Bourne/bash shell script: while loop syntaxA while loop allows execution of a code block an arbitrary number of times until a condition is met. This recipe describes the while loop syntax for the various Bourne shells (sh, ksh, bash, zsh, etc.) and provides examples.
General syntax:
while [ condition ]
do
code block;
done
Any valid conditional expression will work in the while loop. The following code asks the user for input and verifies the input asking for a y or n and will repeat the process until a y answer is received.
verify="n"
while [ "$verify" != y ]
do
echo "Enter option: "
read option
echo "You entered $option. Is this correct? (y/n)"
read verify
done
Another useful while loop is a simple one, and infinite loop. If the conditional is "1" the loop will run until something else breaks it (such as the break keyword):
while [ 1 ]
do
ps -ef | grep [s]endmail | wc -l
sleep 5
done
This while loop will display the number of sendmail processes running every five seconds until the loop or executing shell is killed. The brackets in
endmail are a regular expression trick that prevents the 'grep endmail' process from being counted.