Bash scripts to condense and/or automate repititive local tasks.
A script made to automate the task of building, tagging and pushing local Docker images to Azure Container Registry(ACR).
<command> options [parameters]
-h
| --help
- show help
Example. bash docker_make_utils.sh mycontainerregistry helloworld
This is the equivalent to:
docker build -t helloworld .
docker tag helloworld mycontainerregistry.azurecr.io/helloworld:latest
docker push mycontainerregistry.azurecr.io/helloworld:latest
Note: If omitting the tag for the image, this will default to latest. A tag can be supplied as the 3rd argument, as seen in an example below:
bash docker_make_utils.sh mycontainerregistry helloworld v1
This is the equivalent to:
docker build -t helloworld .
docker tag helloworld mycontainerregistry.azurecr.io/helloworld:v1
docker push mycontainerregistry.azurecr.io/helloworld:v1
Note: You must still log in with either AZ CLI and run docker login
before pushing to the container registry for the first time, if not authenticated already.
Tip: Bash scripts can be aliased locally - by editing the .bashrc
file and adding the script location to your PATH to run this globally. Doing so then can have the script be run in the following manner(where dutils
is the alias name): dutils mycontainerregistry helloworld v1
A script made to automate pushing git commits.
<command> options [parameters]
-h
| --help
- show help
The command requires a minimum of two arguments, which is the commit message(arg: 1) and upstream repo(arg: 2). Omitting the third argument which is the branch(arg: 3) will default to 'main'.
Example: bash git_push_utils.sh 'my first commit' origin
This is the equivalent to:
git add .
git commit -m 'my first commit'
git push origin main
Note: The commit message must be in a string unless using only a single word for the commit message.
How it looks when specifying a branch. Example: bash git_push_utils.sh 'my first commit' origin dev
This is the equivalent to:
git add .
git commit -m 'my first commit'
git push origin dev
As mentioned above, this script can be aliased within your .bashrc
and script location added to your PATH so it can be executed globally.
Aliased example, where gutils
is the script alias name: gutils 'initial commit' origin testing