unless you are suggesting that he can do something like curl get.pharo.org > myScript.sh bash myScript.sh -v
that can work On 11 Jun 2014, at 11:27, Esteban Lorenzano <esteba...@gmail.com> wrote: > does not work. > bash will execute the script (without any option). > What I ask is: how do you tell bash that he needs to transfer a flag “-v” to > the downloaded script? > > Esteban > > On 11 Jun 2014, at 11:07, Max Leske <maxle...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> >> On 11.06.2014, at 15:59, Esteban Lorenzano <esteba...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> >>> On 11 Jun 2014, at 10:54, Max Leske <maxle...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> On 11.06.2014, at 15:45, Esteban Lorenzano <esteba...@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>>> >>>>> On 11 Jun 2014, at 10:41, Esteban A. Maringolo <emaring...@gmail.com> >>>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Can the zeroconf download of the image and/or vm display a progress? >>>>>> >>>>>> It is... remove the --silent and --quiet arguments from curl and wget >>>>>> respectively :) >>>>>> >>>>>> Thank you! >>>>> >>>>> mmm… I do not think so, since zeroconf scripts are intended to automated >>>>> scenarios (like jenkins builds, etc.) >>>> >>>> We could default to silent and give the user the option to turn off the >>>> silence with a -v flag… >>> >>> how? >>> (thinking on "curl get.pharo.org | bash” usage) >> >> Well, the first ‘curl’ simply gets the script and feeds it to bash. After >> that, all the statements from the script work as if executed directly from >> the shell. Then, in the script, you do something like: >> >> if [ <NOT check option> ]; then >> SILENT= "—silent" >> else >> SILENT=“” >> fi >> >> >>> >>>> >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Esteban A. Maringolo