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Linux Shell Scripting Essentials

Linux Shell Scripting Essentials

By : Sinny Kumari
4.5 (2)
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Linux Shell Scripting Essentials

Linux Shell Scripting Essentials

4.5 (2)
By: Sinny Kumari

Overview of this book

Shell scripting is a quick method to prototype complex applications or problems. Shell scripts are a collection of commands to automate tasks, usually those for which the user has a repeated need, when working on Linux-based systems. Using simple commands or a combination of them in a shell can solve complex problems easily. This book starts with the basics, including essential commands that can be executed on Linux systems to perform tasks within a few nanoseconds. You’ll learn to use outputs from commands and transform them to show the data you require. Discover how to write shell scripts easily, execute script files, debug, and handle errors. Next, you’ll explore environment variables in shell programming and learn how to customize them and add a new environment. Finally, the book walks you through processes and how these interact with your shell scripts, along with how to use scripts to automate tasks and how to embed other languages and execute them.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)
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9
Index

Process management


Managing processes is very important because processes are what consumes system resources. System users should be careful about the processes they are creating, in order to ensure that a process is not affecting any other critical processes.

Process creation and execution

In bash, creating a process is very easy. When a program is executed, a new process is created. In a Linux or Unix-based system, when a new process is created, a unique ID is assigned to it, which is known as PID. A PID value is always a positive number starting from 1. Depending upon a system having init or systemd, they always get the PID value 1 because this will be the first process in a system and it is the ancestor of all other processes.

The maximum value of PID is defined in the pid_max file, which should be available in the /proc/sys/kernel/ directory. By default, the pid_max file contains the value 32768 (max PID + 1), which means a maximum of 32767 processes can exist in a system simultaneously...

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