'What is the Linux equivalent to DOS pause?

I have a Bash shell script in which I would like to pause execution until the user presses a key. In DOS, this is easily accomplished with the pause command. Is there a Linux equivalent I can use in my script?



Solution 1:[1]

I use these ways a lot that are very short, and they are like @theunamedguy and @Jim solutions, but with timeout and silent mode in addition.

I especially love the last case and use it in a lot of scripts that run in a loop until the user presses Enter.

Commands

  • Enter solution

    read -rsp $'Press enter to continue...\n'
    
  • Escape solution (with -d $'\e')

    read -rsp $'Press escape to continue...\n' -d $'\e'
    
  • Any key solution (with -n 1)

    read -rsp $'Press any key to continue...\n' -n 1 key
    # echo $key
    
  • Question with preselected choice (with -ei $'Y')

    read -rp $'Are you sure (Y/n) : ' -ei $'Y' key;
    # echo $key
    
  • Timeout solution (with -t 5)

    read -rsp $'Press any key or wait 5 seconds to continue...\n' -n 1 -t 5;
    
  • Sleep enhanced alias

    read -rst 0.5; timeout=$?
    # echo $timeout
    

Explanation

-r specifies raw mode, which don't allow combined characters like "\" or "^".

-s specifies silent mode, and because we don't need keyboard output.

-p $'prompt' specifies the prompt, which need to be between $' and ' to let spaces and escaped characters. Be careful, you must put between single quotes with dollars symbol to benefit escaped characters, otherwise you can use simple quotes.

-d $'\e' specifies escappe as delimiter charater, so as a final character for current entry, this is possible to put any character but be careful to put a character that the user can type.

-n 1 specifies that it only needs a single character.

-e specifies readline mode.

-i $'Y' specifies Y as initial text in readline mode.

-t 5 specifies a timeout of 5 seconds

key serve in case you need to know the input, in -n1 case, the key that has been pressed.

$? serve to know the exit code of the last program, for read, 142 in case of timeout, 0 correct input. Put $? in a variable as soon as possible if you need to test it after somes commands, because all commands would rewrite $?

Solution 2:[2]

read without any parameters will only continue if you press enter. The DOS pause command will continue if you press any key. Use read –n1 if you want this behaviour.

Solution 3:[3]

This worked for me on multiple flavors of Linux, where some of these other solutions did not (including the most popular ones here). I think it's more readable too...

echo Press enter to continue; read dummy;

Note that a variable needs to be supplied as an argument to read.

Solution 4:[4]

read -n1 is not portable. A portable way to do the same might be:

(   trap "stty $(stty -g;stty -icanon)" EXIT
    LC_ALL=C dd bs=1 count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
)   </dev/tty

Besides using read, for just a press ENTER to continue prompt you could do:

sed -n q </dev/tty

Solution 5:[5]

If you just need to pause a loop or script, and you're happy to press Enter instead of any key, then read on its own will do the job.

do_stuff
read
do_more_stuff

It's not end-user friendly, but may be enough in cases where you're writing a quick script for yourself, and you need to pause it to do something manually in the background.

Solution 6:[6]

This function works in both bash and zsh, and ensures I/O to the terminal:

# Prompt for a keypress to continue. Customise prompt with $*
function pause {
  >/dev/tty printf '%s' "${*:-Press any key to continue... }"
  [[ $ZSH_VERSION ]] && read -krs  # Use -u0 to read from STDIN
  [[ $BASH_VERSION ]] && </dev/tty read -rsn1
  printf '\n'
}
export_function pause

Put it in your .{ba,z}shrc for Great Justice!

Solution 7:[7]

This fixes it so pressing any key other than ENTER will still go to a new line

read -n1 -r -s -p "Press any key to continue..." ; echo

it's better than windows pause, because you can change the text to make it more useful

read -n1 -r -s -p "Press any key to continue... (cant find the ANY key? press ENTER) " ; echo

Solution 8:[8]

Yes to using read - and there are a couple of tweaks that make it most useful in both cron and in the terminal.

Example:

time rsync (options)
read -n 120 -p "Press 'Enter' to continue..." ; echo " "

The -n 120 makes the read statement time out after 2 minutes so it does not block in cron.

In terminal it gives 2 minutes to see how long the rsync command took to execute.

Then the subsequent echo is so the subsequent bash prompt will appear on the next line.

Otherwise it will show on the same line directly after "continue..." when Enter is pressed in terminal.

Solution 9:[9]

I've built a little program to achieve pause command in Linux. I've uploaded the code on my GitHub repo.

To install it,

git clone https://github.com/savvysiddharth/pause-command.git
cd pause-command
sudo make install

With this installed, you can now use pause command similar to like you did in windows.

It also supports optional custom string like read.

Example:

pause "Pausing execution, Human intervention required..."

Using this, C/C++ programs using statements like system("pause"); are now compatible with linux.

Solution 10:[10]

Try this:

function pause(){
   read -p "$*"
}

Sources

This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Source: Stack Overflow

Solution Source
Solution 1 Peter Mortensen
Solution 2 xsl
Solution 3
Solution 4
Solution 5
Solution 6
Solution 7
Solution 8
Solution 9
Solution 10 John Kugelman