Is there a "PAUSE" command in bash like there is in MSDOS batch scripts? To prompt the user to press any key to continue?
Use the following to wait until the user presses enter:
# Bash read -p "Press [enter] to continue..." # Bourne echo "Press [enter] to continue..." read junk
Or use the following to wait until the user presses any key to continue:
# Bash read -rsn 1 -p "Press any key to continue..."
Sometimes you need to wait until the user presses any key to continue, but you are already using the "standard input" because (for example) you are using a pipe to feed your script. How do you tell read to read from the keyboard? Unix flexibility is helpful here, you can add "< /dev/tty"
# Bash read -rsn 1 -p "Press any key to continue..." < /dev/tty
If you want to put a timeout on that, use the -t option to read:
# Bash echo "WARNING: You are about to do something stupid." echo -n "Press a key within 5 seconds to cancel." if ! read -rsn 1 -t 5 then something_stupid fi
If you just want to pause for a while, regardless of the user's input, use sleep:
echo "The script is tired. Please wait a minute." sleep 60
If you want a fancy countdown on your timed read:
# Bash # This function won't handle multi-digit counts. countdown() { local i echo -n $1 sleep 1 for ((i=$1-1; i>=1; i--)); do printf "\b%d" $i sleep 1 done } echo 'Warning!!' echo -n 'Five seconds to cancel: ' countdown 5 & pid=$! if ! read -s -n 1 -t 5; then echo; echo "boom" else kill $pid; echo; echo "phew" fi
(If you test that code in an interactive shell, you'll get "chatter" from the job control system when the child process is created, and when it's killed. But in a script, there won't be any such noise.)