Get last dirname/filename in a file path argument in Bash

TJ L picture TJ L · Jul 20, 2010 · Viewed 282.2k times · Source

I'm trying to write a post-commit hook for SVN, which is hosted on our development server. My goal is to try to automatically checkout a copy of the committed project to the directory where it is hosted on the server. However I need to be able to read only the last directory in the directory string passed to the script in order to checkout to the same sub-directory where our projects are hosted.

For example if I make an SVN commit to the project "example", my script gets "/usr/local/svn/repos/example" as its first argument. I need to get just "example" off the end of the string and then concat it with another string so I can checkout to "/server/root/example" and see the changes live immediately.

Answer

sth picture sth · Jul 20, 2010

basename does remove the directory prefix of a path:

$ basename /usr/local/svn/repos/example
example
$ echo "/server/root/$(basename /usr/local/svn/repos/example)"
/server/root/example