# Gracefully Exit A Script With Trap With `trap` you can intercept signals that would cause your script to exit and then inject some additional behavior. Perhaps you want to make sure the script cleans up after itself before it exists. During this script's execution, it creates a file in the filesystem. It would be nice to make sure that no matter path this script ends up down that it will clean up after itself as it exits. We set up a `trap` that looks for the `EXIT` signal to do this. ```bash # Set up trap trap 'echo "Cleaning up temp files"; rm -f *.tmp' EXIT # Create temporary file echo "test data" > work.tmp # Do some work cat work.tmp # Trap will clean up on exit ``` Whatever is in quotes is what the trap will execute when it is triggered. The following one or more signals are what the trap listens for, in this case `EXIT`. [source](https://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_12_02.html)