My buddy Justin FINALLY got his website back up and running after
“accidentally” letting his domain lapse.
On a new domain, of freaking course, which unlocked a task on my TODO list as I
needed to update a bunch of broken links on my site to point to his new domain.
Since I’ve been trying to become more fluent with sed
, that’s what I grabbed
from my command-line toolbox to make short work of the task (and to fuel this
post 😉
Because my site is version controlled, I wasn’t so concerned with backing up my
files, but will do so for the sake of example and because I hate when people
comment to let me know I fucked up something because they didn’t realize what
they were running.
What I discovered when trying to update all of my posts is that sed
expects an
input file. My first pass I tried passing in the name of the directory and that
was a no go.
To get sed
to handle multiple files, instead of passing it a directory, you
can pass it a glob for your files. In my case, I wanted to update all of the
markdown files in my _posts
directory:
sed --in-place='.bak' -- 's/justindavis.co/justindav.is/g' _posts/**/*.md
Omit the ='.bak'
part of --in-place
if you don’t want or need backups.
Because I version control my site, it would be easy enough for me to revert if I
borked something.
As it turns out, everything was fine, except in at one place I had a typo where
I had .com
for the domain instead of .co
which given the above replacement,
turned the TLD into .ism
.
Easy enough, I just ran another sed
to go ahead and clean that up as well.
Even with everything shored up, I still have a problem. Dude’s still not even
running on HTTPS which is not only embarrassing for me as his friend, but also
means I’m going to have to update all of the links yet again in the future once
I finally shame him enough to fix it!