I write, maintain and use a healthy amount of bash scripts. I would consider myself a bash hacker and strive to someday be a bash ninja ( need to learn more awk
first ). One of the most important feature/frustrations of bash to understand is how quotes, and subsequent parameter expansion, work. This is well documented, and for a good reason, many pitfalls, bugs and newbie-traps exist in the mysterious world of quoted parameter expansion and word splitting. For this reason, the advice is to "Double quote everything," but what if I want word splitting to occur?
In multiple style guides I can not find an example of safe and proper use of word splitting after command substitution.
What is the correct way to use unquoted command substitution?
Example:
I don't need help getting this command working, but it seems to be a violation of established patterns, if you would like to give feedback on this command, please keep it in comments
docker stats $(docker ps | awk '{print $NF}' | grep -v NAMES)
The command substitute returns output such as:
container-1 container-3 excitable-newton
This one-liner uses the command substitution to spit out the names of each of my running docker containers and the feeds them, with word splitting, as separate inputs to the docker stats
command, which takes an arbitrary length list of container names and gives back some info about them.
If I used:
docker stats "$(docker ps | awk '{print $NF}' | grep -v NAMES)"
There would be one string of newline separated container names passed to docker stats
.
This seems like a perfect example of when I would want word splitting, but shellcheck disagrees, is this somehow unsafe? Is there an established pattern for using word-splitting after expansion or substitution?
$(docker ps ...)
that your are trying to "solve" quoting issues for. Good luck.docker ps
commanda[12]
-- if you have a file nameda1
ora2
in your current directory, the name can be replaced.