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Inline if shell script

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-10 10:22 出处:网络
Is it possible to execute shell script in command line like this : counter=`ps -ef | grep -c \"myApplication\"`; if [ $counter -eq 1 ] then; echo \"true\";

Is it possible to execute shell script in command line like this :

counter=`ps -ef | grep -c "myApplication"`; if [ $counter -eq 1 ] then; echo "true";
>

Above example is not working I get only > character not the result I'm trying to get, that is "true"

When I execute ps -ef | grep -c "myApplication I get 1 output. Is it possible to create result from single line in a scrip开发者_开发技巧t ? thank you


It doesn't work because you missed out fi to end your if statement.

counter=`ps -ef | grep -c "myApplication"`; if [ $counter -eq 1 ]; then echo "true"; fi

You can shorten it further using:

if [ $(ps -ef | grep -c "myApplication") -eq 1 ]; then echo "true"; fi

Also, do take note the issue of ps -ef | grep ... matching itself as mentioned in @DigitalRoss' answer.

update

In fact, you can do one better by using pgrep:

if [ $(pgrep -c "myApplication") -eq 1 ]; then echo "true"; fi


Other responses have addressed your syntax error, but I would strongly suggest you change the line to:

test $(ps -ef | grep -c myApplication) -eq 1 && echo true

If you are not trying to limit the number of occurrences to exactly 1 (eg, if you are merely trying to check for the output line myApplication and you expect it never to appear more than once) then just do:

ps -ef | grep myApplication > /dev/null && echo true

(If you need the variable counter set for later processing, neither of these solutions will be appropriate.)

Using short circuited && and || operators is often much clearer than embedding if/then constructs, especially in one-liners.


Yes, with syntax issues fixed

That almost worked. The correct syntax is:

counter=`ps -ef | grep -c "myApplication"`; if [ $counter -eq 1 ]; then echo "true"; fi

But note that in an expression of this sort involving ps and grep, the grep will usually match itself because the characters "grep -c Myapplication" show up in the ps listing. There are several ways around that, one of them is to grep for something like [M]yapplication.


I am using Mac OS and following worked very well

$ counter=`ps -ef | grep -c "myApplication"`; if [ $counter -eq 1 ]; then echo "true";fi;

true

Space is needed after [ and before ]


I was struggling to combine both multiple lines feed into command and getting its results into a variable (not a file) and come up with this solution:

    FRA_PARAM="'db_recovery_file_dest'"
    FRA=$(
    sqlplus -S "/as sysdba" <<EOF
set echo off head off feed off newpage none pages 1000 lines 1000
select value from v\$parameter where name=$FRA_PARAM;
exit;
EOF
        )

Please note that single-quotes word was substituted, because otherwise I was receiving its autosubstitution to double quotes... ksh, HP-UX.

Hopefully this will be helpful for somebody else too.

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