3

I have a Bash script that loops through files and masks them. The files are gzipped and I need to gunzip them first before passing them as argument to a Python program as shown in script below. The problem is that variable $i does not turn into the unzipped version of the filename. The file name before unzipping is my-log-1.c.log.gz. After running gunzip on the file as below I want to pass my-log-1.c.log as the argument to the masker.sh script, not the .gz version. How would I do this?

#!bin/bash

cd /home/logs

  for i in *
     gunzip $i
     do
       python masker.py $i  # python program masks files 
     rm $i
     echo "masked_file and removed =  $i"
   done

2 Answers 2

3

Using basename:

for i in; do
  gunzip "$i"
  i=$(basename "$i" .gz)
  python masker.py "$i"  # python program masks files 
  rm $i
  echo "masked_file and removed =  $i"
done

The first argument is the filename and the second one is the extension you want to remove.

2
  • it turns my-log-1.c.log.gz into my-log-1.c.log and stores it in i
    – perreal
    Dec 4, 2012 at 4:13
  • And files that dont have .gz extension to begin with in the directory, would my script screw those up?
    – user836087
    Dec 4, 2012 at 4:15
0

You can use the program below:

for i in; do
    gunzip "$i"
    i=$(echo $i|rev|cut -d'.' -f2-|rev)
    python masker.py "$i"  # python program masks files 
    rm $i
    echo "masked_file and removed =  $i"
done
1
  • Your implementation of stripping the period is rather ugly. It will be slow, and feels like a kludge. Mar 12, 2013 at 17:01

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