bash - Logical_OR
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Logical OR
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Logical OR (||) is boolean operator. It can execute commands or shell functions based on the exit status of another command.
Contents
Syntax
command1 || command2
OR
First_command || Second_command
command2 is executed if, and only if, command1 returns a non-zero exit status. In other words, run command1 successfully or run command2.
Example
cat /etc/shadow 2>/dev/null || echo "Failed to open file"
The cat command will try to display /etc/shadow file and it (the cat command) sets the exit stats to non-zero value if it failed to open /etc/shadow file. Therefore, 'Failed to open file' will be displayed cat command failed to open the file.
Find username else display an error
grep "^vivek" /etc/passwd || echo "User vivek not found in /etc/passwd"
How Do I Combine Both Logical Operators?
Try it as follows:
cat /etc/shadow 2>/dev/null && echo "File successfully opened." || echo "Failed to open file."
Make sure only root can run this script:
test $(id -u) -eq 0 && echo "You are root" || echo "You are NOT root"
OR
test $(id -u) -eq 0 && echo "Root user can run this script." || echo "Use sudo or su to become a root user."
External links
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