Encontre problemas com facilidade buscando: Nº <ID do problema>
Exemplo: nº 1832
Encontre membros facilmente buscando em: <nome do usuário>, <nome> e <sobrenome>.
Exemplo: a busca por smith retornará os resultados smith e adamsmith
Table E-1. Reserved Exit Codes
Exit Code Number | Meaning | Example | Comments |
1 | Catchall for general errors | let "var1 = 1/0" | Miscellaneous errors, such as "divide by zero" and other impermissible operations |
2 | Misuse of shell builtins (according to Bash documentation) | empty_function() {} | Missing keyword or command |
126 | Command invoked cannot execute | /dev/null | Permission problem or command is not an executable |
127 | "command not found" | illegal_command | Possible problem with $PATH or a typo |
128 | Invalid argument to exit | exit 3.14159 | exit takes only integer args in the range 0 - 255 (see first footnote) |
128+n | Fatal error signal "n" | kill -9 $PPID of script | $? returns 137 (128 + 9) |
130 | Script terminated by Control-C | Ctl-C | Control-C is fatal error signal 2, (130 = 128 + 2, see above) |
255* | Exit status out of range | exit -1 | exit takes only integer args in the range 0 - 255 |
According to the above table, exit codes 1 - 2, 126 - 165, and 255 1 have special meanings, and should therefore be avoided for user-specified exit parameters. Ending a script with exit 127 would certainly cause confusion when troubleshooting (is the error code a "command not found" or a user-defined one?). However, many scripts use an exit 1 as a general bailout-upon-error. Since exit code 1 signifies so many possible errors, it is not particularly useful in debugging.
There has been an attempt to systematize exit status numbers (see /usr/include/sysexits.h
), but this is intended for C and C++ programmers. A similar standard for scripting might be appropriate. The author of this document proposes restricting user-defined exit codes to the range 64 - 113 (in addition to 0, for success), to conform with the C/C++ standard. This would allot 50 valid codes, and make troubleshooting scripts more straightforward. 2 All user-defined exit codes in the accompanying examples to this document conform to this standard, except where overriding circumstances exist, as in Example 9-2.
Issuing a $? from the command-line after a shell script exits gives results consistent with the table above only from the Bash or sh
prompt. Running the C-shell
or tcsh
may give different values in some cases.
Sobre o AquaClusters Política de Privacidade Suporte Version - 19.0.2-4 AquaFold, Inc Copyright © 2007-2017