---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jordan Peacock <hewhocutsdown at gmail.com>
Date: Jun 26, 2006 7:31 AM
Subject: Re: [tclug-list] Additional bash scripting question
To: Justin Krejci <jus at krytosvirus.com>


That worked perfectly!

Guess I was making things overly complicated, hey? Thank you

                   -jordan

On 6/26/06, Justin Krejci <jus at krytosvirus.com> wrote:
> On Sunday 25 June 2006 12:27 pm, Jordan Peacock wrote:
> > I have this working:
> >
> > #!/bin/bash
> > IFS="
> > "
> > for i in `find . -name '*.tar'`; do
> >  case "$i" in
> >    *.tar)
> >       mkdir `basename "$i" .tar`
> >       cd `basename "$i" .tar`
> >       tar xvf ../"$i"
> >       cd ..
> >       mv "$i" /home/hewhocutsdown/.Trash/
> >       ;;
> >  esac
> > done
> >
> > This works fine. I'm trying to tinker with it so that it'll do the
> > same with .cbt files, except they don't need the folder to be made, in
> > fact it's counter-productive. .cbt files are simply tar files, and
> > with the previous version of Gnome I could merely right-click and
> > extract them, but now I can't, so I may be required to rename the
> > extension to .tar. (a 'mv' command I'm assuming) but so far nothing's
> > worked. This is what I tried;
> >
> > #!/bin/bash
> > IFS="
> > "
> > for i in `find . -name '*.cbt'`; do
> >  case "$i" in
> >    *.cbt)
> >       mv `basename "$i" .cbt` `basename "$i" .tar` # fails
> >       mkdir `basename "$i" .cbt` # unneeded
> >       cd `basename "$i" .cbt` # uneeded
> >       tar xvf ../"$i" # fails
> >       cd ..
> >       mv "$i" /home/user/.Trash/ # works
> >       ;;
> >  esac
> > done
> >
> > I just need tar to extract the archive in the immediate directory
> > (there's no chance of overwriting, so I'm not concerned with that) and
> > then dispose of the archive.
> >
> > Thanks thanks
> >
> >                       -jordan
>
> So if you need to extract all of the cbt (tar) files to the current directory
> why not just do something like this
>
> find . -type f -name '*.cbt' -exec tar -xvf '{}' \;
>