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first of all, I want you guys to know I did my research and found a ton of documentation about the subject of course, but none of them works.

I have a text file with each line being:

newUserToAdd,inThisGroup

i.e:

John,Client

So trying to create the user's list if they are not already there, and to place them inThisGroup. The thing is if the group name is the text file is Client, I want the group name in the computer to be "Clients". So I need to add the "s" character. I tried many ways, but none of them works.

Here's a bit of my script if that can help to understand.

  for line in `cat /home/jonathan/Desktop/Utilisateurs.txt`
  do
   echo $line > /dev/null
   user=`echo $line | cut -d "," -f1`
   group=`echo $line | cut -d "," -f2`
   groups=${group}"s"

  if [ `grep $group /etc/group` ] ; then 
   echo "Ce groupe existe. Aucune action à faire."
  else
   #echo "Ce groupe n'existe pas. Création immédiate."
   echo $groups
   #groupadd $groups
  fi
  done

But it keeps giving me this kind of output... (There's 3 group names in my list, in French: "Superviseur","Technicien" and "Client". The console output is:

    superviseur
    sechnicien
    sechnicien
    slient
    slient
    slient
    superviseur

Why does it keep changing the first letter instead of adding the letter at the end ?

Thank you very much for your time !

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  • groups="${group}s" should work, but so should groups=${group}"s". You could smack it with a hammer and try groups=$(echo "${groups}s") That seems a little silly though
    – JNevill
    Nov 28, 2017 at 21:40
  • Thanks for your comment JNevill. Unfortunately it didn't work either :( Nov 28, 2017 at 21:46
  • Don't read lines with for. See BashFAQ #1 describing best practices for iterating through a file line-by-line. Nov 28, 2017 at 22:08
  • This is a school project, and the meaning ot the project is to use basic if, loops ans such. What would you suggest instead ? Nov 28, 2017 at 22:09
  • 1
    Also, see the bash tag wiki. Literally the very first thing in the section "Before asking about problematic code" tells you to check for and deal with DOS newlines. Nov 28, 2017 at 22:10

1 Answer 1

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This is probably being caused by carriage returns at the end of each line in your Utilisateurs.txt file. Use the dos2unix utility to convert \r\n (Windows-style newlines) to \n (Unix-style newlines).

This utility may be found in a repository, depending on your distribution (e.g., in the Canonical repository), or it may be created manually (e.g., as a quick sed script).

The reason that you are seeing this issue is that carriage returns (\r) pull the cursor to the left of the line without moving the cursor down one line. This can be useful in some cases, such as when you desire to rewrite the current line. However, this is probably not what you are looking for here.

For more context, Bash uses its internal field separator (IFS) to determine delimiters when processing strings in commands such as for. The default IFS in Bash is $' \n\t', which includes spaces, newlines, and tabs but not carriage returns. This means that your for-loop will separate on newlines but will keep the carriage returns intact.

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  • Yep that was exactly the problem. Thanks a lot for your input ! Nov 28, 2017 at 22:18

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