I think that you need to step back and think about what a map, or associative array, really is. All it is is a way to store a value for a given key, and get that value back quickly and efficiently. You may also want to be able to iterate over the keys to retrieve every key value pair, or delete keys and their associated values.
Now, think about a data structure you use all the time in shell scripting, and even just in the shell without writing a script, that has these properties. Stumped? It's the filesystem.
Really, all you need to have an associative array in shell programming is a temp directory. mktemp -d is your associative array constructor:
prefix=$(basename $0)
map=$(mktemp -dt ${prefix})
echo >${map}/key somevalue
value=$(cat ${map}/key)
If you don't feel like using echo and cat, you can always write some little wrappers; these ones are modelled off of Irfan's, though they just output the value rather than setting arbitrary variables like $value:
#!/bin/sh
prefix=$(basename $0)
mapdir=$(mktemp -dt ${prefix})
trap 'rm -r ${mapdir}' EXIT
put() {
[ "$#" != 3 ] && exit 1
mapname=$1; key=$2; value=$3
[ -d "${mapdir}/${mapname}" ] || mkdir "${mapdir}/${mapname}"
echo $value >"${mapdir}/${mapname}/${key}"
}
get() {
[ "$#" != 2 ] && exit 1
mapname=$1; key=$2
cat "${mapdir}/${mapname}/${key}"
}
put "newMap" "name" "Irfan Zulfiqar"
put "newMap" "designation" "SSE"
put "newMap" "company" "My Own Company"
value=$(get "newMap" "company")
echo $value
value=$(get "newMap" "name")
echo $value
edit: This approach is actually quite a bit faster than the linear search using sed suggested by the questioner, as well as more robust (it allows keys and values to have contain -, =, and space). space, qnd ":SP:"). The fact that it uses the filesystem does not make it slow; these files are actually never guaranteed to be written to the disk unless you call sync; for temporary files like this with a short lifetime, it's not unlikely that many of them will never be written to disk.
I did a few benchmarks of Irfan's code, Jerry's modification of Irfan's code, and my code, using the following driver program:
#!/bin/sh
mapimpl=$1
numkeys=$2
numvals=$3
. ./${mapimpl}.sh #/ <- fix broken stack overflow syntax highlighting
for (( i = 0 ; $i < $numkeys ; i += 1 ))
do
for (( j = 0 ; $j < $numvals ; j += 1 ))
do
put "newMap" "key$i" "value$j"
get "newMap" "key$i"
done
done
The resultsare as follows:
$ time ./driver.sh irfan 10 5
real 0m0.975s
user 0m0.280s
sys 0m0.691s
$ time ./driver.sh brian 10 5
real 0m0.226s
user 0m0.057s
sys 0m0.123s
$ time ./driver.sh jerry 10 5
real 0m0.706s
user 0m0.228s
sys 0m0.530s
$ time ./driver.sh irfan 100 5
real 0m10.633s
user 0m4.366s
sys 0m7.127s
$ time ./driver.sh brian 100 5
real 0m1.682s
user 0m0.546s
sys 0m1.082s
$ time ./driver.sh jerry 100 5
real 0m9.315s
user 0m4.565s
sys 0m5.446s
$ time ./driver.sh irfan 10 500
real 1m46.197s
user 0m44.869s
sys 1m12.282s
$ time ./driver.sh brian 10 500
real 0m16.003s
user 0m5.135s
sys 0m10.396s
$ time ./driver.sh jerry 10 500
real 1m24.414s
user 0m39.696s
sys 0m54.834s
$ time ./driver.sh irfan 1000 5
real 4m25.145s
user 3m17.286s
sys 1m21.490s
$ time ./driver.sh brian 1000 5
real 0m19.442s
user 0m5.287s
sys 0m10.751s
$ time ./driver.sh jerry 1000 5
real 5m29.136s
user 4m48.926s
sys 0m59.336s
