I use a small macOS Automator script to ssh into a remote host so I can add it to the Dock:
tell application "Terminal"
activate
do script ("ssh robot#example.com;")
end tell
When used the first time, I get the expected remote Terminal window, but also an extra local Terminal window. All subsequent uses only generate a single window to the remote host.
I've tried some small alternatives like:
set currentWindow to do script...
and:
set currentTab to do script...
with the same result. Is there any way to prevent the initial local Terminal window?
I found a post that has the answer:
tell application "Terminal"
if not application "Terminal" is running then launch
do script ("ssh robot#example.com;")
activate
end tell
I have an applescript that calls the terminal to run some functions every time my mac wakes up from a sleep. I am getting a bit annoyed of the terminal constantly popping up everytime I open up the laptop. is there a way i can set it so that the terminal can run in the background or in a minimised window and not keep popping up?
My AppleScript is as follows:
set desktop_folder to "$HOME/Desktop"
tell application "Terminal"
activate
do script "cd desktop;cd project34;python3 main.py"
end tell
You can use this by itself, with out the Terminal block:
do shell script "cd ~/Desktop/project34; python3 main.py"
Note that you may need to include the path to python3.
Ok... I've been searching for an answer to this for a while and can't seem to find any good examples, so I thought I'd break down and ask.
How can I create a shell file (.command) in OSX that I can just double-click on which:
Opens a new Terminal window
Runs a few commands
... and stays active so I can continue to run other things!
My goal is to setup various environments using individual .command files, which will each set variables and run certain command line tools, and then remain open to manually run other commands. I currently have one like this:
#!/bin/sh
export MY_VAR_A="blah A"
export MY_VAR_B="blah B"
cd /Users/
... and this doesn't work. It just opens a Terminal window with this output:
Last login: Sat Aug 17 12:52:15 on ttys000
unknown60c5470527e4:~ me$ /Users/me/Documents/test.command ; exit;
logout
[Process completed]
Is there a better (or just different) way of accomplishing what I want? Or do I just need to adjust something simple in my current .command file?
Use applescript
tell application "Terminal" to activate
tell application "Terminal"
do script ("ls -l") in window 1
do script ("cd /Users/test/Music/iTunes/") in window 1
do script ("ls -l") in window 1
end tell
Save apple script as application bundle.
Is there a way to close a Terminal window from within a shell script? I have a .command file that should just get out of the way once it's done.
Using exit 0 will cleanly terminate the script.
Whether Terminal window stays open is user-configurable. The default is to always stay open. To change this:
Terminal.app > Preferences > Profiles > Shell
- "When the shell exists:"
> Close if the shell exited cleanly
- "Ask before closing:"
(•) Never
-- OR --
(•) Only if there are....
When "Close if shell exited cleanly" is used, the script will close the window if the exit result is 0, which is the default if nothing went wrong.
Since you don't want to delete all Terminal windows, first change the name of your window from "Terminal" to something else:
echo -n -e "\033]0;My Window Name\007"
Then at the end of the script, use:
osascript -e 'tell application "Terminal" to close (every window whose name contains "My Window Name")' &
You can use apple script to quit the terminal app. Add the following to your script -
osascript -e 'tell application "Terminal" to quit'
This will give you a popup confirming to close the app. You can disable this in Terminal preferences.
Alternatively, you can also use killall command to quit the app. The following would work just as well.
killall Terminal
Note:
Just as a side note, you can freely add the above commands to your script and it would work as you want. However, there are few caveats. First being you will limit the ability of your script to work on different boxes. Secondly, it would be safer to use nohup so that any commands that are currently running won't quit due to quitting of the Terminal app.
This works for me:
#!/bin/sh
{your script here}
osascript -e 'tell application "Terminal" to close (every window whose name contains ".command")' &
exit
This will work for closing just your windows opened with a .command file but leave things already running in other terminal windows. I know that I almost always have either sass or grunt watch something so I don't want to quit terminal totally.
closeWindow() {
/usr/bin/osascript << _OSACLOSE_
tell application "Terminal"
close (every window whose name contains "YourScriptName")
end tell
delay 0.3
tell application "System Events" to click UI element "Close" of sheet 1 of window 1 of application process "Terminal"
_OSACLOSE_
}
This will close the Terminal window for your script and keep any other Terminal windows open as long as their window titles don't match. For it to work Terminal will have to be added to the list of applications permitted to use the Accessibility framework. You can also cycle through Terminal windows with a repeat command and close every window x that contains a UI element "Close" on sheet 1.
I find the best solution for this is to use Automator to create a true OSX application which will work the same way regardless of how your system is configured. You can have the Automator run your shell script, or you can embed the shell script itself in Automator.
Here is how you do it:
Run Automator (in Applications).
Choose "New Document" and when it
asks "Choose a type for your document" choose "Application"
In the
left panel, select "Utilities" then "Run Shell Script".
Type in your
script commands in the workflow item in the right panel. You can either call another
shell script, or just put your commands in their directly.
Save the
Application, which will be a full-fledged Mac App. You can even
cut-and-paste icons from other apps to give your script some
personality.
#!/bin/bash -x
{your script here}
. exit 0
kill -9 $PPID
you can also create a shortcut for your script:
cp yourscript.sh ~/bin/yourshortcutnamewhateveryouwant
then type
yourshortcutnamewhateveryouwant
will run whatever is writen into script at any directory.
If the current line in the frontmost Terminal tab contained the text aa, this would run the command aauptime:
set cmd to "uptime"
tell application "Terminal"
try
do script cmd in window 1
on error
do script cmd
end try
activate
end tell
You could obviously add something like tell app "System Events" to keystroke "ku" using control down before do script, but does anyone know any better solutions?
You know you can call a shell script without targeting the terminal, right?