Find the character break - sh script
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@marcinozga that is to apply the user account that I want to have local admin rights
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@DustinB3403 but why do you have admin there twice? It's a list of users, separated by comma, what you're doing is setting privileges for admin user, and then for admin user again. It doesn't make much sense.
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Seems to be something with the if statement. Now I just need to figure out what since I haven't touched this part of the script at all. . .
Stupid Apple!
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@DustinB3403 I just ran that if part of the script, and it runs fine.
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@marcinozga ugh. .
When I removed it from the script, the rest of the script at least ran. So now I'm back to square one. . .
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@DustinB3403 Ok, script fails because brew installation is waiting for input. If you run it directly, it'll ask you to press return to continue. Try changing it like so:
ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)" </dev/null
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OKAY so I've gone back to the basics at this point and I'm just writing the script over again. @marcinozga thanks for the assistance the 111</dev/null``` doesn't appear to make a difference.
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OK so while the script works, I'm now hitting the GitHUB API limit.
According to homebrew I should be able to authenticate with
HOMEBREW_GITHUB_API_TOKEN: A personal access token for the GitHub API, which you can create at https://github.com/settings/tokens. If set, GitHub will allow you a greater number of API requests. See https://developer.github.com/v3/#rate-limiting for more information. Homebrew uses the GitHub API for features such as brew search.
so performing
echo `export $HOMEBREW_GITHUB_API_TOKEN=XXXXXXXXXXX` >> ~/.bash_profile
Should work, but doesn't appear to. Obviously I have something wrong here.
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@DustinB3403 you need to source .bash_profile after changing it, so bash picks up modified file. Either
source ~/.bash_profile
or
. ~/.bash_profile
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@marcinozga said in Find the character break - sh script:
@DustinB3403 you need to source .bash_profile after changing it, so bash picks up modified file. Either
source ~/.bash_profile
or
. ~/.bash_profile
Thanks for that, I was actually sorting out that bit as you posted.
Short of setting up a few printers via the script I'm back in working order.