문제

What is the difference:

if IsServerStarted ; then ...

and

if [ IsServerStarted -eq 0 ] ; then ...

Seems to me that these two statements should be equivalent? Strangely the second statement is always true.

도움이 되었습니까?

해결책

The following runs the shell function or executable in $PATH named IsServerStarted, and if its exit code is 0 (i.e. true), runs the then branch. If such a function or executable does not exist, the exit code will be non-0 (i.e. false) and the then branch will be skipped.

if IsServerStarted ; then ...

The following has [ (aka test) check whether IsServerStarted is an integer equal to 0, which (IsServerStarted not even containing a single digit) is always false. Thus, [ exits with a non-0 (i.e. false) code and the then branch is always skipped.

if [ IsServerStarted -eq 0 ] ; then ...

다른 팁

Actually, the second one will give an error complaining that "IsServerStarted" is not a valid integer. It's considered a string constant so something like

var="IsServerStarted"
if [ IsServerStarted == "$var" ] ; then

would succeed (or fail if it wasn't equal).

ndim is correct regarding the executable or function in the first example you gave.

A couple more variations to consider:

if $IsServerStarted ; then ...

In that one, the if is evaluated based on the return value of a command (executable or function) that is contained in the variable IsServerStarted. So you could set IsServerStarted=true and then the if would succeed since true is a shell builtin that always returns true. You could set IsServerStarted='grep popsicle freezer' and theif` would pass or fail depending on whether you were out of treats.

if [ $IsServerStarted -eq 0 ]; then ...

This simply tests whether the variable is equal to zero. If it's not a valid integer it will cause an error message.

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