From: Jeff Frost <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> On Mon, 22 Jan 2007, Richard Ray wrote:
...
> > #!/bin/bash
> > CMD="psql -d test \"select * from t1\""
> > echo $CMD >> my_log
> > eval $CMD |
> > while read x; do
> >  do_something_with_x
> > done
> >
> > In this example * expands to all files in the current working directory.
> > I was attempting to get around this by enumerating the table attributes.
> 
> Oh! Why didn't you just say that in the first place.  You just need quotes. 
...

That's definitely part of it.  I'm assuming the above is an abridged example 
and the OP is doing something dynamic with the query.  The real trouble is Bash 
likes to expand the asterisk into a list of every file in the current directory 
when you try to push the command through a variable.  So it's just a matter of 
finding a way to escape the * character to keep Bash from globbing, which 
unfortunately right now is escaping me (no pun intended.)

Two reasonable workarounds come to mind:
1. Turn off Bash's pathname expansion: #!/bin/bash -f
This will of course disable it script-wide, and thus will break any place you 
actually are trying to use this feature, if at all.

2. Don't put an * in the variable.
If all you're really doing is replacing the table name then only stick that 
into a variable, say tablename, and directly execute the rest:
psql -d test -c "SELECT * FROM $tablename" | while etc
Worst case, you'll end up with a messy $leftside and $rightside variable set.

To answer the original question, the field must be hard coded either as a list 
or that perhaps over-used(?) asterisk.  If you really need to pull and use that 
from the table definition you'll need two round trips to the server.

Best of luck,
 - Josh Williams

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