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I am trying to call the function "warn" if the calculation is TRUE. I am still not quite comfortable with the syntax, would like some tips on how to fix the last line.

    if [ "$noproc" -gt 0 ]; then
    echo "WARNING: NoProc at $noproc for $process processes." >> $log

        elif [ "$max" -ge 11 ]; then 
        [ $(($max - $total)) -lt 6 && [ $idle -le $(($max \* 0.25 | bc -l)) ] ] | warn $total $process $max $idle

The error I get: line 97: [: missing ` ] '

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  • 4
    Consider using ShellCheck. It will give you a clearer explanation for the parser error.
    – kojiro
    Dec 10, 2015 at 20:49
  • Thanks alot ! Looks like a great tool ! Dec 10, 2015 at 21:04
  • If this really is bash (as tagged), and your script starts with #!/bin/bash rather than #!/bin/sh, you've got much more flexible syntax available. ( max >= 11 )) is easier to read than [ "$max" -ge 11 ], after all. You could also use [[ ]] for an extended test context, which would let you use && internally (rather than having that result in the unexpected end of one command and beginning of another). Dec 10, 2015 at 21:05
  • BTW, to explain why | is the wrong operator -- foo | bar runs both foo and bar at the same time, connecting the output of foo to the input of bar. By contrast, what you want here is to run bar only if foo completes successfully -- which a short-circuiting logical AND operator, &&, will do. Dec 10, 2015 at 21:17

2 Answers 2

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If your tagging for this question is correct and you're genuinely using bash (which is to say that your script starts with #!/bin/bash, or if not started via a shebang you use bash yourscript rather than sh yourscript), you might as well take advantage of it.

# extended bash math syntax
if (( (max - total) < 6 )) && (( idle <= (max / 4) )); then
  warn "$total" "$process" "$max" "$idle"
fi

If, for whatever reason, you don't want to use (( )), you can still use [[ ]], which gives you a test context with its own extended syntax:

# extended bash test syntax
if [[ $((max - total)) -lt 6 && $idle -le $(bc -l <<<"$max*0.25") ]]; then
  warn "$total" "$process" "$max" "$idle"
fi

...whereas if you want to be compatible with POSIX sh, you need to end the test before you can put in a shell-level logical-AND operator.

# corrected POSIX-compliant test syntax
if [ "$((max - total))" -lt 6 ] && [ "$idle" -le "$(bc -l <<<"$max*0.25")" ]; then
  warn "$total" "$process" "$max" "$idle"
fi

To understand why, let's look at how your original command would parse, if you changed the (utterly incorrect) | symbol to && instead:

# Equivalent (longer form) of the original code, with pipe corrected to logical-AND
if [ $(($max - $total)) -lt 6; then
  if [ $idle -le $(($max \* 0.25 | bc -l)) ] ]; then
    warn $total $process $max $idle
  fi
fi

Note that this is running, as a single command, [ $(($max - $total)) -lt 6.

[ is not special shell syntax -- it's just a command. In older shells it was actually /usr/bin/[; today, there's also a [ builtin as well, but other than being faster to execute, it behaves exactly the same way as it would have were it executing the old, external command.

That [ command expects to be passed a ] as its last argument, since there's no ] after the -lt 6, you get a syntax error and it exits.

Similarly, your code would then (if the first command succeeded) run [ $idle -le $(($max \* 0.25 | bc -l)) ] ]. Here, you have a [ command passed two ]s on the end; it simply doesn't know what to do with the second one.

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  • I didn't know i could use more flexible syntax, script do starts with #!/bin/bash. Thank you for all those explanation, that will help me alot ! Dec 10, 2015 at 21:32
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  • You can't nest [ invocations. Even if you could, a && (b) === a && b in logic.
  • You can't use commands in arithmetic expansions.
  • Bash's [[ is safer than [.
  • Use More Quotes™.

Result:

[[ "$(($max - $total))" -lt 6 ]] && [[ "$idle" -le "$(bc -l <<< "$max * 0.25")" ]] | warn "$total $process $max $idle"
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  • I can't think of any reason to use quotes around $((...)). An arithmetic expression can never return multiple words.
    – Barmar
    Dec 10, 2015 at 21:24
  • 2
    @Barmar, it can if IFS contains numeric values. Dec 10, 2015 at 21:52
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    @Barmar Shell programming is an ugly business. The simplest things, such as looping over an arbitrary set of files, turn out to be fiendishly difficult to do reliably and securely. And once you've spent some days debugging bizarre behaviour because quotes are expanded after globs or some ****, you'll appreciate that.
    – l0b0
    Dec 10, 2015 at 22:06
  • Although inside [[, arithmetic expressions are not subject to word splitting, so that wouldn't be a concern. Since it's bash, I wouldn't even bother with [[ here and use (( instead.
    – chepner
    Dec 10, 2015 at 22:26

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