To extract joebloggs
from this string in bash using parameter expansion without any extra processes...
MYVAR="/var/cpanel/users/joebloggs:DNS9=domain.com"
NAME=${MYVAR%:*} # retain the part before the colon
NAME=${NAME##*/} # retain the part after the last slash
echo $NAME
Doesn't depend on joebloggs
being at a particular depth in the path.
Summary
An overview of a few parameter expansion modes, for reference...
${MYVAR#pattern} # delete shortest match of pattern from the beginning
${MYVAR##pattern} # delete longest match of pattern from the beginning
${MYVAR%pattern} # delete shortest match of pattern from the end
${MYVAR%%pattern} # delete longest match of pattern from the end
So #
means match from the beginning (think of a comment line) and %
means from the end. One instance means shortest and two instances means longest.
You can get substrings based on position using numbers:
${MYVAR:3} # Remove the first three chars (leaving 4..end)
${MYVAR::3} # Return the first three characters
${MYVAR:3:5} # The next five characters after removing the first 3 (chars 4-9)
You can also replace particular strings or patterns using:
${MYVAR/search/replace}
The pattern
is in the same format as file-name matching, so *
(any characters) is common, often followed by a particular symbol like /
or .
Examples:
Given a variable like
MYVAR="users/joebloggs/domain.com"
Remove the path leaving file name (all characters up to a slash):
echo ${MYVAR##*/}
domain.com
Remove the file name, leaving the path (delete shortest match after last /
):
echo ${MYVAR%/*}
users/joebloggs
Get just the file extension (remove all before last period):
echo ${MYVAR##*.}
com
NOTE: To do two operations, you can't combine them, but have to assign to an intermediate variable. So to get the file name without path or extension:
NAME=${MYVAR##*/} # remove part before last slash
echo ${NAME%.*} # from the new var remove the part after the last period
domain