Classic Shell Scripting - Arnold Robbins [3]
For a long time, there's been a conspicuous lack of a good book on shell scripting. Books on the Unix programming environment have touched on it, but only briefly, as one of several topics, and the better books are long out-of-date. There's reference documentation for the various shells, but what's wanted is a novice-friendly tutorial, covering the tools as well as the shell, introducing the concepts gently, offering advice on how to get the best results, and paying attention to practical issues like readability. Preferably, it should also discuss how the various shells differ, instead of trying to pretend that only one exists.
This book delivers all that, and more. Here, at last, is an up-to-date and painless introduction to the first and best of the Unix scripting languages. It's illustrated with realistic examples that make useful tools in their own right. It covers the standard Unix tools well enough to get people started with them (and to make a useful reference for those who find the manual pages a bit forbidding). I'm particularly pleased to see it including basic coverage of awk, a highly useful and unfairly neglected tool which excels in bridging gaps between other tools and in doing small programming jobs easily and concisely.
I recommend this book to anyone doing shell scripting or administering Unix-derived systems. I learned things from it; I think you will too.
Henry Spencer
SP Systems
Preface
The user or programmer new to Unix[1] is suddenly faced with a bewildering variety of programs, each of which often has multiple options. Questions such as "What purpose do they serve?" and "How do I use them?" spring to mind.
This book's job is to answer those questions. It teaches you how to combine the Unix tools, together with the standard shell, to get your job done. This is the art of shell scripting. Shell scripting requires not just a knowledge of the shell language, but also a knowledge of the individual Unix programs: why each one is there, and how to use them by themselves and in combination with the other programs.
Why should you learn shell scripting? Because often, medium-size to large problems can be decomposed into smaller pieces, each of which is amenable to being solved with one of the Unix tools. A shell script, when done well, can often solve a problem in a mere fraction of the time it would take to solve the same problem using a conventional programming language such as C or C++. It is also possible to make shell scripts portable—i.e., usable across a range of Unix and POSIX-compliant systems, with little or no modification.
When talking about Unix programs, we use the term tools deliberately. The Unix toolbox approach to problem solving has long been known as the "Software Tools" philosophy.[2]
A long-standing analogy summarizes this approach to problem solving. A Swiss Army knife is a useful thing to carry around in one's pocket. It has several blades, a screwdriver, a can opener, a toothpick, and so on. Larger models include more tools, such as a corkscrew or magnifying glass. However, there's only so much you can do with a Swiss Army knife. While it might be great for whittling or simple carving, you wouldn't use it, for example, to build a dog house or bird feeder. Instead, you would move on to using specialized tools, such as a hammer, saw, clamp, or planer. So too, when solving programming problems, it's better to use specialized software tools.
Intended Audience
This book is intended for computer users and software developers who find themselves in a Unix environment, with a need to write shell scripts. For example, you may be a computer science student, with your first account on your school's Unix system, and you want to learn about the things you can do under Unix that your Windows PC just can't handle. (In such a case,