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A course is the basic teaching unit, it's design as a medium for a student to acquire comprehensive knowledge and skills indispensable in the given field. A course guarantor is responsible for the factual content of the course.
For each course, there is a department responsible for the course organisation. A person responsible for timetabling for a given department sets a time schedule of teaching and for each class, s/he assigns an instructor and/or an examiner.
Expected time consumption of the course is expressed by a course attribute extent of teaching. For example, extent = 2 +2 indicates two teaching hours of lectures and two teaching hours of seminar (lab) per week.
At the end of each semester, the course instructor has to evaluate the extent to which a student has acquired the expected knowledge and skills. The type of this evaluation is indicated by the attribute completion. So, a course can be completed by just an assessment ('pouze zápočet'), by a graded assessment ('klasifikovaný zápočet'), or by just an examination ('pouze zkouška') or by an assessment and examination ('zápočet a zkouška') .
The difficulty of a given course is evaluated by the amount of ECTS credits.
The course is in session (cf. teaching is going on) during a semester. Each course is offered either in the winter ('zimní') or summer ('letní') semester of an academic year. Exceptionally, a course might be offered in both semesters.
The subject matter of a course is described in various texts.

BIE-PS1 Programming in Shell 1 Extent of teaching: 2P+2C
Instructor: Completion: KZ
Department: 18104 Credits: 5 Semester: Z

Annotation:
Students understand the basic principles of operating systems (processes and threads, file systems, access rights, memory management, network interface) with a focus on UNIX like operating systems. In practically oriented exercises, they will learn to use shell, basic commands and filters for processing text data.

Lecture syllabus:
1. Introduction. Fundamental concepts. History and architecture of UNIX.
2. Command-line parsing order, special characters, command execution, shell variables.
3. Exit code. Command test. Flow Control. Loops.
4. Filesystem. Basic file/directory commands.
5. Filters and useful commands.
6. Regular expressions, grep.
7. Regular expressions, awk, sed.
8. User identity and access permissions.
9. Command find.
10. Archiving and compression utilities.
11. Arithmetics.
12. Processes and threads. Signals.

Seminar syllabus:
1. Introduction.
2. Command line interface.
3. Shell variables, text editors.
4. Exit status, command test, flow control.
5. File system.
6. Standard Input/Output, UNIX filters and useful commands.
7. Regular expressions, command grep.
8. Regular expressions, commands sed and awk.
9. Access permissions and command find.
10. Processes and jobs.
11. Archiving and compression tools.
12. Arithmetic calculations.

Literature:
1. Cameron Newham. Learning the bash Shell: Unix Shell Programming. Third Edition. O'Reilly, 2005. ISBN: 978-0596009656.
2. Jon Lasser. Think UNIX. Que, 2000. ISBN 078972376X.
3. Bruce Blinn. Portable Shell Programming: An Extensive Collection of Bourne Shell Examples. Prentice Hall, 1995. ISBN: 978-0134514949.
4. Arnold Robbins, Nelson H.F. Beebe. Classic Shell Scripting. O'Reilly, 2005. ISBN: 978-0596005955.

Requirements:
Basic computer skills.

Information about the course and courseware are available at https://courses.fit.cvut.cz/BIE-PS1/

The course is also part of the following Study plans:
Study Plan Study Branch/Specialization Role Recommended semester
BIE-BIT.2015 Computer Security and Information technology (Bachelor, in English) PP 1
BIE-TI.2015 Computer Science (Bachelor, in English) PP 1
BIE-WSI-SI.2015 Software Engineering (Bachelor, in English) PP 1


Page updated 25. 4. 2024, semester: Z,L/2023-4, Z/2019-20, Z/2024-5, L/2022-3, Z/2020-1, Z,L/2021-2, L/2020-1, Z/2022-3, L/2019-20, Send comments to the content presented here to Administrator of study plans Design and implementation: J. Novák, I. Halaška