133

Every time I run a script using bash scriptname.sh from the command line in Debian, I get Command Not found and then the result of the script.

The script works but there is always a Command Not Found statement printed on screen for each empty line. Each blank line is resulting in a command not found.

I am running the script from the /var folder.

Here is the script:

#!/bin/bash

echo Hello World

I run it by typing the following:

bash testscript.sh

Why would this occur?

4
  • 2
    Seriously, net is full of such complaints. Shell is very weak and lame interpreter. Little here and there and it fails. You got to watch even all white spaces in script. My script was failing because of invisible line feed character. Probably this is only scripting language where white spaces count matters!
    – Atul
    Feb 13, 2020 at 16:48
  • 5
    Use bash -x scriptname.sh to trace the error. – In my case it was a sh-file saved under Windows with VSCode and line endings as "CRLF". In VSCode in the bottom right corner you can change the line terminator from "CRLF" to "LF". Uploaded this file and could execute it finally with bash scriptname.sh.
    – Avatar
    Mar 24, 2020 at 15:47
  • This is definitely a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/39527571/… but many answers here explain a number of other situations where you get "command not found" for other reasons. Visitors are advised to read all the answers if your problem is not specifically about empty lines.
    – tripleee
    Aug 1, 2020 at 10:43
  • 1
    @Atul I can't agree with you more. That's why I write scripts in JavaScript, which makes it much easier to re-use modular code. Python works for this too.
    – trusktr
    Jun 7, 2021 at 20:48

17 Answers 17

198

Make sure your first line is:

#!/bin/bash

Enter your path to bash if it is not /bin/bash


Try running:

dos2unix script.sh

That wil convert line endings, etc from Windows to unix format. i.e. it strips \r (CR) from line endings to change them from \r\n (CR+LF) to \n (LF).

More details about the dos2unix command (man page)


Another way to tell if your file is in dos/Win format:

cat scriptname.sh | sed 's/\r/<CR>/'

The output will look something like this:

#!/bin/sh<CR>
<CR>
echo Hello World<CR>
<CR>

This will output the entire file text with <CR> displayed for each \r character in the file.

15
  • That's probably not necessary since he's running it directly with bash scriptname.sh (but it's still good practice, of course).
    – paxdiablo
    Sep 9, 2011 at 13:51
  • 1
    Hi #!/bin/bash is the first line of my script
    – David
    Sep 9, 2011 at 13:53
  • 1
    @chown - I had the same issue on Mac. I stumbled across this post. I am not sure if it helped the OP or not. But your solution helped me.
    – Prashant
    Oct 22, 2011 at 19:41
  • 1
    thanks. This was the exact the issue I was facing. This answers got it working. Sep 28, 2012 at 4:39
  • 5
    How can you write an answer to a programming question while drive?
    – Omar Tariq
    Sep 5, 2016 at 16:24
76

You can use bash -x scriptname.sh to trace it.

0
63

I also ran into a similar issue. The issue seems to be permissions. If you do an ls -l, you may be able to identify that your file may NOT have the execute bit turned on. This will NOT allow the script to execute. :)

As @artooro added in comment:

To fix that issue run chmod +x testscript.sh

5
  • 7
    To fix that issue run chmod +x testscript.sh
    – artooro
    Jun 3, 2015 at 18:53
  • 2
    This was the answer that worked for me, Always got told I didn't have permission, so I sudo'ed it and was told command not found. I didn't think to check the permissions. Mar 28, 2016 at 1:17
  • 1
    Thanks Lypso345, this solved the issue I was having.
    – ammills01
    Jul 28, 2016 at 15:22
  • chmod 777 testscript.sh FTW
    – GeneCode
    Sep 7, 2017 at 2:20
  • 1
    This was the answer for me. Thanks.
    – y_159
    Oct 9, 2020 at 5:04
25

This might be trivial and not related to the OP's question, but I often made this mistaken at the beginning when I was learning scripting

VAR_NAME = $(hostname)
echo "the hostname is ${VAR_NAME}"  

This will produce 'command not found' response. The correct way is to eliminate the spaces

VAR_NAME=$(hostname)
18

On Bash for Windows I've tried incorrectly to run

run_me.sh 

without ./ at the beginning and got the same error.

For people with Windows background the correct form looks redundant:

./run_me.sh
1
  • Same on a linux-gnu bash system: myscript returns bash: myscript: command not found; ./myscript works
    – PaulH
    May 31, 2021 at 10:58
13

If the script does its job (relatively) well, then it's running okay. Your problem is probably a single line in the file referencing a program that's either not on the path, not installed, misspelled, or something similar.

One way is to place a set -x at the top of your script or run it with bash -x instead of just bash - this will output the lines before executing them and you usually just need to look at the command output immediately before the error to see what's causing the problem

If, as you say, it's the blank lines causing the problems, you might want to check what's actaully in them. Run:

od -xcb testscript.sh

and make sure there's no "invisible" funny characters like the CTRL-M (carriage return) you may get by using a Windows-type editor.

1
  • 1
    +1 for the 'od' command! That's cool, I didn't know about that! Thanks!
    – chown
    Sep 9, 2011 at 14:12
9

use dos2unix on your script file.

7

for executing that you must provide full path of that for example

/home/Manuel/mywrittenscript
3
  • Indeed, the shell does not care about file extensions at all. Not sure this merits being posted as a separate answer.
    – tripleee
    Jul 31, 2016 at 20:13
  • of course .in linux file system contrary to windows extensions are used merely as a part of the name and say nothing about file's content.I mustn't say in my case constraint. Aug 1, 2016 at 10:05
  • thanks this helped me, I was giving just the filename and now it runs after I give it correct path
    – obadul024
    Jan 21, 2022 at 14:00
6

Try chmod u+x testscript.sh

I know it from here: http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/red-hat-31/running-shell-script-command-not-found-202062/

6

If you have Notepad++ and you get this .sh Error Message: "command not found" or this autoconf Error Message "line 615: ../../autoconf/bin/autom4te: No such file or directory".

On your Notepad++, Go to Edit -> EOL Conversion then check Macinthos(CR). This will edit your files. I also encourage to check all files with this command, because soon such an error will occur.

1
  • Thanks for this. For my case I was running script on busybox linux distro. Had same error "not found" in all the empty lines in my scripts. it also had problems with if/else statement. changing EOL in Notepad++ to Unix fixed it.
    – GeneCode
    Sep 7, 2017 at 2:04
4

Had the same problem. Unfortunately

dos2unix winfile.sh
bash: dos2unix: command not found

so I did this to convert.

 awk '{ sub("\r$", ""); print }' winfile.sh > unixfile.sh

and then

bash unixfile.sh
0
2

Problems with running scripts may also be connected to bad formatting of multi-line commands, for example if you have a whitespace character after line-breaking "\". E.g. this:

./run_me.sh \ 
--with-some parameter

(please note the extra space after "\") will cause problems, but when you remove that space, it will run perfectly fine.

1

Make sure you haven´t override the 'PATH' variable by mistake like this:

#!/bin/bash
PATH="/home/user/Pictures/"; # do NOT do this

This was my mistake.

0

I was also having some of the Cannot execute command. Everything looked correct, but in fact I was having a non-breakable space &nbsp; right before my command which was ofcourse impossible to spot with the naked eye:

if [[ "true" ]]; then
  &nbsp;highlight --syntax js "var i = 0;"
fi

Which, in Vim, looked like:

if [[ "true" ]]; then
  highlight --syntax js "var i = 0;"
fi

Only after running the Bash script checker shellcheck did I find the problem.

1
  • shellcheck is available on-line, though you of course need to copy+paste your script exactly in order for that to help. shellcheck.net
    – tripleee
    Mar 2, 2017 at 8:18
0

I ran into this today, absentmindedly copying the dollar command prompt $ (ahead of a command string) into the script.

-2

Add the current directory ( . ) to PATH to be able to execute a script, just by typing in its name, that resides in the current directory:

PATH=.:$PATH
2
-2

You may want to update you .bashrc and .bash_profile files with aliases to recognize the command you are entering.

.bashrc and .bash_profile files are hidden files probably located on your C: drive where you save your program files.

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