Is it possible to have a bash script automatically handle prompts that would normally be presented to the user with default actions? Currently I am using a bash script to call an in-house tool that will display prompts to the user (prompting for Y/N) to complete actions, however the script I'm writing needs to be completely "hands-off", so I need a way to send Y|N
to the prompt to allow the program to continue execution. Is this possible?
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If you only have Y to send :
If you only have N to send :
There is a special build-in util for this - 'yes'.
To answer all questions with the same answer, you can run
Or you can put it inside your script have specific answer to each question
I found the best way to send input is to use cat and a text file to pass along whatever input you need.
In my situation I needed to answer some questions without Y or N but with text or blank. I found the best way to do this in my situation was to create a shellscript file. In my case I called it autocomplete.sh
I was needing to answer some questions for a doctrine schema exporter so my file looked like this.
-- This is an example only --
The thing I like about this strategy is you can comment what your answers are and using EOF a blank line is just that (the default answer). Turns out by the way this exporter tool has its own JSON counterpart for answering these questions, but I figured that out after I did this =).
to run the script simply be in the directory you want and run
'sh autocomplete.sh'
in terminal.In short by using << EOL & EOF in combination with Return Lines you can answer each question of the prompt as necessary. Each new line is a new answer.
My example just shows how this can be done with comments also using the ` character so you remember what each step is.
Note the other advantage of this method is you can answer with more then just Y or N ... in fact you can answer with blanks!
Hope this helps someone out.
A simple
This allow you to pass any sequence of "Y" or "N" to your script.
This is not "auto-completion", this is automation. One common tool for these things is called Expect.
You might also get away with just piping input from
yes
.