Ich habe gerade meinen eigenen Parser geschrieben. Ich habe versucht, verschiedene Parser zu verwenden, die hier zu finden sind. Keiner scheint sowohl mit ksh93 (AIX) als auch mit bash (Linux) zu funktionieren.
Es ist ein alter Programmierstil - Zeile für Zeile analysieren. Ziemlich schnell, da nur wenige externe Befehle verwendet wurden. Etwas langsamer, da alle Bewertungen für den dynamischen Namen des Arrays erforderlich sind.
Das INI unterstützt 3 spezielle Syntaxen:
- includefile = ini-Datei -> Laden Sie eine zusätzliche ini-Datei. Nützlich, um ini in mehrere Dateien aufzuteilen oder eine Konfiguration erneut zu verwenden
- includeir = Verzeichnis -> Wie includefile, jedoch mit einem vollständigen Verzeichnis
- includeection = section -> Kopieren Sie einen vorhandenen Abschnitt in den aktuellen Abschnitt.
Ich habe alle diese Syntax verwendet, um eine ziemlich komplexe, wiederverwendbare INI-Datei zu haben. Nützlich, um Produkte bei der Installation eines neuen Betriebssystems zu installieren - das tun wir oft.
Auf Werte kann mit $ {ini [$ section. $ Item]} zugegriffen werden. Das Array MUSS vor dem Aufruf definiert werden.
Habe Spaß. Hoffe, es ist nützlich für jemand anderen!
function Show_Debug {
[[ $DEBUG = YES ]] && echo "DEBUG $@"
}
function Fatal {
echo "$@. Script aborted"
exit 2
}
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# This function load an ini file in the array "ini"
# The "ini" array must be defined in the calling program (typeset -A ini)
#
# It could be any array name, the default array name is "ini".
#
# There is heavy usage of "eval" since ksh and bash do not support
# reference variable. The name of the ini is passed as variable, and must
# be "eval" at run-time to work. Very specific syntax was used and must be
# understood before making any modifications.
#
# It complexify greatly the program, but add flexibility.
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
function Load_Ini {
Show_Debug "$0($@)"
typeset ini_file="$1"
# Name of the array to fill. By default, it's "ini"
typeset ini_array_name="${2:-ini}"
typeset section variable value line my_section file subsection value_array include_directory all_index index sections pre_parse
typeset LF="
"
if [[ ! -s $ini_file ]]; then
Fatal "The ini file is empty or absent in $0 [$ini_file]"
fi
include_directory=$(dirname $ini_file)
include_directory=${include_directory:-$(pwd)}
Show_Debug "include_directory=$include_directory"
section=""
# Since this code support both bash and ksh93, you cannot use
# the syntax "echo xyz|while read line". bash doesn't work like
# that.
# It forces the use of "<<<", introduced in bash and ksh93.
Show_Debug "Reading file $ini_file and putting the results in array $ini_array_name"
pre_parse="$(sed 's/^ *//g;s/#.*//g;s/ *$//g' <$ini_file | egrep -v '^$')"
while read line; do
if [[ ${line:0:1} = "[" ]]; then # Is the line starting with "["?
# Replace [section_name] to section_name by removing the first and last character
section="${line:1}"
section="${section%\]}"
eval "sections=\${$ini_array_name[sections_list]}"
sections="$sections${sections:+ }$section"
eval "$ini_array_name[sections_list]=\"$sections\""
Show_Debug "$ini_array_name[sections_list]=\"$sections\""
eval "$ini_array_name[$section.exist]=YES"
Show_Debug "$ini_array_name[$section.exist]='YES'"
else
variable=${line%%=*} # content before the =
value=${line#*=} # content after the =
if [[ $variable = includefile ]]; then
# Include a single file
Load_Ini "$include_directory/$value" "$ini_array_name"
continue
elif [[ $variable = includedir ]]; then
# Include a directory
# If the value doesn't start with a /, add the calculated include_directory
if [[ $value != /* ]]; then
value="$include_directory/$value"
fi
# go thru each file
for file in $(ls $value/*.ini 2>/dev/null); do
if [[ $file != *.ini ]]; then continue; fi
# Load a single file
Load_Ini "$file" "$ini_array_name"
done
continue
elif [[ $variable = includesection ]]; then
# Copy an existing section into the current section
eval "all_index=\"\${!$ini_array_name[@]}\""
# It's not necessarily fast. Need to go thru all the array
for index in $all_index; do
# Only if it is the requested section
if [[ $index = $value.* ]]; then
# Evaluate the subsection [section.subsection] --> subsection
subsection=${index#*.}
# Get the current value (source section)
eval "value_array=\"\${$ini_array_name[$index]}\""
# Assign the value to the current section
# The $value_array must be resolved on the second pass of the eval, so make sure the
# first pass doesn't resolve it (\$value_array instead of $value_array).
# It must be evaluated on the second pass in case there is special character like $1,
# or ' or " in it (code).
eval "$ini_array_name[$section.$subsection]=\"\$value_array\""
Show_Debug "$ini_array_name[$section.$subsection]=\"$value_array\""
fi
done
fi
# Add the value to the array
eval "current_value=\"\${$ini_array_name[$section.$variable]}\""
# If there's already something for this field, add it with the current
# content separated by a LF (line_feed)
new_value="$current_value${current_value:+$LF}$value"
# Assign the content
# The $new_value must be resolved on the second pass of the eval, so make sure the
# first pass doesn't resolve it (\$new_value instead of $new_value).
# It must be evaluated on the second pass in case there is special character like $1,
# or ' or " in it (code).
eval "$ini_array_name[$section.$variable]=\"\$new_value\""
Show_Debug "$ini_array_name[$section.$variable]=\"$new_value\""
fi
done <<< "$pre_parse"
Show_Debug "exit $0($@)\n"
}