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I have the following script which changes a password using a password file that I have piped the password to in the correct format. However, the next command needs a password file with a revised format. At the moment i just delete and re-create the file, but it would be nice to just edit it instead, im just not sure how:

sudo touch /tmp/password.txt
sudo chmod 600 /tmp/password.txt
sudo echo "AS_ADMIN_PASSWORD=" > /tmp/password.txt
sudo echo "AS_ADMIN_NEWPASSWORD=Pa55w0rd2" >> /tmp/password.txt
sudo /opt/glassfish3/bin/asadmin --user admin --passwordfile /tmp/password.txt change-admin-password \
    --domain_name domain1
sudo rm /tmp/password.txt
sudo touch /tmp/password.txt
sudo chmod 600 /tmp/password.txt
sudo echo "AS_ADMIN_PASSWORD=Pa55w0rd2" > /tmp/password.txt
sudo /opt/glassfish3/bin/asadmin --user admin --passwordfile /tmp/password.txt enable-secure-admin
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    Unrelated to your question, but note that sudo echo "AS_ADMIN_PASSWORD=" > /tmp/password.txt is probably not doing what you think it does. The sudo is a no-op, because the i/o redirection > /tmp/password.txt happens in your local shell before the command is called.
    – larsks
    Oct 27, 2016 at 14:59

1 Answer 1

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Perfect job for sed:

sed -i '/^AS_ADMIN_PASSWORD=/d' /tmp/password.txt

This deletes the line matching the given regex, in-place.

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