I have a script such as follows:
for ((i=0; i < $srccount; i++)); do
echo -e \"\\\"${src[$i]}\\\" will be synchronized to \\\"${dest[$i]}\\\"\"
echo -
Just press Ctrl + Z. It will stop your script entirely.
Ctrl+C sends the interrupt signal, SIGINT
. You need to tell bash to exit when it receives this signal, via the trap
built-in:
trap "exit" INT
for ((i=0; i < $srccount; i++)); do
echo -e "\"${src[$i]}\" will be synchronized to \"${dest[$i]}\""
echo -e $'Press any key to continue or Ctrl+C to exit...\n'
read -rs -n1
rsync ${opt1} ${opt2} ${opt3} ${src[$i]} ${dest[$i]}
done
You can do more than just exiting upon receiving a signal. Commonly, signal handlers remove temporary files. Refer to the bash documentation for more details.