There's a bunch of ways to do this, the first that came to mind was:
OUTPUT="";
while [ `echo $OUTPUT | grep -c somestring` = 0 ]; do
OUTPUT=`$cmd`;
done
Where $cmd is your command to execute.
For the heck of it, here's a BASH function version, so you can call this more easily if it's something you're wanting to invoke from an interactive shell on a regular basis:
function run_until () {
OUTPUT="";
while [ `echo $OUTPUT | grep -c $2` = 0 ]; do
OUTPUT=`$1`;
echo $OUTPUT;
done
}
Disclaimer: only lightly tested, may need to do some additional escaping etc. if your commands have lots of arguments or the string contains special chars.
EDIT: Based on feedback from Adam's comment - if you don't need the output for any reason (i.e. don't want to display the outputoutput), then you can use this shorter version, with less usage of backticks and therefore more less overhead:
OUTPUT=0;
while [ "$OUTPUT" = 0 ]; do
OUTPUT=`$cmd | grep -c somestring`;
done
BASH function version also:
function run_until () {
OUTPUT=0;
while [ "$OUTPUT" = 0 ]; do
OUTPUT=`$1 | grep -c $2`;
done
}
