I feel really guilty for asking this. I am a beginner with bash and I wanted to make a simple script.
I have a syntax error, simplified the script to the maximum and still get the syntax error.
Would you guys be kind enough to guide me?
#!/bin/bash
while true
do
while read IP;
do
if true ;
then
echo "$IP";
fi
done < /var/www/html/people.txt
sleep 1
done
Gives me following error :
line 10: syntax error near unexpected token `done'
line 10: ` done < /var/www/html/people.txt
It seems to work on my friend's server but not mine.
EDIT : I simply had no idea I had to make a new line after the final done.
dos2unix
, or open it in vim and run:set fileformat=unix
.bash yourscript.sh
. What version of bash does your friend have and what version do you have? You can find version by typingbash --version
? Following up on Charles's comment - typedos2unix yourscript.sh
and try running the script againbash -x yourscript
, better -- that way it logs each command. But if the syntax error happens at parse time for the loop, it may not run anything..sh
extension on a bash script (which, as indicated by its shebang, is not built for invocation with POSIX sh, making the extension misleading, and moreover is an executable, which by convention on UNIX doesn't have an extension -- one doesn't runls.elf
, after all).