Edit shell script while it's running

ack picture ack · Aug 3, 2010 · Viewed 45.7k times · Source

Can you edit a shell script while it's running and have the changes affect the running script?

I'm curious about the specific case of a csh script I have that batch runs a bunch of different build flavors and runs all night. If something occurs to me mid operation, I'd like to go in and add additional commands, or comment out un-executed ones.

If not possible, is there any shell or batch-mechanism that would allow me to do this?

Of course I've tried it, but it will be hours before I see if it worked or not, and I'm curious about what's happening or not happening behind the scenes.

Answer

teika kazura picture teika kazura · Jun 10, 2011

It does affect, at least bash in my environment, but in very unpleasant way. See these codes. First a.sh:

#!/bin/sh

echo "First echo"
read y

echo "$y"

echo "That's all."

b.sh:

#!/bin/sh

echo "First echo"
read y

echo "Inserted"

echo "$y"

# echo "That's all."

Do

$ cp a.sh run.sh
$ ./run.sh
$ # open another terminal
$ cp b.sh run.sh  # while 'read' is in effect
$ # Then type "hello."

In my case, the output is always:

hello
hello
That's all.
That's all.

(Of course it's far better to automate it, but the above example is readable.)

[edit] This is unpredictable, thus dangerous. The best workaround is , as described here put all in a brace, and before the closing brace, put "exit". Read the linked answer well to avoid pitfalls.

[added] The exact behavior depends on one extra newline, and perhaps also on your Unix flavor, filesystem, etc. If you simply want to see some influences, simply add "echo foo/bar" to b.sh before and/or after the "read" line.