I have a script like this:
#!/bin/sh
echo "hello"
echo "goodbye"
exit 1
When I run it on its own, I get the failed exit code as I expect.
$ ./fail.sh
hello
goodbye
$ echo $?
1
However, when I run it through grep -v
, the exit status changes to success:
$ ./fail.sh | grep -v hello
goodbye
$ echo $?
0
Is there a way to pipe a command's output into grep -v
and still have the status code be properly propagated? Of course in the real world the point of this would be to filter the output of a noisy command, while still detecting if the command failed.
grep -v
is a really bad command to use for this example. That is because althoughgrep
follows convention with regards to exit status,grep -v
does not necessarily. In other words, using-v
inverts the match but not the exit code. My experience is thatgrep -v
returns success when it returns non-matches. If there are no non-matches to return it returns fail. If nothing matches it returns all the lines that do not match and success.grep (GNU grep) 2.24
(Copyright (C) 2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
) and here is a citationgrep -L 'match' file | grep .