I was trying to write a VPN dialer/disconnector using a batch file, but I got stuck. After some investigation I found that the presence of %
in the password is not playing well.
Here is the code
@echo OFF
SET SWITCHPARSE1=%1
SET SWITCHPARSE2=%2
REM echo %SWITCHPARSE1%
SHIFT
SHIFT
IF "SWITCHPARSE1" == "" goto Usage
IF "SWITCHPARSE1" == "/?" goto Usage
IF "SWITCHPARSE2" == "" goto Usage
IF "SWITCHPARSE2" == "/?" goto Usage
IF "%SWITCHPARSE1%" == "sl" (
IF "%SWITCHPARSE2%" == "conn" (
echo "inside sl conn"
rasdial sl employee1 K%%Pxev3=)g:{#Swc9
goto end
) ELSE IF "%SWITCHPARSE2%" == "disconn" (
rasdial sl /disconnect
goto end
) ELSE (
goto Usage
)
) ELSE IF "%SWITCHPARSE1%" == "off" (
IF "%SWITCHPARSE2%" == "conn" (
rasdial Office employee1 office123
goto end
) ELSE IF "%SWITCHPARSE2%" == "disconn" (
rasdial Office /disconnect
goto end
) ELSE (
goto Usage
)
) ELSE (
goto Usage
)
:Usage
echo "Usage is vpnconn.bat /[sl|off] /[conn|disconn]"
:end
In the above script I am trying to escape %
using %
(i.e. %%
, reference from here), but the bat script gives g:{#Swc9 was unexpected at this time..
To root cause further, I tried to double %%
(escape %
) in a different batch file, and it worked:
@echo OFF
rasdial sl employee1 K%%Pxev3=)g:{#Swc9
Why does the same script when integrated to work with different connections not work?