Issue
I am looking write a small bash script to, when launched, watch a directory for any newly created files. If a new file appears, I want its presence to trigger a second script to run.
I see this being used to trigger the compression recently digitized video, and add it to a log of ingested footage.
Currently my code looks like this:
#!/bin/sh
##VIDSTAT is a global variable coming from a parent script.
##proj is the ingestion directory coming from a parent script
proj=$1
dir="/home/$USER/data/movies/$proj"
dirlist=$(ls $dir)
while { $VIDSTAT -eq 1 }:
do
for mov in $dirlist
do
if [ "$(( $(date +"%s") - $(stat -c "%Y" $mov) ))" -lt "5" ]
then
~/bin/compressNlog.sh $mov
fi
done
done
Is there an easier/cleaner/less memory intensive way to do this?
EDIT I will be changing the ingestion directory per capture session. I have adjusted the code accordingly
Solution
How about incron? It triggering Commands On File/Directory Changes.
sudo apt-get install incron
Example:
<path> <mask> <command>
Where <path>
can be a directory (meaning the directory and/or the files directly in that directory (not files in subdirectories of that directory!) are watched) or a file.
<mask>
can be one of the following:
IN_ACCESS File was accessed (read) (*)
IN_ATTRIB Metadata changed (permissions, timestamps, extended attributes, etc.) (*)
IN_CLOSE_WRITE File opened for writing was closed (*)
IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE File not opened for writing was closed (*)
IN_CREATE File/directory created in watched directory (*)
IN_DELETE File/directory deleted from watched directory (*)
IN_DELETE_SELF Watched file/directory was itself deleted
IN_MODIFY File was modified (*)
IN_MOVE_SELF Watched file/directory was itself moved
IN_MOVED_FROM File moved out of watched directory (*)
IN_MOVED_TO File moved into watched directory (*)
IN_OPEN File was opened (*)
<command>
is the command that should be run when the event occurs. The following wildards may be used inside the command specification:
$$ dollar sign
$@ watched filesystem path (see above)
$# event-related file name
$% event flags (textually)
$& event flags (numerically)
If you watch a directory, then $@ holds the directory path and $# the file that triggered the event. If you watch a file, then $@ holds the complete path to the file and $# is empty.
Working Example:
$sudo echo spatel > /etc/incron.allow
$sudo echo root > /etc/incron.allow
Start Daemon:
$sudo /etc/init.d/incrond start
Edit incrontab
file
$incrontab -e
/home/spatel IN_CLOSE_WRITE touch /tmp/incrontest-$#
Test it
$touch /home/spatel/alpha
Result:
$ls -l /tmp/*alpha*
-rw-r--r-- 1 spatel spatel 0 Feb 4 12:32 /tmp/incrontest-alpha
Notes: In Ubuntu
you need to activate inotify at boot time. Please add following line in Grub menu.lst file:
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.26-1-686 root=/dev/sda1 ro inotify=yes
Answered By - Satish Answer Checked By - Timothy Miller (WPSolving Admin)