By Thomas_H 2021/02/14
#!/bin/bash # ############################################################################## # first we declare some variables. A good programmer is a lazy programmer :) ############################################################################## opsiproduct_path="/home/opsiproducts" product="7zip" setupname="7zip_x64_setup.exe" geturl="https://7-zip.org" urladd="/a/" # minimum a slash / # Attention! following grepvar-string is a regular expression!! Leave the [^"]* at the end!! grepvar='7z.*-x64\.exe[^"]*' searchstr="-" # Where is the first digit of the version-number? startpos=3 ############################################################################## # # # first, let's remove the last valid exe-file # --- rm $opsiproduct_path/$product/CLIENT_DATA/$setupname # get the new setup-file from website and rename it to a standard file name (so no need to change the setup.ins :P ) setupprg=$(wget --no-check-certificate $geturl -q -O- | grep -o $grepvar ) echo setupprg=$setupprg wget --no-check-certificate "$geturl$urladd$setupprg" -O $opsiproduct_path/$product/CLIENT_DATA/$setupname # let's change the directory to the package cd $opsiproduct_path/$product/ # remove the *.opsi-files rm *.opsi rm *.zsync rm *.md5 # to find out, which version it is, we do a little bit of awk pos=$(echo $setupprg | grep -b -o $searchstr | awk 'BEGIN {FS=":"}{print $1}') # well done, we found it. version=$(echo $setupprg | cut -c$startpos-$pos) echo Version=$version # now let's change the /OPSI/control file sed "s/version:.*/version: $version /g" $opsiproduct_path/$product/OPSI/control > $opsiproduct_path/$product/OPSI/control.new mv $opsiproduct_path/$product/OPSI/control.new $opsiproduct_path/$product/OPSI/control # make new package, but quiet opsi-makepackage -q opsi-package-manager -i *.opsi