Shell Scripting
Talks about shell scripting and how it works
Last updated
Talks about shell scripting and how it works
Last updated
UESH shell contains scripting support. The shell scripts have the .uesh
extension containing a subset of UESH commands inside it. A simple UESH script containing a command that sets a UESH variable is as follows:
When this script file is executed, the UESH script parser skims the file for any possible $variables
and initializes them with their default values using the UESHVariables.InitializeVariable
function.
The parser then attempts to skim the script lines for all the variables, and replaces them with the value. The parser also attempts to parse the script argument placeholders, defined with {num}
; which num
is the argument number, in case the ︎user executed the script with the arguments. For example, this script prints the first argument:
As soon as the parsing is done, the final line gets executed by the GetLine()
command.
UESH provides the variable facility, which holds the variable as a key and the variable value as a value. Each variable starts with the dollar sign like $var
, regardless of the platform.
When a variable gets initialized by InitializeVariable()
, the variable name gets sanitized (SanitizeVariableName()
) by appending the dollar sign in front of the variable name, which then gets initialized with the empty value.
The variable can be read from and written to by these respective functions: GetVariable()
and SetVariable()
. These can be used by your mods. Additionally, an array of values can be initialized with one variable by SetVariables()
to initialize $var[n]
variables, which:
var
: A variable name
n
: How many values are there (count from 0)
When the kernel starts up, ConvertSystemEnvironmentVariables()
queries the operating system for environment variables and sets them one by one to the UESH variable store. Its list can be obtained by the GetVariables()
function.
Additionally, the variables can be uninitialized by the RemoveVariable()
function. When the target variable is removed, it has to be re-initialized before it can be used again.
No scripting is complete with conditions, which control the execution of the command. These conditions are currently available to be used: (<value>
can either be a constant or a UESH $variable
)
eq
: The value is equal to the value
Usage: <value> eq <value>
neq
: The value is not equal to the value
Usage: <value> neq <value>
les
: The number is less than another number
Usage: <value> les <value>
lesoreq
: The number is less than or equal to another number
Usage: <value> lesoreq <value>
gre
: The number is greater than another number
Usage: <value> gre <value>
greoreq
: The number is greater than or equal to another number
Usage: <value> greoreq <value>
fileex
: The file exists
Usage: fileex <value>
filenex
: The file doesn't exist
Usage: filenex <value>
direx
: The directory exists
Usage: direx <value>
dirnex
: The directory doesn't exist
Usage: dirnex <value>
has
: The specified string contains a substring
Usage: <value> has <value>
hasno
: The specified string doesn't contain a substring
Usage: <value> hasno <value>
ispath
: The specified path is valid
Usage: <value> ispath
isnotpath
: The specified path is invalid
Usage: <value> isnotpath
isfname
: The specified file name is valid
Usage: <value> isfname
isnotfname
: The specified file name is invalid
Usage: <value> isnotfname
sane
: The hash matches the expected hash
Usage: <value> <value> sane
insane
: The hash doesn't match the expected hash
Usage: <value> <value> insane
fsane
: The file hash matches the expected hash
Usage: <value> <value> fsane
finsane
: The file hash doesn't match the expected hash
Usage: <value> <value> finsane
is
: The variable is of the appropriate type
Usage: <value> is <type>
isnot
: The variable is not of the appropriate type
Usage: <value> isnot <type>
isplat
: The host is running a selected platform
Usage: isplat <platform>
isnotplat
: The host is not running a selected platform
Usage: isnotplat <platform>
<type>
can be one of the following:
null
string, fullstring
numeric
byte, i8, ubyte, u8
int16, short, i16, uint16, ushort, u16
int32, integer, i32, uint32, uinteger, u32
int64, long, i64, uint64, ulong, u64
float, f32, double, f64, decimal
bool
regex
<platform>
can be one of the following:
win
: Windows platforms (Windows 10, 11, ...)
mac
: Macintosh platforms (macOS Catalina, Big Sur, ...)
unix
: Unix flavors (Linux, ...)
android
: Android phones and tablets (Android 13, 14, ...)
The conditions all have their base condition class and their interface to be implemented like below:
Basically, you must override all the variables, where:
ConditionName
: A condition name without spaces to be included in the expression
ConditionPosition
: Which word number starting from 1 should the expression be found?
ConditionRequiredArguments
: How many arguments are required? Starting from 1.
Choose one of the two method overloads to override, depending on your condition:
IsConditionSatisfied(string FirstVariable, string SecondVariable)
This function checks the two variables to see if they satisfy a condition
IsConditionSatisfied(string[] Variables)
This function checks any number of variables to see if they satisfy a condition
You can call ConditionSatisfied()
to test any built-in or custom condition. Give it any expression and test it with true
.
The if
command in the UESH shell is a major contributor to the condition system, though it can be changed in the future.
The conditional blocks and loops are one of the most essential scripting features that control the script flow based on the conditions and conditional loops. These are currently supported:
if <condition>
while <condition>
until <condition>
After the script parser detects one of these, it checks for the new block stack in the next line, like this:
The new block stack must be defined with one extra |
character directly after lines that start with one of the above conditional block statements. Otherwise, parsing will fail.
If defined correctly, the script parser walks through the commands defined in the new stack. However, if the condition is not satisfied, the whole block stack for the first conditional block that doesn't satisfy the condition will be skipped and the parser will continue executing commands that are defined in the current stack. For example, consider this:
This script first checks to see if the user has answered y
in the first line. The following will happen:
If the user answered y
, the script parser enters the new stack defined by the if
condition in line 2.
If the user answered n
, the script parser skips the new stack defined by the if
condition and continues parsing the commands from line 8.
while
and until
blocks require the new stack to be defined. In addition to this, the script parser checks to see if the condition is no longer satisfied after the stack that these blocks defined.
If the condition is satisfied, the commands after the while
or until
blocks get executed.
If the condition is not satisfied, the commands after the while
or until
blocks get skipped and the script parser continues parsing the commands.
Custom conditions are mod-defined conditions that customize the way that you define the conditions and how you want the condition to be satisfied. Your typical condition class file looks like this:
To register your condition, you must call UESHConditional.RegisterCondition()
in your mod initialization code to add your condition with your needed code to the list of custom conditions. After that, the UESH script parser will be able to parse your custom condition.
To unregister your condition, you must call UESHConditional.UnregisterCondition()
in your mod cleanup code to remove your condition from the list of custom conditions. After that, you won't be able to use scripts that use your custom condition.
The error code variable, UESHErrorCode
, holds information about the last process error code, whether it's a success (a zero value) or a failure (non-zero value). Currently, these values are supported:
0
Indicates success
-1
Indicates that the command is not found
-2
Indicates that the command is not found and that the file is not found under any path lookup directories
-3
Indicates that the command is attempting to be run in maintenance mode and the command forbids that
-4
Indicates that the command is a strict command and the user doesn't have permissions to execute it
0
Indicates success
-5
Indicates that the command is interrupted unexpectedly
-6
Indicates that the user didn't provide required arguments
Exception.GetHashCode()
Some commands throw this value from any exception. Indicates that the command failed to perform its operation.
10000 + KernelExceptionType
Some commands throw this value from any KernelException
that is thrown by the command executor. Indicates that the command failed to perform its operation, but the kernel already knows about it.
Example: If KernelExceptionType.Config
is thrown from the command executor, and the command knows how to return this exception as an error code, such as using KernelExceptionTools.GetErrorCode()
, then it'll return the sum of 10000 + 7
, which is 10007
.
1
Indicates that the command answered n
to the confirmation (FTP and SFTP's del
command)
2
Indicates that either the real or the imaginary number is not valid (imaginary
command)
3
Indicates that the unit type is not found (unitconv
command)
4
Indicates that the hashes don't match (verify
command)
5
Indicates that the version code can't be formed (version
command)
Indicates that the action taken is invalid (todo
command)
6
Indicates that the version code can't be formed (platform
command)
7
Indicates that the line endings converter can't convert binary files (convertlineendings
command)
8
Indicates that the note number is not numeric (removenote
command)
9
Indicates that the repository has been modified (checkout
command)
10
Indicates that the branch doesn't exist (checkout
command)
11
Indicates that the repository has been modified (fetch
command)
12
Indicates that the remote doesn't exist (fetch
command)
13
Indicates that there are no remotes to pull updates from (fetch
command)
14
Indicates that you need to identify yourself (pull
command)
15
Indicates that you need to identify yourself (maketag
and commit
command)
16
Indicates that the culture is not found (altdate
command)
17
Indicates that there is no such lyric file (playlyric
command)
18
Indicates that the number of times is invalid (repeat
command)
19
Indicates that repeat
can't repeat itself (repeat
command)
20
Indicates that the number of columns is invalid (wraptext
command)
21
Indicates that the extension handler is not registered (getdefaultexthandler
command)
22
Indicates that the extension handler is not registered (getexthandlers
command)
23
Indicates that the extension is not registered (setexthandler
command)
24
Indicates that the extension implementer is not registered (setexthandler
command)
25
Indicates that the port number is invalid (netfminfo
command)
26
Indicates that the number of seconds or the drink name is invalid (caffeine
command)
27
Indicates that there is no such lyric file (lyriclines
command)
28
Indicates that there is no config or key (getconfigvalue
, setconfigvalue
, and lsconfigvalues
command)
29
Indicates that the music file is not found (playsound
command)
30
Indicates that the MPG123 library has timed out (playsound
command)
Indicates that the music file is not specified (musicplayer
command)
31
Indicates that the music file is not found (musicplayer
command)
32
Indicates that there are no caffeine alerts to abort (caffeine
command)
33
Indicates that this command is not supported on Windows (showmainbuffer
command)
34
Indicates that the dock is not found (dock
command)