Trap: Difference between revisions
Line 70: | Line 70: | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | ||
chart_dir="/tmp" | chart_dir="/tmp" | ||
trap 'rm -rf '${chart_dir}'/tmpcharts | trap 'rm -rf '${chart_dir}'/tmpcharts' EXIT | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
Revision as of 22:45, 23 July 2020
External
- https://www.linuxjournal.com/content/bash-trap-command
- http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_12_02.html
Internal
Overview
"trap" statement is a bash facility that allows for code execution upon catching specific signals. A common usage in shell scripts is to prevent a script to exit untimely when the user types a keyboard abort sequences, but run cleanup code instead. Conceptually, the trap facility is similar to the Java "finally" construct. When bash receives a signal for which a trap has been set while waiting for a command to complete, the trap will not be executed until the command completes. When bash is waiting for an asynchronous command via the wait built-in, the reception of a signal for which a trap has been set will cause the "wait" built-in to return immediately with an exit status greater than 128, immediately after which the trap is executed.
Syntax
trap <commands> <signals>
One or more signals can be listed. The signals can be listed with or without "SIG" prefix (SIGKILL and KILL are equivalent) or using their numeric correspondents. Aside from the standard Linux signals, bash comes with a special set of signals of its own.
Example:
trap 'rm -f ./lock' EXIT
Special Bash Signals
EXIT
"EXIT" is not a Linux signal, but a bash psuedo-signal, which is executed when the script exits. It can be used to make sure that the script executes some cleanup on exit.
DEBUG
For DEBUG, the list of commands is executed after every simple command in the script. Traced functions inherit the DEBUG traps from the calling shell.
ERR
The trap commands are executed every time a script command exits with a non-zero exit status, unless the non-zero exits status comes from part of an "if" statement or from a "while" or "until" loop, or if a logical AND (&&) or OR (||) expression results in a non-zero exit code.
RETURN
Traced functions inherit the RETURN traps from the calling shell.
trap Executable Section
The executable section - the sequence of commands to be executed when the signal is caught - must be enclosed in single or double quotes. The type of quotes is relevant to how the variables specified there are expanded. See Shell Variables and Executable Section for more details.
trap "echo bye" EXIT
trap 'echo bye' EXIT
Multiple commands can be specified with the following syntax
trap "{ rm -r /tmp/lock; exit 255; }" EXIT
Shell Variables and Executable Section
"..." and '...' maintain their semantics relative to variable expansion: if the executable section is enclosed in double quotes, the variables specified there will be expanded when the trap is registered. If the executable section is enclosed in single quotes, the variables will not be expanded when the trap is registered, but when the executable code is actually executed, upon signal catch.
COLOR="blue"
trap "echo ${COLOR}" EXIT
COLOR="green"
will print "blue" upon script exit, while:
COLOR="blue"
trap 'echo ${COLOR}' EXIT
COLOR="green"
will print "green" upon script exit, because the variable declaration ${COLOR} is preserved without expansion until the moment the executable sequence is actually executed on exit. To enable variable expansion at the time of declaration when single quotes are used, use this syntax:
chart_dir="/tmp"
trap 'rm -rf '${chart_dir}'/tmpcharts' EXIT
Global variables declared before the trap declaration are correctly resolved when present in a single-quote quoted string (even if single-quotes are used, the single quote semantics when used in bash command line is different from that in effect here). For example, the following code:
a=hello
trap 'echo ${a}' EXIT
produces:
hello
Variable resolution is done at the time of execution, not declaration, so the following:
trap 'echo ${a}' EXIT
a=hello
also produces:
hello
Experiment with local variables. This works, explain this:
local chart_dir=blah
trap 'rm -rf '${chart_dir}'/tmpcharts; echo chart dir: ${chart_dir}' EXIT
produces:
chart dir: blah
This seems to work for local variables:
trap 'rm -rf '${tmp_dir}' && debug '${tmp_dir}' removed; rm -rf '${chart_dir}'/tmpcharts && debug '${chart_dir}'/tmpcharts removed' EXIT
Only One Code Sequence (Latests) Executes
If multiple code sequences are declared with trap
, only the last one is executed. The following example:
trap 'echo A' EXIT
trap 'echo B' EXIT
produces:
B
Behavior on Being Invoked from Sub-Shells
If code is registered with trap
to react to EXIT in a sub-shell, or in a function that is invoked in a sub-shell, then the registered code will be executed when the sub-shell, and not the top-level invoking shell, exists.
The following code:
$(trap 'echo "a" 1>&2' EXIT)
echo "b"
will display:
a
b
Note that the output should be sent to stderr in the trap code - if the output is sent to stdout, the output is lost, even if the code executes.
Example
Delete Temporary Directory on Exit
local tmp_dir
local preserve_tmp_dir=false
tmp_dir=$(get-tmp-dir) || exit 1
if ${preserve_tmp_dir}; then
debug "temporary directory ${tmp_dir} will be preserved on exit"
else
trap "rm -rf ${tmp_dir} && debug deleted temporary directory ${tmp_dir} || warn failed to delete temporary directory ${tmp_dir}" EXIT && \
debug "registered temporary directory ${tmp_dir} cleanup procedure"
fi
TODO
Reactive Wait Container
Investigate usefulness in case of a reactive wait container. Also see Docker Concepts - Container Exit.
CMD exec /bin/bash -c "trap : TERM INT; sleep infinity & wait"
Other Usage Patterns
trap "rm -f /tmp/blah" 0 2 3 5 10 13 15
Wrap the whole trap functionality in a function
trap _trap SIGTERM
function _trap() {
...
}