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After entering set -e in an interactive bash shell, bash will exit immediately if any command exits with non-zero. How can I undo this effect?

4 Answers 4

376

With set +e. Yeah, it's backward that you enable shell options with set - and disable them with set +. Historical raisins, donchanow.

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  • 2
    Thank you very much, it's among the very last lines of corresponding manual page (faqs.org/docs/bashman/bashref_56.html) which I didn't read to the end.
    – Tianyi Cui
    Aug 18, 2010 at 22:22
  • The bash manual is dauntingly huge, it is true. (FYI, since you seem to be new: it is the done thing to click the check mark under the best answer to your question, this is called "accepting" it.)
    – zwol
    Aug 18, 2010 at 22:26
  • 12
    Sadly, the Unix shell language (most of which is not specific to 'bash') is one of the least internally consistent programming languages still in wide use today. You're going to have to learn lots more of these little warts. And I'd say that's a documentation bug, there.
    – zwol
    Aug 18, 2010 at 22:36
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    historical grapes are raisin hell! Feb 6, 2013 at 12:19
  • 3
    Finally, an unfair bashing of Bash: single dash is the standard POSIX shell command line option, and therefore most natural for "do something". + is like - but crossing over something means "not" as in "≠". Jun 29, 2018 at 8:44
71

It might be unhandy to use set +e/set -e each time you want to override it. I found a simpler solution.

Instead of doing it like this:

set +e
command_that_might_fail_but_we_want_to_ignore_it
set -e

you can do it like this:

command_that_might_fail_but_we_want_to_ignore_it || true

or, if you want to save keystrokes and don't mind being a little cryptic:

command_that_might_fail_but_we_want_to_ignore_it || :

Hope this helps!

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  • 12
    Was wondering about the history of :, and found my answer here, in case anyone else is curious. Sep 23, 2013 at 16:31
  • 5
    This applies only if you don't care about the return code of the command you're running.
    – Isaac
    Oct 31, 2017 at 11:32
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  • Using + rather than - causes these flags to be turned off.

Source

0
(set +e; command_that_might_fail_but_we_want_to_continue_anyway)

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