42

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?

1
  • 1
    The "why" is that nohup executes its arguments with execv(), and execv() 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. Feb 27, 2014 at 19:36

3 Answers 3

100

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' &
3
  • 4
    Will this be writing over output.txt for each file? If there is important information in there that you do not want overwritten, I would use >> instead of >. Feb 1, 2015 at 12:04
  • If I have important data in 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
  • @JonathanLeffler that doesn't answer the question though. I believe this only truncates once. Sep 5, 2017 at 16:26
11

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 &

0
10

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 &
1
  • 4
    Unless 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.
    – tshepang
    Apr 29, 2013 at 14:51

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