Add convenience function for shell scripting

This commit is contained in:
lara 2020-12-22 23:09:06 +01:00
parent 086f2cd86b
commit 3e9196a08e
2 changed files with 79 additions and 0 deletions

55
bin/rreadlink Executable file
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#!/bin/sh
# Function by mklement0
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/29835459/5309963
# The following, POSIX-compliant shell function implements what
# GNU's readlink -e does and is a reasonably robust solution
# that only fails in two rare edge cases:
# - paths with embedded newlines (very rare)
# - filenames containing literal string -> (also rare)
( # Execute the function in a *subshell* to localize variables and the effect of `cd`.
target=$1 fname= targetDir= CDPATH=
# Try to make the execution environment as predictable as possible:
# All commands below are invoked via `command`, so we must make sure that `command`
# itself is not redefined as an alias or shell function.
# (Note that command is too inconsistent across shells, so we don't use it.)
# `command` is a *builtin* in bash, dash, ksh, zsh, and some platforms do not even have
# an external utility version of it (e.g, Ubuntu).
# `command` bypasses aliases and shell functions and also finds builtins
# in bash, dash, and ksh. In zsh, option POSIX_BUILTINS must be turned on for that
# to happen.
{ \unalias command; \unset -f command; } >/dev/null 2>&1
[ -n "$ZSH_VERSION" ] && options[POSIX_BUILTINS]=on # make zsh find *builtins* with `command` too.
while :; do # Resolve potential symlinks until the ultimate target is found.
[ -L "$target" ] || [ -e "$target" ] || { command printf '%s\n' "ERROR: '$target' does not exist." >&2; return 1; }
command cd "$(command dirname -- "$target")" # Change to target dir; necessary for correct resolution of target path.
fname=$(command basename -- "$target") # Extract filename.
[ "$fname" = '/' ] && fname='' # !! curiously, `basename /` returns '/'
if [ -L "$fname" ]; then
# Extract [next] target path, which may be defined
# *relative* to the symlink's own directory.
# Note: We parse `ls -l` output to find the symlink target
# which is the only POSIX-compliant, albeit somewhat fragile, way.
target=$(command ls -l "$fname")
target=${target#* -> }
continue # Resolve [next] symlink target.
fi
break # Ultimate target reached.
done
targetDir=$(command pwd -P) # Get canonical dir. path
# Output the ultimate target's canonical path.
# Note that we manually resolve paths ending in /. and /.. to make sure we have a normalized path.
if [ "$fname" = '.' ]; then
command printf '%s\n' "${targetDir%/}"
elif [ "$fname" = '..' ]; then
# Caveat: something like /var/.. will resolve to /private (assuming /var@ -> /private/var), i.e. the '..' is applied
# AFTER canonicalization.
command printf '%s\n' "$(command dirname -- "${targetDir}")"
else
command printf '%s\n' "${targetDir%/}/$fname"
fi
)

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lib/utils.sh Normal file
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die() {
# Use notify-send to send errors when not in a terminal
# [ -t 0 ] only works outside of pipes
[ -t 0 ] || notify-send "$@" && >&2 echo "$@"
exit 1
}
# Output error to stderr and to graphical notification
notify_err() {
tee /dev/fd/2 | xargs -n1 -d "\n" notify-send
}
assert_exists() {
for c in $@; do
which "$c" > /dev/null 2>&1 || die "$c doesn't appear to be installed"
done
}
check_exists() {
for c in $@; do
which "$c" > /dev/null 2>&1 || return 1
done
}