Passing args from the bash script to the function in the script Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara 2019 Community Moderator Election Results Why I closed the “Why is Kali so hard” questionAre there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?When is double-quoting necessary?How can we run a command stored in a variable?Passing a stream to a bash functionPassing script string to ssh from within a bash script function - variable evaluation problembash script - loop functionShell script - command always display usage before executingrsync using function argsBash script inheritance? Calling a function from another script?Passing options/args/parameters with spaces from the script to a function withinPassing a boolean flag to a function?Dynamically read bash function name from inside bash functionrunning bash script from cron job not working properly

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Passing args from the bash script to the function in the script



Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
2019 Community Moderator Election Results
Why I closed the “Why is Kali so hard” questionAre there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?When is double-quoting necessary?How can we run a command stored in a variable?Passing a stream to a bash functionPassing script string to ssh from within a bash script function - variable evaluation problembash script - loop functionShell script - command always display usage before executingrsync using function argsBash script inheritance? Calling a function from another script?Passing options/args/parameters with spaces from the script to a function withinPassing a boolean flag to a function?Dynamically read bash function name from inside bash functionrunning bash script from cron job not working properly



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















My script:



#! /bin/bash --

set -x

## docker-compose wrapper
compose_fn()
local ENV="$1"
local VERB="$2"
local SERVICE="$3"
local CMD="docker-compose -f $ENV.yml"
case "$VERB" in
(exec)
shift "$#" # remove args passed to this fn
# Execute a command in a running container.
if [ -n "$SERVICE" ]; then
$CMD "$VERB" "$SERVICE" "$@"
else
echo "## Err: You must specify service name..."
exit 1
fi
;;
esac


compose_fn "$1" "$2" "$3"


Is giving me a hard time with the following error:



$ ./tst.sh dev exec django sh
+ compose_fn dev exec django
+ local ENV=dev
+ local VERB=exec
+ local SERVICE=django
+ local 'CMD=docker-compose -f dev.yml'
+ case "$VERB" in
+ shift 3
+ '[' -n django ']'
+ docker-compose -f dev.yml exec django
Execute a command in a running container

Usage: exec [options] [-e KEY=VAL...] SERVICE COMMAND [ARGS...]

Options:
....


Where is my mistake? How can it be done better?



As far as I can tell I've passed 4 args [dev, exec, django, sh] to the script, then within the script removed 3 (shift 3), therefore sh should have been left in the $@ var.










share|improve this question






























    1















    My script:



    #! /bin/bash --

    set -x

    ## docker-compose wrapper
    compose_fn()
    local ENV="$1"
    local VERB="$2"
    local SERVICE="$3"
    local CMD="docker-compose -f $ENV.yml"
    case "$VERB" in
    (exec)
    shift "$#" # remove args passed to this fn
    # Execute a command in a running container.
    if [ -n "$SERVICE" ]; then
    $CMD "$VERB" "$SERVICE" "$@"
    else
    echo "## Err: You must specify service name..."
    exit 1
    fi
    ;;
    esac


    compose_fn "$1" "$2" "$3"


    Is giving me a hard time with the following error:



    $ ./tst.sh dev exec django sh
    + compose_fn dev exec django
    + local ENV=dev
    + local VERB=exec
    + local SERVICE=django
    + local 'CMD=docker-compose -f dev.yml'
    + case "$VERB" in
    + shift 3
    + '[' -n django ']'
    + docker-compose -f dev.yml exec django
    Execute a command in a running container

    Usage: exec [options] [-e KEY=VAL...] SERVICE COMMAND [ARGS...]

    Options:
    ....


    Where is my mistake? How can it be done better?



    As far as I can tell I've passed 4 args [dev, exec, django, sh] to the script, then within the script removed 3 (shift 3), therefore sh should have been left in the $@ var.










    share|improve this question


























      1












      1








      1








      My script:



      #! /bin/bash --

      set -x

      ## docker-compose wrapper
      compose_fn()
      local ENV="$1"
      local VERB="$2"
      local SERVICE="$3"
      local CMD="docker-compose -f $ENV.yml"
      case "$VERB" in
      (exec)
      shift "$#" # remove args passed to this fn
      # Execute a command in a running container.
      if [ -n "$SERVICE" ]; then
      $CMD "$VERB" "$SERVICE" "$@"
      else
      echo "## Err: You must specify service name..."
      exit 1
      fi
      ;;
      esac


      compose_fn "$1" "$2" "$3"


      Is giving me a hard time with the following error:



      $ ./tst.sh dev exec django sh
      + compose_fn dev exec django
      + local ENV=dev
      + local VERB=exec
      + local SERVICE=django
      + local 'CMD=docker-compose -f dev.yml'
      + case "$VERB" in
      + shift 3
      + '[' -n django ']'
      + docker-compose -f dev.yml exec django
      Execute a command in a running container

      Usage: exec [options] [-e KEY=VAL...] SERVICE COMMAND [ARGS...]

      Options:
      ....


      Where is my mistake? How can it be done better?



      As far as I can tell I've passed 4 args [dev, exec, django, sh] to the script, then within the script removed 3 (shift 3), therefore sh should have been left in the $@ var.










      share|improve this question
















      My script:



      #! /bin/bash --

      set -x

      ## docker-compose wrapper
      compose_fn()
      local ENV="$1"
      local VERB="$2"
      local SERVICE="$3"
      local CMD="docker-compose -f $ENV.yml"
      case "$VERB" in
      (exec)
      shift "$#" # remove args passed to this fn
      # Execute a command in a running container.
      if [ -n "$SERVICE" ]; then
      $CMD "$VERB" "$SERVICE" "$@"
      else
      echo "## Err: You must specify service name..."
      exit 1
      fi
      ;;
      esac


      compose_fn "$1" "$2" "$3"


      Is giving me a hard time with the following error:



      $ ./tst.sh dev exec django sh
      + compose_fn dev exec django
      + local ENV=dev
      + local VERB=exec
      + local SERVICE=django
      + local 'CMD=docker-compose -f dev.yml'
      + case "$VERB" in
      + shift 3
      + '[' -n django ']'
      + docker-compose -f dev.yml exec django
      Execute a command in a running container

      Usage: exec [options] [-e KEY=VAL...] SERVICE COMMAND [ARGS...]

      Options:
      ....


      Where is my mistake? How can it be done better?



      As far as I can tell I've passed 4 args [dev, exec, django, sh] to the script, then within the script removed 3 (shift 3), therefore sh should have been left in the $@ var.







      bash shell-script shell






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 1 hour ago







      NarūnasK

















      asked 1 hour ago









      NarūnasKNarūnasK

      9171722




      9171722




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          With shift $# you empty $@ completely. The $@ in the function is separate from the $@ in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?



          #! /bin/bash --

          set -x

          ## docker-compose wrapper
          compose_fn()
          local env="$1"
          local verb="$2"
          local service="$3"

          local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

          shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments

          case $verb in
          exec)
          # Execute a command in a running container.
          if [ -n "$service" ]; then
          "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
          else
          echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
          exit 1
          fi
          ;;
          *)
          printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
          exit 1
          esac


          compose_fn "$@"


          I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.



          I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.



          You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.



          #! /bin/bash --

          set -x

          ## docker-compose wrapper
          compose_fn()
          local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

          case $verb in
          exec)
          # Execute a command in a running container.
          if [ -n "$service" ]; then
          "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
          else
          echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
          exit 1
          fi
          ;;
          *)
          printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
          exit 1
          esac


          env="$1"
          verb="$2"
          service="$3"

          shift 3

          compose_fn "$@"


          You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ] test with



          service=$3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'


          The parameter expansion $parameter:?word will exit the shell with the message defined by word if parameter is unset or empty. The bash shell would format this as



          script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...


          Related:



          • When is double-quoting necessary?

          • How can we run a command stored in a variable?

          • Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?





          share|improve this answer

























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            1 Answer
            1






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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

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            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            4














            With shift $# you empty $@ completely. The $@ in the function is separate from the $@ in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?



            #! /bin/bash --

            set -x

            ## docker-compose wrapper
            compose_fn()
            local env="$1"
            local verb="$2"
            local service="$3"

            local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

            shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments

            case $verb in
            exec)
            # Execute a command in a running container.
            if [ -n "$service" ]; then
            "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
            else
            echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
            exit 1
            fi
            ;;
            *)
            printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
            exit 1
            esac


            compose_fn "$@"


            I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.



            I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.



            You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.



            #! /bin/bash --

            set -x

            ## docker-compose wrapper
            compose_fn()
            local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

            case $verb in
            exec)
            # Execute a command in a running container.
            if [ -n "$service" ]; then
            "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
            else
            echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
            exit 1
            fi
            ;;
            *)
            printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
            exit 1
            esac


            env="$1"
            verb="$2"
            service="$3"

            shift 3

            compose_fn "$@"


            You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ] test with



            service=$3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'


            The parameter expansion $parameter:?word will exit the shell with the message defined by word if parameter is unset or empty. The bash shell would format this as



            script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...


            Related:



            • When is double-quoting necessary?

            • How can we run a command stored in a variable?

            • Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?





            share|improve this answer





























              4














              With shift $# you empty $@ completely. The $@ in the function is separate from the $@ in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?



              #! /bin/bash --

              set -x

              ## docker-compose wrapper
              compose_fn()
              local env="$1"
              local verb="$2"
              local service="$3"

              local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

              shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments

              case $verb in
              exec)
              # Execute a command in a running container.
              if [ -n "$service" ]; then
              "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
              else
              echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
              exit 1
              fi
              ;;
              *)
              printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
              exit 1
              esac


              compose_fn "$@"


              I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.



              I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.



              You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.



              #! /bin/bash --

              set -x

              ## docker-compose wrapper
              compose_fn()
              local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

              case $verb in
              exec)
              # Execute a command in a running container.
              if [ -n "$service" ]; then
              "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
              else
              echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
              exit 1
              fi
              ;;
              *)
              printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
              exit 1
              esac


              env="$1"
              verb="$2"
              service="$3"

              shift 3

              compose_fn "$@"


              You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ] test with



              service=$3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'


              The parameter expansion $parameter:?word will exit the shell with the message defined by word if parameter is unset or empty. The bash shell would format this as



              script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...


              Related:



              • When is double-quoting necessary?

              • How can we run a command stored in a variable?

              • Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?





              share|improve this answer



























                4












                4








                4







                With shift $# you empty $@ completely. The $@ in the function is separate from the $@ in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?



                #! /bin/bash --

                set -x

                ## docker-compose wrapper
                compose_fn()
                local env="$1"
                local verb="$2"
                local service="$3"

                local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

                shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments

                case $verb in
                exec)
                # Execute a command in a running container.
                if [ -n "$service" ]; then
                "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
                else
                echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
                exit 1
                fi
                ;;
                *)
                printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
                exit 1
                esac


                compose_fn "$@"


                I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.



                I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.



                You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.



                #! /bin/bash --

                set -x

                ## docker-compose wrapper
                compose_fn()
                local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

                case $verb in
                exec)
                # Execute a command in a running container.
                if [ -n "$service" ]; then
                "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
                else
                echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
                exit 1
                fi
                ;;
                *)
                printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
                exit 1
                esac


                env="$1"
                verb="$2"
                service="$3"

                shift 3

                compose_fn "$@"


                You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ] test with



                service=$3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'


                The parameter expansion $parameter:?word will exit the shell with the message defined by word if parameter is unset or empty. The bash shell would format this as



                script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...


                Related:



                • When is double-quoting necessary?

                • How can we run a command stored in a variable?

                • Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?





                share|improve this answer















                With shift $# you empty $@ completely. The $@ in the function is separate from the $@ in the main script. Why don't you just pass all arguments to the function and then shift off the first three?



                #! /bin/bash --

                set -x

                ## docker-compose wrapper
                compose_fn()
                local env="$1"
                local verb="$2"
                local service="$3"

                local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

                shift 3 # we've now used up three arguments

                case $verb in
                exec)
                # Execute a command in a running container.
                if [ -n "$service" ]; then
                "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
                else
                echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
                exit 1
                fi
                ;;
                *)
                printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
                exit 1
                esac


                compose_fn "$@"


                I've also used lower-case variable names so that no system or special shell variables are used by accident (ENV is one that some shell uses under some circumstances, for example), and I've removed all unneeded quotes and curly braces.



                I've also put the command into an array, so that we can quote the YAML filename properly.



                You could also just move the setting of the three variables outside of the function, depending on what the rest of the script looks like and if this makes any sense at all. The three variables would then be global in the script.



                #! /bin/bash --

                set -x

                ## docker-compose wrapper
                compose_fn()
                local cmd=( docker-compose -f "$env.yml" )

                case $verb in
                exec)
                # Execute a command in a running container.
                if [ -n "$service" ]; then
                "$cmd[@]" "$verb" "$service" "$@"
                else
                echo '## Err: You must specify service name...' >&2
                exit 1
                fi
                ;;
                *)
                printf 'Unknown verb: %sn' "$verb" >&2
                exit 1
                esac


                env="$1"
                verb="$2"
                service="$3"

                shift 3

                compose_fn "$@"


                You may also bypass the [ -n "$service" ] test with



                service=$3:?'## Err: You must specify service name...'


                The parameter expansion $parameter:?word will exit the shell with the message defined by word if parameter is unset or empty. The bash shell would format this as



                script.sh: line 9: 3: ## Err: You must specify service name...


                Related:



                • When is double-quoting necessary?

                • How can we run a command stored in a variable?

                • Are there naming conventions for variables in shell scripts?






                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 34 mins ago

























                answered 52 mins ago









                KusalanandaKusalananda

                143k18267445




                143k18267445



























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                    Tom Holland Mục lục Đầu đời và giáo dục | Sự nghiệp | Cuộc sống cá nhân | Phim tham gia | Giải thưởng và đề cử | Chú thích | Liên kết ngoài | Trình đơn chuyển hướngProfile“Person Details for Thomas Stanley Holland, "England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837-2008" — FamilySearch.org”"Meet Tom Holland... the 16-year-old star of The Impossible""Schoolboy actor Tom Holland finds himself in Oscar contention for role in tsunami drama"“Naomi Watts on the Prince William and Harry's reaction to her film about the late Princess Diana”lưu trữ"Holland and Pflueger Are West End's Two New 'Billy Elliots'""I'm so envious of my son, the movie star! British writer Dominic Holland's spent 20 years trying to crack Hollywood - but he's been beaten to it by a very unlikely rival"“Richard and Margaret Povey of Jersey, Channel Islands, UK: Information about Thomas Stanley Holland”"Tom Holland to play Billy Elliot""New Billy Elliot leaving the garage"Billy Elliot the Musical - Tom Holland - Billy"A Tale of four Billys: Tom Holland""The Feel Good Factor""Thames Christian College schoolboys join Myleene Klass for The Feelgood Factor""Government launches £600,000 arts bursaries pilot""BILLY's Chapman, Holland, Gardner & Jackson-Keen Visit Prime Minister""Elton John 'blown away' by Billy Elliot fifth birthday" (video with John's interview and fragments of Holland's performance)"First News interviews Arrietty's Tom Holland"“33rd Critics' Circle Film Awards winners”“National Board of Review Current Awards”Bản gốc"Ron Howard Whaling Tale 'In The Heart Of The Sea' Casts Tom Holland"“'Spider-Man' Finds Tom Holland to Star as New Web-Slinger”lưu trữ“Captain America: Civil War (2016)”“Film Review: ‘Captain America: Civil War’”lưu trữ“‘Captain America: Civil War’ review: Choose your own avenger”lưu trữ“The Lost City of Z reviews”“Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios Find Their 'Spider-Man' Star and Director”“‘Mary Magdalene’, ‘Current War’ & ‘Wind River’ Get 2017 Release Dates From Weinstein”“Lionsgate Unleashing Daisy Ridley & Tom Holland Starrer ‘Chaos Walking’ In Cannes”“PTA's 'Master' Leads Chicago Film Critics Nominations, UPDATED: Houston and Indiana Critics Nominations”“Nominaciones Goya 2013 Telecinco Cinema – ENG”“Jameson Empire Film Awards: Martin Freeman wins best actor for performance in The Hobbit”“34th Annual Young Artist Awards”Bản gốc“Teen Choice Awards 2016—Captain America: Civil War Leads Second Wave of Nominations”“BAFTA Film Award Nominations: ‘La La Land’ Leads Race”“Saturn Awards Nominations 2017: 'Rogue One,' 'Walking Dead' Lead”Tom HollandTom HollandTom HollandTom Hollandmedia.gettyimages.comWorldCat Identities300279794no20130442900000 0004 0355 42791085670554170004732cb16706349t(data)XX5557367