With batch, if you get an error, the most you see of it is a flash of text and then the program ends. Is there anyway to have it slow down? or to have it stop before closing when it hits an error?
Thanks
If you execute your Batch file from the command-line in a MS-DOS window and an error happens, you can just review the text in the window to see what happened.
On the other hand, if you execute the Batch file via a double click in the explorer you see nothing if the Batch file have an error. Is this your case? If so, the easiest solution is to test the Batch file in a MS-DOS window until it works ok.
However, if you still need a method to stop closing the DOS window when the Batch file ends, you can do that this way:
This way, when you execute the Shortcut via a double click, the DOS window will execute a PAUSE after the Batch file ends for any reason.
Redirect the output with > to capture it in a file.
You might need: command > file 2>&1
try this :
if NOT ["%errorlevel%"]==["0"] (
pause
exit /b %errorlevel%
)
Run the script from a present CMD.exe and add "exit /b 1" to the scripts end of file. Remove any simple "exit".
exit /b 1
means "exit this batch script with error code 1". It does not mean "exit this batch script only if an error code has been set", which is what the question is asking for.
Open a new cmd window and execute your command there. The newly opened window will not be closed when an error occurs.
start cmd /k [command]
This works for me with basic commands. Not sure if it's useful for anything more advanced.
start cmd /k "command 1 & command 2 & command 3"
To stop a batch script before it ends, put the pause
command on a new line, which will make the script wait for user input (like an enter key) before continuing (or closing).
This works for me. Similar to @Sri7's answer but you need the brackets and quotes:
if NOT ERRORLEVEL 0 (
pause
)