| 1 |
This is the Bash FAQ, version 4.15, for Bash version 5.0. |
| 2 |
|
| 3 |
This document contains a set of frequently-asked questions concerning |
| 4 |
Bash, the GNU Bourne-Again Shell. Bash is a freely-available command |
| 5 |
interpreter with advanced features for both interactive use and shell |
| 6 |
programming. |
| 7 |
|
| 8 |
Another good source of basic information about shells is the collection |
| 9 |
of FAQ articles periodically posted to comp.unix.shell. |
| 10 |
|
| 11 |
Questions and comments concerning this document should be sent to |
| 12 |
chet.ramey@case.edu. |
| 13 |
|
| 14 |
This document is available for anonymous FTP with the URL |
| 15 |
|
| 16 |
ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/FAQ |
| 17 |
|
| 18 |
The Bash home page is http://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/~chet/bash/bashtop.html |
| 19 |
|
| 20 |
---------- |
| 21 |
Contents: |
| 22 |
|
| 23 |
Section A: The Basics |
| 24 |
|
| 25 |
A1) What is it? |
| 26 |
A2) What's the latest version? |
| 27 |
A3) Where can I get it? |
| 28 |
A4) On what machines will bash run? |
| 29 |
A5) Will bash run on operating systems other than Unix? |
| 30 |
A6) How can I build bash with gcc? |
| 31 |
A7) How can I make bash my login shell? |
| 32 |
A8) I just changed my login shell to bash, and now I can't FTP into my |
| 33 |
machine. Why not? |
| 34 |
A9) What's the `POSIX Shell and Utilities standard'? |
| 35 |
A10) What is the bash `posix mode'? |
| 36 |
|
| 37 |
Section B: The latest version |
| 38 |
|
| 39 |
B1) What's new in version 4.3? |
| 40 |
B2) Are there any user-visible incompatibilities between bash-4.3 and |
| 41 |
previous bash versions? |
| 42 |
|
| 43 |
Section C: Differences from other Unix shells |
| 44 |
|
| 45 |
C1) How does bash differ from sh, the Bourne shell? |
| 46 |
C2) How does bash differ from the Korn shell, version ksh88? |
| 47 |
C3) Which new features in ksh-93 are not in bash, and which are? |
| 48 |
|
| 49 |
Section D: Why does bash do some things differently than other Unix shells? |
| 50 |
|
| 51 |
D1) Why does bash run a different version of `command' than |
| 52 |
`which command' says it will? |
| 53 |
D2) Why doesn't bash treat brace expansions exactly like csh? |
| 54 |
D3) Why doesn't bash have csh variable modifiers? |
| 55 |
D4) How can I make my csh aliases work when I convert to bash? |
| 56 |
D5) How can I pipe standard output and standard error from one command to |
| 57 |
another, like csh does with `|&'? |
| 58 |
D6) Now that I've converted from ksh to bash, are there equivalents to |
| 59 |
ksh features like autoloaded functions and the `whence' command? |
| 60 |
|
| 61 |
Section E: Why does bash do certain things the way it does? |
| 62 |
|
| 63 |
E1) Why is the bash builtin `test' slightly different from /bin/test? |
| 64 |
E2) Why does bash sometimes say `Broken pipe'? |
| 65 |
E3) When I have terminal escape sequences in my prompt, why does bash |
| 66 |
wrap lines at the wrong column? |
| 67 |
E4) If I pipe the output of a command into `read variable', why doesn't |
| 68 |
the output show up in $variable when the read command finishes? |
| 69 |
E5) I have a bunch of shell scripts that use backslash-escaped characters |
| 70 |
in arguments to `echo'. Bash doesn't interpret these characters. Why |
| 71 |
not, and how can I make it understand them? |
| 72 |
E6) Why doesn't a while or for loop get suspended when I type ^Z? |
| 73 |
E7) What about empty for loops in Makefiles? |
| 74 |
E8) Why does the arithmetic evaluation code complain about `08'? |
| 75 |
E9) Why does the pattern matching expression [A-Z]* match files beginning |
| 76 |
with every letter except `z'? |
| 77 |
E10) Why does `cd //' leave $PWD as `//'? |
| 78 |
E11) If I resize my xterm while another program is running, why doesn't bash |
| 79 |
notice the change? |
| 80 |
E12) Why don't negative offsets in substring expansion work like I expect? |
| 81 |
E13) Why does filename completion misbehave if a colon appears in the filename? |
| 82 |
E14) Why does quoting the pattern argument to the regular expression matching |
| 83 |
conditional operator (=~) cause matching to stop working? |
| 84 |
E15) Tell me more about the shell compatibility level. |
| 85 |
|
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Section F: Things to watch out for on certain Unix versions |
| 87 |
|
| 88 |
F1) Why can't I use command line editing in my `cmdtool'? |
| 89 |
F2) I built bash on Solaris 2. Why do globbing expansions and filename |
| 90 |
completion chop off the first few characters of each filename? |
| 91 |
F3) Why does bash dump core after I interrupt username completion or |
| 92 |
`~user' tilde expansion on a machine running NIS? |
| 93 |
F4) I'm running SVR4.2. Why is the line erased every time I type `@'? |
| 94 |
F5) Why does bash report syntax errors when my C News scripts use a |
| 95 |
redirection before a subshell command? |
| 96 |
F6) Why can't I use vi-mode editing on Red Hat Linux 6.1? |
| 97 |
F7) Why do bash-2.05a and bash-2.05b fail to compile `printf.def' on |
| 98 |
HP/UX 11.x? |
| 99 |
|
| 100 |
Section G: How can I get bash to do certain common things? |
| 101 |
|
| 102 |
G1) How can I get bash to read and display eight-bit characters? |
| 103 |
G2) How do I write a function `x' to replace builtin command `x', but |
| 104 |
still invoke the command from within the function? |
| 105 |
G3) How can I find the value of a shell variable whose name is the value |
| 106 |
of another shell variable? |
| 107 |
G4) How can I make the bash `time' reserved word print timing output that |
| 108 |
looks like the output from my system's /usr/bin/time? |
| 109 |
G5) How do I get the current directory into my prompt? |
| 110 |
G6) How can I rename "*.foo" to "*.bar"? |
| 111 |
G7) How can I translate a filename from uppercase to lowercase? |
| 112 |
G8) How can I write a filename expansion (globbing) pattern that will match |
| 113 |
all files in the current directory except "." and ".."? |
| 114 |
|
| 115 |
Section H: Where do I go from here? |
| 116 |
|
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H1) How do I report bugs in bash, and where should I look for fixes and |
| 118 |
advice? |
| 119 |
H2) What kind of bash documentation is there? |
| 120 |
H3) What's coming in future versions? |
| 121 |
H4) What's on the bash `wish list'? |
| 122 |
H5) When will the next release appear? |
| 123 |
|
| 124 |
---------- |
| 125 |
Section A: The Basics |
| 126 |
|
| 127 |
A1) What is it? |
| 128 |
|
| 129 |
Bash is a Unix command interpreter (shell). It is an implementation of |
| 130 |
the Posix 1003.2 shell standard, and resembles the Korn and System V |
| 131 |
shells. |
| 132 |
|
| 133 |
Bash contains a number of enhancements over those shells, both |
| 134 |
for interactive use and shell programming. Features geared |
| 135 |
toward interactive use include command line editing, command |
| 136 |
history, job control, aliases, and prompt expansion. Programming |
| 137 |
features include additional variable expansions, shell |
| 138 |
arithmetic, and a number of variables and options to control |
| 139 |
shell behavior. |
| 140 |
|
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Bash was originally written by Brian Fox of the Free Software |
| 142 |
Foundation. The current developer and maintainer is Chet Ramey |
| 143 |
of Case Western Reserve University. |
| 144 |
|
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A2) What's the latest version? |
| 146 |
|
| 147 |
The latest version is 4.3, first made available on 26 February, 2014. |
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|
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A3) Where can I get it? |
| 150 |
|
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Bash is the GNU project's shell, and so is available from the |
| 152 |
master GNU archive site, ftp.gnu.org, and its mirrors. The |
| 153 |
latest version is also available for FTP from ftp.cwru.edu. |
| 154 |
The following URLs tell how to get version 4.3: |
| 155 |
|
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ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/bash-4.3.tar.gz |
| 157 |
ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/bash-4.3.tar.gz |
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|
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Formatted versions of the documentation are available with the URLs: |
| 160 |
|
| 161 |
ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/bash-doc-4.3.tar.gz |
| 162 |
ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/bash-doc-4.3.tar.gz |
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|
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Any patches for the current version are available with the URL: |
| 165 |
|
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ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/bash-4.3-patches/ |
| 167 |
|
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A4) On what machines will bash run? |
| 169 |
|
| 170 |
Bash has been ported to nearly every version of Unix. All you |
| 171 |
should have to do to build it on a machine for which a port |
| 172 |
exists is to type `configure' and then `make'. The build process |
| 173 |
will attempt to discover the version of Unix you have and tailor |
| 174 |
itself accordingly, using a script created by GNU autoconf. |
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|
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More information appears in the file `INSTALL' in the distribution. |
| 177 |
|
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The Bash web page (http://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/~chet/bash/bashtop.html) |
| 179 |
explains how to obtain binary versions of bash for most of the major |
| 180 |
commercial Unix systems. |
| 181 |
|
| 182 |
A5) Will bash run on operating systems other than Unix? |
| 183 |
|
| 184 |
Configuration specifics for Unix-like systems such as QNX and |
| 185 |
LynxOS are included in the distribution. Bash-2.05 and later |
| 186 |
versions should compile and run on Minix 2.0 (patches were |
| 187 |
contributed), but I don't believe anyone has built bash-2.x on |
| 188 |
earlier Minix versions yet. |
| 189 |
|
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Bash has been ported to versions of Windows implementing the Win32 |
| 191 |
programming interface. This includes Windows 95 and Windows NT. |
| 192 |
The port was done by Cygnus Solutions (now part of Red Hat) as part |
| 193 |
of their CYGWIN project. For more information about the project, see |
| 194 |
http://www.cygwin.com/. |
| 195 |
|
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Cygnus originally ported bash-1.14.7, and that port was part of their |
| 197 |
early GNU-Win32 (the original name) releases. Cygnus has also done |
| 198 |
ports of bash-3.2 and bash-4.0 to the CYGWIN environment, and both |
| 199 |
are available as part of their current release. |
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|
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Bash-2.05b and later versions should require no local Cygnus changes to |
| 202 |
build and run under CYGWIN. |
| 203 |
|
| 204 |
DJ Delorie has a port of bash-2.x which runs under MS-DOS, as part |
| 205 |
of the DJGPP project. For more information on the project, see |
| 206 |
|
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http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/ |
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|
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I have been told that the original DJGPP port was done by Daisuke Aoyama. |
| 210 |
|
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Mark Elbrecht <snowball3@bigfoot.com> has sent me notice that bash-2.04 |
| 212 |
is available for DJGPP V2. The files are available as: |
| 213 |
|
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ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204b.zip binary |
| 215 |
ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204d.zip documentation |
| 216 |
ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204s.zip source |
| 217 |
|
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Mark began to work with bash-2.05, but I don't know the current status. |
| 219 |
|
| 220 |
Bash-3.0 compiles and runs with no modifications under Microsoft's Services |
| 221 |
for Unix (SFU), once known as Interix. I do not anticipate any problems |
| 222 |
with building bash-4.2 and later, but will gladly accept any patches that |
| 223 |
are needed. |
| 224 |
|
| 225 |
A6) How can I build bash with gcc? |
| 226 |
|
| 227 |
Bash configures to use gcc by default if it is available. Read the |
| 228 |
file INSTALL in the distribution for more information. |
| 229 |
|
| 230 |
A7) How can I make bash my login shell? |
| 231 |
|
| 232 |
Some machines let you use `chsh' to change your login shell. Other |
| 233 |
systems use `passwd -s' or `passwd -e'. If one of these works for |
| 234 |
you, that's all you need. Note that many systems require the full |
| 235 |
pathname to a shell to appear in /etc/shells before you can make it |
| 236 |
your login shell. For this, you may need the assistance of your |
| 237 |
friendly local system administrator. |
| 238 |
|
| 239 |
If you cannot do this, you can still use bash as your login shell, but |
| 240 |
you need to perform some tricks. The basic idea is to add a command |
| 241 |
to your login shell's startup file to replace your login shell with |
| 242 |
bash. |
| 243 |
|
| 244 |
For example, if your login shell is csh or tcsh, and you have installed |
| 245 |
bash in /usr/gnu/bin/bash, add the following line to ~/.login: |
| 246 |
|
| 247 |
if ( -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ) exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login |
| 248 |
|
| 249 |
(the `--login' tells bash that it is a login shell). |
| 250 |
|
| 251 |
It's not a good idea to put this command into ~/.cshrc, because every |
| 252 |
csh you run without the `-f' option, even ones started to run csh scripts, |
| 253 |
reads that file. If you must put the command in ~/.cshrc, use something |
| 254 |
like |
| 255 |
|
| 256 |
if ( $?prompt ) exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login |
| 257 |
|
| 258 |
to ensure that bash is exec'd only when the csh is interactive. |
| 259 |
|
| 260 |
If your login shell is sh or ksh, you have to do two things. |
| 261 |
|
| 262 |
First, create an empty file in your home directory named `.bash_profile'. |
| 263 |
The existence of this file will prevent the exec'd bash from trying to |
| 264 |
read ~/.profile, and re-execing itself over and over again. ~/.bash_profile |
| 265 |
is the first file bash tries to read initialization commands from when |
| 266 |
it is invoked as a login shell. |
| 267 |
|
| 268 |
Next, add a line similar to the above to ~/.profile: |
| 269 |
|
| 270 |
[ -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && [ -x /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && \ |
| 271 |
exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login |
| 272 |
|
| 273 |
This will cause login shells to replace themselves with bash running as |
| 274 |
a login shell. Once you have this working, you can copy your initialization |
| 275 |
code from ~/.profile to ~/.bash_profile. |
| 276 |
|
| 277 |
I have received word that the recipe supplied above is insufficient for |
| 278 |
machines running CDE. CDE has a maze of twisty little startup files, all |
| 279 |
slightly different. |
| 280 |
|
| 281 |
If you cannot change your login shell in the password file to bash, you |
| 282 |
will have to (apparently) live with CDE using the shell in the password |
| 283 |
file to run its startup scripts. If you have changed your shell to bash, |
| 284 |
there is code in the CDE startup files (on Solaris, at least) that attempts |
| 285 |
to do the right thing. It is, however, often broken, and may require that |
| 286 |
you use the $BASH_ENV trick described below. |
| 287 |
|
| 288 |
`dtterm' claims to use $SHELL as the default program to start, so if you |
| 289 |
can change $SHELL in the CDE startup files, you should be able to use bash |
| 290 |
in your terminal windows. |
| 291 |
|
| 292 |
Setting DTSOURCEPROFILE in ~/.dtprofile will cause the `Xsession' program |
| 293 |
to read your login shell's startup files. You may be able to use bash for |
| 294 |
the rest of the CDE programs by setting SHELL to bash in ~/.dtprofile as |
| 295 |
well, but I have not tried this. |
| 296 |
|
| 297 |
You can use the above `exec' recipe to start bash when not logging in with |
| 298 |
CDE by testing the value of the DT variable: |
| 299 |
|
| 300 |
if [ -n "$DT" ]; then |
| 301 |
[ -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login |
| 302 |
fi |
| 303 |
|
| 304 |
If CDE starts its shells non-interactively during login, the login shell |
| 305 |
startup files (~/.profile, ~/.bash_profile) will not be sourced at login. |
| 306 |
To get around this problem, append a line similar to the following to your |
| 307 |
~/.dtprofile: |
| 308 |
|
| 309 |
BASH_ENV=${HOME}/.bash_profile ; export BASH_ENV |
| 310 |
|
| 311 |
and add the following line to the beginning of ~/.bash_profile: |
| 312 |
|
| 313 |
unset BASH_ENV |
| 314 |
|
| 315 |
A8) I just changed my login shell to bash, and now I can't FTP into my |
| 316 |
machine. Why not? |
| 317 |
|
| 318 |
You must add the full pathname to bash to the file /etc/shells. As |
| 319 |
noted in the answer to the previous question, many systems require |
| 320 |
this before you can make bash your login shell. |
| 321 |
|
| 322 |
Most versions of ftpd use this file to prohibit `special' users |
| 323 |
such as `uucp' and `news' from using FTP. |
| 324 |
|
| 325 |
A9) What's the `POSIX Shell and Utilities standard'? |
| 326 |
|
| 327 |
POSIX is a name originally coined by Richard Stallman for a |
| 328 |
family of open system standards based on UNIX. There are a |
| 329 |
number of aspects of UNIX under consideration for |
| 330 |
standardization, from the basic system services at the system |
| 331 |
call and C library level to applications and tools to system |
| 332 |
administration and management. Each area of standardization is |
| 333 |
assigned to a working group in the 1003 series. |
| 334 |
|
| 335 |
The POSIX Shell and Utilities standard was originally developed by |
| 336 |
IEEE Working Group 1003.2 (POSIX.2). Today it has been merged with |
| 337 |
the original 1003.1 Working Group and is maintained by the Austin |
| 338 |
Group (a joint working group of the IEEE, The Open Group and |
| 339 |
ISO/IEC SC22/WG15). Today the Shell and Utilities are a volume |
| 340 |
within the set of documents that make up IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, and |
| 341 |
thus now the former POSIX.2 (from 1992) is now part of the current |
| 342 |
POSIX.1 standard (POSIX 1003.1-2001). |
| 343 |
|
| 344 |
The Shell and Utilities volume concentrates on the command |
| 345 |
interpreter interface and utility programs commonly executed from |
| 346 |
the command line or by other programs. The standard is freely |
| 347 |
available on the web at http://www.UNIX-systems.org/version3/ . |
| 348 |
Work continues at the Austin Group on maintenance issues; see |
| 349 |
http://www.opengroup.org/austin/ to join the discussions. |
| 350 |
|
| 351 |
Bash is concerned with the aspects of the shell's behavior defined |
| 352 |
by the POSIX Shell and Utilities volume. The shell command |
| 353 |
language has of course been standardized, including the basic flow |
| 354 |
control and program execution constructs, I/O redirection and |
| 355 |
pipelining, argument handling, variable expansion, and quoting. |
| 356 |
|
| 357 |
The `special' builtins, which must be implemented as part of the |
| 358 |
shell to provide the desired functionality, are specified as |
| 359 |
being part of the shell; examples of these are `eval' and |
| 360 |
`export'. Other utilities appear in the sections of POSIX not |
| 361 |
devoted to the shell which are commonly (and in some cases must |
| 362 |
be) implemented as builtin commands, such as `read' and `test'. |
| 363 |
POSIX also specifies aspects of the shell's interactive |
| 364 |
behavior as part of the UPE, including job control and command |
| 365 |
line editing. Only vi-style line editing commands have been |
| 366 |
standardized; emacs editing commands were left out due to |
| 367 |
objections. |
| 368 |
|
| 369 |
The latest version of the POSIX Shell and Utilities standard is |
| 370 |
available (now updated to the 2004 Edition) as part of the Single |
| 371 |
UNIX Specification Version 3 at |
| 372 |
|
| 373 |
http://www.UNIX-systems.org/version3/ |
| 374 |
|
| 375 |
A10) What is the bash `posix mode'? |
| 376 |
|
| 377 |
Although bash is an implementation of the POSIX shell |
| 378 |
specification, there are areas where the bash default behavior |
| 379 |
differs from that spec. The bash `posix mode' changes the bash |
| 380 |
behavior in these areas so that it obeys the spec more closely. |
| 381 |
|
| 382 |
Posix mode is entered by starting bash with the --posix or |
| 383 |
'-o posix' option or executing `set -o posix' after bash is running. |
| 384 |
|
| 385 |
The specific aspects of bash which change when posix mode is |
| 386 |
active are listed in the file POSIX in the bash distribution. |
| 387 |
They are also listed in a section in the Bash Reference Manual |
| 388 |
(from which that file is generated). |
| 389 |
|
| 390 |
Section B: The latest version |
| 391 |
|
| 392 |
B1) What's new in version 4.3? |
| 393 |
|
| 394 |
Bash-4.3 is the third revision to the fourth major release of bash. |
| 395 |
|
| 396 |
Bash-4.3 contains the following new features (see the manual page for |
| 397 |
complete descriptions and the CHANGES and NEWS files in the bash-4.3 |
| 398 |
distribution): |
| 399 |
|
| 400 |
o The `helptopic' completion action now maps to all the help topics, not just |
| 401 |
the shell builtins. |
| 402 |
|
| 403 |
o The `help' builtin no longer does prefix substring matching first, so |
| 404 |
`help read' does not match `readonly', but will do it if exact string |
| 405 |
matching fails. |
| 406 |
|
| 407 |
o The shell can be compiled to not display a message about processes that |
| 408 |
terminate due to SIGTERM. |
| 409 |
|
| 410 |
o Non-interactive shells now react to the setting of checkwinsize and set |
| 411 |
LINES and COLUMNS after a foreground job exits. |
| 412 |
|
| 413 |
o There is a new shell option, `globasciiranges', which, when set to on, |
| 414 |
forces globbing range comparisons to use character ordering as if they |
| 415 |
were run in the C locale. |
| 416 |
|
| 417 |
o There is a new shell option, `direxpand', which makes filename completion |
| 418 |
expand variables in directory names in the way bash-4.1 did. |
| 419 |
|
| 420 |
o In Posix mode, the `command' builtin does not change whether or not a |
| 421 |
builtin it shadows is treated as an assignment builtin. |
| 422 |
|
| 423 |
o The `return' and `exit' builtins accept negative exit status arguments. |
| 424 |
|
| 425 |
o The word completion code checks whether or not a filename containing a |
| 426 |
shell variable expands to a directory name and appends `/' to the word |
| 427 |
as appropriate. The same code expands shell variables in command names |
| 428 |
when performing command completion. |
| 429 |
|
| 430 |
o In Posix mode, it is now an error to attempt to define a shell function |
| 431 |
with the same name as a Posix special builtin. |
| 432 |
|
| 433 |
o When compiled for strict Posix conformance, history expansion is disabled |
| 434 |
by default. |
| 435 |
|
| 436 |
o The history expansion character (!) does not cause history expansion when |
| 437 |
followed by the closing quote in a double-quoted string. |
| 438 |
|
| 439 |
o `complete' and its siblings compgen/compopt now takes a new `-o noquote' |
| 440 |
option to inhibit quoting of the completions. |
| 441 |
|
| 442 |
o Setting HISTSIZE to a value less than zero causes the history list to be |
| 443 |
unlimited (setting it 0 zero disables the history list). |
| 444 |
|
| 445 |
o Setting HISTFILESIZE to a value less than zero causes the history file size |
| 446 |
to be unlimited (setting it to 0 causes the history file to be truncated |
| 447 |
to zero size). |
| 448 |
|
| 449 |
o The `read' builtin now skips NUL bytes in the input. |
| 450 |
|
| 451 |
o There is a new `bind -X' option to print all key sequences bound to Unix |
| 452 |
commands. |
| 453 |
|
| 454 |
o When in Posix mode, `read' is interruptible by a trapped signal. After |
| 455 |
running the trap handler, read returns 128+signal and throws away any |
| 456 |
partially-read input. |
| 457 |
|
| 458 |
o The command completion code skips whitespace and assignment statements |
| 459 |
before looking for the command name word to be completed. |
| 460 |
|
| 461 |
o The build process has a new mechanism for constructing separate help files |
| 462 |
that better reflects the current set of compilation options. |
| 463 |
|
| 464 |
o The -nt and -ot options to test now work with files with nanosecond |
| 465 |
timestamp resolution. |
| 466 |
|
| 467 |
o The shell saves the command history in any shell for which history is |
| 468 |
enabled and HISTFILE is set, not just interactive shells. |
| 469 |
|
| 470 |
o The shell has `nameref' variables and new -n(/+n) options to declare and |
| 471 |
unset to use them, and a `test -R' option to test for them. |
| 472 |
|
| 473 |
o The shell now allows assigning, referencing, and unsetting elements of |
| 474 |
indexed arrays using negative subscripts (a[-1]=2, echo ${a[-1]}) which |
| 475 |
count back from the last element of the array. |
| 476 |
|
| 477 |
o The {x}<word redirection feature now allows words like {array[ind]} and |
| 478 |
can use variables with special meanings to the shell (e.g., BASH_XTRACEFD). |
| 479 |
|
| 480 |
o There is a new CHILD_MAX special shell variable; its value controls the |
| 481 |
number of exited child statues the shell remembers. |
| 482 |
|
| 483 |
o There is a new configuration option (--enable-direxpand-default) that |
| 484 |
causes the `direxpand' shell option to be enabled by default. |
| 485 |
|
| 486 |
o Bash does not do anything special to ensure that the file descriptor |
| 487 |
assigned to X in {x}<foo remains open after the block containing it |
| 488 |
completes. |
| 489 |
|
| 490 |
o The `wait' builtin has a new `-n' option to wait for the next child to |
| 491 |
change status. |
| 492 |
|
| 493 |
o The `printf' %(...)T format specifier now uses the current time if no |
| 494 |
argument is supplied. |
| 495 |
|
| 496 |
o There is a new variable, BASH_COMPAT, that controls the current shell |
| 497 |
compatibility level. |
| 498 |
|
| 499 |
o The `popd' builtin now treats additional arguments as errors. |
| 500 |
|
| 501 |
o The brace expansion code now treats a failed sequence expansion as a |
| 502 |
simple string and will continue to expand brace terms in the remainder |
| 503 |
of the word. |
| 504 |
|
| 505 |
o Shells started to run process substitutions now run any trap set on EXIT. |
| 506 |
|
| 507 |
o The fc builtin now interprets -0 as the current command line. |
| 508 |
|
| 509 |
o Completing directory names containing shell variables now adds a trailing |
| 510 |
slash if the expanded result is a directory. |
| 511 |
|
| 512 |
A short feature history dating back to Bash-2.0: |
| 513 |
|
| 514 |
Bash-4.2 contained the following new features: |
| 515 |
|
| 516 |
o `exec -a foo' now sets $0 to `foo' in an executable shell script without a |
| 517 |
leading #!. |
| 518 |
|
| 519 |
o Subshells begun to execute command substitutions or run shell functions or |
| 520 |
builtins in subshells do not reset trap strings until a new trap is |
| 521 |
specified. This allows $(trap) to display the caller's traps and the |
| 522 |
trap strings to persist until a new trap is set. |
| 523 |
|
| 524 |
o `trap -p' will now show signals ignored at shell startup, though their |
| 525 |
disposition still cannot be modified. |
| 526 |
|
| 527 |
o $'...', echo, and printf understand \uXXXX and \UXXXXXXXX escape sequences. |
| 528 |
|
| 529 |
o declare/typeset has a new `-g' option, which creates variables in the |
| 530 |
global scope even when run in a shell function. |
| 531 |
|
| 532 |
o test/[/[[ have a new -v variable unary operator, which returns success if |
| 533 |
`variable' has been set. |
| 534 |
|
| 535 |
o Posix parsing changes to allow `! time command' and multiple consecutive |
| 536 |
instances of `!' (which toggle) and `time' (which have no cumulative |
| 537 |
effect). |
| 538 |
|
| 539 |
o Posix change to allow `time' as a command by itself to print the elapsed |
| 540 |
user, system, and real times for the shell and its children. |
| 541 |
|
| 542 |
o $((...)) is always parsed as an arithmetic expansion first, instead of as |
| 543 |
a potential nested command substitution, as Posix requires. |
| 544 |
|
| 545 |
o A new FUNCNEST variable to allow the user to control the maximum shell |
| 546 |
function nesting (recursive execution) level. |
| 547 |
|
| 548 |
o The mapfile builtin now supplies a third argument to the callback command: |
| 549 |
the line about to be assigned to the supplied array index. |
| 550 |
|
| 551 |
o The printf builtin has as new %(fmt)T specifier, which allows time values |
| 552 |
to use strftime-like formatting. |
| 553 |
|
| 554 |
o There is a new `compat41' shell option. |
| 555 |
|
| 556 |
o The cd builtin has a new Posix-mandated `-e' option. |
| 557 |
|
| 558 |
o Negative subscripts to indexed arrays, previously errors, now are treated |
| 559 |
as offsets from the maximum assigned index + 1. |
| 560 |
|
| 561 |
o Negative length specifications in the ${var:offset:length} expansion, |
| 562 |
previously errors, are now treated as offsets from the end of the variable. |
| 563 |
|
| 564 |
o Parsing change to allow `time -p --'. |
| 565 |
|
| 566 |
o Posix-mode parsing change to not recognize `time' as a keyword if the |
| 567 |
following token begins with a `-'. This means no more Posix-mode |
| 568 |
`time -p'. Posix interpretation 267. |
| 569 |
|
| 570 |
o There is a new `lastpipe' shell option that runs the last command of a |
| 571 |
pipeline in the current shell context. The lastpipe option has no |
| 572 |
effect if job control is enabled. |
| 573 |
|
| 574 |
o History expansion no longer expands the `$!' variable expansion. |
| 575 |
|
| 576 |
o Posix mode shells no longer exit if a variable assignment error occurs |
| 577 |
with an assignment preceding a command that is not a special builtin. |
| 578 |
|
| 579 |
o Non-interactive mode shells exit if -u is enabled an an attempt is made |
| 580 |
to use an unset variable with the % or # expansions, the `//', `^', or |
| 581 |
`,' expansions, or the parameter length expansion. |
| 582 |
|
| 583 |
o Posix-mode shells use the argument passed to `.' as-is if a $PATH search |
| 584 |
fails, effectively searching the current directory. Posix-2008 change. |
| 585 |
|
| 586 |
A short feature history dating back to Bash-2.0: |
| 587 |
|
| 588 |
Bash-4.1 contained the following new features: |
| 589 |
|
| 590 |
o Here-documents within $(...) command substitutions may once more be |
| 591 |
delimited by the closing right paren, instead of requiring a newline. |
| 592 |
|
| 593 |
o Bash's file status checks (executable, readable, etc.) now take file |
| 594 |
system ACLs into account on file systems that support them. |
| 595 |
|
| 596 |
o Bash now passes environment variables with names that are not valid |
| 597 |
shell variable names through into the environment passed to child |
| 598 |
processes. |
| 599 |
|
| 600 |
o The `execute-unix-command' readline function now attempts to clear and |
| 601 |
reuse the current line rather than move to a new one after the command |
| 602 |
executes. |
| 603 |
|
| 604 |
o `printf -v' can now assign values to array indices. |
| 605 |
|
| 606 |
o New `complete -E' and `compopt -E' options that work on the "empty" |
| 607 |
completion: completion attempted on an empty command line. |
| 608 |
|
| 609 |
o New complete/compgen/compopt -D option to define a `default' completion: |
| 610 |
a completion to be invoked on command for which no completion has been |
| 611 |
defined. If this function returns 124, programmable completion is |
| 612 |
attempted again, allowing a user to dynamically build a set of completions |
| 613 |
as completion is attempted by having the default completion function |
| 614 |
install individual completion functions each time it is invoked. |
| 615 |
|
| 616 |
o When displaying associative arrays, subscripts are now quoted. |
| 617 |
|
| 618 |
o Changes to dabbrev-expand to make it more `emacs-like': no space appended |
| 619 |
after matches, completions are not sorted, and most recent history entries |
| 620 |
are presented first. |
| 621 |
|
| 622 |
o The [[ and (( commands are now subject to the setting of `set -e' and the |
| 623 |
ERR trap. |
| 624 |
|
| 625 |
o The source/. builtin now removes NUL bytes from the file before attempting |
| 626 |
to parse commands. |
| 627 |
|
| 628 |
o There is a new configuration option (in config-top.h) that forces bash to |
| 629 |
forward all history entries to syslog. |
| 630 |
|
| 631 |
o A new variable $BASHOPTS to export shell options settable using `shopt' to |
| 632 |
child processes. |
| 633 |
|
| 634 |
o There is a new confgure option that forces the extglob option to be |
| 635 |
enabled by default. |
| 636 |
|
| 637 |
o New variable $BASH_XTRACEFD; when set to an integer bash will write xtrace |
| 638 |
output to that file descriptor. |
| 639 |
|
| 640 |
o If the optional left-hand-side of a redirection is of the form {var}, the |
| 641 |
shell assigns the file descriptor used to $var or uses $var as the file |
| 642 |
descriptor to move or close, depending on the redirection operator. |
| 643 |
|
| 644 |
o The < and > operators to the [[ conditional command now do string |
| 645 |
comparison according to the current locale. |
| 646 |
|
| 647 |
o Programmable completion now uses the completion for `b' instead of `a' |
| 648 |
when completion is attempted on a line like: a $(b c. |
| 649 |
|
| 650 |
o Force extglob on temporarily when parsing the pattern argument to |
| 651 |
the == and != operators to the [[ command, for compatibility. |
| 652 |
|
| 653 |
o Changed the behavior of interrupting the wait builtin when a SIGCHLD is |
| 654 |
received and a trap on SIGCHLD is set to be Posix-mode only. |
| 655 |
|
| 656 |
o The read builtin has a new `-N nchars' option, which reads exactly NCHARS |
| 657 |
characters, ignoring delimiters like newline. |
| 658 |
|
| 659 |
o The mapfile/readarray builtin no longer stores the commands it invokes via |
| 660 |
callbacks in the history list. |
| 661 |
|
| 662 |
o There is a new `compat40' shopt option. |
| 663 |
|
| 664 |
o The < and > operators to [[ do string comparisons using the current locale |
| 665 |
only if the compatibility level is greater than 40 (set to 41 by default). |
| 666 |
|
| 667 |
o New bindable readline function: menu-complete-backward. |
| 668 |
|
| 669 |
o In the readline vi-mode insertion keymap, C-n is now bound to menu-complete |
| 670 |
by default, and C-p to menu-complete-backward. |
| 671 |
|
| 672 |
o When in readline vi command mode, repeatedly hitting ESC now does nothing, |
| 673 |
even when ESC introduces a bound key sequence. This is closer to how |
| 674 |
historical vi behaves. |
| 675 |
|
| 676 |
o New bindable readline function: skip-csi-sequence. Can be used as a |
| 677 |
default to consume key sequences generated by keys like Home and End |
| 678 |
without having to bind all keys. |
| 679 |
|
| 680 |
o New bindable readline variable: skip-completed-text, active when |
| 681 |
completing in the middle of a word. If enabled, it means that characters |
| 682 |
in the completion that match characters in the remainder of the word are |
| 683 |
"skipped" rather than inserted into the line. |
| 684 |
|
| 685 |
o The pre-readline-6.0 version of menu completion is available as |
| 686 |
"old-menu-complete" for users who do not like the readline-6.0 version. |
| 687 |
|
| 688 |
o New bindable readline variable: echo-control-characters. If enabled, and |
| 689 |
the tty ECHOCTL bit is set, controls the echoing of characters |
| 690 |
corresponding to keyboard-generated signals. |
| 691 |
|
| 692 |
o New bindable readline variable: enable-meta-key. Controls whether or not |
| 693 |
readline sends the smm/rmm sequences if the terminal indicates it has a |
| 694 |
meta key that enables eight-bit characters. |
| 695 |
|
| 696 |
Bash-4.0 contained the following new features: |
| 697 |
|
| 698 |
o When using substring expansion on the positional parameters, a starting |
| 699 |
index of 0 now causes $0 to be prefixed to the list. |
| 700 |
|
| 701 |
o There is a new variable, $BASHPID, which always returns the process id of |
| 702 |
the current shell. |
| 703 |
|
| 704 |
o There is a new `autocd' option that, when enabled, causes bash to attempt |
| 705 |
to `cd' to a directory name that is supplied as the first word of a |
| 706 |
simple command. |
| 707 |
|
| 708 |
o There is a new `checkjobs' option that causes the shell to check for and |
| 709 |
report any running or stopped jobs at exit. |
| 710 |
|
| 711 |
o The programmable completion code exports a new COMP_TYPE variable, set to |
| 712 |
a character describing the type of completion being attempted. |
| 713 |
|
| 714 |
o The programmable completion code exports a new COMP_KEY variable, set to |
| 715 |
the character that caused the completion to be invoked (e.g., TAB). |
| 716 |
|
| 717 |
o The programmable completion code now uses the same set of characters as |
| 718 |
readline when breaking the command line into a list of words. |
| 719 |
|
| 720 |
o The block multiplier for the ulimit -c and -f options is now 512 when in |
| 721 |
Posix mode, as Posix specifies. |
| 722 |
|
| 723 |
o Changed the behavior of the read builtin to save any partial input received |
| 724 |
in the specified variable when the read builtin times out. This also |
| 725 |
results in variables specified as arguments to read to be set to the empty |
| 726 |
string when there is no input available. When the read builtin times out, |
| 727 |
it returns an exit status greater than 128. |
| 728 |
|
| 729 |
o The shell now has the notion of a `compatibility level', controlled by |
| 730 |
new variables settable by `shopt'. Setting this variable currently |
| 731 |
restores the bash-3.1 behavior when processing quoted strings on the rhs |
| 732 |
of the `=~' operator to the `[[' command. |
| 733 |
|
| 734 |
o The `ulimit' builtin now has new -b (socket buffer size) and -T (number |
| 735 |
of threads) options. |
| 736 |
|
| 737 |
o There is a new `compopt' builtin that allows completion functions to modify |
| 738 |
completion options for existing completions or the completion currently |
| 739 |
being executed. |
| 740 |
|
| 741 |
o The `read' builtin has a new -i option which inserts text into the reply |
| 742 |
buffer when using readline. |
| 743 |
|
| 744 |
o A new `-E' option to the complete builtin allows control of the default |
| 745 |
behavior for completion on an empty line. |
| 746 |
|
| 747 |
o There is now limited support for completing command name words containing |
| 748 |
globbing characters. |
| 749 |
|
| 750 |
o The `help' builtin now has a new -d option, to display a short description, |
| 751 |
and a -m option, to print help information in a man page-like format. |
| 752 |
|
| 753 |
o There is a new `mapfile' builtin to populate an array with lines from a |
| 754 |
given file. |
| 755 |
|
| 756 |
o If a command is not found, the shell attempts to execute a shell function |
| 757 |
named `command_not_found_handle', supplying the command words as the |
| 758 |
function arguments. |
| 759 |
|
| 760 |
o There is a new shell option: `globstar'. When enabled, the globbing code |
| 761 |
treats `**' specially -- it matches all directories (and files within |
| 762 |
them, when appropriate) recursively. |
| 763 |
|
| 764 |
o There is a new shell option: `dirspell'. When enabled, the filename |
| 765 |
completion code performs spelling correction on directory names during |
| 766 |
completion. |
| 767 |
|
| 768 |
o The `-t' option to the `read' builtin now supports fractional timeout |
| 769 |
values. |
| 770 |
|
| 771 |
o Brace expansion now allows zero-padding of expanded numeric values and |
| 772 |
will add the proper number of zeroes to make sure all values contain the |
| 773 |
same number of digits. |
| 774 |
|
| 775 |
o There is a new bash-specific bindable readline function: `dabbrev-expand'. |
| 776 |
It uses menu completion on a set of words taken from the history list. |
| 777 |
|
| 778 |
o The command assigned to a key sequence with `bind -x' now sets two new |
| 779 |
variables in the environment of the executed command: READLINE_LINE_BUFFER |
| 780 |
and READLINE_POINT. The command can change the current readline line |
| 781 |
and cursor position by modifying READLINE_LINE_BUFFER and READLINE_POINT, |
| 782 |
respectively. |
| 783 |
|
| 784 |
o There is a new >>& redirection operator, which appends the standard output |
| 785 |
and standard error to the named file. |
| 786 |
|
| 787 |
o The parser now understands `|&' as a synonym for `2>&1 |', which redirects |
| 788 |
the standard error for a command through a pipe. |
| 789 |
|
| 790 |
o The new `;&' case statement action list terminator causes execution to |
| 791 |
continue with the action associated with the next pattern in the |
| 792 |
statement rather than terminating the command. |
| 793 |
|
| 794 |
o The new `;;&' case statement action list terminator causes the shell to |
| 795 |
test the next set of patterns after completing execution of the current |
| 796 |
action, rather than terminating the command. |
| 797 |
|
| 798 |
o The shell understands a new variable: PROMPT_DIRTRIM. When set to an |
| 799 |
integer value greater than zero, prompt expansion of \w and \W will |
| 800 |
retain only that number of trailing pathname components and replace |
| 801 |
the intervening characters with `...'. |
| 802 |
|
| 803 |
o There are new case-modifying word expansions: uppercase (^[^]) and |
| 804 |
lowercase (,[,]). They can work on either the first character or |
| 805 |
array element, or globally. They accept an optional shell pattern |
| 806 |
that determines which characters to modify. There is an optionally- |
| 807 |
configured feature to include capitalization operators. |
| 808 |
|
| 809 |
o The shell provides associative array variables, with the appropriate |
| 810 |
support to create, delete, assign values to, and expand them. |
| 811 |
|
| 812 |
o The `declare' builtin now has new -l (convert value to lowercase upon |
| 813 |
assignment) and -u (convert value to uppercase upon assignment) options. |
| 814 |
There is an optionally-configurable -c option to capitalize a value at |
| 815 |
assignment. |
| 816 |
|
| 817 |
o There is a new `coproc' reserved word that specifies a coprocess: an |
| 818 |
asynchronous command run with two pipes connected to the creating shell. |
| 819 |
Coprocs can be named. The input and output file descriptors and the |
| 820 |
PID of the coprocess are available to the calling shell in variables |
| 821 |
with coproc-specific names. |
| 822 |
|
| 823 |
o A value of 0 for the -t option to `read' now returns success if there is |
| 824 |
input available to be read from the specified file descriptor. |
| 825 |
|
| 826 |
o CDPATH and GLOBIGNORE are ignored when the shell is running in privileged |
| 827 |
mode. |
| 828 |
|
| 829 |
o New bindable readline functions shell-forward-word and shell-backward-word, |
| 830 |
which move forward and backward words delimited by shell metacharacters |
| 831 |
and honor shell quoting. |
| 832 |
|
| 833 |
o New bindable readline functions shell-backward-kill-word and shell-kill-word |
| 834 |
which kill words backward and forward, but use the same word boundaries |
| 835 |
as shell-forward-word and shell-backward-word. |
| 836 |
|
| 837 |
Bash-3.2 contained the following new features: |
| 838 |
|
| 839 |
o Bash-3.2 now checks shell scripts for NUL characters rather than non-printing |
| 840 |
characters when deciding whether or not a script is a binary file. |
| 841 |
|
| 842 |
o Quoting the string argument to the [[ command's =~ (regexp) operator now |
| 843 |
forces string matching, as with the other pattern-matching operators. |
| 844 |
|
| 845 |
Bash-3.1 contained the following new features: |
| 846 |
|
| 847 |
o Bash-3.1 may now be configured and built in a mode that enforces strict |
| 848 |
POSIX compliance. |
| 849 |
|
| 850 |
o The `+=' assignment operator, which appends to the value of a string or |
| 851 |
array variable, has been implemented. |
| 852 |
|
| 853 |
o It is now possible to ignore case when matching in contexts other than |
| 854 |
filename generation using the new `nocasematch' shell option. |
| 855 |
|
| 856 |
Bash-3.0 contained the following new features: |
| 857 |
|
| 858 |
o Features to support the bash debugger have been implemented, and there |
| 859 |
is a new `extdebug' option to turn the non-default options on |
| 860 |
|
| 861 |
o HISTCONTROL is now a colon-separated list of options and has been |
| 862 |
extended with a new `erasedups' option that will result in only one |
| 863 |
copy of a command being kept in the history list |
| 864 |
|
| 865 |
o Brace expansion has been extended with a new {x..y} form, producing |
| 866 |
sequences of digits or characters |
| 867 |
|
| 868 |
o Timestamps are now kept with history entries, with an option to save |
| 869 |
and restore them from the history file; there is a new HISTTIMEFORMAT |
| 870 |
variable describing how to display the timestamps when listing history |
| 871 |
entries |
| 872 |
|
| 873 |
o The `[[' command can now perform extended regular expression (egrep-like) |
| 874 |
matching, with matched subexpressions placed in the BASH_REMATCH array |
| 875 |
variable |
| 876 |
|
| 877 |
o A new `pipefail' option causes a pipeline to return a failure status if |
| 878 |
any command in it fails |
| 879 |
|
| 880 |
o The `jobs', `kill', and `wait' builtins now accept job control notation |
| 881 |
in their arguments even if job control is not enabled |
| 882 |
|
| 883 |
o The `gettext' package and libintl have been integrated, and the shell |
| 884 |
messages may be translated into other languages |
| 885 |
|
| 886 |
Bash-2.05b introduced the following new features: |
| 887 |
|
| 888 |
o support for multibyte characters has been added to both bash and readline |
| 889 |
|
| 890 |
o the DEBUG trap is now run *before* simple commands, ((...)) commands, |
| 891 |
[[...]] conditional commands, and for ((...)) loops |
| 892 |
|
| 893 |
o the shell now performs arithmetic in the largest integer size the machine |
| 894 |
supports (intmax_t) |
| 895 |
|
| 896 |
o there is a new \D{...} prompt expansion; passes the `...' to strftime(3) |
| 897 |
and inserts the result into the expanded prompt |
| 898 |
|
| 899 |
o there is a new `here-string' redirection operator: <<< word |
| 900 |
|
| 901 |
o when displaying variables, function attributes and definitions are shown |
| 902 |
separately, allowing them to be re-used as input (attempting to re-use |
| 903 |
the old output would result in syntax errors). |
| 904 |
|
| 905 |
o `read' has a new `-u fd' option to read from a specified file descriptor |
| 906 |
|
| 907 |
o the bash debugger in examples/bashdb has been modified to work with the |
| 908 |
new DEBUG trap semantics, the command set has been made more gdb-like, |
| 909 |
and the changes to $LINENO make debugging functions work better |
| 910 |
|
| 911 |
o the expansion of $LINENO inside a shell function is only relative to the |
| 912 |
function start if the shell is interactive -- if the shell is running a |
| 913 |
script, $LINENO expands to the line number in the script. This is as |
| 914 |
POSIX-2001 requires |
| 915 |
|
| 916 |
Bash-2.05a introduced the following new features: |
| 917 |
|
| 918 |
o The `printf' builtin has undergone major work |
| 919 |
|
| 920 |
o There is a new read-only `shopt' option: login_shell, which is set by |
| 921 |
login shells and unset otherwise |
| 922 |
|
| 923 |
o New `\A' prompt string escape sequence; expanding to time in 24-hour |
| 924 |
HH:MM format |
| 925 |
|
| 926 |
o New `-A group/-g' option to complete and compgen; goes group name |
| 927 |
completion |
| 928 |
|
| 929 |
o New [+-]O invocation option to set and unset `shopt' options at startup |
| 930 |
|
| 931 |
o ksh-like `ERR' trap |
| 932 |
|
| 933 |
o `for' loops now allow empty word lists after the `in' reserved word |
| 934 |
|
| 935 |
o new `hard' and `soft' arguments for the `ulimit' builtin |
| 936 |
|
| 937 |
o Readline can be configured to place the user at the same point on the line |
| 938 |
when retrieving commands from the history list |
| 939 |
|
| 940 |
o Readline can be configured to skip `hidden' files (filenames with a leading |
| 941 |
`.' on Unix) when performing completion |
| 942 |
|
| 943 |
Bash-2.05 introduced the following new features: |
| 944 |
|
| 945 |
o This version has once again reverted to using locales and strcoll(3) when |
| 946 |
processing pattern matching bracket expressions, as POSIX requires. |
| 947 |
o Added a new `--init-file' invocation argument as a synonym for `--rcfile', |
| 948 |
per the new GNU coding standards. |
| 949 |
o The /dev/tcp and /dev/udp redirections now accept service names as well as |
| 950 |
port numbers. |
| 951 |
o `complete' and `compgen' now take a `-o value' option, which controls some |
| 952 |
of the aspects of that compspec. Valid values are: |
| 953 |
|
| 954 |
default - perform bash default completion if programmable |
| 955 |
completion produces no matches |
| 956 |
dirnames - perform directory name completion if programmable |
| 957 |
completion produces no matches |
| 958 |
filenames - tell readline that the compspec produces filenames, |
| 959 |
so it can do things like append slashes to |
| 960 |
directory names and suppress trailing spaces |
| 961 |
o A new loadable builtin, realpath, which canonicalizes and expands symlinks |
| 962 |
in pathname arguments. |
| 963 |
o When `set' is called without options, it prints function definitions in a |
| 964 |
way that allows them to be reused as input. This affects `declare' and |
| 965 |
`declare -p' as well. This only happens when the shell is not in POSIX |
| 966 |
mode, since POSIX.2 forbids this behavior. |
| 967 |
|
| 968 |
Bash-2.04 introduced the following new features: |
| 969 |
|
| 970 |
o Programmable word completion with the new `complete' and `compgen' builtins; |
| 971 |
examples are provided in examples/complete/complete-examples |
| 972 |
o `history' has a new `-d' option to delete a history entry |
| 973 |
o `bind' has a new `-x' option to bind key sequences to shell commands |
| 974 |
o The prompt expansion code has new `\j' and `\l' escape sequences |
| 975 |
o The `no_empty_cmd_completion' shell option, if enabled, inhibits |
| 976 |
command completion when TAB is typed on an empty line |
| 977 |
o `help' has a new `-s' option to print a usage synopsis |
| 978 |
o New arithmetic operators: var++, var--, ++var, --var, expr1,expr2 (comma) |
| 979 |
o New ksh93-style arithmetic for command: |
| 980 |
for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done |
| 981 |
o `read' has new options: `-t', `-n', `-d', `-s' |
| 982 |
o The redirection code handles several filenames specially: /dev/fd/N, |
| 983 |
/dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr |
| 984 |
o The redirection code now recognizes /dev/tcp/HOST/PORT and |
| 985 |
/dev/udp/HOST/PORT and tries to open a TCP or UDP socket, respectively, |
| 986 |
to the specified port on the specified host |
| 987 |
o The ${!prefix*} expansion has been implemented |
| 988 |
o A new FUNCNAME variable, which expands to the name of a currently-executing |
| 989 |
function |
| 990 |
o The GROUPS variable is no longer readonly |
| 991 |
o A new shopt `xpg_echo' variable, to control the behavior of echo with |
| 992 |
respect to backslash-escape sequences at runtime |
| 993 |
o The NON_INTERACTIVE_LOGIN_SHELLS #define has returned |
| 994 |
|
| 995 |
The version of Readline released with Bash-2.04, Readline-4.1, had several |
| 996 |
new features as well: |
| 997 |
|
| 998 |
o Parentheses matching is always compiled into readline, and controllable |
| 999 |
with the new `blink-matching-paren' variable |
| 1000 |
o The history-search-forward and history-search-backward functions now leave |
| 1001 |
point at the end of the line when the search string is empty, like |
| 1002 |
reverse-search-history, and forward-search-history |
| 1003 |
o A new function for applications: rl_on_new_line_with_prompt() |
| 1004 |
o New variables for applications: rl_already_prompted, and rl_gnu_readline_p |
| 1005 |
|
| 1006 |
|
| 1007 |
Bash-2.03 had very few new features, in keeping with the convention |
| 1008 |
that odd-numbered releases provide mainly bug fixes. A number of new |
| 1009 |
features were added to Readline, mostly at the request of the Cygnus |
| 1010 |
folks. |
| 1011 |
|
| 1012 |
A new shopt option, `restricted_shell', so that startup files can test |
| 1013 |
whether or not the shell was started in restricted mode |
| 1014 |
Filename generation is now performed on the words between ( and ) in |
| 1015 |
compound array assignments (this is really a bug fix) |
| 1016 |
OLDPWD is now auto-exported, as POSIX.2 requires |
| 1017 |
ENV and BASH_ENV are read-only variables in a restricted shell |
| 1018 |
Bash may now be linked against an already-installed Readline library, |
| 1019 |
as long as the Readline library is version 4 or newer |
| 1020 |
All shells begun with the `--login' option will source the login shell |
| 1021 |
startup files, even if the shell is not interactive |
| 1022 |
|
| 1023 |
There were lots of changes to the version of the Readline library released |
| 1024 |
along with Bash-2.03. For a complete list of the changes, read the file |
| 1025 |
CHANGES in the Bash-2.03 distribution. |
| 1026 |
|
| 1027 |
Bash-2.02 contained the following new features: |
| 1028 |
|
| 1029 |
a new version of malloc (based on the old GNU malloc code in previous |
| 1030 |
bash versions) that is more page-oriented, more conservative |
| 1031 |
with memory usage, does not `orphan' large blocks when they |
| 1032 |
are freed, is usable on 64-bit machines, and has allocation |
| 1033 |
checking turned on unconditionally |
| 1034 |
POSIX.2-style globbing character classes ([:alpha:], [:alnum:], etc.) |
| 1035 |
POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes |
| 1036 |
POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols |
| 1037 |
the ksh [[...]] extended conditional command |
| 1038 |
the ksh egrep-style extended pattern matching operators |
| 1039 |
a new `printf' builtin |
| 1040 |
the ksh-like $(<filename) command substitution, which is equivalent to |
| 1041 |
$(cat filename) |
| 1042 |
new tilde prefixes that expand to directories from the directory stack |
| 1043 |
new `**' arithmetic operator to do exponentiation |
| 1044 |
case-insensitive globbing (filename expansion) |
| 1045 |
menu completion a la tcsh |
| 1046 |
`magic-space' history expansion function like tcsh |
| 1047 |
the readline inputrc `language' has a new file inclusion directive ($include) |
| 1048 |
|
| 1049 |
Bash-2.01 contained only a few new features: |
| 1050 |
|
| 1051 |
new `GROUPS' builtin array variable containing the user's group list |
| 1052 |
new bindable readline commands: history-and-alias-expand-line and |
| 1053 |
alias-expand-line |
| 1054 |
|
| 1055 |
Bash-2.0 contained extensive changes and new features from bash-1.14.7. |
| 1056 |
Here's a short list: |
| 1057 |
|
| 1058 |
new `time' reserved word to time pipelines, shell builtins, and |
| 1059 |
shell functions |
| 1060 |
one-dimensional arrays with a new compound assignment statement, |
| 1061 |
appropriate expansion constructs and modifications to some |
| 1062 |
of the builtins (read, declare, etc.) to use them |
| 1063 |
new quoting syntaxes for ANSI-C string expansion and locale-specific |
| 1064 |
string translation |
| 1065 |
new expansions to do substring extraction, pattern replacement, and |
| 1066 |
indirect variable expansion |
| 1067 |
new builtins: `disown' and `shopt' |
| 1068 |
new variables: HISTIGNORE, SHELLOPTS, PIPESTATUS, DIRSTACK, GLOBIGNORE, |
| 1069 |
MACHTYPE, BASH_VERSINFO |
| 1070 |
special handling of many unused or redundant variables removed |
| 1071 |
(e.g., $notify, $glob_dot_filenames, $no_exit_on_failed_exec) |
| 1072 |
dynamic loading of new builtin commands; many loadable examples provided |
| 1073 |
new prompt expansions: \a, \e, \n, \H, \T, \@, \v, \V |
| 1074 |
history and aliases available in shell scripts |
| 1075 |
new readline variables: enable-keypad, mark-directories, input-meta, |
| 1076 |
visible-stats, disable-completion, comment-begin |
| 1077 |
new readline commands to manipulate the mark and operate on the region |
| 1078 |
new readline emacs mode commands and bindings for ksh-88 compatibility |
| 1079 |
updated and extended builtins |
| 1080 |
new DEBUG trap |
| 1081 |
expanded (and now documented) restricted shell mode |
| 1082 |
|
| 1083 |
implementation stuff: |
| 1084 |
autoconf-based configuration |
| 1085 |
nearly all of the bugs reported since version 1.14 have been fixed |
| 1086 |
most builtins converted to use builtin `getopt' for consistency |
| 1087 |
most builtins use -p option to display output in a reusable form |
| 1088 |
(for consistency) |
| 1089 |
grammar tighter and smaller (66 reduce-reduce conflicts gone) |
| 1090 |
lots of code now smaller and faster |
| 1091 |
test suite greatly expanded |
| 1092 |
|
| 1093 |
B2) Are there any user-visible incompatibilities between bash-4.3 and |
| 1094 |
previous bash versions? |
| 1095 |
|
| 1096 |
There are a few incompatibilities between version 4.3 and previous |
| 1097 |
versions. They are detailed in the file COMPAT in the bash distribution. |
| 1098 |
That file is not meant to be all-encompassing; send mail to |
| 1099 |
bash-maintainers@gnu.org (or bug-bash@gnu.org if you would like |
| 1100 |
community discussion) if you find something that's not mentioned there. |
| 1101 |
|
| 1102 |
Section C: Differences from other Unix shells |
| 1103 |
|
| 1104 |
C1) How does bash differ from sh, the Bourne shell? |
| 1105 |
|
| 1106 |
This is a non-comprehensive list of features that differentiate bash |
| 1107 |
from the SVR4.2 shell. The bash manual page explains these more |
| 1108 |
completely. |
| 1109 |
|
| 1110 |
Things bash has that sh does not: |
| 1111 |
long invocation options |
| 1112 |
[+-]O invocation option |
| 1113 |
-l invocation option |
| 1114 |
`!' reserved word to invert pipeline return value |
| 1115 |
`time' reserved word to time pipelines and shell builtins |
| 1116 |
the `function' reserved word |
| 1117 |
the `select' compound command and reserved word |
| 1118 |
arithmetic for command: for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done |
| 1119 |
new $'...' and $"..." quoting |
| 1120 |
the $(...) form of command substitution |
| 1121 |
the $(<filename) form of command substitution, equivalent to |
| 1122 |
$(cat filename) |
| 1123 |
the ${#param} parameter value length operator |
| 1124 |
the ${!param} indirect parameter expansion operator |
| 1125 |
the ${!param*} prefix expansion operator |
| 1126 |
the ${param:offset[:length]} parameter substring operator |
| 1127 |
the ${param/pat[/string]} parameter pattern substitution operator |
| 1128 |
expansions to perform substring removal (${p%[%]w}, ${p#[#]w}) |
| 1129 |
expansion of positional parameters beyond $9 with ${num} |
| 1130 |
variables: BASH, BASHPID, BASH_VERSION, BASH_VERSINFO, UID, EUID, REPLY, |
| 1131 |
TIMEFORMAT, PPID, PWD, OLDPWD, SHLVL, RANDOM, SECONDS, |
| 1132 |
LINENO, HISTCMD, HOSTTYPE, OSTYPE, MACHTYPE, HOSTNAME, |
| 1133 |
ENV, PS3, PS4, DIRSTACK, PIPESTATUS, HISTSIZE, HISTFILE, |
| 1134 |
HISTFILESIZE, HISTCONTROL, HISTIGNORE, GLOBIGNORE, GROUPS, |
| 1135 |
PROMPT_COMMAND, FCEDIT, FIGNORE, IGNOREEOF, INPUTRC, |
| 1136 |
SHELLOPTS, OPTERR, HOSTFILE, TMOUT, FUNCNAME, histchars, |
| 1137 |
auto_resume, PROMPT_DIRTRIM, BASHOPTS, BASH_XTRACEFD |
| 1138 |
DEBUG trap |
| 1139 |
ERR trap |
| 1140 |
variable arrays with new compound assignment syntax |
| 1141 |
redirections: <>, &>, >|, <<<, [n]<&word-, [n]>&word-, >>& |
| 1142 |
prompt string special char translation and variable expansion |
| 1143 |
auto-export of variables in initial environment |
| 1144 |
command search finds functions before builtins |
| 1145 |
bash return builtin will exit a file sourced with `.' |
| 1146 |
builtins: cd -/-L/-P/-@, exec -l/-c/-a, echo -e/-E, hash -d/-l/-p/-t. |
| 1147 |
export -n/-f/-p/name=value, pwd -L/-P, |
| 1148 |
read -e/-p/-a/-t/-n/-d/-s/-u/-i/-N, |
| 1149 |
readonly -a/-f/name=value, trap -l, set +o, |
| 1150 |
set -b/-m/-o option/-h/-p/-B/-C/-H/-P, |
| 1151 |
unset -f/-n/-v, ulimit -i/-m/-p/-q/-u/-x, |
| 1152 |
type -a/-p/-t/-f/-P, suspend -f, kill -n, |
| 1153 |
test -o optname/s1 == s2/s1 < s2/s1 > s2/-nt/-ot/-ef/-O/-G/-S/-R |
| 1154 |
bash reads ~/.bashrc for interactive shells, $ENV for non-interactive |
| 1155 |
bash restricted shell mode is more extensive |
| 1156 |
bash allows functions and variables with the same name |
| 1157 |
brace expansion |
| 1158 |
tilde expansion |
| 1159 |
arithmetic expansion with $((...)) and `let' builtin |
| 1160 |
the `[[...]]' extended conditional command |
| 1161 |
process substitution |
| 1162 |
aliases and alias/unalias builtins |
| 1163 |
local variables in functions and `local' builtin |
| 1164 |
readline and command-line editing with programmable completion |
| 1165 |
command history and history/fc builtins |
| 1166 |
csh-like history expansion |
| 1167 |
other new bash builtins: bind, command, compgen, complete, builtin, |
| 1168 |
declare/typeset, dirs, enable, fc, help, |
| 1169 |
history, logout, popd, pushd, disown, shopt, |
| 1170 |
printf, compopt, mapfile |
| 1171 |
exported functions |
| 1172 |
filename generation when using output redirection (command >a*) |
| 1173 |
POSIX.2-style globbing character classes |
| 1174 |
POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes |
| 1175 |
POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols |
| 1176 |
egrep-like extended pattern matching operators |
| 1177 |
case-insensitive pattern matching and globbing |
| 1178 |
variable assignments preceding commands affect only that command, |
| 1179 |
even for builtins and functions |
| 1180 |
posix mode and strict posix conformance |
| 1181 |
redirection to /dev/fd/N, /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr, |
| 1182 |
/dev/tcp/host/port, /dev/udp/host/port |
| 1183 |
debugger support, including `caller' builtin and new variables |
| 1184 |
RETURN trap |
| 1185 |
the `+=' assignment operator |
| 1186 |
autocd shell option and behavior |
| 1187 |
command-not-found hook with command_not_found_handle shell function |
| 1188 |
globstar shell option and `**' globbing behavior |
| 1189 |
|& synonym for `2>&1 |' |
| 1190 |
;& and ;;& case action list terminators |
| 1191 |
case-modifying word expansions and variable attributes |
| 1192 |
associative arrays |
| 1193 |
coprocesses using the `coproc' reserved word and variables |
| 1194 |
shell assignment of a file descriptor used in a redirection to a variable |
| 1195 |
|
| 1196 |
Things sh has that bash does not: |
| 1197 |
uses variable SHACCT to do shell accounting |
| 1198 |
includes `stop' builtin (bash can use alias stop='kill -s STOP') |
| 1199 |
`newgrp' builtin |
| 1200 |
turns on job control if called as `jsh' |
| 1201 |
$TIMEOUT (like bash $TMOUT) |
| 1202 |
`^' is a synonym for `|' |
| 1203 |
new SVR4.2 sh builtins: mldmode, priv |
| 1204 |
|
| 1205 |
Implementation differences: |
| 1206 |
redirection to/from compound commands causes sh to create a subshell |
| 1207 |
bash does not allow unbalanced quotes; sh silently inserts them at EOF |
| 1208 |
bash does not mess with signal 11 |
| 1209 |
sh sets (euid, egid) to (uid, gid) if -p not supplied and uid < 100 |
| 1210 |
bash splits only the results of expansions on IFS, using POSIX.2 |
| 1211 |
field splitting rules; sh splits all words on IFS |
| 1212 |
sh does not allow MAILCHECK to be unset (?) |
| 1213 |
sh does not allow traps on SIGALRM or SIGCHLD |
| 1214 |
bash allows multiple option arguments when invoked (e.g. -x -v); |
| 1215 |
sh allows only a single option argument (`sh -x -v' attempts |
| 1216 |
to open a file named `-v', and, on SunOS 4.1.4, dumps core. |
| 1217 |
On Solaris 2.4 and earlier versions, sh goes into an infinite |
| 1218 |
loop.) |
| 1219 |
sh exits a script if any builtin fails; bash exits only if one of |
| 1220 |
the POSIX.2 `special' builtins fails |
| 1221 |
|
| 1222 |
C2) How does bash differ from the Korn shell, version ksh88? |
| 1223 |
|
| 1224 |
Things bash has or uses that ksh88 does not: |
| 1225 |
long invocation options |
| 1226 |
[-+]O invocation option |
| 1227 |
-l invocation option |
| 1228 |
`!' reserved word |
| 1229 |
arithmetic for command: for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done |
| 1230 |
arithmetic in largest machine-supported size (intmax_t) |
| 1231 |
posix mode and posix conformance |
| 1232 |
command hashing |
| 1233 |
tilde expansion for assignment statements that look like $PATH |
| 1234 |
process substitution with named pipes if /dev/fd is not available |
| 1235 |
the ${!param} indirect parameter expansion operator |
| 1236 |
the ${!param*} prefix expansion operator |
| 1237 |
the ${param:offset[:length]} parameter substring operator |
| 1238 |
the ${param/pat[/string]} parameter pattern substitution operator |
| 1239 |
variables: BASH, BASH_VERSION, BASH_VERSINFO, BASHPID, UID, EUID, SHLVL, |
| 1240 |
TIMEFORMAT, HISTCMD, HOSTTYPE, OSTYPE, MACHTYPE, |
| 1241 |
HISTFILESIZE, HISTIGNORE, HISTCONTROL, PROMPT_COMMAND, |
| 1242 |
IGNOREEOF, FIGNORE, INPUTRC, HOSTFILE, DIRSTACK, |
| 1243 |
PIPESTATUS, HOSTNAME, OPTERR, SHELLOPTS, GLOBIGNORE, |
| 1244 |
GROUPS, FUNCNAME, histchars, auto_resume, PROMPT_DIRTRIM |
| 1245 |
prompt expansion with backslash escapes and command substitution |
| 1246 |
redirection: &> (stdout and stderr), <<<, [n]<&word-, [n]>&word-, >>& |
| 1247 |
more extensive and extensible editing and programmable completion |
| 1248 |
builtins: bind, builtin, command, declare, dirs, echo -e/-E, enable, |
| 1249 |
exec -l/-c/-a, fc -s, export -n/-f/-p, hash, help, history, |
| 1250 |
jobs -x/-r/-s, kill -s/-n/-l, local, logout, popd, pushd, |
| 1251 |
read -e/-p/-a/-t/-n/-d/-s/-N, readonly -a/-n/-f/-p, |
| 1252 |
set -o braceexpand/-o histexpand/-o interactive-comments/ |
| 1253 |
-o notify/-o physical/-o posix/-o hashall/-o onecmd/ |
| 1254 |
-h/-B/-C/-b/-H/-P, set +o, suspend, trap -l, type, |
| 1255 |
typeset -a/-F/-p, ulimit -i/-q/-u/-x, umask -S, alias -p, |
| 1256 |
shopt, disown, printf, complete, compgen, compopt, mapfile |
| 1257 |
`!' csh-style history expansion |
| 1258 |
POSIX.2-style globbing character classes |
| 1259 |
POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes |
| 1260 |
POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols |
| 1261 |
egrep-like extended pattern matching operators |
| 1262 |
case-insensitive pattern matching and globbing |
| 1263 |
`**' arithmetic operator to do exponentiation |
| 1264 |
redirection to /dev/fd/N, /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr |
| 1265 |
arrays of unlimited size |
| 1266 |
TMOUT is default timeout for `read' and `select' |
| 1267 |
debugger support, including the `caller' builtin |
| 1268 |
RETURN trap |
| 1269 |
Timestamps in history entries |
| 1270 |
{x..y} brace expansion |
| 1271 |
The `+=' assignment operator |
| 1272 |
autocd shell option and behavior |
| 1273 |
command-not-found hook with command_not_found_handle shell function |
| 1274 |
globstar shell option and `**' globbing behavior |
| 1275 |
|& synonym for `2>&1 |' |
| 1276 |
;& and ;;& case action list terminators |
| 1277 |
case-modifying word expansions and variable attributes |
| 1278 |
associative arrays |
| 1279 |
coprocesses using the `coproc' reserved word and variables |
| 1280 |
shell assignment of a file descriptor used in a redirection to a variable |
| 1281 |
|
| 1282 |
Things ksh88 has or uses that bash does not: |
| 1283 |
tracked aliases (alias -t) |
| 1284 |
variables: ERRNO, FPATH, EDITOR, VISUAL |
| 1285 |
co-processes (bash uses different syntax) |
| 1286 |
weirdly-scoped functions |
| 1287 |
typeset +f to list all function names without definitions |
| 1288 |
text of command history kept in a file, not memory |
| 1289 |
builtins: alias -x, cd old new, newgrp, print, |
| 1290 |
read -p/-s/var?prompt, set -A/-o gmacs/ |
| 1291 |
-o bgnice/-o markdirs/-o trackall/-o viraw/-s, |
| 1292 |
typeset -H/-L/-R/-Z/-A/-ft/-fu/-fx/-t, whence |
| 1293 |
using environment to pass attributes of exported variables |
| 1294 |
arithmetic evaluation done on arguments to some builtins |
| 1295 |
reads .profile from $PWD when invoked as login shell |
| 1296 |
|
| 1297 |
Implementation differences: |
| 1298 |
ksh runs last command of a pipeline in parent shell context |
| 1299 |
bash has brace expansion by default (ksh88 compile-time option) |
| 1300 |
bash has fixed startup file for all interactive shells; ksh reads $ENV |
| 1301 |
bash has exported functions |
| 1302 |
bash command search finds functions before builtins |
| 1303 |
bash waits for all commands in pipeline to exit before returning status |
| 1304 |
emacs-mode editing has some slightly different key bindings |
| 1305 |
|
| 1306 |
C3) Which new features in ksh-93 are not in bash, and which are? |
| 1307 |
|
| 1308 |
This list is current through ksh93v (10/08/2013) |
| 1309 |
|
| 1310 |
New things in ksh-93 not in bash-4.3: |
| 1311 |
floating point arithmetic, variables, and constants |
| 1312 |
math library functions, including user-defined math functions |
| 1313 |
${!name[sub]} name of subscript for associative array |
| 1314 |
`.' is allowed in variable names to create a hierarchical namespace |
| 1315 |
more extensive compound assignment syntax |
| 1316 |
discipline functions |
| 1317 |
KEYBD trap |
| 1318 |
variables: .sh.edchar, .sh.edmode, .sh.edcol, .sh.edtext, .sh.version, |
| 1319 |
.sh.name, .sh.subscript, .sh.value, .sh.match, HISTEDIT, |
| 1320 |
.sh.sig, .sh.stats, .sh.siginfo, .sh.pwdfd, .sh.op_astbin, |
| 1321 |
.sh.pool |
| 1322 |
backreferences in pattern matching (\N) |
| 1323 |
`&' operator in pattern lists for matching (match all instead of any) |
| 1324 |
exit statuses between 0 and 255 |
| 1325 |
FPATH and PATH mixing |
| 1326 |
lexical scoping for local variables in `ksh' functions |
| 1327 |
no scoping for local variables in `POSIX' functions |
| 1328 |
$'' \C[.collating-element.] escape sequence |
| 1329 |
-C/-I invocation options |
| 1330 |
print -f (bash uses printf) and rest of print builtin options |
| 1331 |
printf %(type)q, %#q |
| 1332 |
`fc' has been renamed to `hist' |
| 1333 |
`.' can execute shell functions |
| 1334 |
getopts -a |
| 1335 |
printf %B, %H, %P, %R, %Z modifiers, output base for %d, `=' flag |
| 1336 |
read -n/-N differ/-v/-S |
| 1337 |
set -o showme/-o multiline (bash default) |
| 1338 |
set -K |
| 1339 |
kill -Q/-q/-L |
| 1340 |
trap -a |
| 1341 |
`sleep' and `getconf' builtins (bash has loadable versions) |
| 1342 |
[[ -R name ]] (checks whether or not name is a nameref) |
| 1343 |
typeset -C/-S/-T/-X/-h/-s/-c/-M |
| 1344 |
experimental `type' definitions (a la typedef) using typeset |
| 1345 |
array expansions ${array[sub1..sub2]} and ${!array[sub1..sub2]} |
| 1346 |
associative array assignments using `;' as element separator |
| 1347 |
command substitution $(n<#) expands to current byte offset for fd N |
| 1348 |
new '${ ' form of command substitution, executed in current shell |
| 1349 |
new >;/<>;/<#pat/<##pat/<#/># redirections |
| 1350 |
brace expansion printf-like formats |
| 1351 |
CHLD trap triggered by SIGSTOP and SIGCONT |
| 1352 |
~{fd} expansion, which replaces fd with the corresponding path name |
| 1353 |
$"string" expanded when referenced rather than when first parsed |
| 1354 |
job "pools", which allow a collection of jobs to be managed as a unit |
| 1355 |
|
| 1356 |
New things in ksh-93 present in bash-4.3: |
| 1357 |
associative arrays |
| 1358 |
[n]<&word- and [n]>&word- redirections (combination dup and close) |
| 1359 |
for (( expr1; expr2; expr3 )) ; do list; done - arithmetic for command |
| 1360 |
?:, ++, --, `expr1 , expr2' arithmetic operators |
| 1361 |
expansions: ${!param}, ${param:offset[:len]}, ${param/pat[/str]}, |
| 1362 |
${!param*} |
| 1363 |
compound array assignment |
| 1364 |
negative subscripts for indexed array variables |
| 1365 |
the `!' reserved word |
| 1366 |
loadable builtins -- but ksh uses `builtin' while bash uses `enable' |
| 1367 |
new $'...' and $"..." quoting |
| 1368 |
FIGNORE (but bash uses GLOBIGNORE), HISTCMD |
| 1369 |
brace expansion and set -B |
| 1370 |
changes to kill builtin |
| 1371 |
`command', `builtin', `disown' builtins |
| 1372 |
echo -e |
| 1373 |
exec -c/-a |
| 1374 |
printf %T modifier |
| 1375 |
read -A (bash uses read -a) |
| 1376 |
read -t/-d |
| 1377 |
trap -p |
| 1378 |
`.' restores the positional parameters when it completes |
| 1379 |
set -o notify/-C |
| 1380 |
set -o pipefail |
| 1381 |
set -G (-o globstar) and ** |
| 1382 |
POSIX.2 `test' |
| 1383 |
umask -S |
| 1384 |
unalias -a |
| 1385 |
command and arithmetic substitution performed on PS1, PS4, and ENV |
| 1386 |
command name completion, TAB displaying possible completions |
| 1387 |
ENV processed only for interactive shells |
| 1388 |
The `+=' assignment operator |
| 1389 |
the `;&' case statement "fallthrough" pattern list terminator |
| 1390 |
csh-style history expansion and set -H |
| 1391 |
negative offsets in ${param:offset:length} |
| 1392 |
redirection operators preceded with {varname} to store fd number in varname |
| 1393 |
DEBUG can force skipping following command |
| 1394 |
[[ -v var ]] operator (checks whether or not var is set) |
| 1395 |
typeset -n and `nameref' variables |
| 1396 |
process substitutions work without /dev/fd |
| 1397 |
|
| 1398 |
Section D: Why does bash do some things differently than other Unix shells? |
| 1399 |
|
| 1400 |
D1) Why does bash run a different version of `command' than |
| 1401 |
`which command' says it will? |
| 1402 |
|
| 1403 |
On many systems, `which' is actually a csh script that assumes |
| 1404 |
you're running csh. In tcsh, `which' and its cousin `where' |
| 1405 |
are builtins. On other Unix systems, `which' is a perl script |
| 1406 |
that uses the PATH environment variable. Many Linux distributions |
| 1407 |
use GNU `which', which is a C program that can understand shell |
| 1408 |
aliases. |
| 1409 |
|
| 1410 |
The csh script version reads the csh startup files from your |
| 1411 |
home directory and uses those to determine which `command' will |
| 1412 |
be invoked. Since bash doesn't use any of those startup files, |
| 1413 |
there's a good chance that your bash environment differs from |
| 1414 |
your csh environment. The bash `type' builtin does everything |
| 1415 |
`which' does, and will report correct results for the running |
| 1416 |
shell. If you're really wedded to the name `which', try adding |
| 1417 |
the following function definition to your .bashrc: |
| 1418 |
|
| 1419 |
which() |
| 1420 |
{ |
| 1421 |
builtin type "$@" |
| 1422 |
} |
| 1423 |
|
| 1424 |
If you're moving from tcsh and would like to bring `where' along |
| 1425 |
as well, use this function: |
| 1426 |
|
| 1427 |
where() |
| 1428 |
{ |
| 1429 |
builtin type -a "$@" |
| 1430 |
} |
| 1431 |
|
| 1432 |
D2) Why doesn't bash treat brace expansions exactly like csh? |
| 1433 |
|
| 1434 |
The only difference between bash and csh brace expansion is that |
| 1435 |
bash requires a brace expression to contain at least one unquoted |
| 1436 |
comma if it is to be expanded. Any brace-surrounded word not |
| 1437 |
containing an unquoted comma is left unchanged by the brace |
| 1438 |
expansion code. This affords the greatest degree of sh |
| 1439 |
compatibility. |
| 1440 |
|
| 1441 |
Bash, ksh, zsh, and pd-ksh all implement brace expansion this way. |
| 1442 |
|
| 1443 |
D3) Why doesn't bash have csh variable modifiers? |
| 1444 |
|
| 1445 |
Posix has specified a more powerful, albeit somewhat more cryptic, |
| 1446 |
mechanism cribbed from ksh, and bash implements it. |
| 1447 |
|
| 1448 |
${parameter%word} |
| 1449 |
Remove smallest suffix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce |
| 1450 |
a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the |
| 1451 |
smallest portion of the suffix matched by the pattern deleted. |
| 1452 |
|
| 1453 |
x=file.c |
| 1454 |
echo ${x%.c}.o |
| 1455 |
-->file.o |
| 1456 |
|
| 1457 |
${parameter%%word} |
| 1458 |
|
| 1459 |
Remove largest suffix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce |
| 1460 |
a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the |
| 1461 |
largest portion of the suffix matched by the pattern deleted. |
| 1462 |
|
| 1463 |
x=posix/src/std |
| 1464 |
echo ${x%%/*} |
| 1465 |
-->posix |
| 1466 |
|
| 1467 |
${parameter#word} |
| 1468 |
Remove smallest prefix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce |
| 1469 |
a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the |
| 1470 |
smallest portion of the prefix matched by the pattern deleted. |
| 1471 |
|
| 1472 |
x=$HOME/src/cmd |
| 1473 |
echo ${x#$HOME} |
| 1474 |
-->/src/cmd |
| 1475 |
|
| 1476 |
${parameter##word} |
| 1477 |
Remove largest prefix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce |
| 1478 |
a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the |
| 1479 |
largest portion of the prefix matched by the pattern deleted. |
| 1480 |
|
| 1481 |
x=/one/two/three |
| 1482 |
echo ${x##*/} |
| 1483 |
-->three |
| 1484 |
|
| 1485 |
|
| 1486 |
Given |
| 1487 |
a=/a/b/c/d |
| 1488 |
b=b.xxx |
| 1489 |
|
| 1490 |
csh bash result |
| 1491 |
--- ---- ------ |
| 1492 |
$a:h ${a%/*} /a/b/c |
| 1493 |
$a:t ${a##*/} d |
| 1494 |
$b:r ${b%.*} b |
| 1495 |
$b:e ${b##*.} xxx |
| 1496 |
|
| 1497 |
|
| 1498 |
D4) How can I make my csh aliases work when I convert to bash? |
| 1499 |
|
| 1500 |
Bash uses a different syntax to support aliases than csh does. |
| 1501 |
The details can be found in the documentation. We have provided |
| 1502 |
a shell script which does most of the work of conversion for you; |
| 1503 |
this script can be found in ./examples/misc/aliasconv.sh. Here is |
| 1504 |
how you use it: |
| 1505 |
|
| 1506 |
Start csh in the normal way for you. (e.g., `csh') |
| 1507 |
|
| 1508 |
Pipe the output of `alias' through `aliasconv.sh', saving the |
| 1509 |
results into `bash_aliases': |
| 1510 |
|
| 1511 |
alias | bash aliasconv.sh >bash_aliases |
| 1512 |
|
| 1513 |
Edit `bash_aliases', carefully reading through any created |
| 1514 |
functions. You will need to change the names of some csh specific |
| 1515 |
variables to the bash equivalents. The script converts $cwd to |
| 1516 |
$PWD, $term to $TERM, $home to $HOME, $user to $USER, and $prompt |
| 1517 |
to $PS1. You may also have to add quotes to avoid unwanted |
| 1518 |
expansion. |
| 1519 |
|
| 1520 |
For example, the csh alias: |
| 1521 |
|
| 1522 |
alias cd 'cd \!*; echo $cwd' |
| 1523 |
|
| 1524 |
is converted to the bash function: |
| 1525 |
|
| 1526 |
cd () { command cd "$@"; echo $PWD ; } |
| 1527 |
|
| 1528 |
The only thing that needs to be done is to quote $PWD: |
| 1529 |
|
| 1530 |
cd () { command cd "$@"; echo "$PWD" ; } |
| 1531 |
|
| 1532 |
Merge the edited file into your ~/.bashrc. |
| 1533 |
|
| 1534 |
There is an additional, more ambitious, script in |
| 1535 |
examples/misc/cshtobash that attempts to convert your entire csh |
| 1536 |
environment to its bash equivalent. This script can be run as |
| 1537 |
simply `cshtobash' to convert your normal interactive |
| 1538 |
environment, or as `cshtobash ~/.login' to convert your login |
| 1539 |
environment. |
| 1540 |
|
| 1541 |
D5) How can I pipe standard output and standard error from one command to |
| 1542 |
another, like csh does with `|&'? |
| 1543 |
|
| 1544 |
Use |
| 1545 |
command 2>&1 | command2 |
| 1546 |
|
| 1547 |
The key is to remember that piping is performed before redirection, so |
| 1548 |
file descriptor 1 points to the pipe when it is duplicated onto file |
| 1549 |
descriptor 2. |
| 1550 |
|
| 1551 |
D6) Now that I've converted from ksh to bash, are there equivalents to |
| 1552 |
ksh features like autoloaded functions and the `whence' command? |
| 1553 |
|
| 1554 |
There are features in ksh-88 and ksh-93 that do not have direct bash |
| 1555 |
equivalents. Most, however, can be emulated with very little trouble. |
| 1556 |
|
| 1557 |
ksh-88 feature Bash equivalent |
| 1558 |
-------------- --------------- |
| 1559 |
compiled-in aliases set up aliases in .bashrc; some ksh aliases are |
| 1560 |
bash builtins (hash, history, type) |
| 1561 |
coprocesses named pipe pairs (one for read, one for write) |
| 1562 |
typeset +f declare -F |
| 1563 |
cd, print, whence function substitutes in examples/functions/kshenv |
| 1564 |
autoloaded functions examples/functions/autoload is the same as typeset -fu |
| 1565 |
read var?prompt read -p prompt var |
| 1566 |
|
| 1567 |
ksh-93 feature Bash equivalent |
| 1568 |
-------------- --------------- |
| 1569 |
sleep, getconf Bash has loadable versions in examples/loadables |
| 1570 |
${.sh.version} $BASH_VERSION |
| 1571 |
print -f printf |
| 1572 |
hist alias hist=fc |
| 1573 |
$HISTEDIT $FCEDIT |
| 1574 |
|
| 1575 |
Section E: How can I get bash to do certain things, and why does bash do |
| 1576 |
things the way it does? |
| 1577 |
|
| 1578 |
E1) Why is the bash builtin `test' slightly different from /bin/test? |
| 1579 |
|
| 1580 |
The specific example used here is [ ! x -o x ], which is false. |
| 1581 |
|
| 1582 |
Bash's builtin `test' implements the Posix.2 spec, which can be |
| 1583 |
summarized as follows (the wording is due to David Korn): |
| 1584 |
|
| 1585 |
Here is the set of rules for processing test arguments. |
| 1586 |
|
| 1587 |
0 Args: False |
| 1588 |
1 Arg: True iff argument is not null. |
| 1589 |
2 Args: If first arg is !, True iff second argument is null. |
| 1590 |
If first argument is unary, then true if unary test is true |
| 1591 |
Otherwise error. |
| 1592 |
3 Args: If second argument is a binary operator, do binary test of $1 $3 |
| 1593 |
If first argument is !, negate two argument test of $2 $3 |
| 1594 |
If first argument is `(' and third argument is `)', do the |
| 1595 |
one-argument test of the second argument. |
| 1596 |
Otherwise error. |
| 1597 |
4 Args: If first argument is !, negate three argument test of $2 $3 $4. |
| 1598 |
Otherwise unspecified |
| 1599 |
5 or more Args: unspecified. (Historical shells would use their |
| 1600 |
current algorithm). |
| 1601 |
|
| 1602 |
The operators -a and -o are considered binary operators for the purpose |
| 1603 |
of the 3 Arg case. |
| 1604 |
|
| 1605 |
As you can see, the test becomes (not (x or x)), which is false. |
| 1606 |
|
| 1607 |
E2) Why does bash sometimes say `Broken pipe'? |
| 1608 |
|
| 1609 |
If a sequence of commands appears in a pipeline, and one of the |
| 1610 |
reading commands finishes before the writer has finished, the |
| 1611 |
writer receives a SIGPIPE signal. Many other shells special-case |
| 1612 |
SIGPIPE as an exit status in the pipeline and do not report it. |
| 1613 |
For example, in: |
| 1614 |
|
| 1615 |
ps -aux | head |
| 1616 |
|
| 1617 |
`head' can finish before `ps' writes all of its output, and ps |
| 1618 |
will try to write on a pipe without a reader. In that case, bash |
| 1619 |
will print `Broken pipe' to stderr when ps is killed by a |
| 1620 |
SIGPIPE. |
| 1621 |
|
| 1622 |
As of bash-3.1, bash does not report SIGPIPE errors by default. You |
| 1623 |
can build a version of bash that will report such errors. |
| 1624 |
|
| 1625 |
E3) When I have terminal escape sequences in my prompt, why does bash |
| 1626 |
wrap lines at the wrong column? |
| 1627 |
|
| 1628 |
Readline, the line editing library that bash uses, does not know |
| 1629 |
that the terminal escape sequences do not take up space on the |
| 1630 |
screen. The redisplay code assumes, unless told otherwise, that |
| 1631 |
each character in the prompt is a `printable' character that |
| 1632 |
takes up one character position on the screen. |
| 1633 |
|
| 1634 |
You can use the bash prompt expansion facility (see the PROMPTING |
| 1635 |
section in the manual page) to tell readline that sequences of |
| 1636 |
characters in the prompt strings take up no screen space. |
| 1637 |
|
| 1638 |
Use the \[ escape to begin a sequence of non-printing characters, |
| 1639 |
and the \] escape to signal the end of such a sequence. |
| 1640 |
|
| 1641 |
E4) If I pipe the output of a command into `read variable', why doesn't |
| 1642 |
the output show up in $variable when the read command finishes? |
| 1643 |
|
| 1644 |
This has to do with the parent-child relationship between Unix |
| 1645 |
processes. It affects all commands run in pipelines, not just |
| 1646 |
simple calls to `read'. For example, piping a command's output |
| 1647 |
into a `while' loop that repeatedly calls `read' will result in |
| 1648 |
the same behavior. |
| 1649 |
|
| 1650 |
Each element of a pipeline, even a builtin or shell function, |
| 1651 |
runs in a separate process, a child of the shell running the |
| 1652 |
pipeline. A subprocess cannot affect its parent's environment. |
| 1653 |
When the `read' command sets the variable to the input, that |
| 1654 |
variable is set only in the subshell, not the parent shell. When |
| 1655 |
the subshell exits, the value of the variable is lost. |
| 1656 |
|
| 1657 |
Many pipelines that end with `read variable' can be converted |
| 1658 |
into command substitutions, which will capture the output of |
| 1659 |
a specified command. The output can then be assigned to a |
| 1660 |
variable: |
| 1661 |
|
| 1662 |
grep ^gnu /usr/lib/news/active | wc -l | read ngroup |
| 1663 |
|
| 1664 |
can be converted into |
| 1665 |
|
| 1666 |
ngroup=$(grep ^gnu /usr/lib/news/active | wc -l) |
| 1667 |
|
| 1668 |
This does not, unfortunately, work to split the text among |
| 1669 |
multiple variables, as read does when given multiple variable |
| 1670 |
arguments. If you need to do this, you can either use the |
| 1671 |
command substitution above to read the output into a variable |
| 1672 |
and chop up the variable using the bash pattern removal |
| 1673 |
expansion operators or use some variant of the following |
| 1674 |
approach. |
| 1675 |
|
| 1676 |
Say /usr/local/bin/ipaddr is the following shell script: |
| 1677 |
|
| 1678 |
#! /bin/sh |
| 1679 |
host `hostname` | awk '/address/ {print $NF}' |
| 1680 |
|
| 1681 |
Instead of using |
| 1682 |
|
| 1683 |
/usr/local/bin/ipaddr | read A B C D |
| 1684 |
|
| 1685 |
to break the local machine's IP address into separate octets, use |
| 1686 |
|
| 1687 |
OIFS="$IFS" |
| 1688 |
IFS=. |
| 1689 |
set -- $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr) |
| 1690 |
IFS="$OIFS" |
| 1691 |
A="$1" B="$2" C="$3" D="$4" |
| 1692 |
|
| 1693 |
Beware, however, that this will change the shell's positional |
| 1694 |
parameters. If you need them, you should save them before doing |
| 1695 |
this. |
| 1696 |
|
| 1697 |
This is the general approach -- in most cases you will not need to |
| 1698 |
set $IFS to a different value. |
| 1699 |
|
| 1700 |
Some other user-supplied alternatives include: |
| 1701 |
|
| 1702 |
read A B C D << HERE |
| 1703 |
$(IFS=.; echo $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr)) |
| 1704 |
HERE |
| 1705 |
|
| 1706 |
and, where process substitution is available, |
| 1707 |
|
| 1708 |
read A B C D < <(IFS=.; echo $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr)) |
| 1709 |
|
| 1710 |
E5) I have a bunch of shell scripts that use backslash-escaped characters |
| 1711 |
in arguments to `echo'. Bash doesn't interpret these characters. Why |
| 1712 |
not, and how can I make it understand them? |
| 1713 |
|
| 1714 |
This is the behavior of echo on most Unix System V machines. |
| 1715 |
|
| 1716 |
The bash builtin `echo' is modeled after the 9th Edition |
| 1717 |
Research Unix version of `echo'. It does not interpret |
| 1718 |
backslash-escaped characters in its argument strings by default; |
| 1719 |
it requires the use of the -e option to enable the |
| 1720 |
interpretation. The System V echo provides no way to disable the |
| 1721 |
special characters; the bash echo has a -E option to disable |
| 1722 |
them. |
| 1723 |
|
| 1724 |
There is a configuration option that will make bash behave like |
| 1725 |
the System V echo and interpret things like `\t' by default. Run |
| 1726 |
configure with the --enable-xpg-echo-default option to turn this |
| 1727 |
on. Be aware that this will cause some of the tests run when you |
| 1728 |
type `make tests' to fail. |
| 1729 |
|
| 1730 |
There is a shell option, `xpg_echo', settable with `shopt', that will |
| 1731 |
change the behavior of echo at runtime. Enabling this option turns |
| 1732 |
on expansion of backslash-escape sequences. |
| 1733 |
|
| 1734 |
E6) Why doesn't a while or for loop get suspended when I type ^Z? |
| 1735 |
|
| 1736 |
This is a consequence of how job control works on Unix. The only |
| 1737 |
thing that can be suspended is the process group. This is a single |
| 1738 |
command or pipeline of commands that the shell forks and executes. |
| 1739 |
|
| 1740 |
When you run a while or for loop, the only thing that the shell forks |
| 1741 |
and executes are any commands in the while loop test and commands in |
| 1742 |
the loop bodies. These, therefore, are the only things that can be |
| 1743 |
suspended when you type ^Z. |
| 1744 |
|
| 1745 |
If you want to be able to stop the entire loop, you need to put it |
| 1746 |
within parentheses, which will force the loop into a subshell that |
| 1747 |
may be stopped (and subsequently restarted) as a single unit. |
| 1748 |
|
| 1749 |
E7) What about empty for loops in Makefiles? |
| 1750 |
|
| 1751 |
It's fairly common to see constructs like this in automatically-generated |
| 1752 |
Makefiles: |
| 1753 |
|
| 1754 |
SUBDIRS = @SUBDIRS@ |
| 1755 |
|
| 1756 |
... |
| 1757 |
|
| 1758 |
subdirs-clean: |
| 1759 |
for d in ${SUBDIRS}; do \ |
| 1760 |
( cd $$d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean ) \ |
| 1761 |
done |
| 1762 |
|
| 1763 |
When SUBDIRS is empty, this results in a command like this being passed to |
| 1764 |
bash: |
| 1765 |
|
| 1766 |
for d in ; do |
| 1767 |
( cd $d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean ) |
| 1768 |
done |
| 1769 |
|
| 1770 |
In versions of bash before bash-2.05a, this was a syntax error. If the |
| 1771 |
reserved word `in' was present, a word must follow it before the semicolon |
| 1772 |
or newline. The language in the manual page referring to the list of words |
| 1773 |
being empty referred to the list after it is expanded. These versions of |
| 1774 |
bash required that there be at least one word following the `in' when the |
| 1775 |
construct was parsed. |
| 1776 |
|
| 1777 |
The idiomatic Makefile solution is something like: |
| 1778 |
|
| 1779 |
SUBDIRS = @SUBDIRS@ |
| 1780 |
|
| 1781 |
subdirs-clean: |
| 1782 |
subdirs=$SUBDIRS ; for d in $$subdirs; do \ |
| 1783 |
( cd $$d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean ) \ |
| 1784 |
done |
| 1785 |
|
| 1786 |
The latest updated POSIX standard has changed this: the word list |
| 1787 |
is no longer required. Bash versions 2.05a and later accept the |
| 1788 |
new syntax. |
| 1789 |
|
| 1790 |
E8) Why does the arithmetic evaluation code complain about `08'? |
| 1791 |
|
| 1792 |
The bash arithmetic evaluation code (used for `let', $(()), (()), and in |
| 1793 |
other places), interprets a leading `0' in numeric constants as denoting |
| 1794 |
an octal number, and a leading `0x' as denoting hexadecimal. This is |
| 1795 |
in accordance with the POSIX.2 spec, section 2.9.2.1, which states that |
| 1796 |
arithmetic constants should be handled as signed long integers as defined |
| 1797 |
by the ANSI/ISO C standard. |
| 1798 |
|
| 1799 |
The POSIX.2 interpretation committee has confirmed this: |
| 1800 |
|
| 1801 |
http://www.pasc.org/interps/unofficial/db/p1003.2/pasc-1003.2-173.html |
| 1802 |
|
| 1803 |
E9) Why does the pattern matching expression [A-Z]* match files beginning |
| 1804 |
with every letter except `z'? |
| 1805 |
|
| 1806 |
Bash-2.03, Bash-2.05 and later versions honor the current locale setting |
| 1807 |
when processing ranges within pattern matching bracket expressions ([A-Z]). |
| 1808 |
This is what POSIX.2 and SUSv3/XPG6 specify. |
| 1809 |
|
| 1810 |
The behavior of the matcher in bash-2.05 and later versions depends on the |
| 1811 |
current LC_COLLATE setting. Setting this variable to `C' or `POSIX' will |
| 1812 |
result in the traditional behavior ([A-Z] matches all uppercase ASCII |
| 1813 |
characters). Many other locales, including the en_US locale (the default |
| 1814 |
on many US versions of Linux) collate the upper and lower case letters like |
| 1815 |
this: |
| 1816 |
|
| 1817 |
AaBb...Zz |
| 1818 |
|
| 1819 |
which means that [A-Z] matches every letter except `z'. Others collate like |
| 1820 |
|
| 1821 |
aAbBcC...zZ |
| 1822 |
|
| 1823 |
which means that [A-Z] matches every letter except `a'. |
| 1824 |
|
| 1825 |
The portable way to specify upper case letters is [:upper:] instead of |
| 1826 |
A-Z; lower case may be specified as [:lower:] instead of a-z. |
| 1827 |
|
| 1828 |
Look at the manual pages for setlocale(3), strcoll(3), and, if it is |
| 1829 |
present, locale(1). If you have locale(1), you can use it to find |
| 1830 |
your current locale information even if you do not have any of the |
| 1831 |
LC_ variables set. |
| 1832 |
|
| 1833 |
My advice is to put |
| 1834 |
|
| 1835 |
export LC_COLLATE=C |
| 1836 |
|
| 1837 |
into /etc/profile and inspect any shell scripts run from cron for |
| 1838 |
constructs like [A-Z]. This will prevent things like |
| 1839 |
|
| 1840 |
rm [A-Z]* |
| 1841 |
|
| 1842 |
from removing every file in the current directory except those beginning |
| 1843 |
with `z' and still allow individual users to change the collation order. |
| 1844 |
Users may put the above command into their own profiles as well, of course. |
| 1845 |
|
| 1846 |
E10) Why does `cd //' leave $PWD as `//'? |
| 1847 |
|
| 1848 |
POSIX.2, in its description of `cd', says that *three* or more leading |
| 1849 |
slashes may be replaced with a single slash when canonicalizing the |
| 1850 |
current working directory. |
| 1851 |
|
| 1852 |
This is, I presume, for historical compatibility. Certain versions of |
| 1853 |
Unix, and early network file systems, used paths of the form |
| 1854 |
//hostname/path to access `path' on server `hostname'. |
| 1855 |
|
| 1856 |
E11) If I resize my xterm while another program is running, why doesn't bash |
| 1857 |
notice the change? |
| 1858 |
|
| 1859 |
This is another issue that deals with job control. |
| 1860 |
|
| 1861 |
The kernel maintains a notion of a current terminal process group. Members |
| 1862 |
of this process group (processes whose process group ID is equal to the |
| 1863 |
current terminal process group ID) receive terminal-generated signals like |
| 1864 |
SIGWINCH. (For more details, see the JOB CONTROL section of the bash |
| 1865 |
man page.) |
| 1866 |
|
| 1867 |
If a terminal is resized, the kernel sends SIGWINCH to each member of |
| 1868 |
the terminal's current process group (the `foreground' process group). |
| 1869 |
|
| 1870 |
When bash is running with job control enabled, each pipeline (which may be |
| 1871 |
a single command) is run in its own process group, different from bash's |
| 1872 |
process group. This foreground process group receives the SIGWINCH; bash |
| 1873 |
does not. Bash has no way of knowing that the terminal has been resized. |
| 1874 |
|
| 1875 |
There is a `checkwinsize' option, settable with the `shopt' builtin, that |
| 1876 |
will cause bash to check the window size and adjust its idea of the |
| 1877 |
terminal's dimensions each time a process stops or exits and returns control |
| 1878 |
of the terminal to bash. Enable it with `shopt -s checkwinsize'. |
| 1879 |
|
| 1880 |
E12) Why don't negative offsets in substring expansion work like I expect? |
| 1881 |
|
| 1882 |
When substring expansion of the form ${param:offset[:length} is used, |
| 1883 |
an `offset' that evaluates to a number less than zero counts back from |
| 1884 |
the end of the expanded value of $param. |
| 1885 |
|
| 1886 |
When a negative `offset' begins with a minus sign, however, unexpected things |
| 1887 |
can happen. Consider |
| 1888 |
|
| 1889 |
a=12345678 |
| 1890 |
echo ${a:-4} |
| 1891 |
|
| 1892 |
intending to print the last four characters of $a. The problem is that |
| 1893 |
${param:-word} already has a well-defined meaning: expand to word if the |
| 1894 |
expanded value of param is unset or null, and $param otherwise. |
| 1895 |
|
| 1896 |
To use negative offsets that begin with a minus sign, separate the |
| 1897 |
minus sign and the colon with a space. |
| 1898 |
|
| 1899 |
E13) Why does filename completion misbehave if a colon appears in the filename? |
| 1900 |
|
| 1901 |
Filename completion (and word completion in general) may appear to behave |
| 1902 |
improperly if there is a colon in the word to be completed. |
| 1903 |
|
| 1904 |
The colon is special to readline's word completion code: it is one of the |
| 1905 |
characters that breaks words for the completer. Readline uses these characters |
| 1906 |
in sort of the same way that bash uses $IFS: they break or separate the words |
| 1907 |
the completion code hands to the application-specific or default word |
| 1908 |
completion functions. The original intent was to make it easy to edit |
| 1909 |
colon-separated lists (such as $PATH in bash) in various applications using |
| 1910 |
readline for input. |
| 1911 |
|
| 1912 |
This is complicated by the fact that some versions of the popular |
| 1913 |
`bash-completion' programmable completion package have problems with the |
| 1914 |
default completion behavior in the presence of colons. |
| 1915 |
|
| 1916 |
The current set of completion word break characters is available in bash as |
| 1917 |
the value of the COMP_WORDBREAKS variable. Removing `:' from that value is |
| 1918 |
enough to make the colon not special to completion: |
| 1919 |
|
| 1920 |
COMP_WORDBREAKS=${COMP_WORDBREAKS//:} |
| 1921 |
|
| 1922 |
You can also quote the colon with a backslash to achieve the same result |
| 1923 |
temporarily. |
| 1924 |
|
| 1925 |
E14) Why does quoting the pattern argument to the regular expression matching |
| 1926 |
conditional operator (=~) cause regexp matching to stop working? |
| 1927 |
|
| 1928 |
In versions of bash prior to bash-3.2, the effect of quoting the regular |
| 1929 |
expression argument to the [[ command's =~ operator was not specified. |
| 1930 |
The practical effect was that double-quoting the pattern argument required |
| 1931 |
backslashes to quote special pattern characters, which interfered with the |
| 1932 |
backslash processing performed by double-quoted word expansion and was |
| 1933 |
inconsistent with how the == shell pattern matching operator treated |
| 1934 |
quoted characters. |
| 1935 |
|
| 1936 |
In bash-3.2, the shell was changed to internally quote characters in single- |
| 1937 |
and double-quoted string arguments to the =~ operator, which suppresses the |
| 1938 |
special meaning of the characters special to regular expression processing |
| 1939 |
(`.', `[', `\', `(', `), `*', `+', `?', `{', `|', `^', and `$') and forces |
| 1940 |
them to be matched literally. This is consistent with how the `==' pattern |
| 1941 |
matching operator treats quoted portions of its pattern argument. |
| 1942 |
|
| 1943 |
Since the treatment of quoted string arguments was changed, several issues |
| 1944 |
have arisen, chief among them the problem of white space in pattern arguments |
| 1945 |
and the differing treatment of quoted strings between bash-3.1 and bash-3.2. |
| 1946 |
Both problems may be solved by using a shell variable to hold the pattern. |
| 1947 |
Since word splitting is not performed when expanding shell variables in all |
| 1948 |
operands of the [[ command, this allows users to quote patterns as they wish |
| 1949 |
when assigning the variable, then expand the values to a single string that |
| 1950 |
may contain whitespace. The first problem may be solved by using backslashes |
| 1951 |
or any other quoting mechanism to escape the white space in the patterns. |
| 1952 |
|
| 1953 |
Bash-4.0 introduces the concept of a `compatibility level', controlled by |
| 1954 |
several options to the `shopt' builtin. If the `compat31' option is enabled, |
| 1955 |
bash reverts to the bash-3.1 behavior with respect to quoting the rhs of |
| 1956 |
the =~ operator. |
| 1957 |
|
| 1958 |
E15) Tell me more about the shell compatibility level. |
| 1959 |
|
| 1960 |
Bash-4.0 introduced the concept of a `shell compatibility level', specified |
| 1961 |
as a set of options to the shopt builtin (compat31, compat32, compat40 at |
| 1962 |
this writing). There is only one current compatibility level -- each |
| 1963 |
option is mutually exclusive. This list does not mention behavior that is |
| 1964 |
standard for a particular version (e.g., setting compat32 means that quoting |
| 1965 |
the rhs of the regexp matching operator quotes special regexp characters in |
| 1966 |
the word, which is default behavior in bash-3.2 and above). |
| 1967 |
|
| 1968 |
compat31 set |
| 1969 |
- the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current |
| 1970 |
locale when comparing strings |
| 1971 |
- quoting the rhs of the regexp matching operator (=~) has no |
| 1972 |
special effect |
| 1973 |
|
| 1974 |
compat32 set |
| 1975 |
- the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current |
| 1976 |
locale when comparing strings |
| 1977 |
|
| 1978 |
compat40 set |
| 1979 |
- the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current |
| 1980 |
locale when comparing strings |
| 1981 |
- interrupting a command list such as "a ; b ; c" causes the execution |
| 1982 |
of the entire list to be aborted (in versions before bash-4.0, |
| 1983 |
interrupting one command in a list caused the next to be executed) |
| 1984 |
|
| 1985 |
compat41 set |
| 1986 |
- interrupting a command list such as "a ; b ; c" causes the execution |
| 1987 |
of the entire list to be aborted (in versions before bash-4.1, |
| 1988 |
interrupting one command in a list caused the next to be executed) |
| 1989 |
- when in posix mode, single quotes in the `word' portion of a |
| 1990 |
double-quoted parameter expansion define a new quoting context and |
| 1991 |
are treated specially |
| 1992 |
|
| 1993 |
compat42 set |
| 1994 |
- the replacement string in double-quoted pattern substitution is not |
| 1995 |
run through quote removal, as in previous versions |
| 1996 |
|
| 1997 |
Section F: Things to watch out for on certain Unix versions |
| 1998 |
|
| 1999 |
F1) Why can't I use command line editing in my `cmdtool'? |
| 2000 |
|
| 2001 |
The problem is `cmdtool' and bash fighting over the input. When |
| 2002 |
scrolling is enabled in a cmdtool window, cmdtool puts the tty in |
| 2003 |
`raw mode' to permit command-line editing using the mouse for |
| 2004 |
applications that cannot do it themselves. As a result, bash and |
| 2005 |
cmdtool each try to read keyboard input immediately, with neither |
| 2006 |
getting enough of it to be useful. |
| 2007 |
|
| 2008 |
This mode also causes cmdtool to not implement many of the |
| 2009 |
terminal functions and control sequences appearing in the |
| 2010 |
`sun-cmd' termcap entry. For a more complete explanation, see |
| 2011 |
that file examples/suncmd.termcap in the bash distribution. |
| 2012 |
|
| 2013 |
`xterm' is a better choice, and gets along with bash much more |
| 2014 |
smoothly. |
| 2015 |
|
| 2016 |
If you must use cmdtool, you can use the termcap description in |
| 2017 |
examples/suncmd.termcap. Set the TERMCAP variable to the terminal |
| 2018 |
description contained in that file, i.e. |
| 2019 |
|
| 2020 |
TERMCAP='Mu|sun-cmd:am:bs:km:pt:li#34:co#80:cl=^L:ce=\E[K:cd=\E[J:rs=\E[s:' |
| 2021 |
|
| 2022 |
Then export TERMCAP and start a new cmdtool window from that shell. |
| 2023 |
The bash command-line editing should behave better in the new |
| 2024 |
cmdtool. If this works, you can put the assignment to TERMCAP |
| 2025 |
in your bashrc file. |
| 2026 |
|
| 2027 |
F2) I built bash on Solaris 2. Why do globbing expansions and filename |
| 2028 |
completion chop off the first few characters of each filename? |
| 2029 |
|
| 2030 |
This is the consequence of building bash on SunOS 5 and linking |
| 2031 |
with the libraries in /usr/ucblib, but using the definitions |
| 2032 |
and structures from files in /usr/include. |
| 2033 |
|
| 2034 |
The actual conflict is between the dirent structure in |
| 2035 |
/usr/include/dirent.h and the struct returned by the version of |
| 2036 |
`readdir' in libucb.a (a 4.3-BSD style `struct direct'). |
| 2037 |
|
| 2038 |
Make sure you've got /usr/ccs/bin ahead of /usr/ucb in your $PATH |
| 2039 |
when configuring and building bash. This will ensure that you |
| 2040 |
use /usr/ccs/bin/cc or acc instead of /usr/ucb/cc and that you |
| 2041 |
link with libc before libucb. |
| 2042 |
|
| 2043 |
If you have installed the Sun C compiler, you may also need to |
| 2044 |
put /usr/ccs/bin and /opt/SUNWspro/bin into your $PATH before |
| 2045 |
/usr/ucb. |
| 2046 |
|
| 2047 |
F3) Why does bash dump core after I interrupt username completion or |
| 2048 |
`~user' tilde expansion on a machine running NIS? |
| 2049 |
|
| 2050 |
This is a famous and long-standing bug in the SunOS YP (sorry, NIS) |
| 2051 |
client library, which is part of libc. |
| 2052 |
|
| 2053 |
The YP library code keeps static state -- a pointer into the data |
| 2054 |
returned from the server. When YP initializes itself (setpwent), |
| 2055 |
it looks at this pointer and calls free on it if it's non-null. |
| 2056 |
So far, so good. |
| 2057 |
|
| 2058 |
If one of the YP functions is interrupted during getpwent (the |
| 2059 |
exact function is interpretwithsave()), and returns NULL, the |
| 2060 |
pointer is freed without being reset to NULL, and the function |
| 2061 |
returns. The next time getpwent is called, it sees that this |
| 2062 |
pointer is non-null, calls free, and the bash free() blows up |
| 2063 |
because it's being asked to free freed memory. |
| 2064 |
|
| 2065 |
The traditional Unix mallocs allow memory to be freed multiple |
| 2066 |
times; that's probably why this has never been fixed. You can |
| 2067 |
run configure with the `--without-gnu-malloc' option to use |
| 2068 |
the C library malloc and avoid the problem. |
| 2069 |
|
| 2070 |
F4) I'm running SVR4.2. Why is the line erased every time I type `@'? |
| 2071 |
|
| 2072 |
The `@' character is the default `line kill' character in most |
| 2073 |
versions of System V, including SVR4.2. You can change this |
| 2074 |
character to whatever you want using `stty'. For example, to |
| 2075 |
change the line kill character to control-u, type |
| 2076 |
|
| 2077 |
stty kill ^U |
| 2078 |
|
| 2079 |
where the `^' and `U' can be two separate characters. |
| 2080 |
|
| 2081 |
F5) Why does bash report syntax errors when my C News scripts use a |
| 2082 |
redirection before a subshell command? |
| 2083 |
|
| 2084 |
The actual command in question is something like |
| 2085 |
|
| 2086 |
< file ( command ) |
| 2087 |
|
| 2088 |
According to the grammar given in the POSIX.2 standard, this construct |
| 2089 |
is, in fact, a syntax error. Redirections may only precede `simple |
| 2090 |
commands'. A subshell construct such as the above is one of the shell's |
| 2091 |
`compound commands'. A redirection may only follow a compound command. |
| 2092 |
|
| 2093 |
This affects the mechanical transformation of commands that use `cat' |
| 2094 |
to pipe a file into a command (a favorite Useless-Use-Of-Cat topic on |
| 2095 |
comp.unix.shell). While most commands of the form |
| 2096 |
|
| 2097 |
cat file | command |
| 2098 |
|
| 2099 |
can be converted to `< file command', shell control structures such as |
| 2100 |
loops and subshells require `command < file'. |
| 2101 |
|
| 2102 |
The file CWRU/sh-redir-hack in the bash distribution is an |
| 2103 |
(unofficial) patch to parse.y that will modify the grammar to |
| 2104 |
support this construct. It will not apply with `patch'; you must |
| 2105 |
modify parse.y by hand. Note that if you apply this, you must |
| 2106 |
recompile with -DREDIRECTION_HACK. This introduces a large |
| 2107 |
number of reduce/reduce conflicts into the shell grammar. |
| 2108 |
|
| 2109 |
F6) Why can't I use vi-mode editing on Red Hat Linux 6.1? |
| 2110 |
|
| 2111 |
The short answer is that Red Hat screwed up. |
| 2112 |
|
| 2113 |
The long answer is that they shipped an /etc/inputrc that only works |
| 2114 |
for emacs mode editing, and then screwed all the vi users by setting |
| 2115 |
INPUTRC to /etc/inputrc in /etc/profile. |
| 2116 |
|
| 2117 |
The short fix is to do one of the following: remove or rename |
| 2118 |
/etc/inputrc, set INPUTRC=~/.inputrc in ~/.bashrc (or .bash_profile, |
| 2119 |
but make sure you export it if you do), remove the assignment to |
| 2120 |
INPUTRC from /etc/profile, add |
| 2121 |
|
| 2122 |
set keymap emacs |
| 2123 |
|
| 2124 |
to the beginning of /etc/inputrc, or bracket the key bindings in |
| 2125 |
/etc/inputrc with these lines |
| 2126 |
|
| 2127 |
$if mode=emacs |
| 2128 |
[...] |
| 2129 |
$endif |
| 2130 |
|
| 2131 |
F7) Why do bash-2.05a and bash-2.05b fail to compile `printf.def' on |
| 2132 |
HP/UX 11.x? |
| 2133 |
|
| 2134 |
HP/UX's support for long double is imperfect at best. |
| 2135 |
|
| 2136 |
GCC will support it without problems, but the HP C library functions |
| 2137 |
like strtold(3) and printf(3) don't actually work with long doubles. |
| 2138 |
HP implemented a `long_double' type as a 4-element array of 32-bit |
| 2139 |
ints, and that is what the library functions use. The ANSI C |
| 2140 |
`long double' type is a 128-bit floating point scalar. |
| 2141 |
|
| 2142 |
The easiest fix, until HP fixes things up, is to edit the generated |
| 2143 |
config.h and #undef the HAVE_LONG_DOUBLE line. After doing that, |
| 2144 |
the compilation should complete successfully. |
| 2145 |
|
| 2146 |
Section G: How can I get bash to do certain common things? |
| 2147 |
|
| 2148 |
G1) How can I get bash to read and display eight-bit characters? |
| 2149 |
|
| 2150 |
This is a process requiring several steps. |
| 2151 |
|
| 2152 |
First, you must ensure that the `physical' data path is a full eight |
| 2153 |
bits. For xterms, for example, the `vt100' resources `eightBitInput' |
| 2154 |
and `eightBitOutput' should be set to `true'. |
| 2155 |
|
| 2156 |
Once you have set up an eight-bit path, you must tell the kernel and |
| 2157 |
tty driver to leave the eighth bit of characters alone when processing |
| 2158 |
keyboard input. Use `stty' to do this: |
| 2159 |
|
| 2160 |
stty cs8 -istrip -parenb |
| 2161 |
|
| 2162 |
For old BSD-style systems, you can use |
| 2163 |
|
| 2164 |
stty pass8 |
| 2165 |
|
| 2166 |
You may also need |
| 2167 |
|
| 2168 |
stty even odd |
| 2169 |
|
| 2170 |
Finally, you need to tell readline that you will be inputting and |
| 2171 |
displaying eight-bit characters. You use readline variables to do |
| 2172 |
this. These variables can be set in your .inputrc or using the bash |
| 2173 |
`bind' builtin. Here's an example using `bind': |
| 2174 |
|
| 2175 |
bash$ bind 'set convert-meta off' |
| 2176 |
bash$ bind 'set meta-flag on' |
| 2177 |
bash$ bind 'set output-meta on' |
| 2178 |
|
| 2179 |
The `set' commands between the single quotes may also be placed |
| 2180 |
in ~/.inputrc. |
| 2181 |
|
| 2182 |
The script examples/scripts.noah/meta.bash encapsulates the bind |
| 2183 |
commands in a shell function. |
| 2184 |
|
| 2185 |
G2) How do I write a function `x' to replace builtin command `x', but |
| 2186 |
still invoke the command from within the function? |
| 2187 |
|
| 2188 |
This is why the `command' and `builtin' builtins exist. The |
| 2189 |
`command' builtin executes the command supplied as its first |
| 2190 |
argument, skipping over any function defined with that name. The |
| 2191 |
`builtin' builtin executes the builtin command given as its first |
| 2192 |
argument directly. |
| 2193 |
|
| 2194 |
For example, to write a function to replace `cd' that writes the |
| 2195 |
hostname and current directory to an xterm title bar, use |
| 2196 |
something like the following: |
| 2197 |
|
| 2198 |
cd() |
| 2199 |
{ |
| 2200 |
builtin cd "$@" && xtitle "$HOST: $PWD" |
| 2201 |
} |
| 2202 |
|
| 2203 |
This could also be written using `command' instead of `builtin'; |
| 2204 |
the version above is marginally more efficient. |
| 2205 |
|
| 2206 |
G3) How can I find the value of a shell variable whose name is the value |
| 2207 |
of another shell variable? |
| 2208 |
|
| 2209 |
Versions of Bash newer than Bash-2.0 support this directly. You can use |
| 2210 |
|
| 2211 |
${!var} |
| 2212 |
|
| 2213 |
For example, the following sequence of commands will echo `z': |
| 2214 |
|
| 2215 |
var1=var2 |
| 2216 |
var2=z |
| 2217 |
echo ${!var1} |
| 2218 |
|
| 2219 |
For sh compatibility, use the `eval' builtin. The important |
| 2220 |
thing to remember is that `eval' expands the arguments you give |
| 2221 |
it again, so you need to quote the parts of the arguments that |
| 2222 |
you want `eval' to act on. |
| 2223 |
|
| 2224 |
For example, this expression prints the value of the last positional |
| 2225 |
parameter: |
| 2226 |
|
| 2227 |
eval echo \"\$\{$#\}\" |
| 2228 |
|
| 2229 |
The expansion of the quoted portions of this expression will be |
| 2230 |
deferred until `eval' runs, while the `$#' will be expanded |
| 2231 |
before `eval' is executed. In versions of bash later than bash-2.0, |
| 2232 |
|
| 2233 |
echo ${!#} |
| 2234 |
|
| 2235 |
does the same thing. |
| 2236 |
|
| 2237 |
This is not the same thing as ksh93 `nameref' variables, though the syntax |
| 2238 |
is similar. Namerefs are available bash version 4.3, and work as in ksh93. |
| 2239 |
|
| 2240 |
G4) How can I make the bash `time' reserved word print timing output that |
| 2241 |
looks like the output from my system's /usr/bin/time? |
| 2242 |
|
| 2243 |
The bash command timing code looks for a variable `TIMEFORMAT' and |
| 2244 |
uses its value as a format string to decide how to display the |
| 2245 |
timing statistics. |
| 2246 |
|
| 2247 |
The value of TIMEFORMAT is a string with `%' escapes expanded in a |
| 2248 |
fashion similar in spirit to printf(3). The manual page explains |
| 2249 |
the meanings of the escape sequences in the format string. |
| 2250 |
|
| 2251 |
If TIMEFORMAT is not set, bash acts as if the following assignment had |
| 2252 |
been performed: |
| 2253 |
|
| 2254 |
TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%3lR\nuser\t%3lU\nsys\t%3lS' |
| 2255 |
|
| 2256 |
The POSIX.2 default time format (used by `time -p command') is |
| 2257 |
|
| 2258 |
TIMEFORMAT=$'real %2R\nuser %2U\nsys %2S' |
| 2259 |
|
| 2260 |
The BSD /usr/bin/time format can be emulated with: |
| 2261 |
|
| 2262 |
TIMEFORMAT=$'\t%1R real\t%1U user\t%1S sys' |
| 2263 |
|
| 2264 |
The System V /usr/bin/time format can be emulated with: |
| 2265 |
|
| 2266 |
TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%1R\nuser\t%1U\nsys\t%1S' |
| 2267 |
|
| 2268 |
The ksh format can be emulated with: |
| 2269 |
|
| 2270 |
TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%2lR\nuser\t%2lU\nsys\t%2lS' |
| 2271 |
|
| 2272 |
G5) How do I get the current directory into my prompt? |
| 2273 |
|
| 2274 |
Bash provides a number of backslash-escape sequences which are expanded |
| 2275 |
when the prompt string (PS1 or PS2) is displayed. The full list is in |
| 2276 |
the manual page. |
| 2277 |
|
| 2278 |
The \w expansion gives the full pathname of the current directory, with |
| 2279 |
a tilde (`~') substituted for the current value of $HOME. The \W |
| 2280 |
expansion gives the basename of the current directory. To put the full |
| 2281 |
pathname of the current directory into the path without any tilde |
| 2282 |
substitution, use $PWD. Here are some examples: |
| 2283 |
|
| 2284 |
PS1='\w$ ' # current directory with tilde |
| 2285 |
PS1='\W$ ' # basename of current directory |
| 2286 |
PS1='$PWD$ ' # full pathname of current directory |
| 2287 |
|
| 2288 |
The single quotes are important in the final example to prevent $PWD from |
| 2289 |
being expanded when the assignment to PS1 is performed. |
| 2290 |
|
| 2291 |
G6) How can I rename "*.foo" to "*.bar"? |
| 2292 |
|
| 2293 |
Use the pattern removal functionality described in D3. The following `for' |
| 2294 |
loop will do the trick: |
| 2295 |
|
| 2296 |
for f in *.foo; do |
| 2297 |
mv $f ${f%foo}bar |
| 2298 |
done |
| 2299 |
|
| 2300 |
G7) How can I translate a filename from uppercase to lowercase? |
| 2301 |
|
| 2302 |
The script examples/functions/lowercase, originally written by John DuBois, |
| 2303 |
will do the trick. The converse is left as an exercise. |
| 2304 |
|
| 2305 |
G8) How can I write a filename expansion (globbing) pattern that will match |
| 2306 |
all files in the current directory except "." and ".."? |
| 2307 |
|
| 2308 |
You must have set the `extglob' shell option using `shopt -s extglob' to use |
| 2309 |
this: |
| 2310 |
|
| 2311 |
echo .!(.|) * |
| 2312 |
|
| 2313 |
A solution that works without extended globbing is given in the Unix Shell |
| 2314 |
FAQ, posted periodically to comp.unix.shell. It's a variant of |
| 2315 |
|
| 2316 |
echo .[!.]* ..?* * |
| 2317 |
|
| 2318 |
(The ..?* catches files with names of three or more characters beginning |
| 2319 |
with `..') |
| 2320 |
|
| 2321 |
Section H: Where do I go from here? |
| 2322 |
|
| 2323 |
H1) How do I report bugs in bash, and where should I look for fixes and |
| 2324 |
advice? |
| 2325 |
|
| 2326 |
Use the `bashbug' script to report bugs. It is built and |
| 2327 |
installed at the same time as bash. It provides a standard |
| 2328 |
template for reporting a problem and automatically includes |
| 2329 |
information about your configuration and build environment. |
| 2330 |
|
| 2331 |
`bashbug' sends its reports to bug-bash@gnu.org, which |
| 2332 |
is a large mailing list gatewayed to the usenet newsgroup gnu.bash.bug. |
| 2333 |
|
| 2334 |
Bug fixes, answers to questions, and announcements of new releases |
| 2335 |
are all posted to gnu.bash.bug. Discussions concerning bash features |
| 2336 |
and problems also take place there. |
| 2337 |
|
| 2338 |
To reach the bash maintainers directly, send mail to |
| 2339 |
bash-maintainers@gnu.org. |
| 2340 |
|
| 2341 |
H2) What kind of bash documentation is there? |
| 2342 |
|
| 2343 |
First, look in the doc directory in the bash distribution. It should |
| 2344 |
contain at least the following files: |
| 2345 |
|
| 2346 |
bash.1 an extensive, thorough Unix-style manual page |
| 2347 |
builtins.1 a manual page covering just bash builtin commands |
| 2348 |
bashref.texi a reference manual in GNU tex`info format |
| 2349 |
bashref.info an info version of the reference manual |
| 2350 |
FAQ this file |
| 2351 |
article.ms text of an article written for The Linux Journal |
| 2352 |
readline.3 a man page describing readline |
| 2353 |
|
| 2354 |
Postscript, HTML, and ASCII files created from the above source are |
| 2355 |
available in the documentation distribution. |
| 2356 |
|
| 2357 |
There is additional documentation available for anonymous FTP from host |
| 2358 |
ftp.cwru.edu in the `pub/bash' directory. |
| 2359 |
|
| 2360 |
Cameron Newham and Bill Rosenblatt have written a book on bash, published |
| 2361 |
by O'Reilly and Associates. The book is based on Bill Rosenblatt's Korn |
| 2362 |
Shell book. The title is ``Learning the Bash Shell'', and the ISBN number |
| 2363 |
of the third edition, published in March, 2005, is 0-596-00965-8. Look for |
| 2364 |
it in fine bookstores near you. This edition of the book has been updated |
| 2365 |
to cover bash-3.0. |
| 2366 |
|
| 2367 |
The GNU Bash Reference Manual has been published as a printed book by |
| 2368 |
Network Theory Ltd (Paperback, ISBN: 0-9541617-7-7, Nov. 2006). It covers |
| 2369 |
bash-3.2 and is available from most online bookstores (see |
| 2370 |
http://www.network-theory.co.uk/bash/manual/ for details). The publisher |
| 2371 |
will donate $1 to the Free Software Foundation for each copy sold. |
| 2372 |
|
| 2373 |
Arnold Robbins and Nelson Beebe have written ``Classic Shell Scripting'', |
| 2374 |
published by O'Reilly. The first edition, with ISBN number 0-596-00595-4, |
| 2375 |
was published in May, 2005. |
| 2376 |
|
| 2377 |
Chris F. A. Johnson, a frequent contributor to comp.unix.shell and |
| 2378 |
gnu.bash.bug, has written ``Shell Scripting Recipes: A Problem-Solution |
| 2379 |
Approach,'' a new book on shell scripting, concentrating on features of |
| 2380 |
the POSIX standard helpful to shell script writers. The first edition from |
| 2381 |
Apress, with ISBN number 1-59059-471-1, was published in May, 2005. |
| 2382 |
|
| 2383 |
H3) What's coming in future versions? |
| 2384 |
|
| 2385 |
These are features I hope to include in a future version of bash. |
| 2386 |
|
| 2387 |
Rocky Bernstein's bash debugger (support is included with bash-4.0) |
| 2388 |
|
| 2389 |
H4) What's on the bash `wish list' for future versions? |
| 2390 |
|
| 2391 |
These are features that may or may not appear in a future version of bash. |
| 2392 |
|
| 2393 |
breaking some of the shell functionality into embeddable libraries |
| 2394 |
a module system like zsh's, using dynamic loading like builtins |
| 2395 |
a bash programmer's guide with a chapter on creating loadable builtins |
| 2396 |
a better loadable interface to perl with access to the shell builtins and |
| 2397 |
variables (contributions gratefully accepted) |
| 2398 |
ksh93-like `xx.yy' variables (including some of the .sh.* variables) and |
| 2399 |
associated discipline functions |
| 2400 |
Some of the new ksh93 pattern matching operators, like backreferencing |
| 2401 |
|
| 2402 |
H5) When will the next release appear? |
| 2403 |
|
| 2404 |
The next version will appear sometime in 2015. Never make predictions. |
| 2405 |
|
| 2406 |
This document is Copyright 1995-2014 by Chester Ramey. |
| 2407 |
|
| 2408 |
Permission is hereby granted, without written agreement and |
| 2409 |
without license or royalty fees, to use, copy, and distribute |
| 2410 |
this document for any purpose, provided that the above copyright |
| 2411 |
notice appears in all copies of this document and that the |
| 2412 |
contents of this document remain unaltered. |