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## This function is invoked in an 'if' condition so set -e will be disabled. Invoke separately if failures should cause the script to exit.
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(This warning is optional and must be explicitly enabled)
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### Problematic code:
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```sh
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#!/bin/sh
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#shellcheck enable=check-set-e-suppressed
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set -e
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backup() {
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cp *.txt /backup
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rm *.txt # Runs even if copy fails!
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}
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if backup
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then
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echo "Backup successful"
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fi
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```
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### Correct code:
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```sh
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#!/bin/sh
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#shellcheck enable=check-set-e-suppressed
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set -e
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backup() {
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cp *.txt /backup
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rm *.txt
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}
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backup
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echo "Backup successful"
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```
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### Rationale:
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ShellCheck found a function used as a condition in a script where `set -e` is enabled. This means that the function will run without `set -e`, and will power through any errors.
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This applies to `if`, `while`, and `until` statements, commands negated with `!`, as well as the left-hand side of `||` and `&&`. It does matter how deeply the command is nested in such a structure.
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In the problematic example, the intent was that an error like `cp: error writing '/backup/important.txt': No space left on device` would cause the script to abort. Instead, since the function is invoked in an `if` statement, the script will proceed to delete all the files even though it failed to back them up.
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The fix is to call it outside of an `if` statement. There is no point in checking whether the command succeeded, since the script would abort if it didn't. You may also want to consider replacing `set -e` with explicit `|| exit` after every relevant command to avoid such surprises.
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### Exceptions:
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If you don't care that the function runs without `set -e`, you can disable this warning.
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### Related resources:
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* BashFaq #105: [Why doesn't set -e (or set -o errexit, or trap ERR) do what I expected?](https://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/105)
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