W/hen i run the following code snippet
#!/bin/bash
if [ "foo" = "foo" ];
then
echo "true"
else
echo "false"
fi
echo "end"
i get
sfm_write_buffer_test.sh: line 9: syntax error: unexpected end of file
this doesn't make any sense. echo statements works fine, but when the if statement is encountered it gives the above mentioned error.
You're on Cygwin, right?
As I said in a comment, when I copy-and-paste your script and run it on my system, it works; the output is
true
end
But when I change the line endings from the Unix style '\n'
to the Windows style '\r\n'
, I get the same error you got.
With the Windows-style line endings, bash doesn't see the then
keyword; it sees a command named then\r
. It never tries to execute it because it's scanning for the matching then
or fi
for the if
keyword (which it recognized because it's not at the end of the line).
Make sure your shell scripts use Unix-style line endings.
The problem is the CRLF at the end of the script. Shell scripts throw this error when they see Windows-style line endings. You need to replace line endings in your shell script with Unix-style LF. Each IDE has it's own way of doing this.
Sublime Text 2 ==> View -> Line Endings -> Unix
Notepad++ ==> Edit -> EOL Conversion -> UNIX/OSX Format
Once you make that change and save the file, the shell script should execute without error.
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