15

I still use Windows batch-files for basic tasks. One of these is to check my internet connection (pg.bat) which does only do a ping www.google.com

Most of the time, I need to run it a few times until it succeeds (host could not be found error). At first I thought a ping -t would work, but it does not. When the host is not found, it stops right away.

How can I run pg.bat until the ping succeeds? (i.e at least one of the default 4 pings works)

3 Answers 3

29

In general, you can use the label/goto syntax in a batch file.

:repeat
your-command || goto :repeat
echo Success!

The || will only run the second command if the first one fails. Failure in this case means a nonzero exit code, so it will only work with commands that set %errorlevel% to 0 for success or nonzero for failure.

For the specific case of ping.exe, the exit code is not always nonzero on failure. In that case, you can use find.exe to search the output of ping for a success message and set the errorlevel like we need.

:repeat
(ping -n 1 www.google.com | find "TTL=") || goto :repeat
echo Success!

(Thanks to Stephan for the explanation and solution regarding ping.exe exit codes)

3
  • 3
    %errorlevel% of ping is not reliable ("reply from <localhost>: destination not reachable" gives %errorlevel%= 0). Therefore better use errorlevel of ... | find "TTL"
    – Stephan
    Aug 22, 2015 at 6:28
  • Understood. For the specific case when the command is ping, your answer is more complete. My intention was to illustrate the command || do-on-error syntax, in order to answer the more general question "How to run command until it succeeds?". Alternatively, OP could change the question title to "How to run ping.exe until it succeeds." Aug 22, 2015 at 15:21
  • @RyanBemrose you are right, for the more general question is better answered by yours.
    – Burkhard
    Aug 24, 2015 at 6:58
7

just loop the command, until it's successful:

:Loop
ping -n 1 www.google.com | find "TTL="
if not %errorlevel% equ 0 goto :Loop
echo Connection established
0
4

You need to put your command in a loop as demonstrated below:

:Loop
ping -n 1 www.google.com | find "TTL="
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto :Loop
echo Connection established

Mind the operator neq above. That's the "not equal to" operator in Command Line Scripting.

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