Log

From genomewiki
Revision as of 23:10, 9 September 2006 by Max (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search

This was inspired by a post on kuro5hin some time ago, questions from wet-lab collegues ("you don't keep protocols?????"), own negative experiences ("How the heck did I create this damn bed-file three days ago?") and also by the makeDbxxxx files in the source tree. Of course, makefiles are better than shell scripts, but often you're just hacking around and don't want to bother with escaping those $s, tab-characters, etc.

Add these two lines to your .bashrc:

 alias logadd='history 2 | head -n 1 | cut -d" " -f4- >> log'
 alias logmenu=source ~/usr/bin/scripts/logmenu 

When you type logadd now, the last command you typed will be appended to a file called "log". So its a good habit to use logadd after you have found just the right combination of blat, pslSelect, overlapSelect and faPolyASizes for your rocket science result to be able to track down those nasty mistakes 6 months later.

Then save the following file under the name logmenu somewhere:

# this scripts needs alias logmenu=source ~/usr/bin/scripts/logmenu 
# in your bashrc otherwise the cmds will not find the way into your history
#!/bin/bash
if [ "$1" == "-h" -o -z $1 ]; then
    echo logmenu: display the file \"log\" as a menu and let the user choose a command to execute
    echo uses the program \"dialog\"
fi

echo -n dialog --menu logfile 24 70 18\  > /tmp/menu
cat log | tr -d \' | gawk "{ ORS=\" \"; print NR, \"\'\" \$0 \"\'\" } " >> /tmp/menu

. /tmp/menu 2> /tmp/menuresult
line=`cat /tmp/menuresult`
echo $line
head -n $line log | tail -n 1 > /tmp/line
history -r /tmp/line
. /tmp/line

rm -f /tmp/line /tmp/menuresult /tmp/menu

Now, when you type logmenu somewhere, a nice menu will pop up, you can select a command, which will then be run and also put into your history, so you can press the up-arrow-key, modify it, run it again, etc.