UPDATE: The OP says that the problem was a hidden character in his input. This answer does not describe how to solve that problem. Nonetheless, the OP has marked this answer as accepted. See the comments of Charles Duffy for the actual solution to the OP's problem.
Caveat: I am taking everything in your problem description literally, which leads to the answer below. If you provide examples of the strings that will be passed through $Version
it would help clarify the issue.
As I understand it you're reading in the full path of a file in your variable with read Version
. Now if you say echo $Version
you should get /path/to/foo.bar
.
I don't think you'd want to cd
into the file /path/to/foo.bar
. You'll get an error: Not a directory
, because it's a file, not a directory.
Now, consider what sed -e /\.//g
will do to the pathname.
echo "/path/to/foo.bar" | sed -e '/\.//g'
/path/to/foobar
Does /path/to/foobar
actually exist? No, because foo.bar
was a file. You'll get an error: No such file or directory
, because the foobar
directory does not exist.
If I understand what you are trying to do, you are trying to extract the directory that contains the file specified by $Version
. The command dirname /path/to/foo.bar
will return /path/to
. So you want to set New_version=$( dirname "$Version" )
, at which point you should be able to cd $New_version
.
P.S. Make sure $Version
is reading in an absolute path name, not a relative name, so that it's independent of where you run the script from.
set -x
at the top of this script to log (to stderr) the exact commands run by the shell, including all hidden characters. If your input file includes something like aCRLF
, for instance, that would result in what you're describing here, as the CR would be a hidden$'\r'
character at the end of the directory name.