When I run:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
from the command line, it works.
If I put the same line a script file maintain.script:
echo UPDATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE – UPDATE
sudo apt-get update
echo UPDATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE – UPGRADE
sudo apt-get upgrade
and run:
sudo ./maintain.sh
I get errors:
E: Invalid operation update
E: Invalid operation upgrade
I have marked the script as an executable.
Updated After Comment from FSQ
Here is the script file:
#!/bin/bash
echo "UPDATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE – UPDATE"
apt-get update
echo "UPDATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE – UPGRADE"
apt-get upgrade
echo "UPDATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE – DISTRIBUTION"
apt-get dist-upgrade
echo "REMOVING APPLICATION ORPHANS"
apt-get autoremove –purge
echo "UPDATING FIRMWARE"
rpi-update
Here is the command:
pi@raspberrypi2 ~/projects $ sudo ./maintain.sh
Here is the result:
: not foundsh: 1: ./maintain.sh: #!/bin/bash
UPDATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE – UPDATE
E: Invalid operation update
UPDATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE – UPGRADE
E: Invalid operation upgrade
UPDATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE – DISTRIBUTION
E: Invalid operation dist-upgrade
REMOVING APPLICATION ORPHANS
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
E: Unable to locate package –purge
UPDATING FIRMWARE
: not foundsh: 11: ./maintain.sh: rpi-update
It was a file format problem. I was editing the files over a folder share using Windows notepad, which uses a different \r\n to Linux.
Here is the command that corrected my script file:
sed -i 's/\r//' maintain.sh
Here is a script file I use to do all the script files in a folder, and make sure they are executable:
#!/bin/bash
echo "Correcting script file formats"
for file in *.sh
do
echo $file
sed -i 's/\r//' $file
chmod +x $file
done