Is there a better way to double escape (or escape twice) user input in BASH than calling printf twice?
This script will read an old and a new value from the user and then use sed to find and replace the开发者_运维技巧m in a file. For example if I entered TTz and BBz it would look for T\T\z in the file and replace with B\B\z. It works but I've been trying to make this more concise.
I don't have any need for the intermediate variables $ESC_OLD_PW and $ESC_NEW_PW. Is there a more sensible way to do this?
#!/bin/bash
read -sp "Old:" OLD_PW && echo
read -sp "New:" NEW_PW && echo
# Add escape characters to what user entered
printf -v ESC_OLD_PW "%q" "${OLD_PW}"
printf -v ESC_NEW_PW "%q" "${NEW_PW}"
# Escape again for the sed evaluation.
printf -v ESC_ESC_OLD_PW "%q" "${ESC_OLD_PW}"
printf -v ESC_ESC_NEW_PW "%q" "${ESC_NEW_PW}"
sed -i -e s/"${ESC_ESC_OLD_PW}"/"${ESC_ESC_NEW_PW}"/g $1
I've tried the following:
~$ OLD_PW="T*T*z"
~$ printf "%q" $OLD_PW | xargs printf "%q"
printf: %q: invalid conversion specification
~$
And I've tried many variations on piping things into printf... Any suggestions?
Intermediate variable-free:
sed -i -e "s/$(printf '%q' $(printf '%q' $OLD_PW))/$(printf '%q' $(printf '%q' $NEW_PW))/g" $1
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