44

I have this following script, but I need to get $i variable value working inside that each block starting with EOF and ending with EOF.

It is not reading the variable value but putting $i.

/var/tmp/vpn.sh I have:

#!/bin/bash
amazonEth0="10.0.0.18"
amazonWan0="4.9.2.9"
vpnServer="4.8.8.6"
hosttoHost1="10.109.0.20/32"
hosttoHost2="10.109.0.21/32"
hosttoHost3="10.109.58.6/32"
hosttoHost4="10.109.59.3/32"

for i in 1 2 3 4
do
cat > /tmp/test$i.conf << \EOF
#Step 3
conn test"$i"
    #auto=start
    type=tunnel
    authby=secret
    pfs=no
    aggrmode=no
    ikelifetime=28800s
    lifetime=3600s
    ike=aes128-md5;modp1024!
    phase2alg=aes128-md5;modp1024
    forceencaps=yes
    left=$amazonLan0
    leftid=$amazonWan0
    leftsourceip=$amazonWan0
    right=$vpnServer
    rightsubnet=$hosttoHost$i
EOF
done

### Run me
cat > /var/tmp/vpn.sh << \EOF
service ipsec restart

######## Apply for loop here, instead of many many lines ###########
# for i in 1 2 3 4
# do
#   ipsec auto --add test$i
# done
ipsec auto --add test1
ipsec auto --add test2
ipsec auto --add test3
ipsec auto --add test4

######## Apply for loop here, instead of many many lines ###########
# for i in 1 2 3 4
# do
#   ipsec auto --up test$i
# done
ipsec auto --up test1
ipsec auto --up test2
ipsec auto --up test3
ipsec auto --up test4

ipsec auto --status
ip xfrm policy
ip route show

######## Apply for loop here, instead of many many lines ###########
# for i in 1 2 3 4
# do
#   ping -c 1 $hosttoHost$i
# done
ping -c 1 10.109.0.20; 
ping -c 1 10.109.0.21;
ping -c 1 10.109.58.6; 
ping -c 1 10.109.59.3; 

EOF
chmod +x /var/tmp/vpn.sh

# Cake - eat now - optional 
/var/tmp/vpn.sh > save output | mail -s ipsec date time &
2
  • remove quotes on conn test"$i"?
    – 0x1F602
    Commented Aug 1, 2013 at 1:05
  • OK - but $hosttoHost$i becomes 1 instead of $hosttoHost1 $hosttoHost2 ...
    – user285594
    Commented Aug 1, 2013 at 1:09

1 Answer 1

87

Remove the backslash before EOF:

#!/bin/bash

i=ok

# This prints "Bwah ok"
cat <<EOF
Bwah $i
EOF

# This prints "Bwah $i"
cat <<\EOF
Bwah $i
EOF

To get your last line display rightsubnet="10.109.0.20/32" (for i=1), you need something like this:

i=1
val1=beep
val2=bop

rightval="val$i"
cat <<EOF
This is a beep: ${!rightval}
EOF

That is, you compute the name of the variable you want, put that in another variable, and use the ${!var} syntax.

But for that kind of thing you should rather use an array:

i=0
vals=(beep bop)

cat <<EOF
This is a beep: ${vals[$i]}
EOF

Note however that the indexes start at 0.

3
  • $hosttoHost$i becomes 1 instead of $hosttoHost1
    – user285594
    Commented Aug 1, 2013 at 1:08
  • thank you. can i not do it inside cat <<EOF here....here.... EOF then its debug friendly in large script (basically my script is more larger)
    – user285594
    Commented Aug 1, 2013 at 1:13
  • 1
    Edited again: you can use an array, it's more readable and you don't have to compute names of other variables.
    – Pik'
    Commented Aug 1, 2013 at 1:16

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