I'm well aware of the source
(aka .
) utility, which will take the contents from a file and execute them within the current shell.
Now, I'm transforming some text into shell commands, and then running them, as follows:
$ ls | sed ... | sh
ls
is just a random example, the original text can be anything. sed
too, just an example for transforming text. The interesting bit is sh
. I pipe whatever I got to sh
and it runs it.
My problem is, that means starting a new sub shell. I'd rather have the commands run within my current shell. Like I would be able to do with source some-file
, if I had the commands in a text file.
I don't want to create a temp file because feels dirty.
Alternatively, I'd like to start my sub shell with the exact same characteristics as my current shell.
update
Ok, the solutions using backtick certainly work, but I often need to do this while I'm checking and changing the output, so I'd much prefer if there was a way to pipe the result into something in the end.
sad update
Ah, the /dev/stdin
thing looked so pretty, but, in a more complex case, it didn't work.
So, I have this:
find . -type f -iname '*.doc' | ack -v '\.doc$' | perl -pe 's/^((.*)\.doc)$/git mv -f $1 $2.doc/i' | source /dev/stdin
Which ensures all .doc
files have their extension lowercased.
And which incidentally, can be handled with xargs
, but that's besides the point.
find . -type f -iname '*.doc' | ack -v '\.doc$' | perl -pe 's/^((.*)\.doc)$/$1 $2.doc/i' | xargs -L1 git mv
So, when I run the former, it'll exit right away, nothing happens.
$ ls | sed ... | source /dev/stdin
UPDATE: This works in bash 4.0, as well as tcsh, and dash (if you change source
to .
). Apparently this was buggy in bash 3.2. From the bash 4.0 release notes:
Fixed a bug that caused `.' to fail to read and execute commands from non-regular files such as devices or named pipes.
The eval
command exists for this very purpose.
eval "$( ls | sed... )"
More from the bash manual:
eval
eval [arguments]
The arguments are concatenated together
into a single command, which
is then read and executed, and its
exit status returned as the exit
status of eval. If there are no
arguments or only empty arguments, the
return status is zero.
Wow, I know this is an old question, but I've found myself with the same exact problem recently (that's how I got here).
Anyway - I don't like the source /dev/stdin
answer, but I think I found a better one. It's deceptively simple actually:
echo ls -la | xargs xargs
Nice, right? Actually, this still doesn't do what you want, because if you have multiple lines it will concat them into a single command instead of running each command separately. So the solution I found is:
ls | ... | xargs -L 1 xargs
the -L 1
option means you use (at most) 1 line per command execution. Note: if your line ends with a trailing space, it will be concatenated with the next line! So make sure each line ends with a non-space.
Finally, you can do
ls | ... | xargs -L 1 xargs -t
to see what commands are executed (-t is verbose).
Hope someone reads this!
Try using process substitution, which replaces output of a command with a temporary file which can then be sourced:
source <(echo id)
I believe this is "the right answer" to the question:
ls | sed ... | while read line; do $line; done
That is, one can pipe into a while
loop; the read
command command takes one line from its stdin
and assigns it to the variable $line
. $line
then becomes the command executed within the loop; and it continues until there are no further lines in its input.
This still won't work with some control structures (like another loop), but it fits the bill in this case.
`ls | sed ...`
I sort of feel like ls | sed ... | source -
would be prettier, but unfortunately source
doesn't understand -
to mean stdin
.
I think your solution is command substitution with backticks: http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_03_04.html
See section 3.4.5
Why not use source
then?
$ ls | sed ... > out.sh ; source out.sh
To use the mark4o's solution on bash 3.2 (macos) a here string can be used instead of pipelines like in this example:
. /dev/stdin <<< "$(grep '^alias' ~/.profile)"