As others have noted, there's no goto
in bash
(or other POSIX-like shells) - other, more flexible flow-control constructs take its place.
Look for heading Compound Commands
in man bash
.
In your case, the select
command is the right choice.
Since how to use it may not be obvious, here's something to get you started:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
echo "Main Menu"
# Define the choices to present to the user, which will be
# presented line by line, prefixed by a sequential number
# (E.g., '1) copy', ...)
choices=( 'copy' 'exit' )
# Present the choices.
# The user chooses by entering the *number* before the desired choice.
select choice in "${choices[@]}"; do
# If an invalid number was chosen, $choice will be empty.
# Report an error and prompt again.
[[ -n $choice ]] || { echo "Invalid choice." >&2; continue; }
# Examine the choice.
# Note that it is the choice string itself, not its number
# that is reported in $choice.
case $choice in
copy)
echo "Copying..."
# Set flag here, or call function, ...
;;
exit)
echo "Exiting. "
exit 0
esac
# Getting here means that a valid choice was made,
# so break out of the select statement and continue below,
# if desired.
# Note that without an explicit break (or exit) statement,
# bash will continue to prompt.
break
done