I use bash substitutions to give neat one-line validation for input, e.g.:
#!/bin/bash
export PARAM1=${1?Error, please pass a value as the first argument"}
# do something...
In some cases though, I want to only log a message when something is unset and then continue as normal. Is this possible at all?
Maybe something along the lines of
test -n "$1" && export PARAM1="$1" || log "\$1 is empty!"
should do; here the test clause returns true if and only if $1 is non-empty.
For regular parameters (in bash 4 or later), you can use the -v operator to check if a parameter (or array element, as of version 4.3) is set:
[[ -v foo ]] || echo "foo not set"
bar=(1 2 3)
[[ -v bar[0] ]] || echo "bar[0] not set"
[[ -v bar[8] ]] || echo "bar[8] not set"
Unfortunately, -v does not work with the positional parameters, but you can use $# instead (since you can't set, say, $3 without setting $1).
(( $# >= 3 )) || echo "third argument not set"
Before -v became available, you would need to compare two default-value expansions to see if a parameter was unset.
[[ -z $foo && ${foo:-bar} == ${foo-bar} ]] && echo "foo is unset, not just empty"
There's nothing special about bar; it's just an arbitrary non-empty string.
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