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@Queen k
@Queen k
@Queen k
 
1 hour later…
08:54
@tripleee I've forgotten if we had already talked about this: is it possible to get awk to use space or colon as separator ?
@louigi600 IIRC only Gnu Awk allows you to specify a regex
yep .... -F'[ :]'
but that has the sideaffect of counting in multiple spaces ... how do I work around that ?
@louigi600 -F '[ :]+' to say one or more
ah .... normal regex
after all we just sait that gnu awk accepts regex
@Queen k
this is on a cygwin:
netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o | awk -F'[ :]+' '/LISTENING/ && /:543./ {print $4}'
if you're on Windows I think the quoting rules are different
and possibly impossible
on cygwin I'm using still bash ...
it seems to work
drao@ELSCTPROD /usr/local/bin
$ netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o | awk -F'[ :]+' '/LISTENING/ && /:543./ {print $4}'
5432

drao@ELSCTPROD /usr/local/bin
one thing I've noticed:
NETSTAT="netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o"
$NETSTAT
works not in a bash script with cygwin
it prefers
eval "$NETSTAT"

Have you any idea why ?
on the gcwin terminal it works as expected
@louigi600 nope, my advice is always just to avoid Windows if you can
09:26
me too ... but we were forced to have postgresql on this windows machine ...
and I was not going to rewrite the backup script again so I use my backup script from cygwin ... but some commands break because of windows have totally different flag/options
so I hadto mend a few things here and there and stop the script from updating itself from svn repo
if I could get the
$NETSTAT thing to work I might be able to unify and maintain just one script for all including cygwin
try a function instead
well my idea was something like this:
case $(uname -o) in
  Cygwin) NETSTAT="netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o | grep -i listen" ;;
  *) NETSTAT="netstat -ntpl --protocol=inet" ;;
esac

...
...
$NETSTAT
I could have the 2 functions fo different things but then I've gat to call the correct function for the os ... and that would still require ither something like above or many such case every time I need to call the os specific function
maybe you have a better solution ? @tripleee
09:44
case $(uname -o) in Cygwin) netstat () { netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o | grep -i listen ;};; *) netstat () { netstat -ntpl --protocol=inet; };; esac
09:59
well that would need to be done in every place I need netstat ...
so I'm not too happy to do that
oh ...wait a sec
I missed something
that's defining the functions
yep I'd be happy with that
well to be precise it's changing the function definition according to the os
but I've a question: in a bash script if I define a function with the same name as an existing binary ... the script will call the funcrion rather then the executable ?
I think it would be better to call the function something different to the binary it calls internally or it might make a mess
acrually it recurses untill segfault
so bash will first look for the function ... but
netstat () { netstat -ntpl --protocol=inet; }
is recursive infinite looping
11:10
@louigi600 you could do that, yeah
or you can say command netstat to bypass the function
case $(uname -o) in
 Cygwin) netstat () { command netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o | grep -i listen; };;
 *) netstat() { command netstat -ntpl --protocol=inet; };;
esac
sorry about that
 
1 hour later…
12:40
maybe the latter is a neater solution
I'm sure you did not want me to loop indefinitely ... it was just a small mistake ... or maybe you did it on purpose so that you could make me read the bash man page section concerning the "command" shell builtin ;D
@tripleee in Italian one would say: "ne sai una più del diavolo!"
I'm sure there is an equivalent English expression that somewhat means something like : "you're always one ahead of the devil himself !"
vaguely similar to "the devil in the details"...
12:57
and it will still work fine if I pipe the netstat function with awk
netstat | awk -F'[ :]+' '/LISTENING/ && /:543./ {print $4}'

well I know that I would not need the grep in the function but
  netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o | grep -i listen
is the closest thing I can do to the unix
  netstat -ntpl --protocol=inet
but maybe having a function with has the same name as a very commonly used unix command is not a wise thing to do
 
7 hours later…

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