views:

74

answers:

2

For example this line fails:

$ nohup for i in mydir/*.fasta; do ./myscript.sh "$i"; done > output.txt&
-bash: syntax error near unexpected token `do

What's the right way to do it?

+8  A: 

Because 'nohup' expects a single-word command and its arguments - not a shell loop construct. You'd have to use:

nohup sh -c 'for i in mydir/*.fasta; do ./myscript.sh "$i"; done >output.txt' &
Jonathan Leffler
`nohup ( ... )` would work too most likely.
Ether
@Ether - did you try it? I'm practically certain it would not work.
Jonathan Leffler
+2  A: 

You can do it on one line, but you might want to do it tomorrow too.

$ cat loopy.sh 
#!/bin/sh
# a line of text describing what this task does
for i in mydir/*.fast ; do
    ./myscript.sh "$i"
done > output.txt
$ chmod +x loopy.sh
$ nohup loopy.sh &
msw