I have two shell scripts, a.sh
and b.sh
.
How can I call b.sh
from within the shell script a.sh
?
There are a couple of different ways you can do this:
Make the other script executable with chmod a+x /path/to/file
(Nathan Lilienthal's comment), add the #!/bin/bash
line (called shebang) at the top, and the path where the file is to the $PATH
environment variable. Then you can call it as a normal command;
Or call it with the source
command (which is an alias for .
), like this:
source /path/to/script
Or use the bash
command to execute it, like:
/bin/bash /path/to/script
The first and third approaches execute the script as another process, so variables and functions in the other script will not be accessible.
The second approach executes the script in the first script's process, and pulls in variables and functions from the other script (so they are usable from the calling script). It will of course run all the commands in the other script, not only set variables.
In the second method, if you are using exit
in second script, it will exit the first script as well. Which will not happen in first and third methods.
./.git/hooks/pre-commit
has source foo
, you had better have ./foo
!
Commented
Jun 6, 2015 at 2:11
.
is not an alias for source
, but rather the other way around. source
is a bash extension, while .
works in any POSIX compatible shell.
Commented
Jan 16, 2016 at 21:51
SCRIPT_DIRECTORY="$(dirname $(realpath "$0"))"
, and then calling it: source $SCRIPT_DIRECTORY/script.sh
.
Check this out.
#!/bin/bash
echo "This script is about to run another script."
sh ./script.sh
echo "This script has just run another script."
sh <path to script>/script.sh
Commented
Aug 21, 2015 at 20:32
bash
and sh
. Even when sh
is in fact bash
it doesn't behave the same. If you're using #!/bin/bash
then you probably want to use bash script.sh
(or just ./script.sh
to use that scripts's hashbang).
Commented
Nov 14, 2016 at 7:47
chmod +x
to the .sh file. Any suggestions?
Commented
Nov 15, 2016 at 7:09
sudo chmod +x
Commented
Jul 16, 2021 at 8:50
There are a couple of ways you can do this. Terminal to execute the script:
#!/bin/bash
SCRIPT_PATH="/path/to/script.sh"
# Here you execute your script
"$SCRIPT_PATH"
# or
. "$SCRIPT_PATH"
# or
source "$SCRIPT_PATH"
# or
bash "$SCRIPT_PATH"
# or
eval '"$SCRIPT_PATH"'
# or
OUTPUT=$("$SCRIPT_PATH")
echo $OUTPUT
# or
OUTPUT=`"$SCRIPT_PATH"`
echo $OUTPUT
# or
("$SCRIPT_PATH")
# or
(exec "$SCRIPT_PATH")
All this is correct for the path with spaces!!!
"$SCRIPT_PATH"
, source
, and .
don't work that I can see. ./
, /bin/bash
, or the shorter bash
all work though.
The answer which I was looking for:
( exec "path/to/script" )
As mentioned, exec
replaces the shell without creating a new process. However, we can put it in a subshell, which is done using the parantheses.
EDIT:
Actually ( "path/to/script" )
is enough.
/path/to/script
? I don't see the need for exec
at all here?
Commented
Nov 14, 2016 at 7:48
exec
ing.
Commented
Oct 6, 2017 at 11:44
If you have another file in same directory, you can either do:
bash another_script.sh
or
source another_script.sh
or
. another_script.sh
When you use bash
instead of source
, the script cannot alter environment of the parent script. The .
command is POSIX standard while source
command is a more readable bash synonym for .
(I prefer source
over .
). If your script resides elsewhere just provide path to that script. Both relative as well as full path should work.
Depends on.
Briefly...
If you want load variables on current console and execute you may use source myshellfile.sh
on your code. Example:
#!/bin/bash
set -x
echo "This is an example of run another INTO this session."
source my_lib_of_variables_and_functions.sh
echo "The function internal_function() is defined into my lib."
returned_value=internal_function()
echo $this_is_an_internal_variable
set +x
If you just want to execute a file and the only thing intersting for you is the result, you can do:
#!/bin/bash
set -x
./executing_only.sh
bash i_can_execute_this_way_too.sh
bash or_this_way.sh
set +x
source
is a bash-specific feature. The standard bourne shell only has .
(e.g. . other_script.sh
).
Commented
Nov 14, 2016 at 7:49
sh
and bash
, you can consider some answers of this U&L question. For example with the read command, there is a big difference between the two.
You can use /bin/sh
to call or execute another script (via your actual script):
# cat showdate.sh
#!/bin/bash
echo "Date is: `date`"
# cat mainscript.sh
#!/bin/bash
echo "You are login as: `whoami`"
echo "`/bin/sh ./showdate.sh`" # exact path for the script file
The output would be:
# ./mainscript.sh
You are login as: root
Date is: Thu Oct 17 02:56:36 EDT 2013
showdate.sh
under /bin/sh rather than /bin/bash?
Commented
Jan 6, 2017 at 10:44
/bin/sh ./showdate.sh
", "/bin/bash ./showdate.sh
", "./showdate.sh
" and run the file: mainscript.sh and got same output.
Commented
May 2, 2017 at 6:14
sh
and bash
, you can consider some answers of this U&L question. For example with the read command, there is a big difference between the two.
First you have to include the file you call:
#!/bin/bash
. includes/included_file.sh
then you call your function like this:
#!/bin/bash
my_called_function
Simple source will help you. For Ex.
#!/bin/bash
echo "My shell_1"
source my_script1.sh
echo "Back in shell_1"
Just add in a line whatever you would have typed in a terminal to execute the script!
e.g.:
#!bin/bash
./myscript.sh &
if the script to be executed is not in same directory, just use the complete path of the script.
e.g.:`/home/user/script-directory/./myscript.sh &
The top answer suggests adding #!/bin/bash
line to the first line of the sub-script being called. But even if you add the shebang, it is much faster* to run a script in a sub-shell and capture the output:
$(source SCRIPT_NAME)
This works when you want to keep running the same interpreter (e.g. from bash to another bash script) and ensures that the shebang line of the sub-script is not executed.
For example:
#!/bin/bash
SUB_SCRIPT=$(mktemp)
echo "#!/bin/bash" > $SUB_SCRIPT
echo 'echo $1' >> $SUB_SCRIPT
chmod +x $SUB_SCRIPT
if [[ $1 == "--source" ]]; then
for X in $(seq 100); do
MODE=$(source $SUB_SCRIPT "source on")
done
else
for X in $(seq 100); do
MODE=$($SUB_SCRIPT "source off")
done
fi
echo $MODE
rm $SUB_SCRIPT
Output:
~ ❯❯❯ time ./test.sh
source off
./test.sh 0.15s user 0.16s system 87% cpu 0.360 total
~ ❯❯❯ time ./test.sh --source
source on
./test.sh --source 0.05s user 0.06s system 95% cpu 0.114 total
* For example when virus or security tools are running on a device it might take an extra 100ms to exec a new process.
This was what worked for me, this is the content of the main sh script that executes the other one.
#!/bin/bash
source /path/to/other.sh
pathToShell="/home/praveen/"
chmod a+x $pathToShell"myShell.sh"
sh $pathToShell"myShell.sh"
#!/bin/bash
# Here you define the absolute path of your script
scriptPath="/home/user/pathScript/"
# Name of your script
scriptName="myscript.sh"
# Here you execute your script
$scriptPath/$scriptName
# Result of script execution
result=$?
scriptPath
or file name scriptName
with spaces
Commented
Feb 6, 2017 at 13:33
chmod a+x /path/to/file-to-be-executed
That was the only thing I needed. Once the script to be executed is made executable like this, you (at least in my case) don't need any other extra operation like sh
or ./
while you are calling the script.
Thanks to the comment of @Nathan Lilienthal
Assume the new file is "/home/satya/app/app_specific_env" and the file contents are as follows
#!bin/bash
export FAV_NUMBER="2211"
Append this file reference to ~/.bashrc file
source /home/satya/app/app_specific_env
When ever you restart the machine or relogin, try echo $FAV_NUMBER
in the terminal. It will output the value.
Just in case if you want to see the effect right away, source ~/.bashrc
in the command line.
There are some problems to import functions from other file.
First: You needn't to do this file executable. Better not to do so!
just add
. file
to import all functions. And all of them will be as if they are defined in your file.
Second: You may be define the function with the same name. It will be overwritten. It's bad. You may declare like that
declare -f new_function_name=old_function_name
and only after that do import.
So you may call old function by new name.
Third: You may import only full list of functions defined in file.
If some not needed you may unset them. But if you rewrite your functions after unset they will be lost. But if you set reference to it as described above you may restore after unset with the same name.
Finally In common procedure of import is dangerous and not so simple. Be careful! You may write script to do this more easier and safe.
If you use only part of functions(not all) better split them in different files. Unfortunately this technique not made well in bash. In python for example and some other script languages it's easy and safe. Possible to make partial import only needed functions with its own names. We all want that in next bush versions will be done the same functionality. But now We must write many additional cod so as to do what you want.
bush versions
.) (Do you have someone to turn to to help you with English grammar? (Sometimes wish I had.))
Commented
Aug 19, 2017 at 18:38
Use backticks.
$ ./script-that-consumes-argument.sh `sh script-that-produces-argument.sh`
Then fetch the output of the producer script as an argument on the consumer script.
b.sh
did not have executable permissions. It might be a good thing to check../
before the script name, example, instead:b.sh
, use:./b.sh
No such file or directory
error stackoverflow.com/a/2920431/1356559