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#!/usr/bin/env bash
#
# __ __
# / /_ ____ _____/ /______
# / __ \/ __ \/ ___/ __/ ___/
# / / / / /_/ (__ ) /_(__ )
# /_/ /_/\____/____/\__/____/
#
# A program for managing host file entries.
#
# Based on Bash Boilerplate: https://github.com/alphabetum/bash-boilerplate
#
# Based on prior work by:
#
# - https://github.com/nddrylliog
# - https://gist.github.com/nddrylliog/1368532
# - https://github.com/dfeyer
# - https://gist.github.com/dfeyer/1369760
#
# Original idea and interface (since changed) via:
#
# https://github.com/macmade/host-manager
#
# Updates copyright (c) 2015 William Melody • hi@williammelody.com
###############################################################################
# Strict Mode
###############################################################################
# Treat unset variables and parameters other than the special parameters @ or
# * as an error when performing parameter expansion. An 'unbound variable'
# error message will be written to the standard error, and a non-interactive
# shell will exit.
#
# This requires using parameter expansion to test for unset variables.
#
# http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html#Shell-Parameter-Expansion
#
# The two approaches that are probably the most appropriate are:
#
# ${parameter:-word}
# If parameter is unset or null, the expansion of word is substituted.
# Otherwise, the value of parameter is substituted. In other words, "word"
# acts as a default value when the value of "$parameter" is blank. If "word"
# is not present, then the default is blank (essentially an empty string).
#
# ${parameter:?word}
# If parameter is null or unset, the expansion of word (or a message to that
# effect if word is not present) is written to the standard error and the
# shell, if it is not interactive, exits. Otherwise, the value of parameter
# is substituted.
#
# Examples
# ========
#
# Arrays:
#
# ${some_array[@]:-} # blank default value
# ${some_array[*]:-} # blank default value
# ${some_array[0]:-} # blank default value
# ${some_array[0]:-default_value} # default value: the string 'default_value'
#
# Positional variables:
#
# ${1:-alternative} # default value: the string 'alternative'
# ${2:-} # blank default value
#
# With an error message:
#
# ${1:?'error message'} # exit with 'error message' if variable is unbound
#
# Short form: set -u
set -o nounset
# Exit immediately if a pipeline returns non-zero.
#
# NOTE: this has issues. When using read -rd '' with a heredoc, the exit
# status is non-zero, even though there isn't an error, and this setting
# then causes the script to exit. read -rd '' is synonymous to read -d $'\0',
# which means read until it finds a NUL byte, but it reaches the EOF (end of
# heredoc) without finding one and exits with a 1 status. Therefore, when
# reading from heredocs with set -e, there are three potential solutions:
#
# Solution 1. set +e / set -e again:
#
# set +e
# read -rd '' variable <<EOF
# EOF
# set -e
#
# Solution 2. <<EOF || true:
#
# read -rd '' variable <<EOF || true
# EOF
#
# Solution 3. Don't use set -e or set -o errexit at all.
#
# More information:
#
# https://www.mail-archive.com/bug-bash@gnu.org/msg12170.html
#
# Short form: set -e
set -o errexit
# Return value of a pipeline is the value of the last (rightmost) command to
# exit with a non-zero status, or zero if all commands in the pipeline exit
# successfully.
set -o pipefail
# Set IFS to just newline and tab at the start
#
# http://www.dwheeler.com/essays/filenames-in-shell.html
#
# $DEFAULT_IFS and $SAFER_IFS
#
# $DEFAULT_IFS contains the default $IFS value in case it's needed, such as
# when expanding an array and you want to separate elements by spaces.
# $SAFER_IFS contains the preferred settings for the program, and setting it
# separately makes it easier to switch between the two if needed.
#
# NOTE: also printing $DEFAULT_IFS to /dev/null to avoid shellcheck warnings
# about the variable being unused.
DEFAULT_IFS="$IFS"; printf "%s" "$DEFAULT_IFS" > /dev/null
SAFER_IFS="$(printf '\n\t')"
# Then set $IFS
IFS="$SAFER_IFS"
###############################################################################
# Globals
###############################################################################
_VERSION="0.1.0-alpha"
###############################################################################
# Debug
###############################################################################
# _debug()
#
# A simple function for executing a specified command if the `_use_debug`
# variable has been set. The command is expected to print a message and
# should typically be either `echo`, `printf`, or `cat`.
#
# Usage:
# _debug printf "Debug info. Variable: %s\n" "$0"
_debug() {
if [[ "${_use_debug:-"0"}" -eq 1 ]]; then
# Prefix debug message with "bug (U+1F41B)"
printf "🐛 "
"$@"
printf "――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――\n"
fi
}
# debug()
#
# Print the specified message if the `_use_debug` variable has been set.
#
# This is a shortcut for the _debug() function that simply echos the message.
#
# Usage:
# debug "Debug info. Variable: $0"
debug() {
_debug echo "$@"
}
###############################################################################
# Die
###############################################################################
# _die()
#
# A simple function for exiting with an error after executing the specified
# command. The command is expected to print a message and should typically
# be either `echo`, `printf`, or `cat`.
#
# Usage:
# _die printf "Error message. Variable: %s\n" "$0"
_die() {
# Prefix die message with "cross mark (U+274C)", often displayed as a red x.
printf "❌ "
"$@" 1>&2
exit 1
}
# die()
#
# Exit with an error and print the specified message.
#
# This is a shortcut for the _die() function that simply echos the message.
#
# Usage:
# die "Error message. Variable: $0"
die() {
_die echo "$@"
}
###############################################################################
# Options
###############################################################################
# Get raw options for any commands that expect them.
raw_options="$*"
# Steps:
#
# 1. set expected short options in `optstring` at beginning of the "Normalize
# Options" section,
# 2. parse options in while loop in the "Parse Options" section.
# Normalize Options ###########################################################
# Source:
# https://github.com/e36freak/templates/blob/master/options
# The first loop, even though it uses 'optstring', will NOT check if an
# option that takes a required argument has the argument provided. That must
# be done within the second loop and case statement, yourself. Its purpose
# is solely to determine that -oARG is split into -o ARG, and not -o -A -R -G.
# Set short options -----------------------------------------------------------
# option string, for short options.
#
# Very much like getopts, expected short options should be appended to the
# string here. Any option followed by a ':' takes a required argument.
#
# In this example, `-x` and `-h` are regular short options, while `o` is
# assumed to have an argument and will be split if joined with the string,
# meaning `-oARG` would be split to `-o ARG`.
optstring=h
# Normalize -------------------------------------------------------------------
# iterate over options, breaking -ab into -a -b and --foo=bar into --foo bar
# also turns -- into --endopts to avoid issues with things like '-o-', the '-'
# should not indicate the end of options, but be an invalid option (or the
# argument to the option, such as wget -qO-)
unset options
# while the number of arguments is greater than 0
while (($#)); do
case $1 in
# if option is of type -ab
-[!-]?*)
# loop over each character starting with the second
for ((i=1; i<${#1}; i++)); do
# extract 1 character from position 'i'
c=${1:i:1}
# add current char to options
options+=("-$c")
# if option takes a required argument, and it's not the last char
# make the rest of the string its argument
if [[ $optstring = *"$c:"* && ${1:i+1} ]]; then
options+=("${1:i+1}")
break
fi
done
;;
# if option is of type --foo=bar, split on first '='
--?*=*) options+=("${1%%=*}" "${1#*=}");;
# end of options, stop breaking them up
--)
options+=(--endopts)
shift
options+=("$@")
break
;;
# otherwise, nothing special
*) options+=("$1");;
esac
shift
done
# set new positional parameters to altered options. Set default to blank.
set -- "${options[@]:-}"
unset options
# Parse Options ###############################################################
# Initialize command_argv array
#
# This array contains all of the arguments that get passed along to each
# command. This is essentially the same as the program arguments, minus those
# that have been filtered out in the program option parsing loop. This array
# is initialized with $0, which is the program's name.
command_argv=("$0")
# Initialize $cmd and $_use_debug, which can continue to be blank depending on
# what the program needs.
cmd=""
_use_debug=0
while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
opt="$1"
shift
case "$opt" in
-h|--help)
cmd="help"
;;
--version)
cmd="version"
;;
--debug)
_use_debug=1
;;
*)
# The first non-option argument is assumed to be the command name.
# All subsequent arguments are added to $command_arguments.
if [[ -n $cmd ]]; then
command_argv+=("$opt")
else
cmd="$opt"
fi
;;
esac
done
# Set $command_parameters to $command_argv, minus the initial element, $0. This
# provides an array that is equivalent to $* and $@ within each command
# function, though the array is zero-indexed, which could lead to confusion.
command_parameters=("${command_argv[@]:1}")
_debug printf "\$cmd: %s\n" "$cmd"
_debug printf "\$raw_options (one per line):\n%s\n" "$raw_options"
_debug printf "\$command_argv: %s\n" "${command_argv[*]}"
_debug printf "\$command_parameters: %s\n" "${command_parameters[*]:-}"
###############################################################################
# Environment
###############################################################################
# $_me
#
# Set to the program's basename.
_me=$(basename "$0")
_debug printf "\$_me: %s\n" "$_me"
###############################################################################
# Load Commands
###############################################################################
# Initialize defined_commands array.
defined_commands=()
# _load_commands()
#
# Loads all of the commands sourced in the environment.
#
# Usage:
# _load_commands
_load_commands() {
_debug printf "_load_commands(): entering...\n"
_debug printf "_load_commands() declare -F:\n%s\n" "$(declare -F)"
# declare is a bash built-in shell function that, when called with the '-F'
# option, displays all of the functions with the format
# `declare -f function_name`. These are then assigned as elements in the
# $function_list array.
local function_list=($(declare -F))
for c in "${function_list[@]}"
do
# Each element has the format `declare -f function_name`, so set the name
# to only the 'function_name' part of the string.
local function_name=$(printf "%s" "$c" | awk '{ print $3 }')
_debug printf "_load_commands() \$function_name: %s\n" "$function_name"
# Add the function name to the $defined_commands array unless it starts
# with an underscore or is one of the desc(), debug(), or die() functions,
# since these are treated as having 'private' visibility.
if ! ( [[ "$function_name" =~ ^_(.*) ]] || \
[[ "$function_name" == "desc" ]] || \
[[ "$function_name" == "debug" ]] || \
[[ "$function_name" == "die" ]]
); then
defined_commands+=("$function_name")
fi
done
_debug printf \
"commands() \$defined_commands:\n%s\n" \
"${defined_commands[*]:-}"
}
###############################################################################
# Main
###############################################################################
# _main()
#
# Usage:
# _main
#
# The primary function for starting the program.
#
# NOTE: must be called at end of program after all commands have been defined.
_main() {
_debug printf "main(): entering...\n"
_debug printf "main() \$cmd (upon entering): %s\n" "$cmd"
# If $cmd is blank, then set to help
if [[ -z $cmd ]]; then
cmd="list"
fi
# Load all of the commands.
_load_commands
# If the command is defined, run it, otherwise return an error.
if ( _contains "$cmd" "${defined_commands[*]:-}" ); then
# Pass all comment arguments to the program except for the first ($0).
$cmd "${command_parameters[@]:-}"
else
_die printf "Unknown command: %s\n" "$cmd"
fi
}
###############################################################################
# Utility Functions
###############################################################################
# _function_exists()
#
# Takes a potential function name as an argument and returns whether a function
# exists with that name.
_function_exists() {
[ "$(type -t "$1")" == 'function' ]
}
# _contains()
#
# Takes an item and a list and determines whether the list contains the item.
#
# Usage:
# _contains "$item" "${list[*]}"
_contains() {
local test_list=(${*:2})
for _test_element in "${test_list[@]:-}"
do
_debug printf "_contains() \$_test_element: %s\n" "$_test_element"
if [[ "$_test_element" == "$1" ]]; then
_debug printf "_contains() match: %s\n" "$1"
return 0
2011-11-15 22:15:57 +00:00
fi
done
return 1
}
# _command_argv_includes()
#
# Takes a possible command argument and determines whether it is included in
# the command argument list.
#
# This is a shortcut for simple cases where a command wants to check for the
# presence of options quickly without parsing the options again.
#
# Usage:
# _command_argv_includes "an_argument"
_command_argv_includes() {
_contains "$1" "${command_argv[*]}"
}
###############################################################################
# desc
###############################################################################
# desc()
#
# Usage:
# desc command "description"
#
# Create a description for a specified command name. The command description
# text can be passed as the second argument or as standard input.
#
# To make the description text available to other functions, desc() assigns the
# text to a variable with the format $_desc_function_name
#
# NOTE:
#
# The `read` form of assignment is used for a balance of ease of
# implementation and simplicity. There is an alternative assignment form
# that could be used here:
#
# var="$(cat <<'EOM'
# some message
# EOM
# )
#
# However, this form appears to require trailing space after backslases to
# preserve newlines, which is unexpected. Using `read` simply requires
# escaping backslashes, which is more common.
desc() {
set +e
[[ -z $1 ]] && _die printf "desc: No command name specified.\n"
if [[ -n ${2:-} ]]; then
read -d '' "_desc_$1" <<EOM
$2
EOM
_debug printf "desc() set with argument: _desc_%s\n" "$1"
else
read -d '' "_desc_$1"
_debug printf "desc() set with pipe: _desc_%s\n" "$1"
fi
set -e
}
# _print_desc()
#
# Usage:
# _print_desc <command>
#
# Prints the description for a given command, provided the description has been
# set using the desc() function.
_print_desc() {
local var="_desc_$1"
if [[ -n ${!var:-} ]]; then
printf "%s\n" "${!var}"
else
printf "No additional information for \`%s\`\n" "$1"
fi
}
###############################################################################
# Default Commands
###############################################################################
# Version #####################################################################
desc version <<EOM
Usage:
$_me ( version | --version )
Description:
Display the current program version.
To save you the trouble, the current version is $_VERSION
EOM
version() {
printf "%s\n" "$_VERSION"
}
# Help ########################################################################
desc help <<EOM
Usage:
$_me help [<command>]
Description:
Display help information for $_me or a specified command.
EOM
help() {
if [[ ${#command_argv[@]} = 1 ]]; then
cat <<EOM
__ __
/ /_ ____ _____/ /______
/ __ \/ __ \/ ___/ __/ ___/
/ / / / /_/ (__ ) /_(__ )
/_/ /_/\____/____/\__/____/
A program for managing host file entries.
Version: $_VERSION
Usage:
$_me
$_me add <ip> <hostname>
$_me remove <hostname>
$_me list [127.]
$_me edit
$_me file
$_me command [--command-options] [<arguments>]
$_me -h | --help
$_me --version
Options:
-h --help Display this help information.
--version Display version information.
Help:
$_me help [<command>]
$(commands)
EOM
else
_print_desc "$1"
fi
}
# Command List ################################################################
desc commands <<EOM
Usage:
$_me commands [--raw]
Options:
--raw Display the command list without formatting.
Description:
Display the list of available commands.
EOM
commands() {
if _command_argv_includes "--raw"; then
printf "%s\n" "${defined_commands[@]}"
else
printf "Available commands:\n"
printf " %s\n" "${defined_commands[@]}"
fi
}
###############################################################################
# Commands
# ========.....................................................................
#
# Example command group structure:
#
# desc example "" - Optional. A short description for the command.
# example() { : } - The command called by the user.
#
#
# desc example <<EOM
# Usage:
# $_me example
#
# Description:
# Print "Hello, World!"
#
# For usage formatting conventions see:
# - http://docopt.org/
# - http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap12.html
# EOM
# example() {
# printf "Hello, World!\n"
# }
#
###############################################################################
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------- add
desc add <<EOM
Usage:
$_me add <ip> <hostname>
Description:
Add a given IP address and hostname pair.
EOM
add() {
local ip=${1:-}
local hostname=${2:-}
if [[ -z ${ip} ]]; then
$_me help add
exit 1
elif [[ -z ${hostname} ]]; then
printf "Please include a hostname\n"
$_me help add
exit 1
elif grep "^${ip}.*[^A-Za-z0-9\.]${hostname}$" /etc/hosts ; then
_die printf "Duplicate address/host combination, /etc/hosts unchanged.\n"
else
printf "%s\t%s\n" "${ip}" "${hostname}" >> /etc/hosts
fi
}
# --------------------------------------------------------------------- disable
desc disable <<EOM
Usage:
$_me disable (<ip>|<hostname>|<search term>)
Description:
Disable one or more records based on a given ip address, hostname, or
search term.
EOM
disable() {
local search_term=$1
if [[ -z "${search_term}" ]]; then
$_me help disable
exit 1
else
targets=$(sed -n "s/^\([^#]*${search_term}.*\)$/\1/p" /etc/hosts)
printf "Disabling:\n%s\n" "${targets}"
sed -i "s/^\([^#]*${search_term}.*\)$/\#disabled: \1/g" /etc/hosts
fi
}
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------ edit
desc edit <<EOM
Usage:
$_me edit
Description:
Open the /etc/hosts file in your \$EDITOR.
EOM
edit() {
if [[ -z "$EDITOR" ]]; then
_die printf "\$EDITOR not set.\n"
else
"$EDITOR" /etc/hosts
fi
}
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------- enable
desc enable <<EOM
Usage:
$_me enable (<ip>|<hostname>|<search term>)
Description:
Enable one or more disabled records based on a given ip address, hostname,
or search term.
EOM
enable() {
local search_term=$1
if [[ -z "${search_term}" ]]; then
$_me help enable
exit 1
else
target_regex="s/^\#disabled: \(.*${search_term}.*\)$/\1/"
targets=$(sed -n "${target_regex}p" /etc/hosts)
printf "Enabling:\n%s\n" "${targets}"
sed -i "${target_regex}g" /etc/hosts
fi
}
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------ file
desc file <<EOM
Usage:
$_me file
Description:
Print the entire contents of the /etc/hosts file.
EOM
file() {
cat /etc/hosts
}
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------ list
desc list <<EOM
Usage:
$_me list [enabled | disabled | <search string>]
Description:
List the existing IP / hostname pairs, optionally limited to a specified
state. When provided with a seach string, all matching enabled records will
be printed.
EOM
list() {
# Get the disabled records up front for the two cases where they are needed.
disabled_records=$(sed -n "s/^\#disabled: \(.*\)$/\1/p" /etc/hosts)
if [[ -n "$1" ]]; then
if [[ "$1" == disabled ]]; then
printf "%s\n" "${disabled_records}"
elif [[ "$1" == enabled ]]; then
grep -v -e '^$' -e '^\s*\#' /etc/hosts
else
$_me show "$1"
fi
else
# NOTE: use separate expressions since using a | for the or results in
# inconsistent behavior.
grep -v -e '^$' -e '^\s*\#' /etc/hosts
if [[ -n "${disabled_records}" ]]; then
printf "\nDisabled:\n%s\n" "${disabled_records}"
fi
fi
}
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------- remove
desc remove <<EOM
Usage:
$_me remove <hostname>
Description:
Remove all IP / hostname pairs for a given hostname.
EOM
remove() {
local hostname=${1:-}
if [[ -z $hostname ]]; then
$_me help remove
exit 1
else
sed -i "/^[^#].*[^A-Za-z0-9\.]${hostname}$/d" /etc/hosts
fi
}
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------ show
desc show <<EOM
Usage:
$_me show ( <ip> | <hostname> | <search string> )
Description:
Print entries matching a given IP address, hostname, or search string.
EOM
show() {
if [[ -n "$1" ]]; then
grep "^[^#]*$1" /etc/hosts
else
$_me help show
exit 1
fi
}
###############################################################################
# Run Program
###############################################################################
# Calling the _main function after everything has been defined.
_main