X-Git-Url: https://ruderich.org/simon/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=lib.sh;h=5abd27898400e44bbaed2c14ec4a45ce80b8f480;hb=8348ecd5e6759f9551fac0431a45c3bdffc36956;hp=799560cbf72f68e4f126ea8b1b285893f3586643;hpb=d2efdbf3d4f583655ecbe5dba5163f32b1307582;p=config%2Fdotfiles.git diff --git a/lib.sh b/lib.sh index 799560c..5abd278 100644 --- a/lib.sh +++ b/lib.sh @@ -2,43 +2,113 @@ # # Their setup.sh script sources this file. +# Copyright (C) 2009-2013 Simon Ruderich +# +# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify +# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or +# (at your option) any later version. +# +# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +# GNU General Public License for more details. +# +# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +# along with this program. If not, see . + # csh gives the error "Unknown colorls variable `su'." when used with newer -# options supported by zsh or GNU ls. +# options supported by Zsh or GNU ls. unset LS_COLORS -# Check if the given program is installed. Returns 0 if it exists, 1 -# otherwise; so it can be used in if. +# Check if the given program is installed. `type` is portable, `which` is not. installed() { - which $1 | grep -E '^/' > /dev/null + type "$1" >/dev/null 2>&1 +} +# Get the path of the given program. Thanks to Gilles on [1] (read on +# 2013-03-10) for the PATH-walking idea. `which` is not portable and `type` +# has no well-formed output format. +# +# [1]: http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/4988/how-do-i-test-to-see-if-an-application-exists-in-path/4991 +installed_path() { + test -z "$1" && return 1 + + # Keep IFS change local. + ( + IFS=: + # Walk PATH. + for directory in $PATH; do + if test -x "$directory/$1"; then + echo "$directory/$1" + return 0 + fi + done + + return 1 + ) } -# Prints the current OS. Supported are Debian (debian), Gentoo (gentoo) and -# Mac OS X (darwin) at the moment. If an unsupported OS is used an error is -# printed. +# Usage: cmd_i ... +# +# Run with all arguments (including the last file) and write the result +# to the temporary file .tmp and then renamed that file to . This +# can't be done in-place (e.g. cmd file) because it truncates the file. +cmd_i() { + # Get last argument. + last= + for x; do + last="$x" + done + + "$@" >"$last".tmp + mv "$last".tmp "$last" +} + +# Usage: sed_i ... +# +# sed -i is not compatible due to different implementations. See cmd_i. +sed_i() { + cmd_i sed "$@" +} + +# Print the current OS. The following OS are supported at the moment: +# - Debian (debian) +# - Gentoo (gentoo) +# - Mac OS X (darwin) +# - Solaris/OpenSolaris (sun) +# - FreeBSD (freebsd) +# If an unsupported OS is used an error is printed. os() { - if [ -f /etc/debian_version ]; then + if test -f /etc/debian_version; then echo debian - elif [ -f /etc/gentoo-release ]; then + elif test -f /etc/gentoo-release; then echo gentoo - elif [ x`uname` = xDarwin ]; then + elif test x`uname` = xDarwin; then echo darwin + elif test x`uname` = xSunOS; then + echo sun + elif test x`uname` = xFreeBSD; then + echo freebsd else echo unsupported OS! >&2 return 1 fi } -# Creates a symbolic link for file $1 in dirname of $2 with name of basenmae +# Creates a symbolic link for file $1 in dirname of $2 with name of basename # $2. # # `./link.sh example ~/.examplerc` creates a symbolic link to example # (wherever it is located) in ~/ named .examplerc. link() { + local pwd base source target >/dev/null 2>&1 || true + # Get all necessary paths. pwd=`pwd` - base=`dirname "$2"` + base=`echo "$2" | sed "s|\~|$HOME|"` # expand ~, some sh don't do it + base=`dirname "$base"` source=`echo "$pwd/$1" | sed "s|$base/||"` target=`basename "$2"` @@ -47,13 +117,14 @@ link() { # Abort if the target file exists and is no symbolic link. Prevents # overwriting real files. - if [ -e "$target" -a ! -h "$target" ]; then + if ( test -f "$target" && test ! -h "$target" ) || \ + ( test -s "$target" && test ! -h "$target" ); then echo "link(): target '$target' exists already and is no symbolic link!" >&2 exit 1 fi - # Make sure the source exists. - if [ ! -e "$source" ]; then + # Make sure the source exists (is file, directory or link). + if test ! -f "$source" && test ! -d "$source" && test ! -h "$source"; then echo "link(): source '$source' doesn't exist!" >&2 exit 1 fi @@ -65,8 +136,6 @@ link() { # Go back to the directory where we were before. cd "$pwd" - - unset pwd base source target } # Write a warning to $1 to make clear it should not be modified. $2 is the @@ -80,10 +149,10 @@ warning() { echo "# It was generated from $2 on `date`." >> $1 echo >> $1 - # Display given options if there were any (zsh has a problem with $options + # Display given options if there were any (Zsh has a problem with $options # as variable name). option= - if [ -n "$4" ]; then + if test -n "$4"; then option=" with options '$4'" fi # Write message to stdout. @@ -99,9 +168,10 @@ warning() { # The following commands are possible; the file extension for the source file # in brackets. # -# - m4 (.m4): pipe $2.m4 through m4 then write it to $2 -# - awk (.in): pipe $2.in through awk then write it to $2 -# - cat ($3): copy $2$3 to $2 +# - m4 (.m4): pipe $2.m4 through m4 then write it to $2 +# - awk (.in): pipe $2.in through awk then write it to $2 +# - perl (.in): pipe $2.in through perl then write it to $2 +# - cat ($3): copy $2$3 to $2 generate() { # Get command and target file. command="$1" @@ -112,11 +182,11 @@ generate() { # Set extension for the used commands. When cat is used $3 is used as # extension. - if [ x"$command" = xm4 ]; then + if test x"$command" = xm4; then extension=.m4 - elif [ x"$command" = xawk ]; then + elif test x"$command" = xawk -o x"$command" = xperl; then extension=.in - elif [ x"$command" = xcat ]; then + elif test x"$command" = xcat; then extension="$1" # is $3 in reality, $1 because of shifting shift # Print a warning and exit if an unsupported command is used.