2

I am trying to write a bash script which takes a users home directory and cycles through the first level of subdirectories and performs some maintenance on those directories only if it is not the /Library or /Public folder. The code I have so far does not work as I get an error message saying that the directory name returned by $dir is a directory. Here is the code:

#!/bin/bash

user="short name"
source_root="/Users/"

source_use="$source_root$user"
cd "$source_use"

dirarr=( */ )

echo ${dirarr[@]}

for dir in "${dirarr[@]}"
do 
    if ( "$dir" -ne "/Library" -o "$dir" -ne "/Public")
        then echo $dir.
            # do something
    fi
done

Can anyone help me get this working.

Many thanks

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2 Answers 2

1

Your script has several problems:

  1. You need to use [ ] or [[ ]] in your if statement, not ( ). In your example ( ) creates a subshell and tries to run a command "$dir", which is the reason you're getting the error message you see.

  2. You're comparing against strings that you won't find - try "Library/" and "Public/" instead.

  3. You probably want -a instead of -o.

  4. -ne is used to compare numbers. You want !=.

Here's a corrected version of your script:

#!/bin/bash

user="short name"
source_root="/Users/"

source_use="$source_root$user"
cd "$source_use"

dirarr=( */ )

echo ${dirarr[@]}

for dir in "${dirarr[@]}"
do 
    if [ "$dir" != "Library/" -a "$dir" != "Public/" ]
    then
        echo $dir.
        # do something
    fi
done
0
1

Try this:

cd $source_root$user

for dir in `find . -maxdepth 1 -type d`
do
  if [ $dir = ./Library ] || [ $dir = ./Public ]
  then
    continue
  fi

  (Perform actions)
done

Also, bash is backwards. != is string non-equality, -ne is integer non-equality. So, change to equals signs, too.

Good luck!

2
  • Thank you for your solution. I was only trying to find non hidden directories in the users home folder whereas this solution finds all directories. As I am still learning bash it was useful to see this alternative solution. Thank you.
    – pdoak
    Dec 21, 2012 at 10:59
  • @pdoak - if you're trying to look for non-hidden directories, you should use GetFileInfo(1) instead of hardcoding directory names.
    – Carl Norum
    Dec 21, 2012 at 17:36

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