This article is an extension of our First article Understand
Linux Shell and Basic Shell Scripting – Part I, where we gave you a taste of Scripting, continuing that we won’t disappoint you in this article.
Script 1: Drawing a Special Pattern
#!/bin/bash
MAX_NO=0
echo -n "Enter Number between (5 to 9) : "
read MAX_NO
if ! [ $MAX_NO -ge 5 -a $MAX_NO -le 9 ] ; then
echo "WTF... I ask to enter number between 5 and 9, Try Again"
exit 1
fi
clear
for (( i=1; i<=MAX_NO; i++ )) do for (( s=MAX_NO; s>=i; s-- ))
do
echo -n " "
done
for (( j=1; j<=i; j++ )) do echo -n " ." done echo "" done ###### Second stage ###################### for (( i=MAX_NO; i>=1; i-- ))
do
for (( s=i; s<=MAX_NO; s++ ))
do
echo -n " "
done
for (( j=1; j<=i; j++ ))
do
echo -n " ."
done
echo ""
done
echo -e "\n\n\t\t\t Whenever you need help, Tecmint.com is always there"
Most of the above ‘key words‘ would be known to you and most of them are self explanatory. e.g., MAX sets
the maximum value of the variable, for is a loop and anything within the loop gets on executing again and again till the loop is valid for given value of input.
Sample Output
[root@tecmint ~]# chmod 755 Special_Pattern.sh
[root@tecmint ~]# ./Special_Pattern.sh
Enter Number between (5 to 9) : 6
.
. .
. . .
. . . .
. . . . .
. . . . . .
. . . . . .
. . . . .
. . . .
. . .
. .
.
Whenever you need help, Tecmint.com is always there
If you are a little aware of any programming language, learning the above script is not difficult, even if you are new to computation, programming and Linux it is not going to be much difficult.
Script 2: Creating Colorful Script
Who says, Linux is colorless and boring, save the codes below to anything [dot] sh,
make it executable and Run it, don’t forget to tell me how it was, Think what you can achieve, implementing it somewhere.
#!/bin/bash
clear
echo -e "33[1m Hello World"
# bold effect
echo -e "33[5m Blink"
# blink effect
echo -e "33[0m Hello World"
# back to normal
echo -e "33[31m Hello World"
# Red color
echo -e "33[32m Hello World"
# Green color
echo -e "33[33m Hello World"
# See remaining on screen
echo -e "33[34m Hello World"
echo -e "33[35m Hello World"
echo -e "33[36m Hello World"
echo -e -n "33[0m"
# back to normal
echo -e "33[41m Hello World"
echo -e "33[42m Hello World"
echo -e "33[43m Hello World"
echo -e "33[44m Hello World"
echo -e "33[45m Hello World"
echo -e "33[46m Hello World"
echo -e "33[0m Hello World"
Note: Don't bother about the color code now, Those important to you will be at your tongue, gradually.
Warning: Your terminal might not have the facility of blinking.
Sample Output
[root@tecmint ~]# chmod 755 Colorfull.sh
[root@tecmint ~]# ./Colorfull.sh
Hello World
Blink
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Hello World
Script 3: Encrypt a File/Directory
This script will encrypt a file (remember? directory/driver/….
everything is treated as file, in Linux). The current limitation of the above script is that it don’t support auto completion of name
using TAB. Moreover, you need to place the script and file to be encrypted in the same folder. You may need to install “pinentry-gui”,
using yum or apt the
package, if required.
[root@midstage ~]# yum install pinentry-gui
[root@midstage ~]# apt-get install pinentry-gui
Crete a file called “Encrypt.sh” and place the following script, make it executable and run it as shown.
#!/bin/bash
echo "Welcome, I am ready to encrypt a file/folder for you"
echo "currently I have a limitation, Place me to thh same folder, where a file to be
encrypted is present"
echo "Enter the Exact File Name with extension"
read file;
gpg -c $file
echo "I have encrypted the file successfully..."
echo "Now I will be removing the original file"
rm -rf $file
Sample Output
[root@tecmint ~]# chmod 755 Encrypt.sh
[root@tecmint ~]# ./Encrypt.sh
Welcome, I am ready to encrypt a file/folder for you
currently I have a limitation, Place me to the same folder, where a file to be
encrypted is present
Enter the Exact File Name with extension
package.xml
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Enter passphrase │
│ │
│ │
│ Passphrase *******_________________________________ │
│ │
│ <OK> <Cancel> │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Please re-enter this passphrase
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Please re-enter this passphrase │
│ │
│ Passphrase ********________________________________ │
│ │
│ <OK> <Cancel> │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
I have encrypted the file successfully...
Now I will be removing the original file
</pre>
gpg -c : This will encrypt your file, using a passkey aka password.
In this process of learning you would have never thought that the actual process of learning could be that much easy. So after encrypting a file what you need? Obviously! decrypting the file. And I want you – the learner, the reader to write the decryption
script yourself, don’t worry I am not leaving you in the middle, I just want you to gain something out of this article.
Note: gpg
-d filename.gpg > filename is what you need to implement in your decryption script. You may post you script in comment if successful,
if not you may ask me to write it for you.
Script 4: Checking Server Utilization
Checking the server utilization is one of the important task of an administrator, and a good administrator is one who knows how to automate his day to day task. Below is the script that will give many such information about your
server. Check it yourself.
#!/bin/bash
date;
echo "uptime:"
uptime
echo "Currently connected:"
w
echo "--------------------"
echo "Last logins:"
last -a |head -3
echo "--------------------"
echo "Disk and memory usage:"
df -h | xargs | awk '{print "Free/total disk: " $11 " / " $9}'
free -m | xargs | awk '{print "Free/total memory: " $17 " / " $8 " MB"}'
echo "--------------------"
start_log=`head -1 /var/log/messages |cut -c 1-12`
oom=`grep -ci kill /var/log/messages`
echo -n "OOM errors since $start_log :" $oom
echo ""
echo "--------------------"
echo "Utilization and most expensive processes:"
top -b |head -3
echo
top -b |head -10 |tail -4
echo "--------------------"
echo "Open TCP ports:"
nmap -p- -T4 127.0.0.1
echo "--------------------"
echo "Current connections:"
ss -s
echo "--------------------"
echo "processes:"
ps auxf --width=200
echo "--------------------"
echo "vmstat:"
vmstat 1 5
Sample Output
[root@tecmint ~]# chmod 755 Server-Health.sh
[root@tecmint ~]# ./Server-Health.sh
Tue Jul 16 22:01:06 IST 2013
uptime:
22:01:06 up 174 days, 4:42, 1 user, load average: 0.36, 0.25, 0.18
Currently connected:
22:01:06 up 174 days, 4:42, 1 user, load average: 0.36, 0.25, 0.18
USER TTY FROM LOGIN@ IDLE JCPU PCPU WHAT
tecmint pts/0 116.72.134.162 21:48 0.00s 0.03s 0.03s sshd: tecmint [priv]
--------------------
Last logins:
tecmint pts/0 Tue Jul 16 21:48 still logged in 116.72.134.162
tecmint pts/0 Tue Jul 16 21:24 - 21:43 (00:19) 116.72.134.162
--------------------
Disk and memory usage:
Free/total disk: 292G / 457G
Free/total memory: 3510 / 3838 MB
--------------------
OOM errors since Jul 14 03:37 : 0
--------------------
Utilization and most expensive processes:
top - 22:01:07 up 174 days, 4:42, 1 user, load average: 0.36, 0.25, 0.18
Tasks: 149 total, 1 running, 148 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
Cpu(s): 0.1%us, 0.0%sy, 0.0%ni, 99.3%id, 0.6%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.0%si, 0.0%st
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
1 root 20 0 3788 1128 932 S 0.0 0.0 0:32.94 init
2 root 20 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 kthreadd
3 root RT 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:14.07 migration/0
Note: I have given you the script that gives the output in the terminal itself, how about getting the output
in a file for future reference. Implement it using redirect operator.
- ‘>‘ : the redirection operator causes a file creation, and if it does exist, the contents are overwritten.
- ‘>>‘ : when you use >>, you are adding information, rather than replacing it.
- ‘>>‘ is safe, as compared to ‘>‘
Script 5: Check Disk Space and Sends an Email Alert
How about getting an email when disk use in partition PART is bigger than Maximum allowed, it is a life
saver script for web administrators with little modification.
MAX=95
EMAIL=USER@domain.com
PART=sda1
USE=`df -h |grep $PART | awk '{ print $5 }' | cut -d'%' -f1`
if [ $USE -gt $MAX ]; then
echo "Percent used: $USE" | mail -s "Running out of disk space" $EMAIL
fi
Note: Remove “USER”
with your user name. You can check mail using using ‘mail‘ command.
Script writing and programming is beyond boundaries, anything and everything could be implemented as required. That’s all for now, In my very next article I will be giving your some different flavors of scripting. Till then stay
cool and tuned, enjoy.