How to create a command sequence for this?


Recommended Posts

A. Write a command sequence, to create a directory structure like follows:

1. level 1 - 4 directories with random alphanumeric name of 8 characters each directory

2. level 2 - each level 1 directory will have 3 directories - yes, no and yesorno

3. level 3 - each level 3 directory will have 9 directories with directory named in series 1-9 e.g. [1, 2, 3...9]

4. level 4 - each level 4 directory will have 3 directories - yes, no and yesorno

5. all directories at each level will have a text file named abc.txt with random alpha numeric text of 200 characters

Can someone shed a light in a right direction that will help me to achieve this?

Thanks !!

I have a background in C#/VB.NET, so that will influence my answer:

You'll need a few nested For-Next loops to create the exact number of directories you need. You'll also need a pseudo-random number generator to generate the random alphanumeric characters, and to make the "yes, no, or yesorno" directories. The 1-9 directories are easy.

If you're using .NET, use a TextWriter to write the text files.

Have fun!

It could be done in pretty much any language, scripting or otherwise, but assuming you want it in bash:

#!/bin/bash

function random_chars ()
{
	tmp=$( < /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Za-z1-9 | head -c $1 )
	eval $2=$tmp
}

function create_abc ()
{
	local rand=''
	local file=$1'/abc.txt'

	random_chars 200 rand
	echo $rand > $file
	echo $file
}

function create_1to9 ()
{
	for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
	do

		wd=$1'/'$i
		mkdir $wd
		echo $wd

		create_abc $wd
		create_yesno $wd 0

	done
}

function create_answer ()
{
	local answer=$1'/'$2

	mkdir $answer
	echo $answer

	create_abc $answer  

	if [ $3 == 1 ]
	then
		create_1to9 $answer
	fi
}

function create_yesno ()
{
	create_answer $1 'yes' $2
	create_answer $1 'no'  $2
	create_answer $1 'yesorno' $2
}

function create_dirs ()
{
	local ret=''

	for i in 1 2 3 4
	do
		random_chars 8 ret

		dir=$1'/'$ret
		mkdir $dir
		echo $dir

		create_abc $dir
		create_yesno $dir 1	  

	done

}

function main ()
{
	create_dirs $1
}

main $1

Copy/echo it into a file, chmod +x it.

Then to run:

./script targetdir

targetdir is where you want it to create the directory structure. I just used '.' ( current directory ) for testing.

My bash script knowledge is pretty awful, so I'm sure someone else could do better.

I have a background in C#/VB.NET, so that will influence my answer:

You'll need a few nested For-Next loops to create the exact number of directories you need. You'll also need a pseudo-random number generator to generate the random alphanumeric characters, and to make the "yes, no, or yesorno" directories. The 1-9 directories are easy.

If you're using .NET, use a TextWriter to write the text files.

Have fun!

That's about as efficient as using ice cream for a fire guard ;)

There was a slight bug in random_chars () that caused it to output the abc.txt file incorrectly. Change it to:

Edit: Actually, the tmp variable is superfluous. Just remove it entirely.

function random_chars ()
{
	eval $2=$( < /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Za-z1-9 | head -c $1 )
}

Thanks for your responses.. . .

I came up with following command sequence :::::::::::::


bash$ for i in $(seq 4); do mkdir `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c8`; done

bash$ for i in `ls`; do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}/{1..9} `; done

bash$ find . -type d -exec touch {}/abc.txt \;
[/CODE]

Now I am stuck at creating "yes,no,yesorno" directory in directories with name 1 - 9

This is what I tried ::

bash$ for i in $(find . -type d -name [1-9]); do `mkdir -p /{yes,no,yesorno}`;done

but its prompting with error "permission denied"

What am I missing?

Thanks for your responses.. . .

I came up with following command sequence :::::::::::::


bash$ for i in $(seq 4); do mkdir `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c8`; done

bash$ for i in `ls`; do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}/{1..9} `; done

bash$ find . -type d -exec touch {}/abc.txt \;
[/CODE]

Now I am stuck at creating "yes,no,yesorno" directory in directories with name 1 - 9

This is what I tried ::

bash$ for i in $(find . -type d -name [1-9]); do `mkdir -p /{yes,no,yesorno}`;done

but its prompting with error "permission denied"

What am I missing?

What's happening is you are trying to create the folders /yes, /no, and /yesorno, which are in the [i]root directory[/i] of your filesystem. What you want is to modify that line to be

[CODE]
for i in $(find . -type d -name [1-9]); do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}`; done
[/CODE]

Basically, you're missing that $i which would make the {yes,no,yesorno} a subdirectory of your random folders as opposed to a subdirectory of the root directory.

  • Like 2

What's happening is you are trying to create the folders /yes, /no, and /yesorno, which are in the root directory of your filesystem. What you want is to modify that line to be


for i in $(find . -type d -name [1-9]); do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}`; done
[/CODE]

Basically, you're missing that $i which would make the {yes,no,yesorno} a subdirectory of your random folders as opposed to a subdirectory of the root directory.

Thats what I needed. .. . .Thanks.. .

But now there are some other complications I am facing,,, :(

I need to redirect the output to [b]output.txt[/b] and error to [b]error.txt[/b]

[b]I came up with this:[/b]

[CODE]
for i in $(seq 4); do mkdir `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c8`<&- 2>$HOME/error.txt; done

for i in `ls` ; do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}/{1..9}` <&- 1>$HOME/output.txt 2>>$HOME/error.txt; done

for i in $(find . -type d -name [1-9]); do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno} <&- 1>$HOME/output.txt 2>>$HOME/error.txt `;done

for i in $(find . -type d); do `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c200 > $i/abc.txt <&- 2>>$HOME/error.txt `; done
[/CODE]

After that, I need to join all the command sequences into one single command.

When I tried joining the commands and placing [b]done [/b]at the end, it seems to be something is missing.. please help

'done' indicates the end of a loop, not the end of a command sequence. 'joining' the command should be as simple as placing them all on one line with semicolons between them. Based on the four commands you quoted in your last post, your final command should look something like this:


for i in $(seq 4); do mkdir `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c8`<&- 2>$HOME/error.txt; done; for i in `ls` ; do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}/{1..9}` <&- 1>$HOME/output.txt 2>>$HOME/error.txt; done; for i in $(find . -type d -name [1-9]); do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno} <&- 1>$HOME/output.txt 2>>$HOME/error.txt `;done; for i in $(find . -type d); do `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c200 > $i/abc.txt <&- 2>>$HOME/error.txt `; done
[/CODE]

  • Like 2

'done' indicates the end of a loop, not the end of a command sequence. 'joining' the command should be as simple as placing them all on one line with semicolons between them. Based on the four commands you quoted in your last post, your final command should look something like this:


for i in $(seq 4); do mkdir `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c8`<&- 2>$HOME/error.txt; done; for i in `ls` ; do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}/{1..9}` <&- 1>$HOME/output.txt 2>>$HOME/error.txt; done; for i in $(find . -type d -name [1-9]); do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno} <&- 1>$HOME/output.txt 2>>$HOME/error.txt `;done; for i in $(find . -type d); do `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c200 > $i/abc.txt <&- 2>>$HOME/error.txt `; done
[/CODE]

Thank you. . .. Finally. .. :)

[CODE]
for i in $(seq 4); do mkdir `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c8`<&- 2>$HOME/error.txt; done;for i in `ls`; do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}/{1..9}` <&- 1>$HOME/output.txt 2>>$HOME/error.txt; done;for i in $(find . -type d -name [1-9]); do `mkdir -p $i/{yes,no,yesorno}` <&- 1>$HOME/output.txt 2>>$HOME/error.txt; done;for i in $(find . -type d); do `< /dev/urandom tr -dc A-Z0-9 | head -c200 > $i/abc.txt` <&- 2>>$HOME/error.txt; done
[/CODE]

I tried to edit the above post but can't see the edit button, ,, :(

btw, can we redirect the output of mkdir command to a file? i.e output.txt . . .coz its always empty.

And when I execute the command twice, I get an error "Unable to create a directory abc.txt"

How can I make this command to be executed "n" number of times?. . .I don't want to loop it . .. I need to execute the same command on the previous output it generated.

Now I can see the edit button. .

I think your problem is that mkdir doesn't actually output anything to screen unless it encounters an error; so redirecting its output to a file is virtually useless. If you really want it to print a message, try passing it the -v switch. As for the second part of your question about executing the command 'n' times, I have no idea what you are talking about. My best guess is that you want to create a directory inside of a directory that does not yet exist. To create any intermediate directories you could pass mkdir the -p switch. Putting all of the above together your command may look something like the following:


mkdir -pv 'rar' 1>output.txt 2>&1
[/CODE]

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Most of UK Gov are involved in pedophelia and satanic cults/rituals aka epstein mossad agent.
    • Nvidia outs hotfix driver for BSOD, wake from sleep, G-SYNC, Smooth Motion, NV-Failsafe by Sayan Sen Nvidia today rolled out a new hotfix driver in order to fix various issues related to monitors and displays. The company notes G-SYNC-related frame pacing troubles should now be resolved on Ada Lovelace GPUs, ie, RTX 4000 series graphics cards. For anyone not familiar, G-SYNC is Nvidia's in-house proprietary adaptive synchronization tech that syncs the GPU's framerate output with the monitor's refresh rate in order to match them and eliminate screen tearing. On the topic of synchronization, Nvidia claims improved stability when gaming with Vsync or vertical sync on multi-monitor displays. The company also finally fixes a bug wherein displays would fail to wake up from sleep mode. Another bug has been resolved when certain monitors were identified as "NV-Failsafe" since the EDID information was incorrectly read by the GPU. EDID or Extended Display Identification Data of a monitor essentially contains the necessary metadata that lets a GPU understand the features and capabilities of a connected monitor. Ghosting and jittering problems as well as game crashes during the use of the Smooth Motion functionality have also been fixed with this release. Nvidia Smooth Motion feature is a driver-based AI model that delivers a seemingly "smoother" gameplay experience by inferring an additional frame between two rendered frames. Here is the full changelog for the new GeForce hotfix driver 610.52: [Ada] Resolves a frame pacing issue on certain monitors when G-SYNC is enabled Resolved an issue that prevented the EDID from being read on certain monitors causing them to be identified as "NVIDIA NV-Failsafe” Improved gaming stability in multi-monitor configurations when using V-SYNC with DLSS Frame Generation Resolved an issue where certain monitors would not wake from sleep mode [World of Warcraft] Gaming stability improvements Resolved an issue that could cause jittering or ghosting in some DirectX 11 games when Smooth Motion is enabled Resolved an issue that could cause some games to crash when launched with Smooth Motion enabled General stability improvements when the system fails to create a new allocation Others in the feedback thread also point out that the hotfix patches a blue screen of death (BSOD) issue. You can provide your own feedback there too after downloading the new 610.52 driver from Nvidia's official website at this link. Keep in mind that this hotfix is not essential to install unless you are having any or all of these issues. As such you can stay on the latest available GameReady driver version 610.47.
    • Those persons has complete control over the internet right now. They do see everything what we do regardless.
    • Everyone and every country who doesn't support Israel's aggression, terrorism and hypocrisy is their immediate enemy. You can definitely see how many innocent people they are killing almost everyday. In fact they're the actual Neo-Nazi who holds Hitler's ideology.
    • Just pull a 4Chan and ignore the UK gov, or better troll them. It's not like they can enforce the fine across border.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      504
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      219
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      92
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      88
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      83
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!