What is the difference:
if IsServerStarted ; then ...
开发者_Python百科and
if [ IsServerStarted -eq 0 ] ; then ...
Seems to me that these two statements should be equivalent? Strangely the second statement is always true.
The following runs the shell function or executable in $PATH named IsServerStarted, and if its exit code is 0 (i.e. true), runs the then branch. If such a function or executable does not exist, the exit code will be non-0 (i.e. false) and the then branch will be skipped.
if IsServerStarted ; then ...
The following has [ (aka test) check whether IsServerStarted is an integer equal to 0, which (IsServerStarted not even containing a single digit) is always false. Thus, [ exits with a non-0 (i.e. false) code and the then branch is always skipped.
if [ IsServerStarted -eq 0 ] ; then ...
Actually, the second one will give an error complaining that "IsServerStarted" is not a valid integer. It's considered a string constant so something like
var="IsServerStarted"
if [ IsServerStarted == "$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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