I have this simple dummy script called test1
#!/bin/sh
echo "Starting ..."
. ./test2.sh
bring_data
this_is_it
echo "...Done"`
`
It calls another script (note we are not spawning here, but sourcing)
#!/bin/sh
MY_DATA=\
   "john    road      usa
    adrian  avenue    nigeria
    arthur  street    brazil
    bill    roads     canada"
create_my_data() {
   echo "name = ${1}  type = ${2} country = ${3}"
   if [ "${2}" = "avenue" ]; then
     echo "failed... kick me out"
     exit 2
   fi
}
zombies_are() {
   printf "%s" "${1}" | while read -r guy_name lives_on country; do
     create_my_data "${guy_name}" "${lives_on}" "${country}"
   done
}
bring_data() {
  zombies_are "${MY_DATA}"
}
this_is_it() {
  echo "... more work has to be done..."
  sleep 1
  echo "..."
}
Since test1.sh is sourcing test2.sh... I would expect that calling exit 2 would terminate the whole scripting call. I would expect that calling that_is_it... to not happen... yet it does.
Is there something specific about this line:
 while read -r guy_name lives_on country; do
` which does not allow to exit completely from the call test1.sh ???
Here is the output at this point:
# ./test1.sh  
Starting ...
name = john  type = road country = usa
name = adrian  type = avenue country = nigeria
failed... kick me out
... more work has to be done...
... 
...Done
I changed the code to this...
`zombies_are "${MY_DATA}" || exit 2'
that works now.
 
    