From da1fc057fb17a8767f0ac6da3cbadff62739fc96 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paul Buetow Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2021 21:58:45 +0000 Subject: Publishing new version --- gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md | 430 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 430 insertions(+) create mode 100644 gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md (limited to 'gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md') diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md b/gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c74bd031 --- /dev/null +++ b/gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md @@ -0,0 +1,430 @@ +# Bash Golf Part 1 + +``` + + '\ . . |>18>> + \ . ' . | + O>> . 'o | + \ . | + /\ . | + / / .' | +jgs^^^^^^^`^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + Art by Joan Stark +``` + +> Published by Paul Buetow 2021-11-29 + +This is the first blog post about my Bash Golf series. This series is about random Bash tips, tricks and weirdnesses I came across. It's a collection of smaller articles I wrote in an older (in German language) blog, which I translated and refreshed with some new content. + +## TCP/IP networking + +You probably know the Netcat tool, which is a swiss army knife for TCP/IP networking on the command line. But did you know that the Bash natively supports TCP/IP networking? + +Have a look here how that works: + +``` +❯ cat < /dev/tcp/time.nist.gov/13 + +59536 21-11-18 08:09:16 00 0 0 153.6 UTC(NIST) * +``` + +The Bash treats /dev/tcp/HOST/PORT in a special way so that it is actually establishing a TCP connection to HOST:PORT. The example above redirects the TCP output of the time-server to cat and cat is printing it on standard output (stdout). + +A more sophisticated example is firing up an HTTP request. Let's create a new read-write (rw) file descriptor (fd) 5, redirect the HTTP request string to it, and then read the response back: + +``` +❯ exec 5<>/dev/tcp/google.de/80 +❯ echo -e "GET / HTTP/1.1\nhost: google.de\n\n" >&5 +❯ cat <&5 | head +HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently +Location: http://www.google.de/ +Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 +Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2021 08:27:18 GMT +Expires: Sat, 18 Dec 2021 08:27:18 GMT +Cache-Control: public, max-age=2592000 +Server: gws +Content-Length: 218 +X-XSS-Protection: 0 +X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN +``` + +You would assume that this also works with the ZSH, but it doesn't. This is one of the few things which don't work with the ZSH but in the Bash. There might be plugins you could use for ZSH to do something similar, though. + +## Process substitution + +The idea here is, that you can read the output (stdout) of a command from a file descriptor: + +``` +❯ uptime # Without process substitution + 10:58:03 up 4 days, 22:08, 1 user, load average: 0.16, 0.34, 0.41 + +❯ cat <(uptime) # With process substitution + 10:58:16 up 4 days, 22:08, 1 user, load average: 0.14, 0.33, 0.41 + +❯ stat <(uptime) + File: /dev/fd/63 -> pipe:[468130] + Size: 64 Blocks: 0 IO Block: 1024 symbolic link +Device: 16h/22d Inode: 468137 Links: 1 +Access: (0500/lr-x------) Uid: ( 1001/ paul) Gid: ( 1001/ paul) +Context: unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023 +Access: 2021-11-20 10:59:31.482411961 +0000 +Modify: 2021-11-20 10:59:31.482411961 +0000 +Change: 2021-11-20 10:59:31.482411961 +0000 + Birth: - +``` + +This example doesn't make any sense practically speaking, but it clearly demonstrates how process substitution works. The standard output pipe of "uptime" is redirected to an anonymous file descriptor. That fd then is opened by the "cat" command as a regular file. + +A useful use case is displaying the differences of two sorted files: + +``` +❯ echo a > /tmp/file-a.txt +❯ echo b >> /tmp/file-a.txt +❯ echo c >> /tmp/file-a.txt +❯ echo b > /tmp/file-b.txt +❯ echo a >> /tmp/file-b.txt +❯ echo c >> /tmp/file-b.txt +❯ echo X >> /tmp/file-b.txt +❯ diff -u <(sort /tmp/file-a.txt) <(sort /tmp/file-b.txt) +--- /dev/fd/63 2021-11-20 11:05:03.667713554 +0000 ++++ /dev/fd/62 2021-11-20 11:05:03.667713554 +0000 +@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@ + a + b + c ++X +❯ echo X >> /tmp/file-a.txt # Now, both files have the same content again. +❯ diff -u <(sort /tmp/file-a.txt) <(sort /tmp/file-b.txt) +❯ +``` + +Another example is displaying the differences of two directories: + +``` +❯ diff -u <(ls ./dir1/ | sort) <(ls ./dir2/ | sort) +``` + +More (Bash golfing) examples: + +``` +❯ wc -l <(ls /tmp/) /etc/passwd <(env) + 24 /dev/fd/63 + 49 /etc/passwd + 24 /dev/fd/62 + 97 total +❯ + +❯ while read foo; do +> echo $foo +> done < <(echo foo bar baz) +foo bar baz +❯ +``` + +So far, we only used process substitution for stdout redirection. But it also works for stdin. The following two commands result into the same outcome, but the second one is writing the tar data stream to an anonymous file descriptor which is substituted by the "bzip2" command reading the data stream from stdin and compressing it to its own stdout, which then gets redirected to a file: + +``` +❯ tar cjf file.tar.bz2 foo +❯ tar cjf >(bzip2 -c > file.tar.bz2) foo +``` + +Just think a while and see whether you understand fully what is happening here. + +## Grouping + +Command grouping can be quite useful for combining the output of multiple commands: + +``` +❯ { ls /tmp; cat /etc/passwd; env; } | wc -l +97 +❯ ( ls /tmp; cat /etc/passwd; env; ) | wc -l +97 +``` + +But wait, what is the difference between curly braces and normal braces? I assumed that the normal braces create a subprocess whereas the curly ones don't, but I was wrong: + +``` +❯ echo $$ +62676 +❯ { echo $$; } +62676 +❯ ( echo $$; ) +62676 +``` + +One difference is, that the curly braces require you to end the last statement with a semicolon, whereas with the normal braces you can omit the last semicolon: + +``` +❯ ( env; ls ) | wc -l +27 +❯ { env; ls } | wc -l +> +> ^C +``` + +In case you know more (subtle) differences, please write me an E-Mail and let me know. + +## Expansions + +Let's start with simple examples: + +``` +❯ echo {0..5} +0 1 2 3 4 5 +❯ for i in {0..5}; do echo $i; done +0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5 +``` + +You can also add leading 0 or expand to any number range: + +``` +❯ echo {00..05} +00 01 02 03 04 05 +❯ echo {000..005} +000 001 002 003 004 005 +❯ echo {201..205} +201 202 203 204 205 +``` + +It also works with letters: + +``` +❯ echo {a..e} +a b c d e +``` + +Now it gets interesting. The following takes a list of words and expands it so that all words are quoted: + +``` +❯ echo \"{These,words,are,quoted}\" +"These" "words" "are" "quoted" +``` + +Let's also expand to the cross product of two given lists: + +``` +❯ echo {one,two}\:{A,B,C} +one:A one:B one:C two:A two:B two:C +❯ echo \"{one,two}\:{A,B,C}\" +"one:A" "one:B" "one:C" "two:A" "two:B" "two:C" +``` + +Just because we can: + +``` +❯ echo Linux-{one,two,three}\:{A,B,C}-FreeBSD +Linux-one:A-FreeBSD Linux-one:B-FreeBSD Linux-one:C-FreeBSD Linux-two:A-FreeBSD Linux-two:B-FreeBSD Linux-two:C-FreeBSD Linux-three:A-FreeBSD Linux-three:B-FreeBSD Linux-three:C-FreeBSD +``` + +## - aka stdin and stdout placeholder + +Some commands and Bash builtins use "-" as a placeholder for stdin and stdout: + +``` +❯ echo Hello world +Hello world +❯ echo Hello world | cat - +Hello world +❯ cat - <