| UNIX Shells and Shell Scripts |
- Describe the role of shells in the UNIX environment
- Describe the standard shells
- Define the components of a shell script
- Write a simple shell script
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| Writing and Debugging Scripts |
- Start a script with #!
- Put comments in a script
- Change permissions on a script
- Execute a script
- Debug a script
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- Use Bourne and Korn shell variables
- Assign values to shell variables
- Unset shell and environment variables
- Customize the user environment using the .profile file
- Perform arithmetic operations
- Create and use aliases
- Customize the Bourne and Korn shell environments
- Use the tilde expansion and command substitution features of the Korn shell
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| Regular Expressions and the grep Command |
- Use and describe regular expressions
- Describe the grep command
- Use the grep command to find patterns in a file
- Use the regular expression characters with the grep command
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- Use the sed editor to perform noninteractive editing tasks
- Use regular expression characters with the sed command
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| The nawk Programming Language |
- Use nawk commands from the command line
- Write simple nawk programs to generate data reports from text files
- Write simple nawk programs to generate numeric and text reports from text files
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- Use the exit status of a command as conditional control
- Use the "if" statement to test a condition
- Pass values using command-line arguments (positional parameters) into a script
- Create USAGE messages
- Use conditional if, then, elif, else, and fi constructs
- Use exit, let, and test statements ([[ ]], " ")
- Apply the , ||, and ! Boolean logic operators
- Use the case statement
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- Use the print and echo commands to display text
- Use the read command to interactively assign data to a shell variable
- Read user input into one or more variables, using one read statement
- Use special characters, with print and echo, to make the displayed text more user friendly
- Create a "here" document
- Use file descriptors to read from and write to multiple files
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- Write scripts that use for, while, and until loops
- Write a script using the select statement
- Describe when to use loops within a script
- Generate argument lists using command, variable, and file-name substitution
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- Process script options using the getopts statement
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| Advanced Variables, Parameters, and Argument Lists |
- Declare strings, integers, and array variables
- Manipulate string variables
- Change the values of the positional parameters using the set statement within a script
- Use Korn shell arrays
- Set default values for parameters
- Use the Korn shell built-in let, print, set, and typeset statements
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- Create user-defined functions in a shell script
- Create, invoke, and display functions from the command line
- Pass arguments into a function
- Call functions from special (function) files that are saved in one or more function directories
- Describe where functions are available for use
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