44

I am trying to beef up my notify script. The way the script works is that I put it behind a long running shell command and then all sorts of notifications get invoked after the long running script finished.

For example:

sleep 100; my_notify

It would be nice to get the exit code of the long running script. The problem is that calling my_notify creates a new process that does not have access to the $? variable.

Compare:

~ $: ls nonexisting_file; echo "exit code: $?"; echo "PPID: $PPID"
ls: nonexisting_file: No such file or directory
exit code: 1
PPID: 6203

vs.

~ $: ls nonexisting_file; my_notify
ls: nonexisting_file: No such file or directory
exit code: 0
PPID: 6205

The my_notify script has the following in it:

#!/bin/sh
echo "exit code: $?"
echo "PPID: $PPID"

I am looking for a way to get the exit code of the previous command without changing the structure of the command too much. I am aware of the fact that if I change it to work more like time, e.g. my_notify longrunning_command... my problem would be solved, but I actually like that I can tack it at the end of a command and I fear complications of this second solution.

Can this be done or is it fundamentally incompatible with the way that shells work?

My shell is Z shell (zsh), but I would like it to work with Bash as well.

0

3 Answers 3

45

You'd really need to use a shell function in order to accomplish that. For a simple script like that it should be pretty easy to have it working in both zsh and bash. Just place the following in a file:

my_notify() {
  echo "exit code: $?"
  echo "PPID: $PPID"
}

Then source that file from your shell startup files. Although since that would be run from within your interactive shell, you may want to use $$ rather than $PPID.

0
6

It is incompatible. $? only exists within the current shell; if you want it available in subprocesses then you must copy it to an environment variable.

The alternative is to write a shell function that uses it in some way instead.

3

One method to implement this could be to use EOF tag and a master script which will create your my_notify script.


#!/bin/bash

if [ -f my_notify ] ; then
rm -rf my_notify
fi

if [ -f my_temp ] ; then
rm -rf my_temp
fi

retval=`ls non_existent_file &> /dev/null  ; echo $?`
ppid=$PPID
echo "retval=$retval" 
echo "ppid=$ppid" 
cat >> my_notify << 'EOF'
#!/bin/bash

echo "exit code: $retval"
echo " PPID =$ppid"
EOF

sh my_notify 

You can refine this script for your purpose.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.