How do I get the error level of commands in a pipe in Windows batch programming?

25,554

Solution 1

I had a similar problem and settled on the following solution as I did not need to detect the exact error code just success or failure.

echo > .failed.tmp    

( foo.exe && del .failed.tmp ) | tee foo.log

if exist .failed.tmp (
    del .failed.tmp
    exit /b 1
) else (
    exit /b 0
)

Solution 2

The %ERRORLEVEL% variable doesn't get updated before the piped command is run; you have to use a wrapper as advised in the other answers.

However, you can use "IF ERRORLEVEL #". For example:

(
type filename
@REM Use an existing (or not) filename to test each branch
IF ERRORLEVEL 1 (echo ERROR) ELSE (echo OKAY)
) > logfile.txt

The ECHO will only run if an error was returned; however %ERRORLEVEL% seems inconsistent.

Edit: Changed example to be runnable as-is.

Solution 3

After about one day of digging, I found a way to do that:

set error_=0
9>&1 1>&2 2>&9 (for /f "delims=" %%i in ('9^>^&1 1^>^&2 2^>^&9 ^(^(^(2^>^&1 call "%homeDir%%1"^) ^|^| ^(1^>^&2 2^>nul echo FAILED^)^) ^| 2^>nul "%homeDir%mtee" /T /+ "%homeDir%logs\%date_%_%1.log"^)') do (set error_=1))

exit /b %error_%

In the example above "%homeDir%%1" is being executed and its output is piped to "%homeDir%mtee". This line detects failures (I'd suggest you to draw a diagram of batch contexts and their stdin/stdout/stderr assignments in order to understand what it does :-) ). I did not find a good way to extract the actual errorlevel. The best thing I got was to replace the 'echo' command with some batch script call 'call rc.bat' which look like:

@echo %errorlevel%

and then replace 'set error_=1' with 'set error_=%%i'.

But the problem is that this call may fail too, and it is not easy to detect that. Still, it is much better than nothing -- I did not find any solution for that on the Internet.

Solution 4

To call tee for entry bat-file, not for single command, and use errorlevel freely, I use trick like this:

if "%1" == "body" goto :body
call %0 body | tee log.txt
goto :eof
:body

set nls_lang=american_america
set HomePath=%~dp0

sqlplus "usr/pwd@tnsname" "@%HomePath%script.sql" 
if errorlevel 1 goto dberror

rem Here I can do something which is dependent on correct finish of script.sql    

:dberror

echo script.sqlerror failed

it separates using tee from calling any commands inside batch.

Solution 5

You can solve the problem by creating a wrapper around your command file:

rem wrapper for command file, wrapper.cmd

call foo.exe

echo %errorlevel%

if errorlevel 1 goto...

Then append tee to the wrapper:

wrapper.cmd | tee result.log

Of course this does not exactly the same, e.g. if you want to log in several files in the wrapped file, it is not possible, but in my case it solved the problem.

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Updated on August 29, 2020

Comments

  • Admin
    Admin over 3 years

    Batch files return the error code of the last command by default.

    Is it somehow possible to return the error code of a former command. Most notably, is it possible to return the error code of a command in a pipe?

    For example, this one-line batch script

    foo.exe
    

    returns the error code of foo. But this one:

    foo.exe | tee output.txt
    

    always returns the exit code of tee, which is zero.