Difference between revisions of "Bash disaster prevention"
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Like any other versatile tool, consequences of misusing of UNIX scripting can be disasterous. | Like any other versatile tool, consequences of misusing of UNIX scripting can be disasterous. Careful consideration of possible pitfalls in scripting is a very much necessary art. However, it is equally important to have some 'safety-value' in case something goes terribly wrong. | ||
==A horror story== | ==A horror story== | ||
You listen to music and have built up a quite extensive library of digital music in your computer under the directory /home/alex/music. Everyday, you copy a folder from under music folder (e.g. [[wikipedia:beatles|beatles]]/[[wikipedia:Yellow_Submarine_%28album%29|yellowsubmarine]]) to your [[wikipedia:MP3 player|MP3 player]], which appears as a usb drive (say /mnt/usbstick). You write a small script called loadmusic.bash and save it in /home/alex/,<nowiki> | You listen to music and have built up a quite extensive library of digital music in your computer under the directory /home/alex/music. Everyday, you copy a folder from under music folder (e.g. [[wikipedia:beatles|beatles]]/[[wikipedia:Yellow_Submarine_%28album%29|yellowsubmarine]]) to your [[wikipedia:MP3 player|MP3 player]], which appears as a usb drive (say /mnt/usbstick). You write a small script called loadmusic.bash and save it in /home/alex/,<nowiki> | ||
</nowiki><pre><nowiki> | </nowiki> | ||
<pre><nowiki> | |||
#!/bin/bash | #!/bin/bash | ||
cd /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic # Go to the appropriate folder | cd /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic # Go to the appropriate folder | ||
Line 11: | Line 13: | ||
and call it as | and call it as | ||
<nowiki> | <nowiki> | ||
</nowiki><pre><nowiki> | </nowiki> | ||
<pre><nowiki> | |||
$ loadmusic.bash yellowsubmarine | $ loadmusic.bash yellowsubmarine | ||
</nowiki></pre> | </nowiki></pre> | ||
On one day, you simply forget to insert the usb key, before running the command: | On one day, you simply forget to insert the usb key, before running the command: | ||
<nowiki> | |||
</nowiki> | |||
<pre><nowiki> | |||
loadmusic.bash : line 2: cd: /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic: No such file or directory | |||
Done! | |||
</nowiki></pre> | |||
What happens here. Bash tries to change directory to /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic , but can't. Does it stop there? Not unless we ask it to. It simply forgets what happened and executes the next command, namely <tt>rm -rf</tt> and innocently deletes ALL your digital music albums! (And we don't waste time on useless stuff like backups!!) | |||
==Error handling== | |||
{{wbox|Never, ever use dangerous commands like <tt>rm -rf</tt> (or <tt>rm</tt> by itself, for that matter,) or mv in a script that doesn't have a proper error handler.}} | |||
Whenever there is the potential for pitfalls like the above, use some form of general error handler to at least tell the script to exit without trying the rest of the commands. | |||
<nowiki> | |||
</nowiki> | |||
<pre><nowiki> | |||
#!/bin/bash | |||
## End of error handling | |||
function handle { | |||
echo "Error" | |||
exit 1 | |||
} | |||
trap handle ERR | |||
## End of error handling | |||
cd /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic # Go to the appropriate folder | |||
rm -rf #Delete all the old files | |||
cp -r /home/alex/music/$1 . | |||
echo 'Done!' | |||
</nowiki></pre> | |||
which will execute the function | |||
<tt>handle()</tt> | |||
as soon as it encounters and error. And inside <tt>handle()</tt> | |||
, we have | |||
<tt>exit</tt> | |||
, so there's no danger of bash trying to be smart. | |||
<nowiki> | |||
</nowiki> | |||
<pre><nowiki> | |||
loadmusic.bash: line 7: cd: /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic: No such file or directory | |||
Error | |||
</nowiki></pre> | |||
==More useful error handling== | |||
{{hbox|trap type of error handling is useful for preventing disasters. For more graceful error handling, the [[wikipedia:Return_statement|return value]] of each individual command can be checked. }} | |||
Every well behaved Unix command has a exit status expressed by an integer value between 0 and 255. 0 indicates success. Other codes are less universal. In many systems, 127 indicates "Command not found" error. 126 - "permission denied" and 130 - "Process interrupted" (e.g. Ctrl+C). | |||
Look at the following code snippet: <nowiki> | |||
</nowiki> | |||
<pre><nowiki>#!/bin/bash | |||
date=`date +%Y%m%d` | |||
file="cpc_rfe_v2.0_sa_dly.bin.${date}.gz" | |||
site="ftp://ftp.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/fews/S.Asia/data" | |||
wget $site/$file -nv | |||
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then | |||
echo "Some error in retrieving $file." | |||
exit 1 | |||
fi | |||
echo "Now processing $file" | |||
./process.bash $file | |||
</nowiki></pre> | |||
It tries to download a file from a ftp site. Then the code check the exit status of wget, which should be zero only if everything went all right. Otherwise, it will be non-zero and the script print a meaningful error message and exit. | |||
[[Category:Computing]] |
Latest revision as of 19:08, 2 October 2009
Like any other versatile tool, consequences of misusing of UNIX scripting can be disasterous. Careful consideration of possible pitfalls in scripting is a very much necessary art. However, it is equally important to have some 'safety-value' in case something goes terribly wrong.
A horror story
You listen to music and have built up a quite extensive library of digital music in your computer under the directory /home/alex/music. Everyday, you copy a folder from under music folder (e.g. beatles/yellowsubmarine) to your MP3 player, which appears as a usb drive (say /mnt/usbstick). You write a small script called loadmusic.bash and save it in /home/alex/,
#!/bin/bash cd /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic # Go to the appropriate folder rm -rf #Delete all the old files cp -r /home/alex/music/$1 . echo 'Done!'
and call it as
$ loadmusic.bash yellowsubmarine
On one day, you simply forget to insert the usb key, before running the command:
loadmusic.bash : line 2: cd: /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic: No such file or directory Done!
What happens here. Bash tries to change directory to /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic , but can't. Does it stop there? Not unless we ask it to. It simply forgets what happened and executes the next command, namely rm -rf and innocently deletes ALL your digital music albums! (And we don't waste time on useless stuff like backups!!)
Error handling
Never, ever use dangerous commands like rm -rf (or rm by itself, for that matter,) or mv in a script that doesn't have a proper error handler.
Whenever there is the potential for pitfalls like the above, use some form of general error handler to at least tell the script to exit without trying the rest of the commands.
#!/bin/bash ## End of error handling function handle { echo "Error" exit 1 } trap handle ERR ## End of error handling cd /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic # Go to the appropriate folder rm -rf #Delete all the old files cp -r /home/alex/music/$1 . echo 'Done!'
which will execute the function handle() as soon as it encounters and error. And inside handle() , we have exit , so there's no danger of bash trying to be smart.
loadmusic.bash: line 7: cd: /mnt/usbstick/todaysmusic: No such file or directory Error
More useful error handling
trap type of error handling is useful for preventing disasters. For more graceful error handling, the return value of each individual command can be checked.
Every well behaved Unix command has a exit status expressed by an integer value between 0 and 255. 0 indicates success. Other codes are less universal. In many systems, 127 indicates "Command not found" error. 126 - "permission denied" and 130 - "Process interrupted" (e.g. Ctrl+C).
Look at the following code snippet:
#!/bin/bash date=`date +%Y%m%d` file="cpc_rfe_v2.0_sa_dly.bin.${date}.gz" site="ftp://ftp.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/fews/S.Asia/data" wget $site/$file -nv if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Some error in retrieving $file." exit 1 fi echo "Now processing $file" ./process.bash $file
It tries to download a file from a ftp site. Then the code check the exit status of wget, which should be zero only if everything went all right. Otherwise, it will be non-zero and the script print a meaningful error message and exit.