfile

s16

OUTPUT

cat newfile | grep -i "hello" s17

OUTPUT

cat newfile | grep -i -c "hello"

s18

OUTPUT

grep -R ubuntu /etc s19

OUTPUT

grep -w -n world newfile s20

OUTPUT

cat < newfile

Hello world
hello world
Linux is world number 1
Unix is predecessor
Linux is best in this World
^d

s21


cat > newfile
Hello world
hello world
Linux is world number 1
Unix is predecessor
Linux is best in this World
^d

s22

egrep -w 'Hello|hello' newfile

s23

OUTPUT

egrep -w '(H|h)ello' newfile s24

OUTPUT

egrep -w '(H|h)ell[a-z]' newfile s25

OUTPUT

egrep '(^hello)' newfile s26

OUTPUT

egrep '(world$)' newfile s27

OUTPUT

egrep '(World$)' newfile s28

OUTPUT

egrep '((W|w)orld$)' newfile s29

OUTPUT

egrep '[1-9]' newfile s30

OUTPUT

egrep 'Linux.*world' newfile

OUTPUT

egrep 'Linux.*World' newfile

OUTPUT

egrep l{2} newfile s31

OUTPUT

egrep 's{1,2}' newfile

s32 )

OUTPUT

cat > file23

1001 | Ram | 10000 | HR
1001 | Ram | 10000 | HR
1002 | tom |  5000 | Admin
1003 | Joe |  7000 | Developer
1005 | Sam |  5000 | HR
1004 | Sit |  7000 | Dev
1003 | Joe |  7000 | Developer
1001 | Ram | 10000 | HR
^d

s33

sed -n -e '3p' file23 s34

OUTPUT

sed -n -e '$p' file23

s35

OUTPUT

sed -e 's/Ram/Sita/' file23 s36

OUTPUT

sed -e '2s/Ram/Sita/' file23 s37

OUTPUT

sed '/tom/s/5000/6000/' file23 s38

OUTPUT

sed -n -e '1,5p' file23 s39

OUTPUT

sed -n -e '2,/Joe/p' file23

s40

OUTPUT

sed -n -e '/tom/,/Joe/p' file23 s41

OUTPUT

seq 10 s42

OUTPUT

seq 10 | sed -n '4,6p'

image

OUTPUT

seq 10 | sed -n '2,~4p' s43

OUTPUT

seq 3 | sed '2a hello' s45

OUTPUT

seq 2 | sed '2i hello' s46

OUTPUT

seq 10 | sed '2,9c hello' s47

OUTPUT

sed -n '2,4{s/^/$/;p}' file23 s48

OUTPUT

sed -n '2,4{s/$/*/;p}' file23 s49

Sorting File content

cat > file21

1001 | Ram | 10000 | HR
1002 | tom |  5000 | Admin
1003 | Joe |  7000 | Developer
1005 | Sam |  5000 | HR
1004 | Sit |  7000 | Dev

sort file21

s50

OUTPUT

cat > file22

1001 | Ram | 10000 | HR
1001 | Ram | 10000 | HR
1002 | tom |  5000 | Admin
1003 | Joe |  7000 | Developer
1005 | Sam |  5000 | HR
1004 | Sit |  7000 | Dev

s51

uniq file22 s52

OUTPUT

Using tr command

cat file23 | tr [:lower:] [:upper:] s53

OUTPUT

cat < urllist.txt

www. yahoo. com
www. google. com
www. mrcet.... com
^d

s54

cat > urllist.txt

www. yahoo. com
www. google. com
www. mrcet.... com

s55

cat urllist.txt | tr -d ' ' s56

OUTPUT

cat urllist.txt | tr -d ' ' | tr -s '.' s57

OUTPUT

Backup commands

tar -cvf backup.tar * s58

OUTPUT

mkdir backupdir

mv backup.tar backupdir s59

tar -tvf backup.tar s60

OUTPUT

tar -xvf backup.tar s61

OUTPUT

gzip backup.tar

ls .gz image

OUTPUT

gunzip backup.tar.gz

image

OUTPUT

Shell Script

echo '#!/bin/sh' > my-script.sh
echo 'echo Hello World‘; exit 0 >> my-script.sh

image

chmod 755 my-script.sh ./my-script.sh

image

OUTPUT

cat << stop > herecheck.txt

hello in this world
i cant stop
for this non stop movement
stop

s66

cat herecheck.txt s67

OUTPUT

cat < scriptest.sh

\#!/bin/sh
echo “File name is $0echo "File name is " `basename $0`
echo “First arg. is ” $1
echo “Second arg. is ” $2
echo “Third arg. is ” $3
echo “Fourth arg. is ” $4
echo 'The $@ is ' $@
echo 'The $\# is ' $1#
echo 'The $$ is ' $$
ps
^d

s68

cat scriptest.sh

\#!/bin/sh
echo “File name is $0echo "File name is " `basename $0`
echo “First arg. is ” $1
echo “Second arg. is ” $2
echo “Third arg. is ” $3
echo “Fourth arg. is ” $4
echo 'The $@ is ' $@
echo 'The $\# is ' $\#
echo 'The $$ is ' $$
ps

s69

chmod 777 scriptest.sh

./scriptest.sh 1 2 3 s70

OUTPUT

ls file1 s71

OUTPUT

echo $? s72

OUTPUT

./one bash: ./one: Permission denied

echo $? s73

OUTPUT

abcd

echo $? s74

OUTPUT

mis-using string comparisons

cat < strcomp.sh

\#!/bin/bash
val1=baseball
val2=hockey
if [ $val1 \> $val2 ]
then
echo "$val1 is greater than $val2"
else
echo "$val1 is less than $val2"
fi
^d

cat strcomp.sh

\#!/bin/bash
val1=baseball
val2=hockey
if [ $val1 \> $val2 ]
then
echo "$val1 is greater than $val2"
else
echo "$val1 is less than $val2"
fi

s76

OUTPUT

chmod 755 strcomp.sh

./strcomp.sh s77

OUTPUT

check file ownership

cat < psswdperm.sh

\#!/bin/bash
if [ -O /etc/passwd ]
then
echo “You are the owner of the /etc/passwd file”
else
echo “Sorry, you are not the owner of the /etc/passwd file”
fi
^d

cat psswdperm.sh

/#!/bin/bash
if [ -O /etc/passwd ]
then
echo “You are the owner of the /etc/passwd file”
else
echo “Sorry, you are not the owner of the /etc/passwd file”
fi

s78

./psswdperm.sh s79

OUTPUT

check if with file location

cat>ifnested.sh

\#!/bin/bash
if [ -e $HOME ]
then
echo$HOME The object exists, is it a file?if [ -f $HOME ]
then
echo “Yes,$HOME it is a file!else
echo “No,$HOME it is not a file!if [ -f $HOME/.bash_history ]
then
echo “But $HOME/.bash_history is a file!fi
fi
else
echo “Sorry, the object does not exist”
fi
^d

cat ifnested.sh

\#!/bin/bash
if [ -e $HOME ]
then
echo “$HOME The object exists, is it a file?”
if [ -f $HOME ]
then
echo “Yes,$HOME it is a file!”
else
echo “No,$HOME it is not a file!”
if [ -f $HOME/.bash_history ]
then
echo “But $HOME/.bash_history is a file!”
fi
fi
else
echo “Sorry, the object does not exist”
fi

s81

./ifnested.sh s80

OUTPUT

using numeric test comparisons

cat > iftest.sh

\#!/bin/bash
val1=10
val2=11
if [ $val1 -gt 5 ]
then
echo “The test value $val1 is greater than 5”
fi
if [ $val1 -eq $val2 ]
then
echo “The values are equal”
else
echo “The values are different”
fi
^d

cat iftest.sh

\#!/bin/bash
val1=10
val2=11
if [ $val1 -gt 5 ]
then
echo “The test value $val1 is greater than 5”
fi
if [ $val1 -eq $val2 ]
then
echo “The values are equal”
else
echo “The values are different”
fi

s82

$ chmod 755 iftest.sh

$ ./iftest.sh

s83

OUTPUT

check if a file

cat > ifnested.sh

\#!/bin/bash
if [ -e $HOME ]
then
echo$HOME The object exists, is it a file?if [ -f $HOME ]
then
echo “Yes,$HOME it is a file!else
echo “No,$HOME it is not a file!if [ -f $HOME/.bash_history ]
then
echo “But $HOME/.bash_history is a file!fi
fi
else
echo “Sorry, the object does not exist”
fi
^d

cat ifnested.sh

\#!/bin/bash
if [ -e $HOME ]
then
echo$HOME The object exists, is it a file?if [ -f $HOME ]
then
echo “Yes,$HOME it is a file!else
echo “No,$HOME it is not a file!if [ -f $HOME/.bash_history ]
then
echo “But $HOME/.bash_history is a file!fi
fi
else
echo “Sorry, the object does not exist”
fi

s84

$ chmod 755 ifnested.sh

$ ./ifnested.sh

s85

OUTPUT

looking for a possible value using elif

cat elifcheck.sh

\#!/bin/bash
if [ $USER = Ram ]
then
echo "Welcome $USER"
echo "Please enjoy your visit"
elif [ $USER = Rahim ]
then
echo "Welcome $USER"
echo "Please enjoy your visit"
elif [ $USER = Robert ]
then
echo "Special testing account"
elif [ $USER = gganesh ]
then
echo "$USER, Do not forget to logout when you're done"
else
echo "Sorry, you are not allowed here"
fi

s86

$ chmod 755 elifcheck.sh

$ ./elifcheck.sh s87

OUTPUT

testing compound comparisons

cat> ifcompound.sh

\#!/bin/bash
if [ -d $HOME ] && [ -w $HOME ]
then
echo "The file exists and you can write to it"
else
echo "I cannot write to the file"
fi

$ chmod 755 ifcompound.sh

$ ./ifcompound.sh s88

OUTPUT

using the case command

cat >casecheck.sh

case $USER in
Ram | Robert)
echo "Welcome, $USER"
echo "Please enjoy your visit";;
Rahim)
echo "Special testing account";;
gganesh)
echo "$USER, Do not forget to log off when you're done";;
*)
echo "Sorry, you are not allowed here";;
esac

$ chmod 755 casecheck.sh

$ ./casecheck.sh s89

cat > whiletest

#!/bin/bash
#while command test
var1=10
while [ $var1 -gt 0 ]
do
echo $var1
var1=$[ $var1 - 1 ]
done

$ chmod 755 whiletest.sh

$ ./whiletest.sh s90

cat untiltest.sh

\#using the until command
var1=100
until [ $var1 -eq 0 ]
do
echo $var1
var1=$[ $var1 - 25 ]
done

$ chmod 755 untiltest.sh

$ ./untiltest.sh s91

cat forin1.sh

\#!/bin/bash
\#basic for command
for test in Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado
do
echo The next state is $test
done

s92

$ chmod 755 forin1.sh

$ ./forin1.sh s93

cat forin2.sh

\#!/bin/bash
\# another example of how not to use the for command
for test in I don't know if this'll work
do
echo “word:$testdone

$ chmod 755 forin2.sh

$ ./forin2.sh s94

cat forin3.sh

\#!/bin/bash
\# another example of how not to use the for command
for test in I don\'t know if "this'll" work
do
echo "word:$test"
done

$ chmod 755 forin3.sh

$ ./forin3.sh s95

OUTPUT

cat forinfile.sh

#!/bin/bash
# reading values from a file
file="cities"
for state in "cat $file"
do
echo "Visit beautiful $state
done

$ chmod 777 forinfile.sh

$ cat cities

Hyderabad
Alampur
Basara
Warangal
Adilabad
Bhadrachalam
Khammam
Screenshot 2024-03-08 114549

OUTPUT

cat forctype.sh

#!/bin/bash
# testing the C-style for loop
for (( i=1; i <= 5; i++ ))
do
echo "The value of i is $i"
done

$ chmod 755 forctype.sh $ ./forctype.sh s98

OUTPUT

cat forctype1.sh

#!/bin/bash
# multiple variables
for (( a=1, b=5; a <= 5; a++, b-- ))
do
echo "$a - $b"
done

$ chmod 755 forctype.sh $ ./forctype1.sh s99

OUTPUT

cat fornested1.sh

#!/bin/bash
# nesting for loops
for (( a = 1; a <= 3; a++ ))
do
echo "Starting loop $a:"
for (( b = 1; b <= 3; b++ ))
do
echo " Inside loop: $b"
done
done

$ chmod 755 fornested1.sh

$ ./fornested1.sh s100

OUTPUT

cat forbreak.sh

#!/bin/bash
# breaking out of a for loop
for var1 in 1 2 3 4 5
do
if [ $var1 -eq 3 ]
then
break
fi
echo "Iteration number: $var1"
done
echo "The for loop is completed"

OUTPUT

$ chmod 755 forbreak.sh

$ ./forbreak.sh s101

cat forcontinue.sh

#!/bin/bash
# breaking out of a for loop
for var1 in 1 2 3 4 5
do
if [ $var1 -eq 3 ]
then
continue
fi
echo "Iteration number: $var1"
done
echo "The for loop is completed"

$ chmod 755 forcontinue.sh

$ ./forcontinue.sh s102

OUTPUT

cat exread.sh

#!/bin/bash
# testing the read command
echo -n "Enter your name: "
read name
echo "Hello $name, welcome to my program. "

$ chmod 755 exread.sh

$ ./exread.sh s103

OUTPUT

cat exread1.sh

#!/bin/bash
# testing the read command
read -p "Enter your name: " name
echo "Hello $name, welcome to my program. “

$ chmod 755 exread1.sh

$ ./exread1.sh s104

OUTPUT

cat funcex.sh

#!/bin/bash
# trying to access script parameters inside a function
function func {
echo $[ $1 * $2 ]
}
if [ $# -eq 2 ]
then
value=`func $1 $2`
echo "The result is $value"
else
echo "Usage: badtest1 a b"
fi

OUTPUT

./funcex.sh

./funcex.sh 1 2 s105

cat argshift.sh

#!/bin/bash
 while (( "$#" )); do
  echo $1
  shift
done

$ chmod 777 argshift.sh

OUTPUT

$ ./argshift.sh 1 2 3 s106

cat argshift1.sh

args=("$@")
ELEMENTS=${#args[@]}
for (( i=0;i<$ELEMENTS;i++)); do
    echo ${args[${i}]}
done

$ chmod 777 argshift.sh

OUTPUT

$ ./argshift.sh 1 2 3 s107

cat argshift.sh

#!/bin/bash
set -x
while (( "$#" )); do
  echo $1
  shift
done
set +x

OUTPUT

./argshift.sh 1 2 3 s108

cat > nc.awk

BEGIN{}
{
print len=length($0),"\t",$0
wordcount+=NF
chrcnt+=len
}
END{}
{
print "total characters",chrcnt
print "Number of Lines are",NR
print "No of Words count:",wordcount
}

s109

cat>data.dat

bcdfghj
abcdfghj
bcdfghj
ebcdfghj
bcdfghj
ibcdfghj
bcdfghj
obcdfghj
bcdfghj
ubcdfghj

s110

awk -f nc.awk data.dat

s111

OUTPUT

cat > palindrome.sh

#num=545
echo "Enter the number"
read num
s=0
rev=""
temp=$num
while [ $num -gt 0 ]
do
	# Get Remainder
	s=$(( $num % 10 ))
	# Get next digit
	num=$(( $num / 10 ))
	# Store previous number and
	# current digit in reverse
	rev=$( echo ${rev}${s} )
done
if [ $temp -eq $rev ];
then
	echo "Number is palindrome"
else
	echo "Number is NOT palindrome"
fi

OUTPUT

$ chmod 755 palindrome.sh

$ ./palindrome.sh

s112

RESULT:

The Commands are executed successfully.

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Operating systems Lab exercise

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