A builtin is a command contained within the Bash tool set, literally built in. A builtin may be a synonym to a system command of the same name, but Bash reimplements it internally. [1] For example, the Bash echo command is not the same as /bin/echo, although their behavior is almost identical.
A keyword is a reserved word, token or operator. Keywords have a special meaning to the shell, and indeed are the building blocks of the shell's syntax. As examples, "for", "while" and "!" are keywords. Similar to a builtin, a keyword is hard-coded into Bash.
prints (to stdout) an expression or variable (see Example 5-1).
echo Hello echo $a |
An echo requires the -e option to print escaped characters. See Example 6-2.
Normally, each echo command prints a terminal newline, but the -n option suppresses this.
An echo can be used to feed a sequence of commands down a pipe.
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An echo, in combination with command substitution can set a variable. a=`echo "HELLO" | tr A-Z a-z` See also Example 12-14, Example 12-2, Example 12-27, and Example 12-28. |
Be aware that echo `command` deletes any linefeeds that the output of command generates. Since $IFS normally contains \n as one of its set of whitespace characters, Bash segments the output of command at linefeeds into arguments to echo, which then emits these arguments separated by spaces.
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This command is a shell builtin, and not the same as /bin/echo, although its behavior is similar.
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The printf, formatted print, command is an enhanced echo. It is a limited variant of the C language printf, and the syntax is somewhat different.
printf format-string... parameter...
This is the Bash builtin version of the /bin/printf or /usr/bin/printf command. See the printf manpage (of the system command) for in-depth coverage.
Older versions of Bash may not support printf. |
Example 11-1. printf in action
#!/bin/bash # printf demo PI=3.14159265358979 DecimalConstant=31373 Message1="Greetings," Message2="Earthling." echo printf "Pi to 2 decimal places = %1.2f" $PI echo printf "Pi to 9 decimal places = %1.9f" $PI # It even rounds off correctly. printf "\n" # Prints a line feed, # equivalent to 'echo'. printf "Constant = \t%d\n" $DecimalConstant # Inserts tab (\t) printf "%s %s \n" $Message1 $Message2 echo # ==========================================# # Simulation of C function, 'sprintf'. # Loading a variable with a formatted string. echo Pi12=$(printf "%1.12f" $PI) echo "Pi to 12 decimal places = $Pi12" Msg=`printf "%s %s \n" $Message1 $Message2` echo $Msg; echo $Msg # As it happens, the 'sprintf' function can now be accessed # as a loadable module to Bash, but this is not portable. exit 0 |
Formatting error messages is a useful application of printf
E_BADDIR=65 var=nonexistent_directory error() { printf "$@" >&2 # Formats positional params passed, and sents them to stderr. echo exit $E_BADDIR } cd $var || error $"Can't cd to %s." "$var" # Thanks, S.C. |
"Reads" the value of a variable from stdin, that is, interactively fetches input from the keyboard. The -a option lets read get array variables (see Example 26-2).
Example 11-2. Variable assignment, using read
#!/bin/bash echo -n "Enter the value of variable 'var1': " # The -n option to echo suppresses newline. read var1 # Note no '$' in front of var1, since it is being set. echo "var1 = $var1" echo # A single 'read' statement can set multiple variables. echo -n "Enter the values of variables 'var2' and 'var3' (separated by a space or tab): " read var2 var3 echo "var2 = $var2 var3 = $var3" # If you input only one value, the other variable(s) will remain unset (null). exit 0 |
Normally, inputting a \ suppresses a newline during input to a read. The -r option causes an inputted \ to be interpreted literally.
Example 11-3. Multi-line input to read
#!/bin/bash echo echo "Enter a string terminated by a \\, then press <ENTER>." echo "Then, enter a second string, and again press <ENTER>." read var1 # The "\" suppresses the newline, when reading "var1". # first line \ # second line echo "var1 = $var1" # var1 = first line second line # For each line terminated by a "\", # you get a prompt on the next line to continue feeding characters into var1. echo; echo echo "Enter another string terminated by a \\ , then press <ENTER>." read -r var2 # The -r option causes the "\" to be read literally. # first line \ echo "var2 = $var2" # var2 = first line \ # Data entry terminates with the first <ENTER>. echo exit 0 |
The read command has some interesting options that permit echoing a prompt and even reading keystrokes without hitting ENTER.
# Read a keypress without hitting ENTER. read -s -n1 -p "Hit a key " keypress echo; echo "Keypress was "\"$keypress\""." # -s option means do not echo input. # -n N option means accept only N characters of input. # -p option means echo the following prompt before reading input. # Using these options is tricky, since they need to be in the correct order. |
The read command may also "read" its variable value from a file redirected to stdin. If the file contains more than one line, only the first line is assigned to the variable. If read has more than one parameter, then each of these variables gets assigned a successive whitespace-delineated string. Caution!
Example 11-4. Using read with file redirection
#!/bin/bash read var1 <data-file echo "var1 = $var1" # var1 set to the entire first line of the input file "data-file" read var2 var3 <data-file echo "var2 = $var2 var3 = $var3" # Note non-intuitive behavior of "read" here. # 1) Rewinds back to the beginning of input file. # 2) Each variable is now set to a corresponding string, # separated by whitespace, rather than to an entire line of text. # 3) The final variable gets the remainder of the line. # 4) If there are more variables to be set than whitespace-terminated strings # on the first line of the file, then the excess variables remain empty. echo "------------------------------------------------" # How to resolve the above problem with a loop: while read line do echo "$line" done <data-file # Thanks, Heiner Steven for pointing this out. echo "------------------------------------------------" # Use $IFS (Internal File Separator variable) to split a line of input to # "read", if you do not want the default to be whitespace. echo "List of all users:" OIFS=$IFS; IFS=: # /etc/passwd uses ":" for field separator. while read name passwd uid gid fullname ignore do echo "$name ($fullname)" done </etc/passwd # I/O redirection. IFS=$OIFS # Restore originial $IFS. # This code snippet also by Heiner Steven. exit 0 |
The familiar cd change directory command finds use in scripts where execution of a command requires being in a specified directory.
(cd /source/directory && tar cf - . ) | (cd /dest/directory && tar xpvf -) |
The -P (physical) option to cd causes it to ignore symbolic links.
cd - changes to $OLDPWD, the previous working directory.
Print Working Directory. This gives the user's (or script's) current directory (see Example 11-5). The effect is identical to reading the value of the builtin variable $PWD.
This command set is a mechanism for bookmarking working directories, a means of moving back and forth through directories in an orderly manner. A pushdown stack is used to keep track of directory names. Options allow various manipulations of the directory stack.
pushd dir-name pushes the path dir-name onto the directory stack and simultaneously changes the current working directory to dir-name
popd removes (pops) the top directory path name off the directory stack and simultaneously changes the current working directory to that directory popped from the stack.
dirs lists the contents of the directory stack (counterpart to $DIRSTACK) A successful pushd or popd will automatically invoke dirs.
Scripts that require various changes to the current working directory without hard-coding the directory name changes can make good use of these commands. Note that the implicit $DIRSTACK array variable, accessible from within a script, holds the contents of the directory stack.
Example 11-5. Changing the current working directory
#!/bin/bash dir1=/usr/local dir2=/var/spool pushd $dir1 # Will do an automatic 'dirs' (list directory stack to stdout). echo "Now in directory `pwd`." # Uses back-quoted 'pwd'. # Now, do some stuff in directory 'dir1'. pushd $dir2 echo "Now in directory `pwd`." # Now, do some stuff in directory 'dir2'. echo "The top entry in the DIRSTACK array is $DIRSTACK." popd echo "Now back in directory `pwd`." # Now, do some more stuff in directory 'dir1'. popd echo "Now back in original working directory `pwd`." exit 0 |
The let command carries out arithmetic operations on variables. In many cases, it functions as a less complex version of expr.
Example 11-6. Letting let do some arithmetic.
#!/bin/bash echo let a=11 # Same as 'a=11' let a=a+5 # Equivalent to let "a = a + 5" # (double quotes and spaces make it more readable) echo "11 + 5 = $a" let "a <<= 3" # Equivalent to let "a = a << 3" echo "\"\$a\" (=16) left-shifted 3 places = $a" let "a /= 4" # Equivalent to let "a = a / 4" echo "128 / 4 = $a" let "a -= 5" # Equivalent to let "a = a - 5" echo "32 - 5 = $a" let "a = a * 10" # Equivalent to let "a = a * 10" echo "27 * 10 = $a" let "a %= 8" # Equivalent to let "a = a % 8" echo "270 modulo 8 = $a (270 / 8 = 33, remainder $a)" echo exit 0 |
eval arg1 [arg2] ... [argN]
Translates into commands the arguments in a list (useful for code generation within a script).
Example 11-7. Showing the effect of eval
#!/bin/bash y=`eval ls -l` # Similar to y=`ls -l` echo $y # but linefeeds removed. y=`eval df` # Similar to y=`df` echo $y # but linefeeds removed. # Since LF's not preserved, it may make it easier to parse output. exit 0 |
Example 11-8. Forcing a log-off
#!/bin/bash y=`eval ps ax | sed -n '/ppp/p' | awk '{ print $1 }'` # Finding the process number of 'ppp'. kill -9 $y # Killing it # Above lines may be replaced by # kill -9 `ps ax | awk '/ppp/ { print $1 }' chmod 666 /dev/ttyS3 # Doing a SIGKILL on ppp changes the permissions # on the serial port. Restore them to previous state. rm /var/lock/LCK..ttyS3 # Remove the serial port lock file. exit 0 |
Example 11-9. A version of "rot13"
#!/bin/bash # rot13.sh: Classic rot13 algorithm, encryption that might fool a 3-year old. # Usage: ./rot13.sh filename # or ./rot13.sh <filename # or ./rot13.sh and supply keyboard input (stdin) cat "$@" | tr 'a-zA-Z' 'n-za-mN-ZA-M' # "a" goes to "n", "b" to "o", etc. # The 'cat "$@"' construction # permits getting input either from stdin or from files. exit 0 _2; |
The eval command can be risky, and normally should be avoided when there exists a reasonable alternative. An eval $COMMANDS executes the contents of COMMANDS, which may contain such unpleasant surprises as rm -rf *. Running an eval on unfamiliar code written by persons unknown is living dangerously. |
The set command changes the value of internal script variables. One use for this is to toggle option flags which help determine the behavior of the script. Another application for it is to reset the positional parameters that a script sees as the result of a command (set `command`). The script can then parse the fields of the command output.
Example 11-10. Using set with positional parameters
#!/bin/bash # script "set-test" # Invoke this script with three command line parameters, # for example, "./set-test one two three". echo echo "Positional parameters before set \`uname -a\` :" echo "Command-line argument #1 = $1" echo "Command-line argument #2 = $2" echo "Command-line argument #3 = $3" echo set `uname -a` # Sets the positional parameters to the output # of the command `uname -a` echo "Positional parameters after set \`uname -a\` :" # $1, $2, $3, etc. reinitialized to result of `uname -a` echo "Field #1 of 'uname -a' = $1" echo "Field #2 of 'uname -a' = $2" echo "Field #3 of 'uname -a' = $3" echo exit 0 |
See also Example 10-2.
The unset command deletes a shell variable, effectively setting it to null. Note that this command does not affect positional parameters.
bash$ unset PATH bash$ echo $PATH bash$ |
The export command makes available variables to all child processes of the running script or shell. Unfortunately, there is no way to export variables back to the parent process, to the process that called or invoked the script or shell. One important use of export command is in startup files, to initialize and make accessible environmental variables to subsequent user processes.
Example 11-12. Using export to pass a variable to an embedded awk script
#!/bin/bash # Yet another version of the "column totaler" script (col-totaler.sh) # that adds up a specified column (of numbers) in the target file. # This uses the environment to pass a script variable to 'awk'. ARGS=2 E_WRONGARGS=65 if [ $# -ne "$ARGS" ] # Check for proper no. of command line args. then echo "Usage: `basename $0` filename column-number" exit $E_WRONGARGS fi filename=$1 column_number=$2 #===== Same as original script, up to this point =====# export column_number # Export column number to environment, so it's available for retrieval. # Begin awk script. # ------------------------------------------------ awk '{ total += $ENVIRON["column_number"] } END { print total }' $filename # ------------------------------------------------ # End awk script. # Thanks, Stephane Chazelas. exit 0 |
It is possible to initialize and export variables in the same operation, as in export var1=xxx. |
The declare and typeset commands specify and/or restrict properties of variables.
Same as declare -r, sets a variable as read-only, or, in effect, as a constant. Attempts to change the variable fail with an error message. This is the shell analog of the C language const type qualifier.
This powerful tool parses command line arguments passed to the script. This is the bash analog of the getopt library function familiar to C programmers. It permits passing and concatenating multiple options [2] and associated arguments to a script (for example scriptname -abc -e /usr/local).
The getopts construct uses two implicit variables. $OPTIND is the argument pointer (OPTion INDex) and $OPTARG (OPTion ARGument) the (optional) argument attached to an option. A colon following the option name in the declaration tags that option as having an associated argument.
A getopts construct usually comes packaged in a while loop, which processes the options and arguments one at a time, then decrements the implicit $OPTIND variable to step to the next.
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while getopts ":abcde:fg" Option # Initial declaration. # a, b, c, d, e, f, and g are the options (flags) expected. # The : after option 'e' shows it will have an argument passed with it. do case $Option in a ) # Do something with variable 'a'. b ) # Do something with variable 'b'. ... e) # Do something with 'e', and also with $OPTARG, # which is the associated argument passed with option 'e'. ... g ) # Do something with variable 'g'. esac done shift $(($OPTIND - 1)) # Move argument pointer to next. # All this is not nearly as complicated as it looks <grin>. |
Example 11-13. Using getopts to read the options/arguments passed to a script
#!/bin/bash # 'getopts' processes command line arguments to script. # The arguments are parsed as "options" (flags) and associated arguments. # Try invoking this script with # 'scriptname -mn' # 'scriptname -oq qOption' (qOption can be some arbitrary string.) # 'scriptname -qXXX -r' # # 'scriptname -qr' - Unexpected result, takes "r" as the argument to option "q" # 'scriptname -q -r' - Unexpected result, same as above # If an option expects an argument ("flag:"), then it will grab # whatever is next on the command line. NO_ARGS=0 OPTERROR=65 if [ $# -eq "$NO_ARGS" ] # Script invoked with no command-line args? then echo "Usage: `basename $0` options (-mnopqrs)" exit $OPTERROR # Exit and explain usage, if no argument(s) given. fi # Usage: scriptname -options # Note: dash (-) necessary while getopts ":mnopq:rs" Option do case $Option in m ) echo "Scenario #1: option -m-";; n | o ) echo "Scenario #2: option -$Option-";; p ) echo "Scenario #3: option -p-";; q ) echo "Scenario #4: option -q-, with argument \"$OPTARG\"";; # Note that option 'q' must have an associated argument, # otherwise it falls through to the default. r | s ) echo "Scenario #5: option -$Option-"'';; * ) echo "Unimplemented option chosen.";; # DEFAULT esac done shift $(($OPTIND - 1)) # Decrements the argument pointer so it points to next argument. exit 0 |
This command, when invoked from the command line, executes a script. Within a script, a source file-name loads the file file-name. This is the shell scripting equivalent of a C/C++ #include directive. It is useful in situations when multiple scripts use a common data file or function library.
Example 11-14. "Including" a data file
#!/bin/bash . data-file # Load a data file. # Same effect as "source data-file", but more portable. # The file "data-file" must be present in current working directory, # since it is referred to by its 'basename'. # Now, reference some data from that file. echo "variable1 (from data-file) = $variable1" echo "variable3 (from data-file) = $variable3" let "sum = $variable2 + $variable4" echo "Sum of variable2 + variable4 (from data-file) = $sum" echo "message1 (from data-file) is \"$message1\"" # Note: escaped quotes print_message This is the message-print function in the data-file. exit 0 |
File data-file for Example 11-14, above. Must be present in same directory.
# This is a data file loaded by a script. # Files of this type may contain variables, functions, etc. # It may be loaded with a 'source' or '.' command by a shell script. # Let's initialize some variables. variable1=22 variable2=474 variable3=5 variable4=97 message1="Hello, how are you?" message2="Enough for now. Goodbye." print_message () { # Echoes any message passed to it. if [ -z "$1" ] then return 1 # Error, if argument missing. fi echo until [ -z "$1" ] do # Step through arguments passed to function. echo -n "$1" # Echo args one at a time, suppressing line feeds. echo -n " " # Insert spaces between words. shift # Next one. done echo return 0 } |
Unconditionally terminates a script. The exit command may optionally take an integer argument, which is returned to the shell as the exit status of the script. It is a good practice to end all but the simplest scripts with an exit 0, indicating a successful run.
If a script terminates with an exit lacking an argument, the exit status of the script is the exit status of the last command executed in the script, not counting the exit. |
This shell builtin replaces the current process with a specified command. Normally, when the shell encounters a command, it forks off [3] a child process to actually execute the command. Using the exec builtin, the shell does not fork, and the command exec'ed replaces the shell. When used in a script, therefore, it forces an exit from the script when the exec'ed command terminates. For this reason, if an exec appears in a script, it would probably be the final command.
An exec also serves to reassign file descriptors. exec <zzz-file replaces stdin with the file zzz-file (see Example 16-1).
Example 11-15. Effects of exec
#!/bin/bash exec echo "Exiting \"$0\"." # Exit from script. # The following lines never execute. echo "This will never echo." exit 0 # Will not exit here. |
The -exec option to find is not the same as the exec shell builtin. |
This command permits changing shell options on the fly (see Example 24-1 and Example 24-2). It often appears in the Bash startup files, but also has its uses in scripts. Needs version 2 or later of Bash.
shopt -s cdspell # Allows minor misspelling directory names with 'cd' command. |
A command that returns a successful (zero) exit status, but does nothing else.
# Endless loop while true # alias for ":" do operation-1 operation-2 ... operation-n # Need a way to break out of loop. done |
A command that returns an unsuccessful exit status, but does nothing else.
# Null loop while false do # The following code will not execute. operation-1 operation-2 ... operation-n # Nothing happens! done |
Similar to the which external command, type cmd gives the full pathname to "cmd". Unlike which, type is a Bash builtin. The useful -a option to type accesses identifies keywords and builtins, and also locates system commands with identical names.
bash$ type '[' [ is a shell builtin bash$ type -a '[' [ is a shell builtin [ is /usr/bin/[ |
Record the path name of specified commands (in the shell hash table), so the shell or script will not need to search the $PATH on subsequent calls to those commands. When hash is called with no arguments, it simply lists the commands that have been hashed. The -r option resets the hash table.
help COMMAND looks up a short usage summary of the shell builtin COMMAND. This is the counterpart to whatis, but for builtins.
bash$ help exit exit: exit [n] Exit the shell with a status of N. If N is omitted, the exit status is that of the last command executed. |
[1] | This is either for performance reasons (builtins execute much faster than external commands, which usually require forking off a process) or because a particular builtin needs direct access to the shell internals. |
[2] | A option is an argument that acts as a flag, switching script behaviors on or off. The argument associated with a particular option indicates the behavior that the option (flag) switches on or off. |
[3] | When a command or the shell itself initiates (or spawns) a new subprocess to carry out a task, this is called forking. This new process is the "child", and the process that forked it off is the "parent". While the child process is doing its work, the parent process is still running. |