I have this
#! /bin/bash
cd ~
hostname=`hostname`
cat /opt/ip.txt | while read line;
do
# do something with $line here
RES=`ping -c 2 -q $line | grep "packet loss"`
echo "---" >> /opt/os-$hostname.txt
echo "---"
echo "$line $RES" >> /opt/os-$hostname.txt
echo "$line $RES"
done
How I can make the script multi-threaded? I would like to speed up the performance.
You can use the <(...)
notation for starting a subprocess and then cat
all the outputs together:
myping() {
ping -c 2 -q "$1" | grep "packet loss"
}
cat <(myping hostname1) <(myping hostname2) ...
To use a loop for this, you will need to build the command first:
cat /opt/ip.txt | {
command='cat'
while read line
do
command="$command "'<'"(myping $line)"
done
eval "$command"
}
If you really want the delimiting ---
of your original, I propose to add an echo "---"
in the myping
.
If you want to append the output to a file as well, use tee
:
eval "$command" | tee -a /opt/os-$hostname.txt