I'm trying to chain a series of .bat files using the EXIT /B X
command to return success or failure and &&
and ||
for conditional running of the next .bat (e.g. a.bat && b.bat
).
Regardless of whether I call EXIT /B 0
or anything else to end a.bat, a.bat && b.bat
will call b.bat afterward. My understanding is that EXIT /B 0
should set ERRORLEVEL=0
, which is success, so the &&
should continue. The counterpoint to this is that calling EXIT /B 1
should set ERRORLEVEL=1
which is failure, so the &&
should stop. What am I missing here?
Trivialized example:
For non-batch commands, acting as expected:
C:> echo test|findstr test>NUL && echo yes
yes
C:> echo test|findstr test>NUL || echo yes
C:> echo test|findstr nope>NUL && echo yes
C:> echo test|findstr nope>NUL || echo yes
yes
Using EXIT /B
always sees a.bat as successful:
C:> echo @EXIT /B 0 > a.bat
C:> a.bat && echo yes
yes
C:> a.bat || echo yes
C:> echo @EXIT /B 1 > a.bat
C:> a.bat && echo yes
yes
C:> a.bat || echo yes
How can I exit from a.bat so that a.bat && b.bat
and a.bat || b.bat
behave as expected?
All commands are run in cmd.exe on Windows XP SP3.
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