docs/unix-phil
changeset 4:c707b0c5c849
new text about pipes
author | meillo@marmaro.de |
---|---|
date | Fri, 12 Feb 2010 19:30:13 +0100 |
parents | aebbe3e76f5e |
children | 48f1f3465550 |
files | unix-phil.ms |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 75 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) [+] |
line diff
1.1 --- a/unix-phil.ms Wed Feb 10 13:19:04 2010 +0100 1.2 +++ b/unix-phil.ms Fri Feb 12 19:30:13 2010 +0100 1.3 @@ -166,15 +166,82 @@ 1.4 1.5 .NH 1 1.6 The Unix Philosophy 1.7 +.LP 1.8 +The origins of the Unix Philosophy were already introduced. 1.9 +This chapter explains the philosophy and shows concrete examples of its application. 1.10 +.NH 2 1.11 +Examples 1.12 +.LP 1.13 +Following are some examples to demonstrate how applied Unix Philosophy feels like. 1.14 +Knowledge of using the Unix shell is assumed. 1.15 +.PP 1.16 +Counting the number of files in the current directory: 1.17 +.DS 1.18 +.CW 1.19 +ls | wc -l 1.20 +.DE 1.21 +The 1.22 +.CW ls 1.23 +command lists all files in the current directory, one per line, 1.24 +and 1.25 +.CW "wc -l 1.26 +counts how many lines they are. 1.27 +.PP 1.28 +Counting all files that do not contain ``foo'' in their name: 1.29 +.DS 1.30 +.CW 1.31 +ls | grep -v foo | wc -l 1.32 +.DE 1.33 +Here, the list of files is filtered by 1.34 +.CW grep 1.35 +to remove all that contain ``foo''. 1.36 +The rest is the same as in the previous example. 1.37 +.PP 1.38 +Finding the five largest entries in the current directory. 1.39 +.DS 1.40 +.CW 1.41 +du -s * | sort -nr | sed 5q 1.42 +.DE 1.43 +.CW "du -s * 1.44 +returns the recursively summed sizes of all files 1.45 +-- no matter if they are regular files or directories. 1.46 +.CW "sort -nr 1.47 +sorts the list numerically in reverse order. 1.48 +Finally, 1.49 +.CW "sed 5q 1.50 +quits after it has printed the fifth line. 1.51 +.PP 1.52 +The presented command lines are examples of what Unix people would use 1.53 +to get the desired output. 1.54 +There are also other ways to get the same output. 1.55 +It's a user's decision which way to go. 1.56 +.NH 2 1.57 +Pipes 1.58 +.LP 1.59 +The examples show that a lot of tasks on a Unix system 1.60 +are accomplished by combining several small programs. 1.61 +The connection between the single programs is denoted by the pipe operator `|'. 1.62 +.PP 1.63 +Pipes, and their extensive and easy use, are one of the great 1.64 +achievements of the Unix system. 1.65 +Pipes between programs have been possible in earlier operating systems, 1.66 +but it has never been a so central part of the concept. 1.67 +When, in the early seventies, Doug McIlroy introduced pipes for the 1.68 +Unix system, 1.69 +``it was this concept and notation for linking several programs together 1.70 +that transformed Unix from a basic file-sharing system to an entirely new way of computing.'' 1.71 +.[ 1.72 +%T Unix: An Oral History 1.73 +%O http://www.princeton.edu/~hos/frs122/unixhist/finalhis.htm 1.74 +.] 1.75 +.PP 1.76 +Being able to specify pipelines in an easy way is, 1.77 +however, not enough by itself. 1.78 +It is only one part. 1.79 +The other is the design of the programs that are used in the pipeline. 1.80 +They have to be of an external shape that allows them to be be used in a pipeline. 1.81 1.82 -.NH 2 1.83 -what it is 1.84 -.LP 1.85 -definitions by McIlroy, Gancarz, ESR (maybe already in the intro) 1.86 -.LP 1.87 -cf. unix tool chain 1.88 -.LP 1.89 -enabler pipe 1.90 + 1.91 1.92 .NH 2 1.93 Architecture