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Week Three Agenda. Administrative Issues Link of the Week Review Week Two Information This Week’s Expected Outcomes Next Lab Assignment Break-Out Problems Upcoming Deadlines Lab Assistance, Questions, and Answers. Administrative Issues.
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Week Three Agenda Administrative Issues Link of the Week Review Week Two Information This Week’s Expected Outcomes Next Lab Assignment Break-Out Problems Upcoming Deadlines Lab Assistance, Questions, and Answers
Administrative Issues This is the last week for identifying a proctor. Many students have already selected their proctor for their midterm exam. This same proctor list will be utilized for the final exam unless a change request is emailed to the Student Learning Center and me two weeks prior to the final exam date.
Link of the Week APA Style writing guidelines will be utilized for all lab assignment reports . APA Style http://www.apastyle.org/learn/ APA Style Writing Workshop http://www.franklin.edu/student-services/student-learning-center/academic-support/workshops.html Grading will focus mainly on capitalization, punctuation, grammar, and citation.
Link of the Week Linux Forums Web Site This web site allows individuals to post questions about Fedora Linux and Redhat Linux. The people that maintain this site are knowledgeable users of these operating systems. If your experiencing problems with commands or just want to learn more about these systems, you can find this type of information at this site. http://www.linuxforums.org/forum/redhat-fedora-linux-help/73994-system-commands-not-working-unless-sbin.html
Review Week Two Information Caveat: Knoppix software was designed to be used as a Live CD because of specific features that make it’s performance and stability very suitable. It has been noted in several articles that Knoppix works best from a Live CD. Knoppix enthusiasts have attempted to install this software on a hard disk and encountered problems in the process. These problems are most pronounced when installing updates and new software.
Review Week Two Information Users can connect the standard output of one command into the standard input of another command by using the pipeline operator (|). Demonstrate ps -ef ps –ef | wc –l ps –ef | awk ‘{print $2}’ ps –ef | grep dandrear ls –l | cut –c1-3 who | sort > test_file.txt The output of the who command is piped to the sort function and written in ascending order in the test_file.txt file. The “who” and “sort” command execute in parallel.
Review Week Two Information Commands who –b (time of last system boot) who –d (print dead processes) who –r (print current run level) List directory entries using the ls –l | less command drwxrwxrwx permissions (directory) -rwxrwxrwx permissions (file) lrwxrwxrwx permissions (Symbolic link) -rwxrwxrwx 2 dandrear (Hardlink)
Week Two Information A process associates a number with each file that it has opened. This number is called a file descriptor. When you log in, your first process has the following three open files connected to your terminal. Standard Input (stdin) : Filedescriptor 0 is open for reading. /dev/stdin Standard Output (stdout): File descriptor 1 is open for writing. /dev/stdout Standard Error (stderr): File descriptor 2 is open reading. /dev/stderr Demonstrate ls –a > /tmp/output 2>&1 > is equivalent to 1> < is equivalent to <0
Review Week Two Information A file descriptor is generally an index for an entry in a kernel-resident data structure that contains information on all open files. Each process on the system has its own file descriptor table. A user application passes the abstract key to the kernel through a system call, and the kernel accesses the file for the application. A data structure is a specific way of storing and organizing data in a computer so that it can be accessed with high efficiently. Data structures can be used as a single place for storing unrelated information.
Review Week Two Information The grep command searches the named input file(s)for lines containing a given pattern. Each line found is reported to standard output. Demonstrate: grep UNIX foobar_3 grep ‘^UNIX’ foobar_3 grep ‘UNIX$’ foobar_3 grep pattern foobar_1 grep pattern * The find command lists all pathnames that are in each of the given directories. Demonstrate: find / -type d –print find ~dandrear –type d -print find . –print find / -name foobar
Review Week Two Information Redirection Symbols: Redirect the standard output of a command to a file. date > /tmp/date_saved Redirect the standard input of a command so that it reads from a file instead of from your terminal. cat < ~dandrear/Fall09_Solutions/test.txt Append the standard output of a command to a file. cat foobar_2 >> foobar_1
Review Week Two Information Korn Shell Syntax and Commands srchfile.sh $1 $2 original=$PWD cd $original cd $2 listing=`ls –l | cut –c57-80` for file_name in listing do (boundary) Action Statements done (boundary)
Review Week Two Information Commands ls –l | more ls –l | less (count the fields/use “q” to quit) ls -a (does not hide entries) less man (utilizes the less command for reading online documentation). cat > test_file (keyboard input goes into test_file) cat < test_file (test_file is displayed on terminal) cat foobar_2 >> foobar_1 (append first file to second file)
Review Week Two Information Commands > test_file cat /etc/passwd grep x /etc/passwd | cut –d’:’ –f1 chmod 705 * chmod 705 test_file grep line ~dandrear/Fall09_Solutions/foobar_1 find ~dandrear –type d -print myArray[1]=$1 $0
Review Week Two Information Commands: The tilde (~) symbol is used to represent the user’s current home directory (e.g. /export/home/dandrear) The command line arguments are: $0 $1 $2 $3 …
Review Week Two Information Demonstrate /export/home/dandrear/.profile umask 077 The umask variable contains the default permissions for a file and a directory. Variables Used by Korn Shell: HOME = is set to the full path name of your login directory (/export/home/dandrear) PATH = contains the command search path. It is set to a series of path names separated by colons (:).
Review Week Two Information Variables Used by Korn Shell SHELL = This entry may be set by the system administrator to the path name of a shell interpreter other than the standard bash. TERM = specifies what terminal you are using. TMOUT = variable contains the integer attribute. If you set the value greater than zero, ksh terminates if you do not enter a command within the prescribed number of seconds after ksh issues the PS1 prompt. MAIL = Name of your Mail files EDITOR = Pathname for your editor
Review Week Two Information The tilde (~) symbol is used to represent the user’s current home directory (e.g. /export/home/dandrear) The command line arguments are: $0 $1 $2 $3 …
Review Week Two Information Man page Man formats and displays the on-line manual pages. If you specify section, man only looks in that section of the manual. Name is normally the name of the manual page, which is typically the name of a command, function, or file. However, if name contains a slash (/) then man interprets it as a file specification. Each section has an introduction which can be obtained with, e.g., "man 2 intro“ or “man ./foobar_1”. If MANPATH is set, man uses it as the path to search for manual page files.
Review Week Two Information Man Page Sections 1 Commands 2 System calls 3 C library routines 4 Devices and networks 5 File formats 6 Games and demos 7 Miscellaneous 8 System administration.
Review Week Two Information Types of File and Directory Access: AccessFile MeaningDirectory Meaning r View file contents Search directory contents w Alter file contents Alter directory contents x Run executable file Make your current directory
Review Week Two Information Shell and Programs Access: To run a shell script, you will need read (r) and execute (x) access. To run a binary executable program, you will need execute (x) access.
Week’s 2 & 3 Expected Outcomes Upon successful completion of this module, the student will be able to: • Create scripts using shell/Perl variables and program control flow. • Use redirection and pipes to combine scripts and executables. • Use man page system and find script tools. • Discuss Perl Language
Next Lab Assignment Introduction to Perl: Perl - Practical Extraction and Report Language Originally developed by Larry Wall, a linguist. Perl is 21 years old and Perl 5 is 14 years old. • Perl is a simple language - Compiles and executes like a shell script or a batch file - Perl doesn’t impose special growth limitations on arrays and data strings - Perl is a composite of C, AWK, and Basic - Originally developed to process text and automating tasks.
Next Lab Assignment Perl’s range of flexibility - System administration - Web development - Network programming - GUI development Major features - Procedural Programming Sequence or unstructured statements Includes routines, subroutines, methods, or functions - Object Oriented Programming Module uses “objects” and their interactions to design applications and computer programs.
Next Lab Assignment Major features (continued) - Powerful built-in support for text processing - Large collection of third-party modules.
Next Lab Assignment The Advanced Scripting lab assignment requires two shell scripts to be written. srch.sh srchfile.sh Demonstrate Execution of srch.sh and srchfile.sh Case #1: ./srch.sh <pattern> <file name / directory name> The srch.sh script will call the srchfile.sh script to perform a specific task. The srchfile.sh searches for a file with a pattern and outputs the matching information to standard output. After all directory entries have been read, control is returned to the main script, srch.sh.
Break Out Problems 1. scalar@ARGV 2. $ARGV[0] 3. filter 4. unless 5. $NUMBER 6. exit 1 7. $ARGV[1] 8. % (%directory) 9. $ ($quote) 10. @ (@names) 11. diff 12. tr “[a-z]” “[A-Z]” < filein > fileout
Next Lab Assignment Read your Programming Perl text. Chapter One (1) Chapter Two (2) Review Chapter 32: Standard Modules Review Chapter 33: Diagnostic Output Messages
Upcoming Deadlines • Lab Assignment 1-1, Obtain a Proctor for Exams, due January 22, 2010. • Lab Assignment 2-1, Simple Shell Scripting, due January 24, 2010. • Lab Assignment 3-1, Advanced Scripting, due January 31, 2010. • Read Chapters 1 and 2 in Programming Perl text. Review Chapter 32: Standard Modules Review Chapter 33: Diagnostic Output Messages • Read Module Two listed under the course Web site.
Lab Assistance, Questions and Answers Questions Comments Concerns After class I will help students with their scripts.