For example this line fails:
$ nohup for i in mydir/*.fasta; do ./myscript.sh "$i"; done > output.txt&
-bash: syntax error near unexpected token `do
What's the right way to do it?
Because 'nohup' expects a single-word command and its arguments - not a shell loop construct. You'd have to use:
nohup sh -c 'for i in mydir/*.fasta; do ./myscript.sh "$i"; done >output.txt' &
>>
instead of >
.
Feb 1, 2015 at 12:04
output.txt
, I would not run the output of a program into it even in append mode. I would create a new file, and only when I was satisfied that the new data was what I wanted would I append it to the master file. YMMV, of course.
Feb 1, 2015 at 14:53
For me, Jonathan's solution does not redirect correctly to output.txt. This one works better:
nohup bash -c 'for i in mydir/*.fasta; do ./myscript.sh "$i"; done' > output.txt &
You can do it on one line, but you might want to do it tomorrow too.
$ cat loopy.sh
#!/bin/sh
# a line of text describing what this task does
for i in mydir/*.fast ; do
./myscript.sh "$i"
done > output.txt
$ chmod +x loopy.sh
$ nohup loopy.sh &
loopy.sh
is in the path, you need to invoke it like ./loopy.sh
, at least on this Red Hat system I just tried with.
execv()
, andexecv()
takes an argument vector which is passed directly to the kernel, not going through any shell. Thus, if you want a shell, you need to tell nohup to execute one yourself.