Use parameter expansions:
#!/bin/bash
shopt -s nullglob
for f in /work/xiaofenglu/science/myten.*.dump.gz; do
base_name=${f%.dump.gz} # removes trailing .dump.gz
base_name=${base_name##*/} # removes everything up to last / found
printf 'Base name is: %s\n' "$base_name"
done
Your command doesn't work since you're not even calling the command basename
. You're just defining the string base_name
as the verbatim string
basename ${inputfile} .dump.gz
because of the single quotes. Maybe you saw somewhere this command:
base_name=`basename ${inputfile} .dump.gz`
and you confused the backticks ` with the single quote '
. With backticks instead of single quotes, the command works. But it's much better to use, instead of backticks, the $(...)
construct:
base_name=$(basename "$inputfile" .dump.gz)
which is called a Command Substitution.
But I would say it's useless to call the external process basename
to perform something that Bash can do very well on its own.