I'd like to run a script every time I close a Bash session.
I use XFCE and Terminal 0.4.5 (Xfce Terminal Emulator), I would like to run a script every time I close a tab in Termina开发者_如何学运维l including the last one (when I close Terminal).
Something like .bashrc but running at the end of every session.
.bash_logout doesn't work
You use trap
(see man bash
):
trap /u1/myuser/on_exit_script.sh EXIT
The command can be added to your .profile/.login
This works whether you exit the shell normally (e.g. via exit
command) or simply kill the terminal window/tab, since the shell gets the EXIT
signal either way - I just tested by exiting my putty window.
My answer is similar to DVK's answer but you have to use a command or function, not a file.
$ man bash
[...]
trap [-lp] [[arg] sigspec ...]
The command arg is to be read and executed when the shell
receives signal(s) sigspec.
[...]
If a sigspec is EXIT (0) the command arg is executed on
exit from the shell.
So, you can add to your .bashrc
something like the following code:
finish() {
# Your code here
}
trap finish EXIT
Write you script in "~/.bash_logout". It executed by bash(1) when login shell exits.
If you close your session with "exit", might be able to something like
alias endbash="./runscript;exit"
and just exit by entering endbash. I'm not entirely sure this works, as I'm running windows at the moment.
edit: DVK has a better answer.
精彩评论