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- External Command Reference
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- SKsh
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- A ksh-like Shell for the Amiga
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- Version 1.5
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- (Copyright) 1989, 1990
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- Steve Koren
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- July 20, 1990
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- Table of Contents
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- Introduction......................................3
- cat...............................................4
- cmp...............................................5
- cp................................................6
- crc...............................................7
- cut...............................................8
- du................................................9
- encr..............................................10
- fgrep.............................................11
- grep..............................................13
- head..............................................15
- indent............................................16
- join..............................................17
- num...............................................18
- strings...........................................19
- srun..............................................20
- tail..............................................21
- tee...............................................22
- view..............................................23
- wc................................................24
- window............................................25
- xd................................................26
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 2 External Cmd Reference
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- Introduction
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- This reference manual describes each SKsh external command in
- a concise manner. Each page contains the following
- information:
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- Name: The name of the command.
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- Type: Always External Command for this document; may be
- something else in the reference manual.
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- Default: Default parameters, if applicable.
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- Usage: Command syntax
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- Range: Legal values for variables or parameters
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- About: Text describing the command, variable, etc.
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- Example: A brief example usage.
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- See Also: Other related commands, variables, etc.
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- When reading the command syntax, anything in square brackets
- is optional. Anything followed by three dots can be repeated
- any number of times. A vertical bar is used to separate op-
- tion where one or the other, but not both, can be used.
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- In general, 'command -a -b' is equilivant to 'command -ab'.
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- All external commands were re-written in SKsh 1.4 to be much
- smaller and faster than their earlier counterparts. In 1.5
- they are slightly smaller yet.
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 3 External Cmd Reference
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- Name: cat
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: cat [ file ... ]
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- Range: n/a
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- About: cat copies the files named on the command line to
- its standard output. If no files are named, it
- copies the standard input to the standard output.
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- The cat external command is provided as an alter-
- native to the builtin form; this one can copy bi-
- nary data as well as ASCII data and is much faster
- when the output is redirected to a file.
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- To use the external cat command by default, insert
- the following line into your .skshrc file:
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- unset -b cat
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- Example: cat myfile.foo
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- See Also: The cat command entry in Reference.doc
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 4 External Cmd Reference
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- Name: cmp
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: cmp [ -s ] file1 file2
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- Range: n/a
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- About: cmp compares two files for equality. It can be
- used on binary as well as textual data. cmp is
- fast in that if the files are not the same size,
- it won't even bother comparing the contents of the
- files. cmp normally outputs a message that indi-
- cates whether the files are the same, different,
- or one is shorter than the other. If the -s op-
- tion is used, compare does not output this infor-
- mation, but simply returns a zero exit status if
- the files were the same, or non-zero if they were
- not.
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- Example: if cmp -s file1 file2
- then
- echo 'file1 is the same as file2'
- else
- echo 'file1 is different than file2'
- fi
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- See Also:
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 5 External Cmd Reference
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- Name: cp
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: cp [ -nuv ] file { file | dir }
- cp [ -nruv ] { file | dir } ... dir
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- Range: n/a
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- About: cp copies files from one place to another, option-
- ally renaming them in the process. If the desti-
- nation is a directory, the files have the same
- name in the destination directory. If more than
- one file is copied, the destination must be either
- a directory or nonexistant. If it is nonexistant,
- it is created as a directory.
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- The -r flag causes cp to perform a recursive copy.
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- The -v flag prints the name of each file as it is
- copied.
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- The -n flag causes cp NOT to duplicate file modi-
- fication times and protection flags on the desti-
- nation files. If you wish to make this the de-
- fault behavior, use this alias:
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- alias cp='$(which cp) -n'
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- cp will reset the AmigaDos archive bit whether or
- not the -v flag is used.
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- The -u flag causes cp to operate in "update" mode;
- only files with a newer timestamp than their asso-
- ciated destination are copied.
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- Example: cp my_file1 m_file2 my_file3 my_directory
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- Warnings: The -c (clone) flag was obsoleted in SKsh 1.4. It
- is still accepted for backward compatibility; how-
- ever, it is ignored. Use the -n option to turn
- off the clone behaviour.
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- The cp command was changed to an external binary
- in SKsh 1.4. It used to be a builtin.
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- See Also: mv
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 6 External Cmd Reference
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- Name: crc
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: crc file1 file2
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- Range: n/a
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- About: crc generates several 32 bit values which are com-
- puted from a file's contents. These values can be
- used to check the integrity of files which are
- transfered over a medium of questionable reliabil-
- ity (such as phone lines).
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- Example: crc a_file another_file
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- See Also:
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 7 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: cut
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: cut [ -flist [ -dchar ] | -clist ] [ file ... ]
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- Range: n/a
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- About: Cut is used for making vertical slices though a
- file based on character position or on fields de-
- limited by a defined character. It can also be
- used to re-order characters or fields within a
- file.
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- The -c option cuts based on character positions in
- the line. For example, "-c1,5-10,20" would copy
- characters one, five though ten, and twenty from
- each input line to the output line. If the list
- begins with a dash (for example, "-c-10") the
- first item is used implicitly (1 though 10 in this
- case). Characters beyond the end of line are
- ignored.
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- The -f option cuts based on field position within
- a line. Fields are separated by the tab character
- by default, but this can be changed with the -d
- option. For example, "-d:" would use colon sepa-
- rated fields. Repeated strings of the field sepa-
- rator indicate empty fields. Fields beyond the
- last in the record are ignored.
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- No space may occur between the -d option and the
- field separator character, or between the -f or -c
- options and the list.
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- Example: cut -c1-10,15,20-50 myfile.txt
- cut -f1,3,5-7 -d: myfile1.txt
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- See Also:
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 8 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: du
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: du [ -dkst ] dir ...
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- Range: n/a
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- About: du prints disk usage information for a set of
- directories. For each directory listed on the
- command line, the subtree rooted at that point is
- searched in a depth-first manner. du adds all the
- file sizes, and for each directory, prints 1) the
- directory name, 2) the total disk usage for files
- in this directory, and 3) the total disk usage for
- the subtree rooted at this directory.
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- The following options are available:
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- -k Print disk usage in 1024 byte kilobytes
- instead of the default bytes.
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- -s Summary mode; print disk usage only for
- root directories listed on the command
- line. This option omits the display for
- any sub-directories, but still must exam-
- ine the entire directory subtree to find
- the total disk usage.
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- -d Omit the first disk usage number (the to-
- tal for this directory only).
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- -t Omit the second disk usage number (the to-
- tal for the subtree rooted at this direc-
- tory). If both -t and -d are used, only
- directory names are printed.
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- Example: du devs: ram:
- du -s devs:
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- Warnings: The -k option rounds to the nearest kilobyte. For
- example, a 1023 byte file is printed as 1K, and a
- 511 byte file is printed as 0K. This means that
- the rooted subtree disk usage count may not be the
- sum of the directory disk usage counts for all
- subdirectories.
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- See Also: info
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 9 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: encr
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: encr { -d|-e } key { infile | - } { outfile | - }
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- Range: 4 <= strlen(key) <= max parameter length
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- About: encr encrypts (-e) and decrypts (-d) files, or
- standard input and output if the file name is
- given as a dash. The key value must be the same
- for the encrypt and decrypt; otherwise, garbage
- will result. The key may be of any passable
- length. Longer keys will result in a more secure
- encryption.
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- The encrypted data will in most cases not be ASCII
- data. However, this can be an advantage in that
- encr can be used to encrypt binary as well as
- ASCII data.
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- If encrypted data is to be compressed, the com-
- press operation should be performed before the
- data is encrypted, not after. This is because the
- encrypted data will appear random, and hence be
- difficult to compress by the standard algorithms.
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- encr does not use the DES algorithm, as code based
- on that algorithm is not shippable outside of the
- United States. (This is a bit paranoid if you ask
- me, but no one did). For obvious reasons, I'm not
- going to describe the encr algorithm here. The
- algorithm should be plenty secure enough to dis-
- courage casual perusal of encrypted data. It is
- probably not secure enough to keep data from a
- dedicated cryptoanalyst, or perhaps even from
- someone who is willing to closely examine a disas-
- sembly of the program code. I have provided a
- small file with this release of SKsh which con-
- tains some encrypted english text; I would very
- much like to hear if anyone manages to find out
- what it says. The file is called "crypted_data".
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- Example: encr -e mykey plainfile encryptedfile
- encr -d mykey encryptedfile plainfile
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- See Also:
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 10 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: fgrep
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: fgrep -[vxcilns] [-f pfile] [-e] pattern
- [ file ... ]
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- Range: n/a
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- About: fgrep provides a fast way to search for text pat-
- terns in a set of files. It is similar to, al-
- though more limited but faster than, grep.
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- fgrep searches for the indicated pattern in the
- indicated set of files, if present, or the stan-
- dard input, if not. An fgrep pattern is extremely
- limited; it can be either a string constant or a
- set of string constants separated by percent
- signs. For example, these are valid fgrep state-
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- fgrep my_routine *.c
- fgrep 'this%or%that' my_file my_other_file
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- In the second example, fgrep searches for lines
- containing any of the three strings.
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- There are a large number of options availble which
- modify the actions of fgrep:
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- -c Print only a count of matching lines for each
- file. If the 'v' option is used with the 'c'
- option, a count of non-matching lines is
- printed.
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- -e Use the next argument as the pattern. This
- is useful to search for patterns beginning
- with a dash.
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- -f Use the next argument as a file which con-
- tains a newline separated list of values.
- This file is read and used in place of the
- command line pattern. For example, the fol-
- lowing two examples are equivalent:
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- fgrep 'foo%bar' myfile
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- echo "foo" >temp; echo "bar" >>temp
- fgrep -f temp myfile
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 11 External Cmd Reference
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- -i Ignore case in the search. Normally, fgrep
- is case sensitive.
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- -l Print only the names of files which containg
- the given pattern. This is fast; if fgrep
- finds the pattern anywhere in the file, it
- will stop looking and proceed to the next
- file. This can save time for large files
- where the task is to discover which files
- contain the given pattern.
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- -n Print the line number before each matching
- line.
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- -s Print nothing. Return an exit code of 0
- (true) if any file contained the pattern, or
- 1 (false) if no files contained the pattern.
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- -v Invert the search. Lines which do not con-
- tain the pattern are printed.
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- -x Lines must match the pattern exactly, not
- simply contain it.
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- Example: if grep -s my_pattern my_file
- then
- echo 'my_file contains my_pattern'
- fi
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- Warnings: Patterns which contain '%', spaces, or other spe-
- cial characters should be quoted to avoid being
- interpreted by the shell.
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- The '%' character is used to separate strings in-
- stead of a newline as in Un*x, as there is a prob-
- lem in AmigaDos passing parameters containing
- newlines to external commands.
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- See Also: grep
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- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 12 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: grep
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: grep -[vxcilns] [-f pfile] [-e] pattern
- [ file ... ]
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- Range: n/a
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- About: grep provides a way to search for text patterns in
- a set of files. It is similar to, although more
- powerful but slower than, fgrep.
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- grep searches for the indicated pattern in the in-
- dicated set of files, if present, or the standard
- input, if not. A grep pattern is a limited regu-
- lar expression. An explaination of regular ex-
- pressions is beyond the scope of this document;
- however, it should be noted that although they ap-
- pear similar to wildcards, they are much different
- (and more powerful).
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- There are a large number of options availble which
- modify the actions of grep:
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- -c Print only a count of matching lines for each
- file. If the 'v' option is used with the 'c'
- option, a count of non-matching lines is
- printed.
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- -e Use the next argument as the pattern. This
- is useful to search for patterns beginning
- with a dash.
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- -f Use the next argument as a file which con-
- tains a one-line regular expression. There
- can only be one regular expression in this
- version of grep, so this option is currently
- of limited use. However, if grep is extended
- to permit multiple expressions, the 'f' op-
- tion will become more useful.
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- -i Ignore case in the search. Normally, grep is
- case sensitive.
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- -l Print only the names of files which containg
- the given pattern. This is fast; if grep
- finds the pattern anywhere in the file, it
- will stop looking and proceed to the next
- file. This can save time for large files
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 13 External Cmd Reference
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- where the task is to discover which files
- contain the given pattern.
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- -n Print the line number before each matching
- line.
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- -s Print nothing. Return an exit code of 0
- (true) if any file contained the regular ex-
- pression, or 1 (false) otherwise.
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- -v Invert the search. Lines which do not con-
- tain the regular expression are printed.
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- -x The expression must be found at the beginning
- of a line.
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- Example: if grep -s my_pattern my_file
- then
- echo 'my_file contains my_pattern'
- fi
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- Warnings: Patterns which contain '*', '.', spaces, or other
- special characters should be quoted to avoid being
- interpreted by the shell.
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- Be wary of the difference in the 'x' option be-
- tween fgrep and grep.
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- fgrep often more useful than grep because of its
- greater speed and smaller size. This is most
- noticable on fast devices such as ram or hard
- disks.
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- See Also: fgrep
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 14 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: head
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: num = 10
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- Usage: head [ -num ] [ file ... ]
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- Range: 0 <= num
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- About: head prints the first num lines of each named
- file, or the standard input if no files are
- indicated. If num is not explicitly set, it has a
- default value of 10.
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- Example: head -5 my_file.c my_other_file.c
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- See Also: tail
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 15 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: indent
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: char = space
- num = 4
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- Usage: indent [ -num ] [ -cchar ] [ file ... ]
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- Range: n/a
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- About: Indent inserts the defined character (a space by
- default) a given number of times (4 by default) at
- the beginning of every line of a file which does
- not contain only a newline. That is, empty lines
- are left alone.
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- Example: indent -5 myfile.txt
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- See Also:
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 16 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: join
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: n/a
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- Usage: join [ -a ] source1 [ source2 ... ] destination
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- Range: n/a
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- About: The join command concatinates binary or ASCII data
- from multiple files into a single file, optionally
- appending the data to the destination file if the
- -a flag is set. The destination file is the last
- one given.
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- Example: join file1 file2 dest_file
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- See Also:
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 17 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: num
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: num = 4
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- Usage: num [ -digits ] [ -r ] [ file ... ]
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- Range: 2 <= digits <= 8
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- About: num prints ASCII files, prefixing each line in the
- file with its line number. By default, 4 digit
- line numbers are used, but this can be changed
- from 2 to 8 digits numbers with the command line
- switch.
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- Also by default, num resets the line number at the
- beginning of each file. To use consecutive line
- numbers for all files, use the "-r" switch. With
- that option selected, the line count is not reset
- for each file.
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- Example: num -6 -r myfile1.c myfile2.c
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- See Also:
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 18 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: strings
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: num = 6
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- Usage: strings [ -num ] [ file ... ]
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- Range: 0 <= num
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- About: strings searches the named files for strings of at
- least num consecutive printable characters. If
- found, it prints them. If num is not set, it de-
- faults to 6.
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- Example: strings -10 my_file.o binary_file
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- See Also:
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 19 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: srun
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- Type: External Command
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- Default: stk = 4000
- pri = 0
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- Usage: srun [ -i file ] [ -o file ] [ -s stk ] [ -p pri ]
- program [ args ]
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- Range: 4000 <= stk
- -31 <= pri <= 31
-
- About: srun was created to overcome certain deficiencies
- in the AmigaDos run command. srun is most useful
- in scripts or functions, although it can also be
- used from the command line. It allows you to
- specify an input file, output file, stack size,
- and priority for a command which is run in the
- background. Standard input and output cannot be
- re-directed with the AmigaDos run command. The
- srun command is very useful in functions such as
- the one given below (very much simplified from one
- given in the Stuff.sksh file).
-
- Example: function zmore {
- srun -o pipe:tmp $(which zoo) -print "$1" "$2"
- more pipe:tmp
- }
-
- See Also: run
-
- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 20 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: tail
-
- Type: External Command
-
- Default: num = 10, '-' option
-
- Usage: tail [ -num | +num ] [ file ... ]
-
- Range: 0 <= num <= 32000
-
- About: tail prints the last num lines of each named file,
- or the standard input if no files are named. If a
- '+' precedes num instead of a '-', tail instead
- skips num lines and prints the rest of the file.
-
- In SKsh 1.4, the algorithm used by tail was
- changed. If run on a file, it will now seek to
- the end of the file and read backwards until it
- encounters the proper line. This means that run-
- ning tail on a large file is now nearly instanta-
- neous; previously, it would read in the entire
- file.
-
- Example: tail -15 my_file.c my_other_file.c
-
- See Also: head
-
- ________________________________________________________________
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- Name: tee
-
- Type: External Command
-
- Default: n/a
-
- Usage: tee [ -a ] [ file ... ]
-
- Range: less than 32 files
-
- About: tee copies its standard input to its standard out-
- put, and also to any named files. The old con-
- tents of the files are overwritten unless the ap-
- pend (-a) flag is used. With no arguments, tee
- simply copies its input to its output.
-
- Example: fgrep foo my_file | tee save_foo | wc -c
-
- See Also:
-
- _______________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 22 External Cmd Reference
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- Name: view
-
- Type: External Command
-
- Default: n/a
-
- Usage: see View.doc
-
- Range: n/a
-
- About: view is a command which allows other commands to
- be called based on the type of a given file. See
- the View.doc manual for a detail description of
- this command.
-
- Example: view myfile my_otherfile
-
- See Also:
-
- ________________________________________________________________
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- Name: wc
-
- Type: External Command
-
- Default: n/a
-
- Usage: wc [ -hcwlqt ] [ file ... ]
-
- Range: n/a
-
- About: wc is a utility which counts characters, words, or
- lines in a given series of files (or the standard
- input, if no files are indicated). It normally
- produces information on all three counts, preceded
- by a title for each column. If the c, w, or l
- flags are set, only information on characters,
- words, or lines is printed. (These can be com-
- bined; for example 'wc -cl'). If the q flag is
- set, wc does its work quietly; that is, it leaves
- out titles and file names, only reporting the ac-
- tual counts. The t flag can be used to obtain a
- total at the end, and the h flag prints a helpful
- usage message.
-
- Example: if [ $(wc -lq my_file) -lt 10 ]
- then
- echo "There must be at least 10 lines"
- fi
-
- See Also:
-
- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 24 External Cmd Reference
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-
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- Name: window
-
- Type: External Command
-
- Default: n/a
-
- Usage: window [ -back ] [ -front ] [ -title ]
- [ -pos [x,y] ] [ -size [x,y] ] [ -scrsize ]
- [ -wmouse ] [ -smouse ]
-
- Range: n/a
-
- About: window is a command which allows parameters of the
- current shell window to be modified or examined.
- The -back and -front flags cause the window to be
- sent to the back or front. The -title flag causes
- the current window title to be printed. The -pos
- flag with no following parameters can be used to
- find the current x and y positions of the window.
- With a comma separated set of numbers, it moves
- the window to that position if possible. Simi-
- larly, the -size parameter either reports the size
- of the current window in pixels, or resizes the
- window to that size if possible. The -scrsize
- flag reports the current size of the screen con-
- taining this window, and the -smouse and -wmouse
- flags report the cursor position relative to the
- screen or window.
-
- With no parameters, the window command prints a
- helpful usage message. Note that this usage mes-
- sage contains one additional option which can be
- included after the -title flag to change the win-
- dow title to a set value. However, this is not
- actually permitted by AmigaDos, and although it
- works now, it may cause problems, and its use is
- not recommended. Use at your own risk.
-
- Example: # move window to back and upper left hand corner
- window -back -pos 0,0
-
- See Also:
-
- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 25 External Cmd Reference
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-
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Name: xd
-
- Type: External Command
-
- Default: n/a
-
- Usage: xd [ file ... ]
-
- Range: n/a
-
- About: xd (hex dump) prints a hexadecimal dump of each
- named file, or the standard input if no files are
- named. It prints the hex address of the current
- offset as 8 digits, then a hex dump of 16 bytes
- separated into groups of 2 bytes, then an ASCII rep-
- resentation of the 16 bytes, or '.' if the byte is
- not a printable character.
-
- Example: xd any_old_file
-
- See Also:
-
- ________________________________________________________________
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- SKsh Amiga Shell Page 26 External Cmd Reference
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