Bash get exit code of command on a Linux / Unix

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What is an exit code in bash shell?

I am a new Linux system user. How do I get the exit code of a command? How do I get the exit code or status of Linux or Unix shell command and store it into a shell variable?Introduction – Each Linux or Unix shell command returns a status when it terminates normally or abnormally. For example, if backup.sh script is unsuccessful, and it returns a code which tells the shell script to send an e-mail to sysadmin.

Every Linux or Unix command executed by the shell script or user has an exit status. Exit status is an integer number. 0 exit status means the command was successful without any errors. A non-zero (1-255 values) exit status means command was a failure.

How to find out the exit code of a command

You need to use a particular shell variable called $? to get the exit status of the previously executed command. To print $? variable use the echo command or printf command:

date

echo $?

date-foo-bar

printf '%d

' $?



Bash get exit code of command – How to use exit codes in shell scripts

From the above outputs, it is clear that the exit code is 0 indicates that date command was successful. Further, the exit code is 127 (non-zero) as the nonexistant-command was not successful.

So how do you store exit status of the command in a shell variable? Simply assign $? to a shell variable. The syntax is:

command status = $? ## run date command ## cmd = "date" $cmd ## get status ## status = $? ## take some decision ## [ $status -eq 0 ] && echo " $cmd command was successful" || echo " $cmd failed" command status=$? ## run date command ## cmd="date" $cmd ## get status ## status=$? ## take some decision ## [ $status -eq 0 ] && echo "$cmd command was successful" || echo "$cmd failed"

How do I set an exit code for my own shell scripts?

The exit command cause normal shell script termination. It exits the shell with a status of N. The syntax is:

exit N exit 1 exit 999 exit N exit 1 exit 999

For example:

#!/bin/bash / path / to / some / command [ $? -eq 0 ] || exit 1 #!/bin/bash /path/to/some/command [ $? -eq 0 ] || exit 1

A sample shell script to get the exit code of a command

#!/bin/bash # # Sample shell script to demo exit code usage # # set -e ## find ip in the file ## grep -q 192.168.2.254 / etc / resolv.conf ## Did we found IP address? Use exit status of the grep command ## if [ $? -eq 0 ] then echo "Success: I found IP address in file." exit 0 else echo "Failure: I did not found IP address in file. Script failed" >& 2 exit 1 fi #!/bin/bash # # Sample shell script to demo exit code usage # # set -e ## find ip in the file ## grep -q 192.168.2.254 /etc/resolv.conf ## Did we found IP address? Use exit status of the grep command ## if [ $? -eq 0 ] then echo "Success: I found IP address in file." exit 0 else echo "Failure: I did not found IP address in file. Script failed" >&2 exit 1 fi

How to deal with the exit codes of all piped commands

See “Bash Find out the exit codes of all piped commands” for more info.

Conclusion

This page showed how to use exit codes on Linux or Unix based system and how to get the exit status/code of command. For more info see: