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I've read the answer here,but still got wrong. In my folder,I only want to deal with *.gz file,Windows 10.tar.gz got space in filename.

Assume the folder contain:

Windows 10.tar.gz Windows7.tar.gz otherfile

Here is my shell scripts,I tried everything to quote with "",still can't got what I want. crypt_import_xml.sh

#/bin/sh

rule_dir=/root/demo/rule
function crypt_import_xml()
{
    rule=$1
    # list the file in absoulte path
    for file in `ls ${rule}/*.gz`; do
        echo "${file}"
        #tar -xf *.gz

        #mv a b.xml to ab.xml

    done
}

crypt_import_xml ${rule_dir}

Here is what I got:

[email protected]:[/root/demo]./crypt_import_xml.sh 
/root/demo/rule/Windows
10.tar.gz
/root/demo/rule/Windows7.tar.gz

After tar xf the *.gz file,the xml filename still contain space.It is a nightmare for me to deal with filename contain spaces.

5
  • 1
    Can you use: for file in "${rule}"/*.gz; do echo "${file}" #tar -xf *.gz #mv a b.xml to ab.xml done and let me know if it works? You do not need the ls command in the first place
    – Allan
    Feb 22, 2019 at 8:13
  • @Allan still got the same result with ls command.
    – J.Doe
    Feb 22, 2019 at 8:29
  • 1
    There should not be any ls command
    – Allan
    Feb 22, 2019 at 8:45
  • mywiki.wooledge.org/ParsingLs
    – Biffen
    Feb 22, 2019 at 9:08
  • (OT: @J.Doe Your code has a few issues (broken shebang, function is a bashism, etc), may I recommend shellcheck.net ?)
    – Biffen
    Feb 22, 2019 at 9:16

2 Answers 2

4

You shouldn't use ls in for loop.

$ ls directory 
file.txt  'file with more spaces.txt'  'file with spaces.txt'

Using ls:

$ for file in `ls ./directory`; do echo "$file"; done
file.txt
file
with
more
spaces.txt
file
with
spaces.txt

Using file globbing:

$ for file in ./directory/*; do echo "$file"; done 
./directory/file.txt
./directory/file with more spaces.txt
./directory/file with spaces.txt

So:

for file in "$rule"/*.gz; do
    echo "$file"
    #tar -xf *.gz

    #mv a b.xml to ab.xml
done
0
1

You do not need to call that ls command in the for loop, the file globbing will take place in your shell, without running this additional command:

XXX-macbookpro:testDir XXX$ ls -ltra
total 0
drwx------+ 123 XXX  XXX  3936 Feb 22 17:15 ..
-rw-r--r--    1 XXX  XXX     0 Feb 22 17:15 abc 123
drwxr-xr-x    3 XXX  XXX    96 Feb 22 17:15 .
XXX-macbookpro:testDir XXX$ rule=.
XXX-macbookpro:testDir XXX$ for f in "${rule}"/*; do echo "$f"; done
./abc 123

In your case you can change the "${rule}"/* into:

"${rule}"/*.gz;
1
  • can not work,If don't change directory,still got wrong.
    – J.Doe
    Feb 22, 2019 at 8:28

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