135
votes

I want to print code into a file using cat <<EOF >>:

cat <<EOF >> brightup.sh
!/bin/bash
curr=`cat /sys/class/backlight/intel_backlight/actual_brightness`
if [ $curr -lt 4477 ]; then
   curr=$((curr+406));
   echo $curr  > /sys/class/backlight/intel_backlight/brightness;
fi
EOF

but when I check the file output, I get this:

!/bin/bash
curr=1634
if [  -lt 4477 ]; then
   curr=406;
   echo   > /sys/class/backlight/intel_backlight/brightness;
fi

I tried putting single quotes but the output also carries the single quotes with it. How can I avoid this issue?

5
You should also fix the shebang. The first line needs to be literally #!/bin/bash and nothing else -- the #! is what makes it into a valid shebang line, and what comes after it is the path to the interpreter.tripleee
As a late-coming aside, the modern syntax for process substitution is $(command) instead of `command`. For obtaining the contents of a file, Bash has $(<file)tripleee

5 Answers

210
votes

You only need a minimal change; single-quote the here-document delimiter after <<.

cat <<'EOF' >> brightup.sh

or equivalently backslash-escape it:

cat <<\EOF >>brightup.sh

Without quoting, the here document will undergo variable substitution, backticks will be evaluated, etc, like you discovered.

If you need to expand some, but not all, values, you need to individually escape the ones you want to prevent.

cat <<EOF >>brightup.sh
#!/bin/sh
# Created on $(date # : <<-- this will be evaluated before cat;)
echo "\$HOME will not be evaluated because it is backslash-escaped"
EOF

will produce

#!/bin/sh
# Created on Fri Feb 16 11:00:18 UTC 2018
echo "$HOME will not be evaluated because it is backslash-escaped"

As suggested by @fedorqui, here is the relevant section from man bash:

Here Documents

This type of redirection instructs the shell to read input from the current source until a line containing only delimiter (with no trailing blanks) is seen. All of the lines read up to that point are then used as the standard input for a command.

The format of here-documents is:

      <<[-]word
              here-document
      delimiter

No parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic expansion, or pathname expansion is performed on word. If any characters in word are quoted, the delimiter is the result of quote removal on word, and the lines in the here-document are not expanded. If word is unquoted, all lines of the here-document are subjected to parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion. In the latter case, the character sequence \<newline> is ignored, and \ must be used to quote the characters \, $, and `.

23
votes

Or, using your EOF markers, you need to quote the initial marker so expansion won't be done:

#-----v---v------
cat <<'EOF' >> brightup.sh
#!/bin/bash
curr=`cat /sys/class/backlight/intel_backlight/actual_brightness`
if [ $curr -lt 4477 ]; then
   curr=$((curr+406));
   echo $curr  > /sys/class/backlight/intel_backlight/brightness;
fi
EOF

IHTH

22
votes

This should work, I just tested it out and it worked as expected: no expansion, substitution, or what-have-you took place.

cat <<< '
#!/bin/bash
curr=`cat /sys/class/backlight/intel_backlight/actual_brightness`
if [ $curr -lt 4477 ]; then
  curr=$((curr+406));
  echo $curr  > /sys/class/backlight/intel_backlight/brightness;
fi' > file # use overwrite mode so that you don't keep on appending the same script to that file over and over again, unless that's what you want. 

Using the following also works.

cat <<< ' > file
 ... code ...'

Also, it's worth noting that when using heredocs, such as << EOF, substitution and variable expansion and the like takes place. So doing something like this:

cat << EOF > file
cd "$HOME"
echo "$PWD" # echo the current path
EOF

will always result in the expansion of the variables $HOME and $PWD. So if your home directory is /home/foobar and the current path is /home/foobar/bin, file will look like this:

cd "/home/foobar"
echo "/home/foobar/bin"

instead of the expected:

cd "$HOME"
echo "$PWD"
1
votes

I know this is a two year old question, but this is a quick answer for those searching for a 'how to'.

If you don't want to have to put quotes around anything you can simply write a block of text to a file, and escape variables you want to export as text (for instance for use in a script) and not escape one's you want to export as the value of the variable.

#!/bin/bash

FILE_NAME="test.txt"
VAR_EXAMPLE="\"string\""

cat > ${FILE_NAME} << EOF
\${VAR_EXAMPLE}=${VAR_EXAMPLE} in ${FILE_NAME}  
EOF

Will write "${VAR_EXAMPLE}="string" in test.txt" into test.txt

This can also be used to output blocks of text to the console with the same rules by omitting the file name

#!/bin/bash

VAR_EXAMPLE="\"string\""

cat << EOF
\${VAR_EXAMPLE}=${VAR_EXAMPLE} to console 
EOF

Will output "${VAR_EXAMPLE}="string" to console" to the console

1
votes

cat with <<EOF>> will create or append the content to the existing file, won't overwrite. whereas cat with <<EOF> will create or overwrite the content.

cat test.txt 
hello

cat <<EOF>> test.txt
> hi
> EOF

cat test.txt 
hello
hi

cat <<EOF> test.txt
> haiiiii
> EOF

cat test.txt
haiiiii