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i have got a bash file which i want to toggle via the sudo crontab list. Problem is, that it does not work, because when i run the script with sudo, there is a syntax error message on this line:

size=(`du -h $backupDir --summarize`)

If i run the same script without, i have to type the sudo pw, but it works without any problems. I allready tried a few variations with brackets, with or without backticks, with or without spaces, etc but nothing helped. The error message is:

Syntax error: "(" unexpected (expecting ";;")

Any help?

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  • does the script have a bash shebang ? #!/usr/bin/env bash or at least #!/bin/bash ? ( is valid in bash, and should create an array from the command's output. Aug 7, 2012 at 10:28
  • also it seems like you're not closing a case statement correctly, thus expecting ;;. posting your script would help. Aug 7, 2012 at 10:29
  • the #!/bin/bash was the problem ;) All case Statements where closed correctly :/
    – modmoto
    Aug 7, 2012 at 11:45

2 Answers 2

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The problem here is that you use bash-syntax, and the script (when it is executed from cron) is interpreted by /bin/sh (that known nothing about arrays and the () construction.).

You must either specify bash as an interpreter of the script using she-bang notation:

#!/bin/bash

or run the script explicitly with bash from cron:

bash /path/to/script

or rewrite script so, that it could run without arrays.

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Fro readability use the $() form

size=$(du -h $backupDir --summarize)

If you want to stick to back quotes, then

size=`du -h $backupDir --summarize`
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  • you better quote both of those. size="`cmd --args`"; size="$(cmd --args)" Aug 7, 2012 at 10:25
  • @c00kiemon5ter - While that doesn't hurt, it is not needed on the right side of a variable assignment.
    – jordanm
    Aug 7, 2012 at 15:19

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