Contents:
Tips for Debugging Shell Scripts
Quoting Trouble? Think, Then Use echo
Bourne Shell Debugger Shows a Shell Variable
Stop Syntax Errors in Numeric Tests
Stop Syntax Errors in String Tests
Watch Out for Bourne Shell -e Bug
Quoting and Command-Line Parameters
Test Built-In Commands for Failure
If Command Doesn't Return a Status, Test the Error Messages
A Portable echo Command
Depending on the Bourne shell version you have, the error messages
it gives can be downright useless.
For instance, it can just say End
of
file
unexpected
.
Here are a few tricks to use to get a little more information about
what's going on.
Start your script like this:
#!/bin/sh -xv
(or, if your UNIX can't handle #!
, use the command
set -xv
(44.19)).
The -xv
shows you what's happening as the shell reads your script.
The lines of the script will be shown as the shell reads them.
The shell shows each command it executes with a plus sign (+
) before the command.
Note that the shell reads an entire loop (for, while, etc.) before it executes any commands in the loop.
If you want to run a script with debugging but you don't want to edit the script file, you can also start the shell explicitly from the command line and give the options there:
%sh -xv
scrfile
Debugging output is usually pretty long, more than a screenful.
So I pipe it to a pager like pg.
But the shell sends its debugging output to stderr, so I
pipe both stdout and stderr (13.4).
Using a pager has another advantage: if you want to kill the script
before it finishes, just use the pager's "quit" command (like q).
When the pager quits, UNIX may even kill
the shell script (you may see
the message
Broken pipe
(50.12)).
Do you want to save the debugging output in a file and see it on your screen, too? Use tee (13.9) to snag the scrfile stdout and stderr; add tee to the pipeline before the pager.
If the script is slow, you can run it in the background. Redirect the shell's output and errors (13.5, 8.13) into a temporary file (21.3). Use tail -f (25.16) to "watch" the log file. If you want to do something else while the script runs, just kill the tail command (with CTRL-c or your interrupt key), do something else, then start another tail -f when you want to watch again.
Finally, if the script normally writes something to its standard output, you can split the normal and debugging outputs into two files (13.1).
If the shell says End
of
file
unexpected
,
look for a line in your script
that has an opening quote but no closing quote.
The shell is probably searching for but never finding the matching quote.
The same goes for missing parentheses and braces ({}
).
If you're getting an End
of
file
unexpected
error, put these two lines near the middle of the script:
echo "DEBUG: quitting early..." 1>&2 exit
Then run your script.
Those lines will print a message and stop the shell where you put them.
If you don't get the End
of
file
unexpected
error anymore, you know that
the problem is somewhere after the exit
line.
Move those two lines farther down and try again.
(Otherwise, move them up...)
A message like line
23:
;;
unexpected
means
that you have an
unmatched piece of code somewhere before line 23.
You'll also see fi unexpected
.
Look at all nested if and case statements, and statements like
them, to be sure that they end in the right places.
The shell may give you an error that mentions "line 1" or another line number that seems way too small, when there's no error close to the top of your script. Look at any loops or other structures with redirected inputs or outputs (45.22). Some Bourne shells start a separate shell to run these loops and lose track of the line numbers.
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