table of contents
g.findfile(1grass) | GRASS GIS User's Manual | g.findfile(1grass) |
NAME¶
g.findfile - Searches for GRASS data base files and sets variables for the shell.
KEYWORDS¶
general, map management, scripts
SYNOPSIS¶
g.findfile
g.findfile --help
g.findfile [-nl] element=string
file=string [mapset=string] [--help]
[--verbose] [--quiet] [--ui]
Flags:¶
Parameters:¶
- element=string [required]
-
Name of an element - file=string [required]
-
Name of an existing map - mapset=string
-
Name of a mapset (default: search path)
’.’ for current mapset
DESCRIPTION¶
g.findfile is designed for Bourne shell or Python scripts that need to search for mapset elements, including: raster, vector maps, region definitions and imagery groups.
The list of element names to search for is not fixed; any subdirectory of the mapset directory is a valid element name.
However, the user can find the list of standard GRASS element names in the file $GISBASE/etc/element_list. This is the file which g.remove, g.rename and g.copy use to determine which files need to be deleted/renamed/copied for a given entity type.
NOTES¶
g.findfile writes four lines to standard output:
name=’file_name’ mapset=’mapset_name’ file=’unix_filename’ fullname=’grass_fullname’
The output is Bash commands to set the variable name
to the GRASS data base file name, mapset to the mapset in which the
file resides, and file to the full UNIX path name for the named file.
These variables may be set in the Bash as follows:
eval `g.findfile element=name mapset=name file=name`
EXAMPLES¶
SHELL¶
Raster map example:
eval `g.findfile element=cell file=elevation`
If the specified file (here: raster map) does not exist, the
variables will be set as follows:
name= mapset= fullname= file=
The following is a way to test for this case:
if [ ! "$file" ] then exit 1 fi
Vector map example (including error message):
eval `g.findfile element=vector file="$G_OPT_V_INPUT"` if [ ! "$file" ] ; then
g.message -e "Vector map <$G_OPT_V_INPUT> not found"
exit 1 fi
PYTHON¶
See Python Scripting Library for more info.
Note: The Python tab in the wxGUI can be used for entering the following code:
import grass.script as gcore gcore.find_file(’elevation’, element = ’cell’)
SEE ALSO¶
g.filename, g.gisenv, g.mapsets, g.parser
AUTHOR¶
Michael Shapiro, U.S.Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratory
SOURCE CODE¶
Available at: g.findfile source code (history)
Accessed: Thursday Aug 01 05:16:04 2024
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GRASS 8.4.0 |