I have a shell script that executes a number of commands, and if any of the commands exit with a non-zero exit code the shell script should exit.
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Turning on psychic debugging powers (as there's no actual question in your "question"). I' m assuming you're running Linux since it's tagged "bash" and you want a way to do it. After each command, the exit code can be found in the $? variable so you would have something like:
You need to be careful of piped commands since the $? only gives you the return code of the last element in the pipe so, in the code:
will not return an error code if the file doesn't exist (since the sed works). |
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In bash this is easy, just tie them together with &&:
You can also use the nested if construct:
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" |
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If you want to work with $?, you'll need to check it after each command, since $? is updated after each command exits. This means that if you execute a pipeline, you'll only get the exit code of the last process in the pipeline. Another approach is to do this:
If you put this at the top of the shell script, it looks like bash will take care of this for you. As a previous poster noted, "set -e" will cause bash to exit with an error on any simple command. "set -o pipefail" will cause bash to exit with an error on any command in a pipeline as well. See here or here for a little more discussion on this problem. Here is the bash manual section on the set builtin. |
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If you just call exit in the bash with no parameters, it will return the exit code of the last command. Combined with OR the bash should only invoke exit, if the previous command fails. But I haven't tested this. command1 || exit; command2 || exit; The Bash will also store the exit code of the last command in the variable $?. |
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for bash:
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http://cfaj.freeshell.org/shell/cus-faq-2.html#11
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