Analogous to the $? in Linux, is there a way to get the exit status of a program in a Windows batch file (.bat)?
Say for example the program has a System.exit(0) upon successful execution, and a System.exit(1) upon a failure, how do I trap these exit values in a .bat file?
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Use %ERRORLEVEL%. Don't you love how batch files are clear and concise? :) |
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Something like:
It's important to make this the absolute next line of the batch file, to avoid the error level being overwritten :) Note that if you use the
"feature" of batch files, it means "if the error level is greater than or equal to |
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Raymond Chen has a good blog post named ERRORLEVEL is not %ERRORLEVEL%. Worth checking out. Also worth noting is that the REM command which most people think of as comments, really aren't. The REM command is a nop command which always succeeds. After a REM, the error level is always 0. So
will never fail... |
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mostly answering bulgar's question, but complementing the other answers: for %ERRORLEVEL% to work you need to have the command extensions activated in Windows (it's the default).
or permanently in the registry
for more details:
[]] |
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Most of the usual external command operations return ERRORLEVEL 0 and this usually (but NOT invariably) indicates that no error was encountered:
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