user4781431
user4781431

Reputation: 1

Unix Bash Alias Command

I am trying to simplify my work with the help of Alias commands in my bash shell.

Problem Statement: I want to copy different files from different directories to one single folder. The syntax i am using here is as below

cp <folder>/<file>    <path>/file.dir

Here I want to save the destination file with filename.directory for easy identification. To achieve the same, I have written the below alias.

Alias Script

cp $Folder/$fileName ~/<path>/$fileName.$Folder

OR

cp $1/$2 ~/<path>/$2.$1

Expected output,

  1. cp bin/file1 ~/Desktop/personal/file1.bin
  2. cp etc/file2 ~/Desktop/personal/file2.etc*

However, It's failing at parsing the source file. i.e. $Folder is not replaced with my first argument.

cp: cannot stat `/file1': No such file or directory

I am writing the above script only to reduce my command lengths. As I am not expert in the above code, seeking any expert help in resolving the issue.

Upvotes: 0

Views: 396

Answers (3)

Joe
Joe

Reputation: 1

A directory contains some files say ~/Documents/file1.d contains newfile.txt

joe@indiana:~/Documents$ ls -l $file
total 1
-rw-r--r--   1 joe      staff          0 May  5 11:39 newfile.txt

Add the variable 'file' in .bashrc for example my .bashrc is shown here

alias ll='ls -la'
file=~/Documents/file1.d

Now whenever you copy to '$file' it will copy to file1.d directory under ~/Documents :)

Upvotes: 0

fpmurphy
fpmurphy

Reputation: 2537

Rather than using an alias you could use a function which you define in some suitable location such as .profile or .bashrc

For example:

mycp()
{
   folder=$1
   filename=$2

   if [ $# -ne 2 ]
   then
       echo "Two parameters not entered"
       return
   fi

   if  [ -d $folder -a -r $folder/$filename ]
   then
      cp $folder/$filename ~/playpen/$filename.$folder
   else
      echo "Invalid parameter"
   fi
}

Upvotes: 1

anishsane
anishsane

Reputation: 20980

There is no way a bash alias can use arguments as you are trying to do. However, perl based rename can probably help you here. Note that it will effectively mv the files, not cp them.

rename 's|([^/]*)/(.*)|/home/user/path/$2.$1|' */*

Limitations: You can only process the files in 1 sub-directory level.

So, below alias can work (with above limitation):

$ alias backupfiles="rename 's|([^/]*)/(.*)|/home/user/path/\$2.\$1|'"
$ backupfiles */*

You can make more sophisticated perl expression if you want to work with multi-directory-level file structure.

Upvotes: 0

Related Questions