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 $groups
fi
done
But it keeps giving me this kind of output... (There's 3 group names in my list, in French: "Superviseur","Technicien" and "Client". The console output is:
superviseur
sechnicien
sechnicien
slient
slient
slient
superviseur
Why does it keep changing the first letter instead of adding the letter at the end ?
Thank you very much for your time !
groups="${group}s"
should work, but so shouldgroups=${group}"s"
. You could smack it with a hammer and trygroups=$(echo "${groups}s")
That seems a little silly thoughfor
. See BashFAQ #1 describing best practices for iterating through a file line-by-line.