The MBFL is a collection of shell functions for the GNU Bash shell. This package is an attempt to make Bash a viable solution for medium sized scripts; it needs at least Bash version 4.3.
This package relies on the facilities of the packages: GNU m4, GNU Coreutils, sudo.
The package uses the GNU Autotools and it is tested, using Travis CI, on both Ubuntu GNU+Linux systems and OS X systems.
Copyright (c) 2003-2005, 2009-2010, 2012-2014, 2017-2018, 2020, 2023, 2024 Marco Maggi mrc.mgg@gmail.com. All rights reserved.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3.0 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
To install from a proper release tarball, after unpacking the archive, do this:
$ cd mbfl-3.0.0
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ ../configure [options]
$ make
$ make check
$ make install
to inspect the available configuration options:
$ ../configure --help
We want to check the following configuration options:
-
--with-sudo=/path/to/sudo
allows the selection of the pathname to the executablesudo
; this pathname is hard-coded in the library. It defaults to:/usr/bin/sudo
. -
--with-whoami=/path/to/whoami
allows the selection of the pathname to the executablewhoami
, which is meant to be the program from the package GNU Coreutils; this pathname is hard-coded in the library. It defaults to: /bin/whoami. -
--with-id=/path/to/id
allows the selection of the pathname to the executableid
, which is meant to be the program from the package GNU Coreutils; this pathname is hard-coded in the library. It defaults to: /bin/id.
The Makefile is designed to allow parallel builds, so we can do:
$ make -j4 all && make -j4 check
which, on a 4-core CPU, should speed up building and checking significantly.
From a repository checkout or snapshot (the ones from the Github site):
we must install the GNU Autotools (GNU Automake, GNU Autoconf), then we
must first run the script autogen.sh
from the top source directory, to
generate the needed files:
$ cd mbfl
$ sh autogen.sh
After this the procedure is the same as the one for building from a proper release tarball, but we have to enable maintainer mode:
$ ../configure --enable-maintainer-mode [options]
$ make
$ make check
$ make install
After building the package, and before installing it, we can test the example scripts as follows:
$ make test-template MFLAGS='--help'
will run examples/template.sh
with the flags --help
;
$ make test-template-actions MFLAGS='one green gas --help'
will run examples/template-actions.sh
selection the action one green gas
and appending the flags --help
.
Read the documentation generated from the Texinfo sources. The package installs the documentation in Info format; we can generate and install documentation in HTML format by running:
$ make html
$ make install-html
The stuff was written by Marco Maggi. If this package exists it's because of the great GNU software tools that he uses all the time.
A lot of ideas were recycled from the "Revised^6 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme" (R6RS):
Bug and vulnerability reports are appreciated, all the vulnerability reports are public; register them using the Issue Tracker at the project's GitHub site. For contributions and patches please use the Pull Requests feature at the project's GitHub site.
The GNU Project software can be found here:
development takes place at:
https://github.com/marcomaggi/mbfl/
and as backup at:
https://bitbucket.org/marcomaggi/mbfl
proper release tarballs for this package are in the download area at:
https://bitbucket.org/marcomaggi/mbfl/downloads/
Travis CI is a hosted, distributed continuous integration service used to build and test software projects hosted at GitHub. We can find this project's dashboard at:
https://travis-ci.org/marcomaggi/mbfl
Usage of this service is configured through the file .travis.yml
and
additional scripts are under the directory meta/travis-ci
.