Note:
echo $?
gives you the exit status of the previous command. 0 == success, 1 == failure.
set -euxo pipefail
☯ cat test.sh
ls 1
echo "finished"
☯ bash test.sh ; echo $?
ls: cannot access '1': No such file or directory
finished
0
☯ cat test.sh
set -euxo pipefail
ls 1
echo "finished"
☯ ~/d/tmck-code.github.io bash test.sh ; echo $?
+ ls 1
ls: cannot access '1': No such file or directory
☯ ~ cat test.sh
set -euxo pipefail
echo "${1}"
echo "finished"
☯ ~ bash test.sh ; echo $?
test.sh: line 2: 1: unbound variable
1
To get more control over unbound variables, we can give the variable a default empty value, and then do an explicit check to see if the variable is empty
☯ ~ cat test.sh
set -euxo pipefail
[ -z "${1:-}" ] && echo "\$1 must be given!" && exit 1
echo "finished"
☯ ~ bash test.sh ; echo $?
+ '[' -z '' ']'
+ echo '$1 must be given!'
$1 must be given!
+ exit 1
1
You might want to suppress the debug output, for brevity or to protect secret credentials from being logged.
You can either
- omit the
x
character - or toggle with
set -x
to enable debug printingset +x
to disable debug printing
☯ ~ cat test.sh
set -euxo pipefail
set +x
echo "without debug"
set -x
[ -z "${1:-}" ] && echo "\$1 must be given!" && exit 1
echo "finished"
☯ ~ bash test.sh ; echo $?
+ set +x
without debug
+ '[' -z '' ']'
+ echo '$1 must be given!'
$1 must be given!
+ exit 1
1