Continuing to learn bash so bare with me. I am using sed to edit a tftp configuration file for a server within a bash script.
I have added the following line to the bash script
"sed -i -e 's| server_args = -v -s /tftpboot| server_args = -v -s /tftpboot --verbose' /etc/xinetd.d/tftp"
I have replaced the / after 's with | but I am thinking the spaces are creating a problem. When I run the script I get the following error:
-bash: sed -i -e 's| server_args = -v -s /tftpboot| server_args = -v -s /tftpboot --verbose' /etc/xinetd.d/tftp: No such file or directory
The file is there so I was wondering if the spaces may be creating my issue? Again, in a learning mode with Bash. I appreciate the help in advance!
Well I changed the statement to read
sed -i -e 's| server_args = -v -s /tftpboot| server_args = -v -s /tftpboot --verbose|' /etc/xinetd.d/tftp
But when I run it, it does not make a change to the file.
I strongly recommend you don't use -i
while learning sed and figuring out your script. Also, if you're going to use some character other than /
as the delimiter, don't use a regexp (or backreference) metacharacter like |
, use some character that's always literal within a sed command such as :
or #
to avoid surprises and make your code clearer.
Try this (note that's an upper-case E
to enable EREs):
sed -E 's:\s+server_args\s+=\s+-v\s+-s\s+/tftpboot:& --verbose:' /etc/xinetd.d/tftp
If that doesn't work then either the regexp is wrong or you aren't using GNU sed so let us know the output of sed --version
.
Once the command produces the output you expect THEN add the `-i argument (if you're using GNU or BSD sed) to update the input file.
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