I'm currently trying to make a DDNS script that interacts with the Cloudflare API to catch changes in my ip address and automatically fix the ip address change for my web server. Everything is working correctly so far except I can't get $IP to be put properly in the curl statement. I first run a python script from within the bash script to get the ip address, then run the curl statement in the bash script. Here's what the python script looks like (it returns an ip address like "1.1.1.1" with quotations included because the curl command requires the quotations)
#!/usr/bin/python3
import subprocess as sp
def main():
command = "dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com";
ip = sp.check_output(command, shell=True).decode('utf-8').strip('\n');
ip_tmp = ip;
ip_tmp = '"' + ip + '"';
ip = ip_tmp;
print(ip);
if __name__ == "__main__":
main();
And the bash script looks like this:
#!/bin/bash
IP=$("./getIP.py")
curl -X PUT "https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/zones/zone_id/dns_records/dns_id" \
-H "X-Auth-Email: example.com" \
-H "X-Auth-Key: authkey" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
--data '{"type":"A","name":"example.com","content":$IP,"ttl":120,"proxied":true}'
I've tried to have the python script only return numbers and then added the quotations in the bash script and now vice versa and I can't seem to get it to work. The last line should end up looking like this once the variable replaces with quotations around the ip address:
'{"type":"A","name":"example.com","content":"127.0.0.1","ttl":120,"proxied":true}'
IP=$(dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com)? And if you need the doublequotes in the string:IP=$(echo '"'$(dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com)'"')curl ipinfo.io/ipto get the ip, but that returned a bunch of other garbage with it and I'm way more familiar with Python than Bash as far as string manipulation goes. Then I found the dig command made life way easier but didn't get around to deleting the py script I didn't need anymore yetcurl api.ipify.orgwill nicely just reply with just your IP. See ipify.org even for other output formats. Of course you then depend on this site to work when you need to get your IP.