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1 This is the Bash FAQ, version 4.14, for Bash version 4.4.
2
3 [THIS FAQ IS NO LONGER MAINTAINED]
4
5 This document contains a set of frequently-asked questions concerning
6 Bash, the GNU Bourne-Again Shell. Bash is a freely-available command
7 interpreter with advanced features for both interactive use and shell
8 programming.
9
10 Another good source of basic information about shells is the collection
11 of FAQ articles periodically posted to comp.unix.shell.
12
13 Questions and comments concerning this document should be sent to
14 chet.ramey@case.edu.
15
16 This document is available for anonymous FTP with the URL
17
18 ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/FAQ
19
20 The Bash home page is http://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/~chet/bash/bashtop.html
21
22 ----------
23 Contents:
24
25 Section A: The Basics
26
27 A1) What is it?
28 A2) What's the latest version?
29 A3) Where can I get it?
30 A4) On what machines will bash run?
31 A5) Will bash run on operating systems other than Unix?
32 A6) How can I build bash with gcc?
33 A7) How can I make bash my login shell?
34 A8) I just changed my login shell to bash, and now I can't FTP into my
35 machine. Why not?
36 A9) What's the `POSIX Shell and Utilities standard'?
37 A10) What is the bash `posix mode'?
38
39 Section B: The latest version
40
41 B1) What's new in version 4.3?
42 B2) Are there any user-visible incompatibilities between bash-4.3 and
43 previous bash versions?
44
45 Section C: Differences from other Unix shells
46
47 C1) How does bash differ from sh, the Bourne shell?
48 C2) How does bash differ from the Korn shell, version ksh88?
49 C3) Which new features in ksh-93 are not in bash, and which are?
50
51 Section D: Why does bash do some things differently than other Unix shells?
52
53 D1) Why does bash run a different version of `command' than
54 `which command' says it will?
55 D2) Why doesn't bash treat brace expansions exactly like csh?
56 D3) Why doesn't bash have csh variable modifiers?
57 D4) How can I make my csh aliases work when I convert to bash?
58 D5) How can I pipe standard output and standard error from one command to
59 another, like csh does with `|&'?
60 D6) Now that I've converted from ksh to bash, are there equivalents to
61 ksh features like autoloaded functions and the `whence' command?
62
63 Section E: Why does bash do certain things the way it does?
64
65 E1) Why is the bash builtin `test' slightly different from /bin/test?
66 E2) Why does bash sometimes say `Broken pipe'?
67 E3) When I have terminal escape sequences in my prompt, why does bash
68 wrap lines at the wrong column?
69 E4) If I pipe the output of a command into `read variable', why doesn't
70 the output show up in $variable when the read command finishes?
71 E5) I have a bunch of shell scripts that use backslash-escaped characters
72 in arguments to `echo'. Bash doesn't interpret these characters. Why
73 not, and how can I make it understand them?
74 E6) Why doesn't a while or for loop get suspended when I type ^Z?
75 E7) What about empty for loops in Makefiles?
76 E8) Why does the arithmetic evaluation code complain about `08'?
77 E9) Why does the pattern matching expression [A-Z]* match files beginning
78 with every letter except `z'?
79 E10) Why does `cd //' leave $PWD as `//'?
80 E11) If I resize my xterm while another program is running, why doesn't bash
81 notice the change?
82 E12) Why don't negative offsets in substring expansion work like I expect?
83 E13) Why does filename completion misbehave if a colon appears in the filename?
84 E14) Why does quoting the pattern argument to the regular expression matching
85 conditional operator (=~) cause matching to stop working?
86 E15) Tell me more about the shell compatibility level.
87
88 Section F: Things to watch out for on certain Unix versions
89
90 F1) Why can't I use command line editing in my `cmdtool'?
91 F2) I built bash on Solaris 2. Why do globbing expansions and filename
92 completion chop off the first few characters of each filename?
93 F3) Why does bash dump core after I interrupt username completion or
94 `~user' tilde expansion on a machine running NIS?
95 F4) I'm running SVR4.2. Why is the line erased every time I type `@'?
96 F5) Why does bash report syntax errors when my C News scripts use a
97 redirection before a subshell command?
98 F6) Why can't I use vi-mode editing on Red Hat Linux 6.1?
99 F7) Why do bash-2.05a and bash-2.05b fail to compile `printf.def' on
100 HP/UX 11.x?
101
102 Section G: How can I get bash to do certain common things?
103
104 G1) How can I get bash to read and display eight-bit characters?
105 G2) How do I write a function `x' to replace builtin command `x', but
106 still invoke the command from within the function?
107 G3) How can I find the value of a shell variable whose name is the value
108 of another shell variable?
109 G4) How can I make the bash `time' reserved word print timing output that
110 looks like the output from my system's /usr/bin/time?
111 G5) How do I get the current directory into my prompt?
112 G6) How can I rename "*.foo" to "*.bar"?
113 G7) How can I translate a filename from uppercase to lowercase?
114 G8) How can I write a filename expansion (globbing) pattern that will match
115 all files in the current directory except "." and ".."?
116
117 Section H: Where do I go from here?
118
119 H1) How do I report bugs in bash, and where should I look for fixes and
120 advice?
121 H2) What kind of bash documentation is there?
122 H3) What's coming in future versions?
123 H4) What's on the bash `wish list'?
124 H5) When will the next release appear?
125
126 ----------
127 Section A: The Basics
128
129 A1) What is it?
130
131 Bash is a Unix command interpreter (shell). It is an implementation of
132 the Posix 1003.2 shell standard, and resembles the Korn and System V
133 shells.
134
135 Bash contains a number of enhancements over those shells, both
136 for interactive use and shell programming. Features geared
137 toward interactive use include command line editing, command
138 history, job control, aliases, and prompt expansion. Programming
139 features include additional variable expansions, shell
140 arithmetic, and a number of variables and options to control
141 shell behavior.
142
143 Bash was originally written by Brian Fox of the Free Software
144 Foundation. The current developer and maintainer is Chet Ramey
145 of Case Western Reserve University.
146
147 A2) What's the latest version?
148
149 The latest version is 4.3, first made available on 26 February, 2014.
150
151 A3) Where can I get it?
152
153 Bash is the GNU project's shell, and so is available from the
154 master GNU archive site, ftp.gnu.org, and its mirrors. The
155 latest version is also available for FTP from ftp.cwru.edu.
156 The following URLs tell how to get version 4.3:
157
158 ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/bash-4.3.tar.gz
159 ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/bash-4.3.tar.gz
160
161 Formatted versions of the documentation are available with the URLs:
162
163 ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/bash-doc-4.3.tar.gz
164 ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/bash-doc-4.3.tar.gz
165
166 Any patches for the current version are available with the URL:
167
168 ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/bash-4.3-patches/
169
170 A4) On what machines will bash run?
171
172 Bash has been ported to nearly every version of Unix. All you
173 should have to do to build it on a machine for which a port
174 exists is to type `configure' and then `make'. The build process
175 will attempt to discover the version of Unix you have and tailor
176 itself accordingly, using a script created by GNU autoconf.
177
178 More information appears in the file `INSTALL' in the distribution.
179
180 The Bash web page (http://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/~chet/bash/bashtop.html)
181 explains how to obtain binary versions of bash for most of the major
182 commercial Unix systems.
183
184 A5) Will bash run on operating systems other than Unix?
185
186 Configuration specifics for Unix-like systems such as QNX and
187 LynxOS are included in the distribution. Bash-2.05 and later
188 versions should compile and run on Minix 2.0 (patches were
189 contributed), but I don't believe anyone has built bash-2.x on
190 earlier Minix versions yet.
191
192 Bash has been ported to versions of Windows implementing the Win32
193 programming interface. This includes Windows 95 and Windows NT.
194 The port was done by Cygnus Solutions (now part of Red Hat) as part
195 of their CYGWIN project. For more information about the project, see
196 http://www.cygwin.com/.
197
198 Cygnus originally ported bash-1.14.7, and that port was part of their
199 early GNU-Win32 (the original name) releases. Cygnus has also done
200 ports of bash-3.2 and bash-4.0 to the CYGWIN environment, and both
201 are available as part of their current release.
202
203 Bash-2.05b and later versions should require no local Cygnus changes to
204 build and run under CYGWIN.
205
206 DJ Delorie has a port of bash-2.x which runs under MS-DOS, as part
207 of the DJGPP project. For more information on the project, see
208
209 http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/
210
211 I have been told that the original DJGPP port was done by Daisuke Aoyama.
212
213 Mark Elbrecht <snowball3@bigfoot.com> has sent me notice that bash-2.04
214 is available for DJGPP V2. The files are available as:
215
216 ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204b.zip binary
217 ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204d.zip documentation
218 ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204s.zip source
219
220 Mark began to work with bash-2.05, but I don't know the current status.
221
222 Bash-3.0 compiles and runs with no modifications under Microsoft's Services
223 for Unix (SFU), once known as Interix. I do not anticipate any problems
224 with building bash-4.2 and later, but will gladly accept any patches that
225 are needed.
226
227 A6) How can I build bash with gcc?
228
229 Bash configures to use gcc by default if it is available. Read the
230 file INSTALL in the distribution for more information.
231
232 A7) How can I make bash my login shell?
233
234 Some machines let you use `chsh' to change your login shell. Other
235 systems use `passwd -s' or `passwd -e'. If one of these works for
236 you, that's all you need. Note that many systems require the full
237 pathname to a shell to appear in /etc/shells before you can make it
238 your login shell. For this, you may need the assistance of your
239 friendly local system administrator.
240
241 If you cannot do this, you can still use bash as your login shell, but
242 you need to perform some tricks. The basic idea is to add a command
243 to your login shell's startup file to replace your login shell with
244 bash.
245
246 For example, if your login shell is csh or tcsh, and you have installed
247 bash in /usr/gnu/bin/bash, add the following line to ~/.login:
248
249 if ( -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ) exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login
250
251 (the `--login' tells bash that it is a login shell).
252
253 It's not a good idea to put this command into ~/.cshrc, because every
254 csh you run without the `-f' option, even ones started to run csh scripts,
255 reads that file. If you must put the command in ~/.cshrc, use something
256 like
257
258 if ( $?prompt ) exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login
259
260 to ensure that bash is exec'd only when the csh is interactive.
261
262 If your login shell is sh or ksh, you have to do two things.
263
264 First, create an empty file in your home directory named `.bash_profile'.
265 The existence of this file will prevent the exec'd bash from trying to
266 read ~/.profile, and re-execing itself over and over again. ~/.bash_profile
267 is the first file bash tries to read initialization commands from when
268 it is invoked as a login shell.
269
270 Next, add a line similar to the above to ~/.profile:
271
272 [ -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && [ -x /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && \
273 exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login
274
275 This will cause login shells to replace themselves with bash running as
276 a login shell. Once you have this working, you can copy your initialization
277 code from ~/.profile to ~/.bash_profile.
278
279 I have received word that the recipe supplied above is insufficient for
280 machines running CDE. CDE has a maze of twisty little startup files, all
281 slightly different.
282
283 If you cannot change your login shell in the password file to bash, you
284 will have to (apparently) live with CDE using the shell in the password
285 file to run its startup scripts. If you have changed your shell to bash,
286 there is code in the CDE startup files (on Solaris, at least) that attempts
287 to do the right thing. It is, however, often broken, and may require that
288 you use the $BASH_ENV trick described below.
289
290 `dtterm' claims to use $SHELL as the default program to start, so if you
291 can change $SHELL in the CDE startup files, you should be able to use bash
292 in your terminal windows.
293
294 Setting DTSOURCEPROFILE in ~/.dtprofile will cause the `Xsession' program
295 to read your login shell's startup files. You may be able to use bash for
296 the rest of the CDE programs by setting SHELL to bash in ~/.dtprofile as
297 well, but I have not tried this.
298
299 You can use the above `exec' recipe to start bash when not logging in with
300 CDE by testing the value of the DT variable:
301
302 if [ -n "$DT" ]; then
303 [ -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login
304 fi
305
306 If CDE starts its shells non-interactively during login, the login shell
307 startup files (~/.profile, ~/.bash_profile) will not be sourced at login.
308 To get around this problem, append a line similar to the following to your
309 ~/.dtprofile:
310
311 BASH_ENV=${HOME}/.bash_profile ; export BASH_ENV
312
313 and add the following line to the beginning of ~/.bash_profile:
314
315 unset BASH_ENV
316
317 A8) I just changed my login shell to bash, and now I can't FTP into my
318 machine. Why not?
319
320 You must add the full pathname to bash to the file /etc/shells. As
321 noted in the answer to the previous question, many systems require
322 this before you can make bash your login shell.
323
324 Most versions of ftpd use this file to prohibit `special' users
325 such as `uucp' and `news' from using FTP.
326
327 A9) What's the `POSIX Shell and Utilities standard'?
328
329 POSIX is a name originally coined by Richard Stallman for a
330 family of open system standards based on UNIX. There are a
331 number of aspects of UNIX under consideration for
332 standardization, from the basic system services at the system
333 call and C library level to applications and tools to system
334 administration and management. Each area of standardization is
335 assigned to a working group in the 1003 series.
336
337 The POSIX Shell and Utilities standard was originally developed by
338 IEEE Working Group 1003.2 (POSIX.2). Today it has been merged with
339 the original 1003.1 Working Group and is maintained by the Austin
340 Group (a joint working group of the IEEE, The Open Group and
341 ISO/IEC SC22/WG15). Today the Shell and Utilities are a volume
342 within the set of documents that make up IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, and
343 thus now the former POSIX.2 (from 1992) is now part of the current
344 POSIX.1 standard (POSIX 1003.1-2001).
345
346 The Shell and Utilities volume concentrates on the command
347 interpreter interface and utility programs commonly executed from
348 the command line or by other programs. The standard is freely
349 available on the web at http://www.UNIX-systems.org/version3/ .
350 Work continues at the Austin Group on maintenance issues; see
351 http://www.opengroup.org/austin/ to join the discussions.
352
353 Bash is concerned with the aspects of the shell's behavior defined
354 by the POSIX Shell and Utilities volume. The shell command
355 language has of course been standardized, including the basic flow
356 control and program execution constructs, I/O redirection and
357 pipelining, argument handling, variable expansion, and quoting.
358
359 The `special' builtins, which must be implemented as part of the
360 shell to provide the desired functionality, are specified as
361 being part of the shell; examples of these are `eval' and
362 `export'. Other utilities appear in the sections of POSIX not
363 devoted to the shell which are commonly (and in some cases must
364 be) implemented as builtin commands, such as `read' and `test'.
365 POSIX also specifies aspects of the shell's interactive
366 behavior as part of the UPE, including job control and command
367 line editing. Only vi-style line editing commands have been
368 standardized; emacs editing commands were left out due to
369 objections.
370
371 The latest version of the POSIX Shell and Utilities standard is
372 available (now updated to the 2004 Edition) as part of the Single
373 UNIX Specification Version 3 at
374
375 http://www.UNIX-systems.org/version3/
376
377 A10) What is the bash `posix mode'?
378
379 Although bash is an implementation of the POSIX shell
380 specification, there are areas where the bash default behavior
381 differs from that spec. The bash `posix mode' changes the bash
382 behavior in these areas so that it obeys the spec more closely.
383
384 Posix mode is entered by starting bash with the --posix or
385 '-o posix' option or executing `set -o posix' after bash is running.
386
387 The specific aspects of bash which change when posix mode is
388 active are listed in the file POSIX in the bash distribution.
389 They are also listed in a section in the Bash Reference Manual
390 (from which that file is generated).
391
392 Section B: The latest version
393
394 B1) What's new in version 4.3?
395
396 Bash-4.3 is the third revision to the fourth major release of bash.
397
398 Bash-4.3 contains the following new features (see the manual page for
399 complete descriptions and the CHANGES and NEWS files in the bash-4.3
400 distribution):
401
402 o The `helptopic' completion action now maps to all the help topics, not just
403 the shell builtins.
404
405 o The `help' builtin no longer does prefix substring matching first, so
406 `help read' does not match `readonly', but will do it if exact string
407 matching fails.
408
409 o The shell can be compiled to not display a message about processes that
410 terminate due to SIGTERM.
411
412 o Non-interactive shells now react to the setting of checkwinsize and set
413 LINES and COLUMNS after a foreground job exits.
414
415 o There is a new shell option, `globasciiranges', which, when set to on,
416 forces globbing range comparisons to use character ordering as if they
417 were run in the C locale.
418
419 o There is a new shell option, `direxpand', which makes filename completion
420 expand variables in directory names in the way bash-4.1 did.
421
422 o In Posix mode, the `command' builtin does not change whether or not a
423 builtin it shadows is treated as an assignment builtin.
424
425 o The `return' and `exit' builtins accept negative exit status arguments.
426
427 o The word completion code checks whether or not a filename containing a
428 shell variable expands to a directory name and appends `/' to the word
429 as appropriate. The same code expands shell variables in command names
430 when performing command completion.
431
432 o In Posix mode, it is now an error to attempt to define a shell function
433 with the same name as a Posix special builtin.
434
435 o When compiled for strict Posix conformance, history expansion is disabled
436 by default.
437
438 o The history expansion character (!) does not cause history expansion when
439 followed by the closing quote in a double-quoted string.
440
441 o `complete' and its siblings compgen/compopt now takes a new `-o noquote'
442 option to inhibit quoting of the completions.
443
444 o Setting HISTSIZE to a value less than zero causes the history list to be
445 unlimited (setting it 0 zero disables the history list).
446
447 o Setting HISTFILESIZE to a value less than zero causes the history file size
448 to be unlimited (setting it to 0 causes the history file to be truncated
449 to zero size).
450
451 o The `read' builtin now skips NUL bytes in the input.
452
453 o There is a new `bind -X' option to print all key sequences bound to Unix
454 commands.
455
456 o When in Posix mode, `read' is interruptible by a trapped signal. After
457 running the trap handler, read returns 128+signal and throws away any
458 partially-read input.
459
460 o The command completion code skips whitespace and assignment statements
461 before looking for the command name word to be completed.
462
463 o The build process has a new mechanism for constructing separate help files
464 that better reflects the current set of compilation options.
465
466 o The -nt and -ot options to test now work with files with nanosecond
467 timestamp resolution.
468
469 o The shell saves the command history in any shell for which history is
470 enabled and HISTFILE is set, not just interactive shells.
471
472 o The shell has `nameref' variables and new -n(/+n) options to declare and
473 unset to use them, and a `test -R' option to test for them.
474
475 o The shell now allows assigning, referencing, and unsetting elements of
476 indexed arrays using negative subscripts (a[-1]=2, echo ${a[-1]}) which
477 count back from the last element of the array.
478
479 o The {x}<word redirection feature now allows words like {array[ind]} and
480 can use variables with special meanings to the shell (e.g., BASH_XTRACEFD).
481
482 o There is a new CHILD_MAX special shell variable; its value controls the
483 number of exited child statues the shell remembers.
484
485 o There is a new configuration option (--enable-direxpand-default) that
486 causes the `direxpand' shell option to be enabled by default.
487
488 o Bash does not do anything special to ensure that the file descriptor
489 assigned to X in {x}<foo remains open after the block containing it
490 completes.
491
492 o The `wait' builtin has a new `-n' option to wait for the next child to
493 change status.
494
495 o The `printf' %(...)T format specifier now uses the current time if no
496 argument is supplied.
497
498 o There is a new variable, BASH_COMPAT, that controls the current shell
499 compatibility level.
500
501 o The `popd' builtin now treats additional arguments as errors.
502
503 o The brace expansion code now treats a failed sequence expansion as a
504 simple string and will continue to expand brace terms in the remainder
505 of the word.
506
507 o Shells started to run process substitutions now run any trap set on EXIT.
508
509 o The fc builtin now interprets -0 as the current command line.
510
511 o Completing directory names containing shell variables now adds a trailing
512 slash if the expanded result is a directory.
513
514 A short feature history dating back to Bash-2.0:
515
516 Bash-4.2 contained the following new features:
517
518 o `exec -a foo' now sets $0 to `foo' in an executable shell script without a
519 leading #!.
520
521 o Subshells begun to execute command substitutions or run shell functions or
522 builtins in subshells do not reset trap strings until a new trap is
523 specified. This allows $(trap) to display the caller's traps and the
524 trap strings to persist until a new trap is set.
525
526 o `trap -p' will now show signals ignored at shell startup, though their
527 disposition still cannot be modified.
528
529 o $'...', echo, and printf understand \uXXXX and \UXXXXXXXX escape sequences.
530
531 o declare/typeset has a new `-g' option, which creates variables in the
532 global scope even when run in a shell function.
533
534 o test/[/[[ have a new -v variable unary operator, which returns success if
535 `variable' has been set.
536
537 o Posix parsing changes to allow `! time command' and multiple consecutive
538 instances of `!' (which toggle) and `time' (which have no cumulative
539 effect).
540
541 o Posix change to allow `time' as a command by itself to print the elapsed
542 user, system, and real times for the shell and its children.
543
544 o $((...)) is always parsed as an arithmetic expansion first, instead of as
545 a potential nested command substitution, as Posix requires.
546
547 o A new FUNCNEST variable to allow the user to control the maximum shell
548 function nesting (recursive execution) level.
549
550 o The mapfile builtin now supplies a third argument to the callback command:
551 the line about to be assigned to the supplied array index.
552
553 o The printf builtin has as new %(fmt)T specifier, which allows time values
554 to use strftime-like formatting.
555
556 o There is a new `compat41' shell option.
557
558 o The cd builtin has a new Posix-mandated `-e' option.
559
560 o Negative subscripts to indexed arrays, previously errors, now are treated
561 as offsets from the maximum assigned index + 1.
562
563 o Negative length specifications in the ${var:offset:length} expansion,
564 previously errors, are now treated as offsets from the end of the variable.
565
566 o Parsing change to allow `time -p --'.
567
568 o Posix-mode parsing change to not recognize `time' as a keyword if the
569 following token begins with a `-'. This means no more Posix-mode
570 `time -p'. Posix interpretation 267.
571
572 o There is a new `lastpipe' shell option that runs the last command of a
573 pipeline in the current shell context. The lastpipe option has no
574 effect if job control is enabled.
575
576 o History expansion no longer expands the `$!' variable expansion.
577
578 o Posix mode shells no longer exit if a variable assignment error occurs
579 with an assignment preceding a command that is not a special builtin.
580
581 o Non-interactive mode shells exit if -u is enabled an an attempt is made
582 to use an unset variable with the % or # expansions, the `//', `^', or
583 `,' expansions, or the parameter length expansion.
584
585 o Posix-mode shells use the argument passed to `.' as-is if a $PATH search
586 fails, effectively searching the current directory. Posix-2008 change.
587
588 A short feature history dating back to Bash-2.0:
589
590 Bash-4.1 contained the following new features:
591
592 o Here-documents within $(...) command substitutions may once more be
593 delimited by the closing right paren, instead of requiring a newline.
594
595 o Bash's file status checks (executable, readable, etc.) now take file
596 system ACLs into account on file systems that support them.
597
598 o Bash now passes environment variables with names that are not valid
599 shell variable names through into the environment passed to child
600 processes.
601
602 o The `execute-unix-command' readline function now attempts to clear and
603 reuse the current line rather than move to a new one after the command
604 executes.
605
606 o `printf -v' can now assign values to array indices.
607
608 o New `complete -E' and `compopt -E' options that work on the "empty"
609 completion: completion attempted on an empty command line.
610
611 o New complete/compgen/compopt -D option to define a `default' completion:
612 a completion to be invoked on command for which no completion has been
613 defined. If this function returns 124, programmable completion is
614 attempted again, allowing a user to dynamically build a set of completions
615 as completion is attempted by having the default completion function
616 install individual completion functions each time it is invoked.
617
618 o When displaying associative arrays, subscripts are now quoted.
619
620 o Changes to dabbrev-expand to make it more `emacs-like': no space appended
621 after matches, completions are not sorted, and most recent history entries
622 are presented first.
623
624 o The [[ and (( commands are now subject to the setting of `set -e' and the
625 ERR trap.
626
627 o The source/. builtin now removes NUL bytes from the file before attempting
628 to parse commands.
629
630 o There is a new configuration option (in config-top.h) that forces bash to
631 forward all history entries to syslog.
632
633 o A new variable $BASHOPTS to export shell options settable using `shopt' to
634 child processes.
635
636 o There is a new confgure option that forces the extglob option to be
637 enabled by default.
638
639 o New variable $BASH_XTRACEFD; when set to an integer bash will write xtrace
640 output to that file descriptor.
641
642 o If the optional left-hand-side of a redirection is of the form {var}, the
643 shell assigns the file descriptor used to $var or uses $var as the file
644 descriptor to move or close, depending on the redirection operator.
645
646 o The < and > operators to the [[ conditional command now do string
647 comparison according to the current locale.
648
649 o Programmable completion now uses the completion for `b' instead of `a'
650 when completion is attempted on a line like: a $(b c.
651
652 o Force extglob on temporarily when parsing the pattern argument to
653 the == and != operators to the [[ command, for compatibility.
654
655 o Changed the behavior of interrupting the wait builtin when a SIGCHLD is
656 received and a trap on SIGCHLD is set to be Posix-mode only.
657
658 o The read builtin has a new `-N nchars' option, which reads exactly NCHARS
659 characters, ignoring delimiters like newline.
660
661 o The mapfile/readarray builtin no longer stores the commands it invokes via
662 callbacks in the history list.
663
664 o There is a new `compat40' shopt option.
665
666 o The < and > operators to [[ do string comparisons using the current locale
667 only if the compatibility level is greater than 40 (set to 41 by default).
668
669 o New bindable readline function: menu-complete-backward.
670
671 o In the readline vi-mode insertion keymap, C-n is now bound to menu-complete
672 by default, and C-p to menu-complete-backward.
673
674 o When in readline vi command mode, repeatedly hitting ESC now does nothing,
675 even when ESC introduces a bound key sequence. This is closer to how
676 historical vi behaves.
677
678 o New bindable readline function: skip-csi-sequence. Can be used as a
679 default to consume key sequences generated by keys like Home and End
680 without having to bind all keys.
681
682 o New bindable readline variable: skip-completed-text, active when
683 completing in the middle of a word. If enabled, it means that characters
684 in the completion that match characters in the remainder of the word are
685 "skipped" rather than inserted into the line.
686
687 o The pre-readline-6.0 version of menu completion is available as
688 "old-menu-complete" for users who do not like the readline-6.0 version.
689
690 o New bindable readline variable: echo-control-characters. If enabled, and
691 the tty ECHOCTL bit is set, controls the echoing of characters
692 corresponding to keyboard-generated signals.
693
694 o New bindable readline variable: enable-meta-key. Controls whether or not
695 readline sends the smm/rmm sequences if the terminal indicates it has a
696 meta key that enables eight-bit characters.
697
698 Bash-4.0 contained the following new features:
699
700 o When using substring expansion on the positional parameters, a starting
701 index of 0 now causes $0 to be prefixed to the list.
702
703 o There is a new variable, $BASHPID, which always returns the process id of
704 the current shell.
705
706 o There is a new `autocd' option that, when enabled, causes bash to attempt
707 to `cd' to a directory name that is supplied as the first word of a
708 simple command.
709
710 o There is a new `checkjobs' option that causes the shell to check for and
711 report any running or stopped jobs at exit.
712
713 o The programmable completion code exports a new COMP_TYPE variable, set to
714 a character describing the type of completion being attempted.
715
716 o The programmable completion code exports a new COMP_KEY variable, set to
717 the character that caused the completion to be invoked (e.g., TAB).
718
719 o The programmable completion code now uses the same set of characters as
720 readline when breaking the command line into a list of words.
721
722 o The block multiplier for the ulimit -c and -f options is now 512 when in
723 Posix mode, as Posix specifies.
724
725 o Changed the behavior of the read builtin to save any partial input received
726 in the specified variable when the read builtin times out. This also
727 results in variables specified as arguments to read to be set to the empty
728 string when there is no input available. When the read builtin times out,
729 it returns an exit status greater than 128.
730
731 o The shell now has the notion of a `compatibility level', controlled by
732 new variables settable by `shopt'. Setting this variable currently
733 restores the bash-3.1 behavior when processing quoted strings on the rhs
734 of the `=~' operator to the `[[' command.
735
736 o The `ulimit' builtin now has new -b (socket buffer size) and -T (number
737 of threads) options.
738
739 o There is a new `compopt' builtin that allows completion functions to modify
740 completion options for existing completions or the completion currently
741 being executed.
742
743 o The `read' builtin has a new -i option which inserts text into the reply
744 buffer when using readline.
745
746 o A new `-E' option to the complete builtin allows control of the default
747 behavior for completion on an empty line.
748
749 o There is now limited support for completing command name words containing
750 globbing characters.
751
752 o The `help' builtin now has a new -d option, to display a short description,
753 and a -m option, to print help information in a man page-like format.
754
755 o There is a new `mapfile' builtin to populate an array with lines from a
756 given file.
757
758 o If a command is not found, the shell attempts to execute a shell function
759 named `command_not_found_handle', supplying the command words as the
760 function arguments.
761
762 o There is a new shell option: `globstar'. When enabled, the globbing code
763 treats `**' specially -- it matches all directories (and files within
764 them, when appropriate) recursively.
765
766 o There is a new shell option: `dirspell'. When enabled, the filename
767 completion code performs spelling correction on directory names during
768 completion.
769
770 o The `-t' option to the `read' builtin now supports fractional timeout
771 values.
772
773 o Brace expansion now allows zero-padding of expanded numeric values and
774 will add the proper number of zeroes to make sure all values contain the
775 same number of digits.
776
777 o There is a new bash-specific bindable readline function: `dabbrev-expand'.
778 It uses menu completion on a set of words taken from the history list.
779
780 o The command assigned to a key sequence with `bind -x' now sets two new
781 variables in the environment of the executed command: READLINE_LINE_BUFFER
782 and READLINE_POINT. The command can change the current readline line
783 and cursor position by modifying READLINE_LINE_BUFFER and READLINE_POINT,
784 respectively.
785
786 o There is a new >>& redirection operator, which appends the standard output
787 and standard error to the named file.
788
789 o The parser now understands `|&' as a synonym for `2>&1 |', which redirects
790 the standard error for a command through a pipe.
791
792 o The new `;&' case statement action list terminator causes execution to
793 continue with the action associated with the next pattern in the
794 statement rather than terminating the command.
795
796 o The new `;;&' case statement action list terminator causes the shell to
797 test the next set of patterns after completing execution of the current
798 action, rather than terminating the command.
799
800 o The shell understands a new variable: PROMPT_DIRTRIM. When set to an
801 integer value greater than zero, prompt expansion of \w and \W will
802 retain only that number of trailing pathname components and replace
803 the intervening characters with `...'.
804
805 o There are new case-modifying word expansions: uppercase (^[^]) and
806 lowercase (,[,]). They can work on either the first character or
807 array element, or globally. They accept an optional shell pattern
808 that determines which characters to modify. There is an optionally-
809 configured feature to include capitalization operators.
810
811 o The shell provides associative array variables, with the appropriate
812 support to create, delete, assign values to, and expand them.
813
814 o The `declare' builtin now has new -l (convert value to lowercase upon
815 assignment) and -u (convert value to uppercase upon assignment) options.
816 There is an optionally-configurable -c option to capitalize a value at
817 assignment.
818
819 o There is a new `coproc' reserved word that specifies a coprocess: an
820 asynchronous command run with two pipes connected to the creating shell.
821 Coprocs can be named. The input and output file descriptors and the
822 PID of the coprocess are available to the calling shell in variables
823 with coproc-specific names.
824
825 o A value of 0 for the -t option to `read' now returns success if there is
826 input available to be read from the specified file descriptor.
827
828 o CDPATH and GLOBIGNORE are ignored when the shell is running in privileged
829 mode.
830
831 o New bindable readline functions shell-forward-word and shell-backward-word,
832 which move forward and backward words delimited by shell metacharacters
833 and honor shell quoting.
834
835 o New bindable readline functions shell-backward-kill-word and shell-kill-word
836 which kill words backward and forward, but use the same word boundaries
837 as shell-forward-word and shell-backward-word.
838
839 Bash-3.2 contained the following new features:
840
841 o Bash-3.2 now checks shell scripts for NUL characters rather than non-printing
842 characters when deciding whether or not a script is a binary file.
843
844 o Quoting the string argument to the [[ command's =~ (regexp) operator now
845 forces string matching, as with the other pattern-matching operators.
846
847 Bash-3.1 contained the following new features:
848
849 o Bash-3.1 may now be configured and built in a mode that enforces strict
850 POSIX compliance.
851
852 o The `+=' assignment operator, which appends to the value of a string or
853 array variable, has been implemented.
854
855 o It is now possible to ignore case when matching in contexts other than
856 filename generation using the new `nocasematch' shell option.
857
858 Bash-3.0 contained the following new features:
859
860 o Features to support the bash debugger have been implemented, and there
861 is a new `extdebug' option to turn the non-default options on
862
863 o HISTCONTROL is now a colon-separated list of options and has been
864 extended with a new `erasedups' option that will result in only one
865 copy of a command being kept in the history list
866
867 o Brace expansion has been extended with a new {x..y} form, producing
868 sequences of digits or characters
869
870 o Timestamps are now kept with history entries, with an option to save
871 and restore them from the history file; there is a new HISTTIMEFORMAT
872 variable describing how to display the timestamps when listing history
873 entries
874
875 o The `[[' command can now perform extended regular expression (egrep-like)
876 matching, with matched subexpressions placed in the BASH_REMATCH array
877 variable
878
879 o A new `pipefail' option causes a pipeline to return a failure status if
880 any command in it fails
881
882 o The `jobs', `kill', and `wait' builtins now accept job control notation
883 in their arguments even if job control is not enabled
884
885 o The `gettext' package and libintl have been integrated, and the shell
886 messages may be translated into other languages
887
888 Bash-2.05b introduced the following new features:
889
890 o support for multibyte characters has been added to both bash and readline
891
892 o the DEBUG trap is now run *before* simple commands, ((...)) commands,
893 [[...]] conditional commands, and for ((...)) loops
894
895 o the shell now performs arithmetic in the largest integer size the machine
896 supports (intmax_t)
897
898 o there is a new \D{...} prompt expansion; passes the `...' to strftime(3)
899 and inserts the result into the expanded prompt
900
901 o there is a new `here-string' redirection operator: <<< word
902
903 o when displaying variables, function attributes and definitions are shown
904 separately, allowing them to be re-used as input (attempting to re-use
905 the old output would result in syntax errors).
906
907 o `read' has a new `-u fd' option to read from a specified file descriptor
908
909 o the bash debugger in examples/bashdb has been modified to work with the
910 new DEBUG trap semantics, the command set has been made more gdb-like,
911 and the changes to $LINENO make debugging functions work better
912
913 o the expansion of $LINENO inside a shell function is only relative to the
914 function start if the shell is interactive -- if the shell is running a
915 script, $LINENO expands to the line number in the script. This is as
916 POSIX-2001 requires
917
918 Bash-2.05a introduced the following new features:
919
920 o The `printf' builtin has undergone major work
921
922 o There is a new read-only `shopt' option: login_shell, which is set by
923 login shells and unset otherwise
924
925 o New `\A' prompt string escape sequence; expanding to time in 24-hour
926 HH:MM format
927
928 o New `-A group/-g' option to complete and compgen; goes group name
929 completion
930
931 o New [+-]O invocation option to set and unset `shopt' options at startup
932
933 o ksh-like `ERR' trap
934
935 o `for' loops now allow empty word lists after the `in' reserved word
936
937 o new `hard' and `soft' arguments for the `ulimit' builtin
938
939 o Readline can be configured to place the user at the same point on the line
940 when retrieving commands from the history list
941
942 o Readline can be configured to skip `hidden' files (filenames with a leading
943 `.' on Unix) when performing completion
944
945 Bash-2.05 introduced the following new features:
946
947 o This version has once again reverted to using locales and strcoll(3) when
948 processing pattern matching bracket expressions, as POSIX requires.
949 o Added a new `--init-file' invocation argument as a synonym for `--rcfile',
950 per the new GNU coding standards.
951 o The /dev/tcp and /dev/udp redirections now accept service names as well as
952 port numbers.
953 o `complete' and `compgen' now take a `-o value' option, which controls some
954 of the aspects of that compspec. Valid values are:
955
956 default - perform bash default completion if programmable
957 completion produces no matches
958 dirnames - perform directory name completion if programmable
959 completion produces no matches
960 filenames - tell readline that the compspec produces filenames,
961 so it can do things like append slashes to
962 directory names and suppress trailing spaces
963 o A new loadable builtin, realpath, which canonicalizes and expands symlinks
964 in pathname arguments.
965 o When `set' is called without options, it prints function defintions in a
966 way that allows them to be reused as input. This affects `declare' and
967 `declare -p' as well. This only happens when the shell is not in POSIX
968 mode, since POSIX.2 forbids this behavior.
969
970 Bash-2.04 introduced the following new features:
971
972 o Programmable word completion with the new `complete' and `compgen' builtins;
973 examples are provided in examples/complete/complete-examples
974 o `history' has a new `-d' option to delete a history entry
975 o `bind' has a new `-x' option to bind key sequences to shell commands
976 o The prompt expansion code has new `\j' and `\l' escape sequences
977 o The `no_empty_cmd_completion' shell option, if enabled, inhibits
978 command completion when TAB is typed on an empty line
979 o `help' has a new `-s' option to print a usage synopsis
980 o New arithmetic operators: var++, var--, ++var, --var, expr1,expr2 (comma)
981 o New ksh93-style arithmetic for command:
982 for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done
983 o `read' has new options: `-t', `-n', `-d', `-s'
984 o The redirection code handles several filenames specially: /dev/fd/N,
985 /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr
986 o The redirection code now recognizes /dev/tcp/HOST/PORT and
987 /dev/udp/HOST/PORT and tries to open a TCP or UDP socket, respectively,
988 to the specified port on the specified host
989 o The ${!prefix*} expansion has been implemented
990 o A new FUNCNAME variable, which expands to the name of a currently-executing
991 function
992 o The GROUPS variable is no longer readonly
993 o A new shopt `xpg_echo' variable, to control the behavior of echo with
994 respect to backslash-escape sequences at runtime
995 o The NON_INTERACTIVE_LOGIN_SHELLS #define has returned
996
997 The version of Readline released with Bash-2.04, Readline-4.1, had several
998 new features as well:
999
1000 o Parentheses matching is always compiled into readline, and controllable
1001 with the new `blink-matching-paren' variable
1002 o The history-search-forward and history-search-backward functions now leave
1003 point at the end of the line when the search string is empty, like
1004 reverse-search-history, and forward-search-history
1005 o A new function for applications: rl_on_new_line_with_prompt()
1006 o New variables for applications: rl_already_prompted, and rl_gnu_readline_p
1007
1008
1009 Bash-2.03 had very few new features, in keeping with the convention
1010 that odd-numbered releases provide mainly bug fixes. A number of new
1011 features were added to Readline, mostly at the request of the Cygnus
1012 folks.
1013
1014 A new shopt option, `restricted_shell', so that startup files can test
1015 whether or not the shell was started in restricted mode
1016 Filename generation is now performed on the words between ( and ) in
1017 compound array assignments (this is really a bug fix)
1018 OLDPWD is now auto-exported, as POSIX.2 requires
1019 ENV and BASH_ENV are read-only variables in a restricted shell
1020 Bash may now be linked against an already-installed Readline library,
1021 as long as the Readline library is version 4 or newer
1022 All shells begun with the `--login' option will source the login shell
1023 startup files, even if the shell is not interactive
1024
1025 There were lots of changes to the version of the Readline library released
1026 along with Bash-2.03. For a complete list of the changes, read the file
1027 CHANGES in the Bash-2.03 distribution.
1028
1029 Bash-2.02 contained the following new features:
1030
1031 a new version of malloc (based on the old GNU malloc code in previous
1032 bash versions) that is more page-oriented, more conservative
1033 with memory usage, does not `orphan' large blocks when they
1034 are freed, is usable on 64-bit machines, and has allocation
1035 checking turned on unconditionally
1036 POSIX.2-style globbing character classes ([:alpha:], [:alnum:], etc.)
1037 POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes
1038 POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols
1039 the ksh [[...]] extended conditional command
1040 the ksh egrep-style extended pattern matching operators
1041 a new `printf' builtin
1042 the ksh-like $(<filename) command substitution, which is equivalent to
1043 $(cat filename)
1044 new tilde prefixes that expand to directories from the directory stack
1045 new `**' arithmetic operator to do exponentiation
1046 case-insensitive globbing (filename expansion)
1047 menu completion a la tcsh
1048 `magic-space' history expansion function like tcsh
1049 the readline inputrc `language' has a new file inclusion directive ($include)
1050
1051 Bash-2.01 contained only a few new features:
1052
1053 new `GROUPS' builtin array variable containing the user's group list
1054 new bindable readline commands: history-and-alias-expand-line and
1055 alias-expand-line
1056
1057 Bash-2.0 contained extensive changes and new features from bash-1.14.7.
1058 Here's a short list:
1059
1060 new `time' reserved word to time pipelines, shell builtins, and
1061 shell functions
1062 one-dimensional arrays with a new compound assignment statement,
1063 appropriate expansion constructs and modifications to some
1064 of the builtins (read, declare, etc.) to use them
1065 new quoting syntaxes for ANSI-C string expansion and locale-specific
1066 string translation
1067 new expansions to do substring extraction, pattern replacement, and
1068 indirect variable expansion
1069 new builtins: `disown' and `shopt'
1070 new variables: HISTIGNORE, SHELLOPTS, PIPESTATUS, DIRSTACK, GLOBIGNORE,
1071 MACHTYPE, BASH_VERSINFO
1072 special handling of many unused or redundant variables removed
1073 (e.g., $notify, $glob_dot_filenames, $no_exit_on_failed_exec)
1074 dynamic loading of new builtin commands; many loadable examples provided
1075 new prompt expansions: \a, \e, \n, \H, \T, \@, \v, \V
1076 history and aliases available in shell scripts
1077 new readline variables: enable-keypad, mark-directories, input-meta,
1078 visible-stats, disable-completion, comment-begin
1079 new readline commands to manipulate the mark and operate on the region
1080 new readline emacs mode commands and bindings for ksh-88 compatibility
1081 updated and extended builtins
1082 new DEBUG trap
1083 expanded (and now documented) restricted shell mode
1084
1085 implementation stuff:
1086 autoconf-based configuration
1087 nearly all of the bugs reported since version 1.14 have been fixed
1088 most builtins converted to use builtin `getopt' for consistency
1089 most builtins use -p option to display output in a reusable form
1090 (for consistency)
1091 grammar tighter and smaller (66 reduce-reduce conflicts gone)
1092 lots of code now smaller and faster
1093 test suite greatly expanded
1094
1095 B2) Are there any user-visible incompatibilities between bash-4.3 and
1096 previous bash versions?
1097
1098 There are a few incompatibilities between version 4.3 and previous
1099 versions. They are detailed in the file COMPAT in the bash distribution.
1100 That file is not meant to be all-encompassing; send mail to
1101 bash-maintainers@gnu.org (or bug-bash@gnu.org if you would like
1102 community discussion) if you find something that's not mentioned there.
1103
1104 Section C: Differences from other Unix shells
1105
1106 C1) How does bash differ from sh, the Bourne shell?
1107
1108 This is a non-comprehensive list of features that differentiate bash
1109 from the SVR4.2 shell. The bash manual page explains these more
1110 completely.
1111
1112 Things bash has that sh does not:
1113 long invocation options
1114 [+-]O invocation option
1115 -l invocation option
1116 `!' reserved word to invert pipeline return value
1117 `time' reserved word to time pipelines and shell builtins
1118 the `function' reserved word
1119 the `select' compound command and reserved word
1120 arithmetic for command: for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done
1121 new $'...' and $"..." quoting
1122 the $(...) form of command substitution
1123 the $(<filename) form of command substitution, equivalent to
1124 $(cat filename)
1125 the ${#param} parameter value length operator
1126 the ${!param} indirect parameter expansion operator
1127 the ${!param*} prefix expansion operator
1128 the ${param:offset[:length]} parameter substring operator
1129 the ${param/pat[/string]} parameter pattern substitution operator
1130 expansions to perform substring removal (${p%[%]w}, ${p#[#]w})
1131 expansion of positional parameters beyond $9 with ${num}
1132 variables: BASH, BASHPID, BASH_VERSION, BASH_VERSINFO, UID, EUID, REPLY,
1133 TIMEFORMAT, PPID, PWD, OLDPWD, SHLVL, RANDOM, SECONDS,
1134 LINENO, HISTCMD, HOSTTYPE, OSTYPE, MACHTYPE, HOSTNAME,
1135 ENV, PS3, PS4, DIRSTACK, PIPESTATUS, HISTSIZE, HISTFILE,
1136 HISTFILESIZE, HISTCONTROL, HISTIGNORE, GLOBIGNORE, GROUPS,
1137 PROMPT_COMMAND, FCEDIT, FIGNORE, IGNOREEOF, INPUTRC,
1138 SHELLOPTS, OPTERR, HOSTFILE, TMOUT, FUNCNAME, histchars,
1139 auto_resume, PROMPT_DIRTRIM, BASHOPTS, BASH_XTRACEFD
1140 DEBUG trap
1141 ERR trap
1142 variable arrays with new compound assignment syntax
1143 redirections: <>, &>, >|, <<<, [n]<&word-, [n]>&word-, >>&
1144 prompt string special char translation and variable expansion
1145 auto-export of variables in initial environment
1146 command search finds functions before builtins
1147 bash return builtin will exit a file sourced with `.'
1148 builtins: cd -/-L/-P/-@, exec -l/-c/-a, echo -e/-E, hash -d/-l/-p/-t.
1149 export -n/-f/-p/name=value, pwd -L/-P,
1150 read -e/-p/-a/-t/-n/-d/-s/-u/-i/-N,
1151 readonly -a/-f/name=value, trap -l, set +o,
1152 set -b/-m/-o option/-h/-p/-B/-C/-H/-P,
1153 unset -f/-n/-v, ulimit -i/-m/-p/-q/-u/-x,
1154 type -a/-p/-t/-f/-P, suspend -f, kill -n,
1155 test -o optname/s1 == s2/s1 < s2/s1 > s2/-nt/-ot/-ef/-O/-G/-S/-R
1156 bash reads ~/.bashrc for interactive shells, $ENV for non-interactive
1157 bash restricted shell mode is more extensive
1158 bash allows functions and variables with the same name
1159 brace expansion
1160 tilde expansion
1161 arithmetic expansion with $((...)) and `let' builtin
1162 the `[[...]]' extended conditional command
1163 process substitution
1164 aliases and alias/unalias builtins
1165 local variables in functions and `local' builtin
1166 readline and command-line editing with programmable completion
1167 command history and history/fc builtins
1168 csh-like history expansion
1169 other new bash builtins: bind, command, compgen, complete, builtin,
1170 declare/typeset, dirs, enable, fc, help,
1171 history, logout, popd, pushd, disown, shopt,
1172 printf, compopt, mapfile
1173 exported functions
1174 filename generation when using output redirection (command >a*)
1175 POSIX.2-style globbing character classes
1176 POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes
1177 POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols
1178 egrep-like extended pattern matching operators
1179 case-insensitive pattern matching and globbing
1180 variable assignments preceding commands affect only that command,
1181 even for builtins and functions
1182 posix mode and strict posix conformance
1183 redirection to /dev/fd/N, /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr,
1184 /dev/tcp/host/port, /dev/udp/host/port
1185 debugger support, including `caller' builtin and new variables
1186 RETURN trap
1187 the `+=' assignment operator
1188 autocd shell option and behavior
1189 command-not-found hook with command_not_found_handle shell function
1190 globstar shell option and `**' globbing behavior
1191 |& synonym for `2>&1 |'
1192 ;& and ;;& case action list terminators
1193 case-modifying word expansions and variable attributes
1194 associative arrays
1195 coprocesses using the `coproc' reserved word and variables
1196 shell assignment of a file descriptor used in a redirection to a variable
1197
1198 Things sh has that bash does not:
1199 uses variable SHACCT to do shell accounting
1200 includes `stop' builtin (bash can use alias stop='kill -s STOP')
1201 `newgrp' builtin
1202 turns on job control if called as `jsh'
1203 $TIMEOUT (like bash $TMOUT)
1204 `^' is a synonym for `|'
1205 new SVR4.2 sh builtins: mldmode, priv
1206
1207 Implementation differences:
1208 redirection to/from compound commands causes sh to create a subshell
1209 bash does not allow unbalanced quotes; sh silently inserts them at EOF
1210 bash does not mess with signal 11
1211 sh sets (euid, egid) to (uid, gid) if -p not supplied and uid < 100
1212 bash splits only the results of expansions on IFS, using POSIX.2
1213 field splitting rules; sh splits all words on IFS
1214 sh does not allow MAILCHECK to be unset (?)
1215 sh does not allow traps on SIGALRM or SIGCHLD
1216 bash allows multiple option arguments when invoked (e.g. -x -v);
1217 sh allows only a single option argument (`sh -x -v' attempts
1218 to open a file named `-v', and, on SunOS 4.1.4, dumps core.
1219 On Solaris 2.4 and earlier versions, sh goes into an infinite
1220 loop.)
1221 sh exits a script if any builtin fails; bash exits only if one of
1222 the POSIX.2 `special' builtins fails
1223
1224 C2) How does bash differ from the Korn shell, version ksh88?
1225
1226 Things bash has or uses that ksh88 does not:
1227 long invocation options
1228 [-+]O invocation option
1229 -l invocation option
1230 `!' reserved word
1231 arithmetic for command: for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done
1232 arithmetic in largest machine-supported size (intmax_t)
1233 posix mode and posix conformance
1234 command hashing
1235 tilde expansion for assignment statements that look like $PATH
1236 process substitution with named pipes if /dev/fd is not available
1237 the ${!param} indirect parameter expansion operator
1238 the ${!param*} prefix expansion operator
1239 the ${param:offset[:length]} parameter substring operator
1240 the ${param/pat[/string]} parameter pattern substitution operator
1241 variables: BASH, BASH_VERSION, BASH_VERSINFO, BASHPID, UID, EUID, SHLVL,
1242 TIMEFORMAT, HISTCMD, HOSTTYPE, OSTYPE, MACHTYPE,
1243 HISTFILESIZE, HISTIGNORE, HISTCONTROL, PROMPT_COMMAND,
1244 IGNOREEOF, FIGNORE, INPUTRC, HOSTFILE, DIRSTACK,
1245 PIPESTATUS, HOSTNAME, OPTERR, SHELLOPTS, GLOBIGNORE,
1246 GROUPS, FUNCNAME, histchars, auto_resume, PROMPT_DIRTRIM
1247 prompt expansion with backslash escapes and command substitution
1248 redirection: &> (stdout and stderr), <<<, [n]<&word-, [n]>&word-, >>&
1249 more extensive and extensible editing and programmable completion
1250 builtins: bind, builtin, command, declare, dirs, echo -e/-E, enable,
1251 exec -l/-c/-a, fc -s, export -n/-f/-p, hash, help, history,
1252 jobs -x/-r/-s, kill -s/-n/-l, local, logout, popd, pushd,
1253 read -e/-p/-a/-t/-n/-d/-s/-N, readonly -a/-n/-f/-p,
1254 set -o braceexpand/-o histexpand/-o interactive-comments/
1255 -o notify/-o physical/-o posix/-o hashall/-o onecmd/
1256 -h/-B/-C/-b/-H/-P, set +o, suspend, trap -l, type,
1257 typeset -a/-F/-p, ulimit -i/-q/-u/-x, umask -S, alias -p,
1258 shopt, disown, printf, complete, compgen, compopt, mapfile
1259 `!' csh-style history expansion
1260 POSIX.2-style globbing character classes
1261 POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes
1262 POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols
1263 egrep-like extended pattern matching operators
1264 case-insensitive pattern matching and globbing
1265 `**' arithmetic operator to do exponentiation
1266 redirection to /dev/fd/N, /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr
1267 arrays of unlimited size
1268 TMOUT is default timeout for `read' and `select'
1269 debugger support, including the `caller' builtin
1270 RETURN trap
1271 Timestamps in history entries
1272 {x..y} brace expansion
1273 The `+=' assignment operator
1274 autocd shell option and behavior
1275 command-not-found hook with command_not_found_handle shell function
1276 globstar shell option and `**' globbing behavior
1277 |& synonym for `2>&1 |'
1278 ;& and ;;& case action list terminators
1279 case-modifying word expansions and variable attributes
1280 associative arrays
1281 coprocesses using the `coproc' reserved word and variables
1282 shell assignment of a file descriptor used in a redirection to a variable
1283
1284 Things ksh88 has or uses that bash does not:
1285 tracked aliases (alias -t)
1286 variables: ERRNO, FPATH, EDITOR, VISUAL
1287 co-processes (bash uses different syntax)
1288 weirdly-scoped functions
1289 typeset +f to list all function names without definitions
1290 text of command history kept in a file, not memory
1291 builtins: alias -x, cd old new, newgrp, print,
1292 read -p/-s/var?prompt, set -A/-o gmacs/
1293 -o bgnice/-o markdirs/-o trackall/-o viraw/-s,
1294 typeset -H/-L/-R/-Z/-A/-ft/-fu/-fx/-t, whence
1295 using environment to pass attributes of exported variables
1296 arithmetic evaluation done on arguments to some builtins
1297 reads .profile from $PWD when invoked as login shell
1298
1299 Implementation differences:
1300 ksh runs last command of a pipeline in parent shell context
1301 bash has brace expansion by default (ksh88 compile-time option)
1302 bash has fixed startup file for all interactive shells; ksh reads $ENV
1303 bash has exported functions
1304 bash command search finds functions before builtins
1305 bash waits for all commands in pipeline to exit before returning status
1306 emacs-mode editing has some slightly different key bindings
1307
1308 C3) Which new features in ksh-93 are not in bash, and which are?
1309
1310 This list is current through ksh93v (10/08/2013)
1311
1312 New things in ksh-93 not in bash-4.3:
1313 floating point arithmetic, variables, and constants
1314 math library functions, including user-defined math functions
1315 ${!name[sub]} name of subscript for associative array
1316 `.' is allowed in variable names to create a hierarchical namespace
1317 more extensive compound assignment syntax
1318 discipline functions
1319 KEYBD trap
1320 variables: .sh.edchar, .sh.edmode, .sh.edcol, .sh.edtext, .sh.version,
1321 .sh.name, .sh.subscript, .sh.value, .sh.match, HISTEDIT,
1322 .sh.sig, .sh.stats, .sh.siginfo, .sh.pwdfd, .sh.op_astbin,
1323 .sh.pool
1324 backreferences in pattern matching (\N)
1325 `&' operator in pattern lists for matching (match all instead of any)
1326 exit statuses between 0 and 255
1327 FPATH and PATH mixing
1328 lexical scoping for local variables in `ksh' functions
1329 no scoping for local variables in `POSIX' functions
1330 $'' \C[.collating-element.] escape sequence
1331 -C/-I invocation options
1332 print -f (bash uses printf) and rest of print builtin options
1333 printf %(type)q, %#q
1334 `fc' has been renamed to `hist'
1335 `.' can execute shell functions
1336 getopts -a
1337 printf %B, %H, %P, %R, %Z modifiers, output base for %d, `=' flag
1338 read -n/-N differ/-v/-S
1339 set -o showme/-o multiline (bash default)
1340 set -K
1341 kill -Q/-q/-L
1342 trap -a
1343 `sleep' and `getconf' builtins (bash has loadable versions)
1344 [[ -R name ]] (checks whether or not name is a nameref)
1345 typeset -C/-S/-T/-X/-h/-s/-c/-M
1346 experimental `type' definitions (a la typedef) using typeset
1347 array expansions ${array[sub1..sub2]} and ${!array[sub1..sub2]}
1348 associative array assignments using `;' as element separator
1349 command substitution $(n<#) expands to current byte offset for fd N
1350 new '${ ' form of command substitution, executed in current shell
1351 new >;/<>;/<#pat/<##pat/<#/># redirections
1352 brace expansion printf-like formats
1353 CHLD trap triggered by SIGSTOP and SIGCONT
1354 ~{fd} expansion, which replaces fd with the corresponding path name
1355 $"string" expanded when referenced rather than when first parsed
1356 job "pools", which allow a collection of jobs to be managed as a unit
1357
1358 New things in ksh-93 present in bash-4.3:
1359 associative arrays
1360 [n]<&word- and [n]>&word- redirections (combination dup and close)
1361 for (( expr1; expr2; expr3 )) ; do list; done - arithmetic for command
1362 ?:, ++, --, `expr1 , expr2' arithmetic operators
1363 expansions: ${!param}, ${param:offset[:len]}, ${param/pat[/str]},
1364 ${!param*}
1365 compound array assignment
1366 negative subscripts for indexed array variables
1367 the `!' reserved word
1368 loadable builtins -- but ksh uses `builtin' while bash uses `enable'
1369 new $'...' and $"..." quoting
1370 FIGNORE (but bash uses GLOBIGNORE), HISTCMD
1371 brace expansion and set -B
1372 changes to kill builtin
1373 `command', `builtin', `disown' builtins
1374 echo -e
1375 exec -c/-a
1376 printf %T modifier
1377 read -A (bash uses read -a)
1378 read -t/-d
1379 trap -p
1380 `.' restores the positional parameters when it completes
1381 set -o notify/-C
1382 set -o pipefail
1383 set -G (-o globstar) and **
1384 POSIX.2 `test'
1385 umask -S
1386 unalias -a
1387 command and arithmetic substitution performed on PS1, PS4, and ENV
1388 command name completion, TAB displaying possible completions
1389 ENV processed only for interactive shells
1390 The `+=' assignment operator
1391 the `;&' case statement "fallthrough" pattern list terminator
1392 csh-style history expansion and set -H
1393 negative offsets in ${param:offset:length}
1394 redirection operators preceded with {varname} to store fd number in varname
1395 DEBUG can force skipping following command
1396 [[ -v var ]] operator (checks whether or not var is set)
1397 typeset -n and `nameref' variables
1398 process substitutions work without /dev/fd
1399
1400 Section D: Why does bash do some things differently than other Unix shells?
1401
1402 D1) Why does bash run a different version of `command' than
1403 `which command' says it will?
1404
1405 On many systems, `which' is actually a csh script that assumes
1406 you're running csh. In tcsh, `which' and its cousin `where'
1407 are builtins. On other Unix systems, `which' is a perl script
1408 that uses the PATH environment variable. Many Linux distributions
1409 use GNU `which', which is a C program that can understand shell
1410 aliases.
1411
1412 The csh script version reads the csh startup files from your
1413 home directory and uses those to determine which `command' will
1414 be invoked. Since bash doesn't use any of those startup files,
1415 there's a good chance that your bash environment differs from
1416 your csh environment. The bash `type' builtin does everything
1417 `which' does, and will report correct results for the running
1418 shell. If you're really wedded to the name `which', try adding
1419 the following function definition to your .bashrc:
1420
1421 which()
1422 {
1423 builtin type "$@"
1424 }
1425
1426 If you're moving from tcsh and would like to bring `where' along
1427 as well, use this function:
1428
1429 where()
1430 {
1431 builtin type -a "$@"
1432 }
1433
1434 D2) Why doesn't bash treat brace expansions exactly like csh?
1435
1436 The only difference between bash and csh brace expansion is that
1437 bash requires a brace expression to contain at least one unquoted
1438 comma if it is to be expanded. Any brace-surrounded word not
1439 containing an unquoted comma is left unchanged by the brace
1440 expansion code. This affords the greatest degree of sh
1441 compatibility.
1442
1443 Bash, ksh, zsh, and pd-ksh all implement brace expansion this way.
1444
1445 D3) Why doesn't bash have csh variable modifiers?
1446
1447 Posix has specified a more powerful, albeit somewhat more cryptic,
1448 mechanism cribbed from ksh, and bash implements it.
1449
1450 ${parameter%word}
1451 Remove smallest suffix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce
1452 a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the
1453 smallest portion of the suffix matched by the pattern deleted.
1454
1455 x=file.c
1456 echo ${x%.c}.o
1457 -->file.o
1458
1459 ${parameter%%word}
1460
1461 Remove largest suffix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce
1462 a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the
1463 largest portion of the suffix matched by the pattern deleted.
1464
1465 x=posix/src/std
1466 echo ${x%%/*}
1467 -->posix
1468
1469 ${parameter#word}
1470 Remove smallest prefix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce
1471 a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the
1472 smallest portion of the prefix matched by the pattern deleted.
1473
1474 x=$HOME/src/cmd
1475 echo ${x#$HOME}
1476 -->/src/cmd
1477
1478 ${parameter##word}
1479 Remove largest prefix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce
1480 a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the
1481 largest portion of the prefix matched by the pattern deleted.
1482
1483 x=/one/two/three
1484 echo ${x##*/}
1485 -->three
1486
1487
1488 Given
1489 a=/a/b/c/d
1490 b=b.xxx
1491
1492 csh bash result
1493 --- ---- ------
1494 $a:h ${a%/*} /a/b/c
1495 $a:t ${a##*/} d
1496 $b:r ${b%.*} b
1497 $b:e ${b##*.} xxx
1498
1499
1500 D4) How can I make my csh aliases work when I convert to bash?
1501
1502 Bash uses a different syntax to support aliases than csh does.
1503 The details can be found in the documentation. We have provided
1504 a shell script which does most of the work of conversion for you;
1505 this script can be found in ./examples/misc/aliasconv.sh. Here is
1506 how you use it:
1507
1508 Start csh in the normal way for you. (e.g., `csh')
1509
1510 Pipe the output of `alias' through `aliasconv.sh', saving the
1511 results into `bash_aliases':
1512
1513 alias | bash aliasconv.sh >bash_aliases
1514
1515 Edit `bash_aliases', carefully reading through any created
1516 functions. You will need to change the names of some csh specific
1517 variables to the bash equivalents. The script converts $cwd to
1518 $PWD, $term to $TERM, $home to $HOME, $user to $USER, and $prompt
1519 to $PS1. You may also have to add quotes to avoid unwanted
1520 expansion.
1521
1522 For example, the csh alias:
1523
1524 alias cd 'cd \!*; echo $cwd'
1525
1526 is converted to the bash function:
1527
1528 cd () { command cd "$@"; echo $PWD ; }
1529
1530 The only thing that needs to be done is to quote $PWD:
1531
1532 cd () { command cd "$@"; echo "$PWD" ; }
1533
1534 Merge the edited file into your ~/.bashrc.
1535
1536 There is an additional, more ambitious, script in
1537 examples/misc/cshtobash that attempts to convert your entire csh
1538 environment to its bash equivalent. This script can be run as
1539 simply `cshtobash' to convert your normal interactive
1540 environment, or as `cshtobash ~/.login' to convert your login
1541 environment.
1542
1543 D5) How can I pipe standard output and standard error from one command to
1544 another, like csh does with `|&'?
1545
1546 Use
1547 command 2>&1 | command2
1548
1549 The key is to remember that piping is performed before redirection, so
1550 file descriptor 1 points to the pipe when it is duplicated onto file
1551 descriptor 2.
1552
1553 D6) Now that I've converted from ksh to bash, are there equivalents to
1554 ksh features like autoloaded functions and the `whence' command?
1555
1556 There are features in ksh-88 and ksh-93 that do not have direct bash
1557 equivalents. Most, however, can be emulated with very little trouble.
1558
1559 ksh-88 feature Bash equivalent
1560 -------------- ---------------
1561 compiled-in aliases set up aliases in .bashrc; some ksh aliases are
1562 bash builtins (hash, history, type)
1563 coprocesses named pipe pairs (one for read, one for write)
1564 typeset +f declare -F
1565 cd, print, whence function substitutes in examples/functions/kshenv
1566 autoloaded functions examples/functions/autoload is the same as typeset -fu
1567 read var?prompt read -p prompt var
1568
1569 ksh-93 feature Bash equivalent
1570 -------------- ---------------
1571 sleep, getconf Bash has loadable versions in examples/loadables
1572 ${.sh.version} $BASH_VERSION
1573 print -f printf
1574 hist alias hist=fc
1575 $HISTEDIT $FCEDIT
1576
1577 Section E: How can I get bash to do certain things, and why does bash do
1578 things the way it does?
1579
1580 E1) Why is the bash builtin `test' slightly different from /bin/test?
1581
1582 The specific example used here is [ ! x -o x ], which is false.
1583
1584 Bash's builtin `test' implements the Posix.2 spec, which can be
1585 summarized as follows (the wording is due to David Korn):
1586
1587 Here is the set of rules for processing test arguments.
1588
1589 0 Args: False
1590 1 Arg: True iff argument is not null.
1591 2 Args: If first arg is !, True iff second argument is null.
1592 If first argument is unary, then true if unary test is true
1593 Otherwise error.
1594 3 Args: If second argument is a binary operator, do binary test of $1 $3
1595 If first argument is !, negate two argument test of $2 $3
1596 If first argument is `(' and third argument is `)', do the
1597 one-argument test of the second argument.
1598 Otherwise error.
1599 4 Args: If first argument is !, negate three argument test of $2 $3 $4.
1600 Otherwise unspecified
1601 5 or more Args: unspecified. (Historical shells would use their
1602 current algorithm).
1603
1604 The operators -a and -o are considered binary operators for the purpose
1605 of the 3 Arg case.
1606
1607 As you can see, the test becomes (not (x or x)), which is false.
1608
1609 E2) Why does bash sometimes say `Broken pipe'?
1610
1611 If a sequence of commands appears in a pipeline, and one of the
1612 reading commands finishes before the writer has finished, the
1613 writer receives a SIGPIPE signal. Many other shells special-case
1614 SIGPIPE as an exit status in the pipeline and do not report it.
1615 For example, in:
1616
1617 ps -aux | head
1618
1619 `head' can finish before `ps' writes all of its output, and ps
1620 will try to write on a pipe without a reader. In that case, bash
1621 will print `Broken pipe' to stderr when ps is killed by a
1622 SIGPIPE.
1623
1624 As of bash-3.1, bash does not report SIGPIPE errors by default. You
1625 can build a version of bash that will report such errors.
1626
1627 E3) When I have terminal escape sequences in my prompt, why does bash
1628 wrap lines at the wrong column?
1629
1630 Readline, the line editing library that bash uses, does not know
1631 that the terminal escape sequences do not take up space on the
1632 screen. The redisplay code assumes, unless told otherwise, that
1633 each character in the prompt is a `printable' character that
1634 takes up one character position on the screen.
1635
1636 You can use the bash prompt expansion facility (see the PROMPTING
1637 section in the manual page) to tell readline that sequences of
1638 characters in the prompt strings take up no screen space.
1639
1640 Use the \[ escape to begin a sequence of non-printing characters,
1641 and the \] escape to signal the end of such a sequence.
1642
1643 E4) If I pipe the output of a command into `read variable', why doesn't
1644 the output show up in $variable when the read command finishes?
1645
1646 This has to do with the parent-child relationship between Unix
1647 processes. It affects all commands run in pipelines, not just
1648 simple calls to `read'. For example, piping a command's output
1649 into a `while' loop that repeatedly calls `read' will result in
1650 the same behavior.
1651
1652 Each element of a pipeline, even a builtin or shell function,
1653 runs in a separate process, a child of the shell running the
1654 pipeline. A subprocess cannot affect its parent's environment.
1655 When the `read' command sets the variable to the input, that
1656 variable is set only in the subshell, not the parent shell. When
1657 the subshell exits, the value of the variable is lost.
1658
1659 Many pipelines that end with `read variable' can be converted
1660 into command substitutions, which will capture the output of
1661 a specified command. The output can then be assigned to a
1662 variable:
1663
1664 grep ^gnu /usr/lib/news/active | wc -l | read ngroup
1665
1666 can be converted into
1667
1668 ngroup=$(grep ^gnu /usr/lib/news/active | wc -l)
1669
1670 This does not, unfortunately, work to split the text among
1671 multiple variables, as read does when given multiple variable
1672 arguments. If you need to do this, you can either use the
1673 command substitution above to read the output into a variable
1674 and chop up the variable using the bash pattern removal
1675 expansion operators or use some variant of the following
1676 approach.
1677
1678 Say /usr/local/bin/ipaddr is the following shell script:
1679
1680 #! /bin/sh
1681 host `hostname` | awk '/address/ {print $NF}'
1682
1683 Instead of using
1684
1685 /usr/local/bin/ipaddr | read A B C D
1686
1687 to break the local machine's IP address into separate octets, use
1688
1689 OIFS="$IFS"
1690 IFS=.
1691 set -- $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr)
1692 IFS="$OIFS"
1693 A="$1" B="$2" C="$3" D="$4"
1694
1695 Beware, however, that this will change the shell's positional
1696 parameters. If you need them, you should save them before doing
1697 this.
1698
1699 This is the general approach -- in most cases you will not need to
1700 set $IFS to a different value.
1701
1702 Some other user-supplied alternatives include:
1703
1704 read A B C D << HERE
1705 $(IFS=.; echo $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr))
1706 HERE
1707
1708 and, where process substitution is available,
1709
1710 read A B C D < <(IFS=.; echo $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr))
1711
1712 E5) I have a bunch of shell scripts that use backslash-escaped characters
1713 in arguments to `echo'. Bash doesn't interpret these characters. Why
1714 not, and how can I make it understand them?
1715
1716 This is the behavior of echo on most Unix System V machines.
1717
1718 The bash builtin `echo' is modeled after the 9th Edition
1719 Research Unix version of `echo'. It does not interpret
1720 backslash-escaped characters in its argument strings by default;
1721 it requires the use of the -e option to enable the
1722 interpretation. The System V echo provides no way to disable the
1723 special characters; the bash echo has a -E option to disable
1724 them.
1725
1726 There is a configuration option that will make bash behave like
1727 the System V echo and interpret things like `\t' by default. Run
1728 configure with the --enable-xpg-echo-default option to turn this
1729 on. Be aware that this will cause some of the tests run when you
1730 type `make tests' to fail.
1731
1732 There is a shell option, `xpg_echo', settable with `shopt', that will
1733 change the behavior of echo at runtime. Enabling this option turns
1734 on expansion of backslash-escape sequences.
1735
1736 E6) Why doesn't a while or for loop get suspended when I type ^Z?
1737
1738 This is a consequence of how job control works on Unix. The only
1739 thing that can be suspended is the process group. This is a single
1740 command or pipeline of commands that the shell forks and executes.
1741
1742 When you run a while or for loop, the only thing that the shell forks
1743 and executes are any commands in the while loop test and commands in
1744 the loop bodies. These, therefore, are the only things that can be
1745 suspended when you type ^Z.
1746
1747 If you want to be able to stop the entire loop, you need to put it
1748 within parentheses, which will force the loop into a subshell that
1749 may be stopped (and subsequently restarted) as a single unit.
1750
1751 E7) What about empty for loops in Makefiles?
1752
1753 It's fairly common to see constructs like this in automatically-generated
1754 Makefiles:
1755
1756 SUBDIRS = @SUBDIRS@
1757
1758 ...
1759
1760 subdirs-clean:
1761 for d in ${SUBDIRS}; do \
1762 ( cd $$d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean ) \
1763 done
1764
1765 When SUBDIRS is empty, this results in a command like this being passed to
1766 bash:
1767
1768 for d in ; do
1769 ( cd $d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean )
1770 done
1771
1772 In versions of bash before bash-2.05a, this was a syntax error. If the
1773 reserved word `in' was present, a word must follow it before the semicolon
1774 or newline. The language in the manual page referring to the list of words
1775 being empty referred to the list after it is expanded. These versions of
1776 bash required that there be at least one word following the `in' when the
1777 construct was parsed.
1778
1779 The idiomatic Makefile solution is something like:
1780
1781 SUBDIRS = @SUBDIRS@
1782
1783 subdirs-clean:
1784 subdirs=$SUBDIRS ; for d in $$subdirs; do \
1785 ( cd $$d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean ) \
1786 done
1787
1788 The latest updated POSIX standard has changed this: the word list
1789 is no longer required. Bash versions 2.05a and later accept the
1790 new syntax.
1791
1792 E8) Why does the arithmetic evaluation code complain about `08'?
1793
1794 The bash arithmetic evaluation code (used for `let', $(()), (()), and in
1795 other places), interprets a leading `0' in numeric constants as denoting
1796 an octal number, and a leading `0x' as denoting hexadecimal. This is
1797 in accordance with the POSIX.2 spec, section 2.9.2.1, which states that
1798 arithmetic constants should be handled as signed long integers as defined
1799 by the ANSI/ISO C standard.
1800
1801 The POSIX.2 interpretation committee has confirmed this:
1802
1803 http://www.pasc.org/interps/unofficial/db/p1003.2/pasc-1003.2-173.html
1804
1805 E9) Why does the pattern matching expression [A-Z]* match files beginning
1806 with every letter except `z'?
1807
1808 Bash-2.03, Bash-2.05 and later versions honor the current locale setting
1809 when processing ranges within pattern matching bracket expressions ([A-Z]).
1810 This is what POSIX.2 and SUSv3/XPG6 specify.
1811
1812 The behavior of the matcher in bash-2.05 and later versions depends on the
1813 current LC_COLLATE setting. Setting this variable to `C' or `POSIX' will
1814 result in the traditional behavior ([A-Z] matches all uppercase ASCII
1815 characters). Many other locales, including the en_US locale (the default
1816 on many US versions of Linux) collate the upper and lower case letters like
1817 this:
1818
1819 AaBb...Zz
1820
1821 which means that [A-Z] matches every letter except `z'. Others collate like
1822
1823 aAbBcC...zZ
1824
1825 which means that [A-Z] matches every letter except `a'.
1826
1827 The portable way to specify upper case letters is [:upper:] instead of
1828 A-Z; lower case may be specified as [:lower:] instead of a-z.
1829
1830 Look at the manual pages for setlocale(3), strcoll(3), and, if it is
1831 present, locale(1). If you have locale(1), you can use it to find
1832 your current locale information even if you do not have any of the
1833 LC_ variables set.
1834
1835 My advice is to put
1836
1837 export LC_COLLATE=C
1838
1839 into /etc/profile and inspect any shell scripts run from cron for
1840 constructs like [A-Z]. This will prevent things like
1841
1842 rm [A-Z]*
1843
1844 from removing every file in the current directory except those beginning
1845 with `z' and still allow individual users to change the collation order.
1846 Users may put the above command into their own profiles as well, of course.
1847
1848 E10) Why does `cd //' leave $PWD as `//'?
1849
1850 POSIX.2, in its description of `cd', says that *three* or more leading
1851 slashes may be replaced with a single slash when canonicalizing the
1852 current working directory.
1853
1854 This is, I presume, for historical compatibility. Certain versions of
1855 Unix, and early network file systems, used paths of the form
1856 //hostname/path to access `path' on server `hostname'.
1857
1858 E11) If I resize my xterm while another program is running, why doesn't bash
1859 notice the change?
1860
1861 This is another issue that deals with job control.
1862
1863 The kernel maintains a notion of a current terminal process group. Members
1864 of this process group (processes whose process group ID is equal to the
1865 current terminal process group ID) receive terminal-generated signals like
1866 SIGWINCH. (For more details, see the JOB CONTROL section of the bash
1867 man page.)
1868
1869 If a terminal is resized, the kernel sends SIGWINCH to each member of
1870 the terminal's current process group (the `foreground' process group).
1871
1872 When bash is running with job control enabled, each pipeline (which may be
1873 a single command) is run in its own process group, different from bash's
1874 process group. This foreground process group receives the SIGWINCH; bash
1875 does not. Bash has no way of knowing that the terminal has been resized.
1876
1877 There is a `checkwinsize' option, settable with the `shopt' builtin, that
1878 will cause bash to check the window size and adjust its idea of the
1879 terminal's dimensions each time a process stops or exits and returns control
1880 of the terminal to bash. Enable it with `shopt -s checkwinsize'.
1881
1882 E12) Why don't negative offsets in substring expansion work like I expect?
1883
1884 When substring expansion of the form ${param:offset[:length} is used,
1885 an `offset' that evaluates to a number less than zero counts back from
1886 the end of the expanded value of $param.
1887
1888 When a negative `offset' begins with a minus sign, however, unexpected things
1889 can happen. Consider
1890
1891 a=12345678
1892 echo ${a:-4}
1893
1894 intending to print the last four characters of $a. The problem is that
1895 ${param:-word} already has a well-defined meaning: expand to word if the
1896 expanded value of param is unset or null, and $param otherwise.
1897
1898 To use negative offsets that begin with a minus sign, separate the
1899 minus sign and the colon with a space.
1900
1901 E13) Why does filename completion misbehave if a colon appears in the filename?
1902
1903 Filename completion (and word completion in general) may appear to behave
1904 improperly if there is a colon in the word to be completed.
1905
1906 The colon is special to readline's word completion code: it is one of the
1907 characters that breaks words for the completer. Readline uses these characters
1908 in sort of the same way that bash uses $IFS: they break or separate the words
1909 the completion code hands to the application-specific or default word
1910 completion functions. The original intent was to make it easy to edit
1911 colon-separated lists (such as $PATH in bash) in various applications using
1912 readline for input.
1913
1914 This is complicated by the fact that some versions of the popular
1915 `bash-completion' programmable completion package have problems with the
1916 default completion behavior in the presence of colons.
1917
1918 The current set of completion word break characters is available in bash as
1919 the value of the COMP_WORDBREAKS variable. Removing `:' from that value is
1920 enough to make the colon not special to completion:
1921
1922 COMP_WORDBREAKS=${COMP_WORDBREAKS//:}
1923
1924 You can also quote the colon with a backslash to achieve the same result
1925 temporarily.
1926
1927 E14) Why does quoting the pattern argument to the regular expression matching
1928 conditional operator (=~) cause regexp matching to stop working?
1929
1930 In versions of bash prior to bash-3.2, the effect of quoting the regular
1931 expression argument to the [[ command's =~ operator was not specified.
1932 The practical effect was that double-quoting the pattern argument required
1933 backslashes to quote special pattern characters, which interfered with the
1934 backslash processing performed by double-quoted word expansion and was
1935 inconsistent with how the == shell pattern matching operator treated
1936 quoted characters.
1937
1938 In bash-3.2, the shell was changed to internally quote characters in single-
1939 and double-quoted string arguments to the =~ operator, which suppresses the
1940 special meaning of the characters special to regular expression processing
1941 (`.', `[', `\', `(', `), `*', `+', `?', `{', `|', `^', and `$') and forces
1942 them to be matched literally. This is consistent with how the `==' pattern
1943 matching operator treats quoted portions of its pattern argument.
1944
1945 Since the treatment of quoted string arguments was changed, several issues
1946 have arisen, chief among them the problem of white space in pattern arguments
1947 and the differing treatment of quoted strings between bash-3.1 and bash-3.2.
1948 Both problems may be solved by using a shell variable to hold the pattern.
1949 Since word splitting is not performed when expanding shell variables in all
1950 operands of the [[ command, this allows users to quote patterns as they wish
1951 when assigning the variable, then expand the values to a single string that
1952 may contain whitespace. The first problem may be solved by using backslashes
1953 or any other quoting mechanism to escape the white space in the patterns.
1954
1955 Bash-4.0 introduces the concept of a `compatibility level', controlled by
1956 several options to the `shopt' builtin. If the `compat31' option is enabled,
1957 bash reverts to the bash-3.1 behavior with respect to quoting the rhs of
1958 the =~ operator.
1959
1960 E15) Tell me more about the shell compatibility level.
1961
1962 Bash-4.0 introduced the concept of a `shell compatibility level', specified
1963 as a set of options to the shopt builtin (compat31, compat32, compat40 at
1964 this writing). There is only one current compatibility level -- each
1965 option is mutually exclusive. This list does not mention behavior that is
1966 standard for a particular version (e.g., setting compat32 means that quoting
1967 the rhs of the regexp matching operator quotes special regexp characters in
1968 the word, which is default behavior in bash-3.2 and above).
1969
1970 compat31 set
1971 - the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current
1972 locale when comparing strings
1973 - quoting the rhs of the regexp matching operator (=~) has no
1974 special effect
1975
1976 compat32 set
1977 - the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current
1978 locale when comparing strings
1979
1980 compat40 set
1981 - the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current
1982 locale when comparing strings
1983 - interrupting a command list such as "a ; b ; c" causes the execution
1984 of the entire list to be aborted (in versions before bash-4.0,
1985 interrupting one command in a list caused the next to be executed)
1986
1987 compat41 set
1988 - interrupting a command list such as "a ; b ; c" causes the execution
1989 of the entire list to be aborted (in versions before bash-4.1,
1990 interrupting one command in a list caused the next to be executed)
1991 - when in posix mode, single quotes in the `word' portion of a
1992 double-quoted parameter expansion define a new quoting context and
1993 are treated specially
1994
1995 compat42 set
1996 - the replacement string in double-quoted pattern substitution is not
1997 run through quote removal, as in previous versions
1998
1999 Section F: Things to watch out for on certain Unix versions
2000
2001 F1) Why can't I use command line editing in my `cmdtool'?
2002
2003 The problem is `cmdtool' and bash fighting over the input. When
2004 scrolling is enabled in a cmdtool window, cmdtool puts the tty in
2005 `raw mode' to permit command-line editing using the mouse for
2006 applications that cannot do it themselves. As a result, bash and
2007 cmdtool each try to read keyboard input immediately, with neither
2008 getting enough of it to be useful.
2009
2010 This mode also causes cmdtool to not implement many of the
2011 terminal functions and control sequences appearing in the
2012 `sun-cmd' termcap entry. For a more complete explanation, see
2013 that file examples/suncmd.termcap in the bash distribution.
2014
2015 `xterm' is a better choice, and gets along with bash much more
2016 smoothly.
2017
2018 If you must use cmdtool, you can use the termcap description in
2019 examples/suncmd.termcap. Set the TERMCAP variable to the terminal
2020 description contained in that file, i.e.
2021
2022 TERMCAP='Mu|sun-cmd:am:bs:km:pt:li#34:co#80:cl=^L:ce=\E[K:cd=\E[J:rs=\E[s:'
2023
2024 Then export TERMCAP and start a new cmdtool window from that shell.
2025 The bash command-line editing should behave better in the new
2026 cmdtool. If this works, you can put the assignment to TERMCAP
2027 in your bashrc file.
2028
2029 F2) I built bash on Solaris 2. Why do globbing expansions and filename
2030 completion chop off the first few characters of each filename?
2031
2032 This is the consequence of building bash on SunOS 5 and linking
2033 with the libraries in /usr/ucblib, but using the definitions
2034 and structures from files in /usr/include.
2035
2036 The actual conflict is between the dirent structure in
2037 /usr/include/dirent.h and the struct returned by the version of
2038 `readdir' in libucb.a (a 4.3-BSD style `struct direct').
2039
2040 Make sure you've got /usr/ccs/bin ahead of /usr/ucb in your $PATH
2041 when configuring and building bash. This will ensure that you
2042 use /usr/ccs/bin/cc or acc instead of /usr/ucb/cc and that you
2043 link with libc before libucb.
2044
2045 If you have installed the Sun C compiler, you may also need to
2046 put /usr/ccs/bin and /opt/SUNWspro/bin into your $PATH before
2047 /usr/ucb.
2048
2049 F3) Why does bash dump core after I interrupt username completion or
2050 `~user' tilde expansion on a machine running NIS?
2051
2052 This is a famous and long-standing bug in the SunOS YP (sorry, NIS)
2053 client library, which is part of libc.
2054
2055 The YP library code keeps static state -- a pointer into the data
2056 returned from the server. When YP initializes itself (setpwent),
2057 it looks at this pointer and calls free on it if it's non-null.
2058 So far, so good.
2059
2060 If one of the YP functions is interrupted during getpwent (the
2061 exact function is interpretwithsave()), and returns NULL, the
2062 pointer is freed without being reset to NULL, and the function
2063 returns. The next time getpwent is called, it sees that this
2064 pointer is non-null, calls free, and the bash free() blows up
2065 because it's being asked to free freed memory.
2066
2067 The traditional Unix mallocs allow memory to be freed multiple
2068 times; that's probably why this has never been fixed. You can
2069 run configure with the `--without-gnu-malloc' option to use
2070 the C library malloc and avoid the problem.
2071
2072 F4) I'm running SVR4.2. Why is the line erased every time I type `@'?
2073
2074 The `@' character is the default `line kill' character in most
2075 versions of System V, including SVR4.2. You can change this
2076 character to whatever you want using `stty'. For example, to
2077 change the line kill character to control-u, type
2078
2079 stty kill ^U
2080
2081 where the `^' and `U' can be two separate characters.
2082
2083 F5) Why does bash report syntax errors when my C News scripts use a
2084 redirection before a subshell command?
2085
2086 The actual command in question is something like
2087
2088 < file ( command )
2089
2090 According to the grammar given in the POSIX.2 standard, this construct
2091 is, in fact, a syntax error. Redirections may only precede `simple
2092 commands'. A subshell construct such as the above is one of the shell's
2093 `compound commands'. A redirection may only follow a compound command.
2094
2095 This affects the mechanical transformation of commands that use `cat'
2096 to pipe a file into a command (a favorite Useless-Use-Of-Cat topic on
2097 comp.unix.shell). While most commands of the form
2098
2099 cat file | command
2100
2101 can be converted to `< file command', shell control structures such as
2102 loops and subshells require `command < file'.
2103
2104 The file CWRU/sh-redir-hack in the bash distribution is an
2105 (unofficial) patch to parse.y that will modify the grammar to
2106 support this construct. It will not apply with `patch'; you must
2107 modify parse.y by hand. Note that if you apply this, you must
2108 recompile with -DREDIRECTION_HACK. This introduces a large
2109 number of reduce/reduce conflicts into the shell grammar.
2110
2111 F6) Why can't I use vi-mode editing on Red Hat Linux 6.1?
2112
2113 The short answer is that Red Hat screwed up.
2114
2115 The long answer is that they shipped an /etc/inputrc that only works
2116 for emacs mode editing, and then screwed all the vi users by setting
2117 INPUTRC to /etc/inputrc in /etc/profile.
2118
2119 The short fix is to do one of the following: remove or rename
2120 /etc/inputrc, set INPUTRC=~/.inputrc in ~/.bashrc (or .bash_profile,
2121 but make sure you export it if you do), remove the assignment to
2122 INPUTRC from /etc/profile, add
2123
2124 set keymap emacs
2125
2126 to the beginning of /etc/inputrc, or bracket the key bindings in
2127 /etc/inputrc with these lines
2128
2129 $if mode=emacs
2130 [...]
2131 $endif
2132
2133 F7) Why do bash-2.05a and bash-2.05b fail to compile `printf.def' on
2134 HP/UX 11.x?
2135
2136 HP/UX's support for long double is imperfect at best.
2137
2138 GCC will support it without problems, but the HP C library functions
2139 like strtold(3) and printf(3) don't actually work with long doubles.
2140 HP implemented a `long_double' type as a 4-element array of 32-bit
2141 ints, and that is what the library functions use. The ANSI C
2142 `long double' type is a 128-bit floating point scalar.
2143
2144 The easiest fix, until HP fixes things up, is to edit the generated
2145 config.h and #undef the HAVE_LONG_DOUBLE line. After doing that,
2146 the compilation should complete successfully.
2147
2148 Section G: How can I get bash to do certain common things?
2149
2150 G1) How can I get bash to read and display eight-bit characters?
2151
2152 This is a process requiring several steps.
2153
2154 First, you must ensure that the `physical' data path is a full eight
2155 bits. For xterms, for example, the `vt100' resources `eightBitInput'
2156 and `eightBitOutput' should be set to `true'.
2157
2158 Once you have set up an eight-bit path, you must tell the kernel and
2159 tty driver to leave the eighth bit of characters alone when processing
2160 keyboard input. Use `stty' to do this:
2161
2162 stty cs8 -istrip -parenb
2163
2164 For old BSD-style systems, you can use
2165
2166 stty pass8
2167
2168 You may also need
2169
2170 stty even odd
2171
2172 Finally, you need to tell readline that you will be inputting and
2173 displaying eight-bit characters. You use readline variables to do
2174 this. convert-meta says what to do if you read a character with its
2175 eighth bit set. input-meta says whether to permit characters with the
2176 eighth bit at all. output-meta determines how to display characters
2177 with the eighth bit set: if on, they are output directly; if it is off,
2178 such characters are displayed as a meta-prefixed escape sequence.
2179
2180 These variables can be set in your .inputrc or using the bash
2181 `bind' builtin. Here's an example using `bind':
2182
2183 bash$ bind 'set convert-meta off'
2184 bash$ bind 'set input-meta on'
2185 bash$ bind 'set output-meta on'
2186
2187 The `set' commands between the single quotes may also be placed
2188 in ~/.inputrc.
2189
2190 The script examples/scripts.noah/meta.bash encapsulates the bind
2191 commands in a shell function.
2192
2193 G2) How do I write a function `x' to replace builtin command `x', but
2194 still invoke the command from within the function?
2195
2196 This is why the `command' and `builtin' builtins exist. The
2197 `command' builtin executes the command supplied as its first
2198 argument, skipping over any function defined with that name. The
2199 `builtin' builtin executes the builtin command given as its first
2200 argument directly.
2201
2202 For example, to write a function to replace `cd' that writes the
2203 hostname and current directory to an xterm title bar, use
2204 something like the following:
2205
2206 cd()
2207 {
2208 builtin cd "$@" && xtitle "$HOST: $PWD"
2209 }
2210
2211 This could also be written using `command' instead of `builtin';
2212 the version above is marginally more efficient.
2213
2214 G3) How can I find the value of a shell variable whose name is the value
2215 of another shell variable?
2216
2217 Versions of Bash newer than Bash-2.0 support this directly. You can use
2218
2219 ${!var}
2220
2221 For example, the following sequence of commands will echo `z':
2222
2223 var1=var2
2224 var2=z
2225 echo ${!var1}
2226
2227 For sh compatibility, use the `eval' builtin. The important
2228 thing to remember is that `eval' expands the arguments you give
2229 it again, so you need to quote the parts of the arguments that
2230 you want `eval' to act on.
2231
2232 For example, this expression prints the value of the last positional
2233 parameter:
2234
2235 eval echo \"\$\{$#\}\"
2236
2237 The expansion of the quoted portions of this expression will be
2238 deferred until `eval' runs, while the `$#' will be expanded
2239 before `eval' is executed. In versions of bash later than bash-2.0,
2240
2241 echo ${!#}
2242
2243 does the same thing.
2244
2245 This is not the same thing as ksh93 `nameref' variables, though the syntax
2246 is similar. Namerefs are available bash version 4.3, and work as in ksh93.
2247
2248 G4) How can I make the bash `time' reserved word print timing output that
2249 looks like the output from my system's /usr/bin/time?
2250
2251 The bash command timing code looks for a variable `TIMEFORMAT' and
2252 uses its value as a format string to decide how to display the
2253 timing statistics.
2254
2255 The value of TIMEFORMAT is a string with `%' escapes expanded in a
2256 fashion similar in spirit to printf(3). The manual page explains
2257 the meanings of the escape sequences in the format string.
2258
2259 If TIMEFORMAT is not set, bash acts as if the following assignment had
2260 been performed:
2261
2262 TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%3lR\nuser\t%3lU\nsys\t%3lS'
2263
2264 The POSIX.2 default time format (used by `time -p command') is
2265
2266 TIMEFORMAT=$'real %2R\nuser %2U\nsys %2S'
2267
2268 The BSD /usr/bin/time format can be emulated with:
2269
2270 TIMEFORMAT=$'\t%1R real\t%1U user\t%1S sys'
2271
2272 The System V /usr/bin/time format can be emulated with:
2273
2274 TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%1R\nuser\t%1U\nsys\t%1S'
2275
2276 The ksh format can be emulated with:
2277
2278 TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%2lR\nuser\t%2lU\nsys\t%2lS'
2279
2280 G5) How do I get the current directory into my prompt?
2281
2282 Bash provides a number of backslash-escape sequences which are expanded
2283 when the prompt string (PS1 or PS2) is displayed. The full list is in
2284 the manual page.
2285
2286 The \w expansion gives the full pathname of the current directory, with
2287 a tilde (`~') substituted for the current value of $HOME. The \W
2288 expansion gives the basename of the current directory. To put the full
2289 pathname of the current directory into the path without any tilde
2290 subsitution, use $PWD. Here are some examples:
2291
2292 PS1='\w$ ' # current directory with tilde
2293 PS1='\W$ ' # basename of current directory
2294 PS1='$PWD$ ' # full pathname of current directory
2295
2296 The single quotes are important in the final example to prevent $PWD from
2297 being expanded when the assignment to PS1 is performed.
2298
2299 G6) How can I rename "*.foo" to "*.bar"?
2300
2301 Use the pattern removal functionality described in D3. The following `for'
2302 loop will do the trick:
2303
2304 for f in *.foo; do
2305 mv $f ${f%foo}bar
2306 done
2307
2308 G7) How can I translate a filename from uppercase to lowercase?
2309
2310 The script examples/functions/lowercase, originally written by John DuBois,
2311 will do the trick. The converse is left as an exercise.
2312
2313 G8) How can I write a filename expansion (globbing) pattern that will match
2314 all files in the current directory except "." and ".."?
2315
2316 You must have set the `extglob' shell option using `shopt -s extglob' to use
2317 this:
2318
2319 echo .!(.|) *
2320
2321 A solution that works without extended globbing is given in the Unix Shell
2322 FAQ, posted periodically to comp.unix.shell. It's a variant of
2323
2324 echo .[!.]* ..?* *
2325
2326 (The ..?* catches files with names of three or more characters beginning
2327 with `..')
2328
2329 Section H: Where do I go from here?
2330
2331 H1) How do I report bugs in bash, and where should I look for fixes and
2332 advice?
2333
2334 Use the `bashbug' script to report bugs. It is built and
2335 installed at the same time as bash. It provides a standard
2336 template for reporting a problem and automatically includes
2337 information about your configuration and build environment.
2338
2339 `bashbug' sends its reports to bug-bash@gnu.org, which
2340 is a large mailing list gatewayed to the usenet newsgroup gnu.bash.bug.
2341
2342 Bug fixes, answers to questions, and announcements of new releases
2343 are all posted to gnu.bash.bug. Discussions concerning bash features
2344 and problems also take place there.
2345
2346 To reach the bash maintainers directly, send mail to
2347 bash-maintainers@gnu.org.
2348
2349 H2) What kind of bash documentation is there?
2350
2351 First, look in the doc directory in the bash distribution. It should
2352 contain at least the following files:
2353
2354 bash.1 an extensive, thorough Unix-style manual page
2355 builtins.1 a manual page covering just bash builtin commands
2356 bashref.texi a reference manual in GNU tex`info format
2357 bashref.info an info version of the reference manual
2358 FAQ this file
2359 article.ms text of an article written for The Linux Journal
2360 readline.3 a man page describing readline
2361
2362 Postscript, HTML, and ASCII files created from the above source are
2363 available in the documentation distribution.
2364
2365 There is additional documentation available for anonymous FTP from host
2366 ftp.cwru.edu in the `pub/bash' directory.
2367
2368 Cameron Newham and Bill Rosenblatt have written a book on bash, published
2369 by O'Reilly and Associates. The book is based on Bill Rosenblatt's Korn
2370 Shell book. The title is ``Learning the Bash Shell'', and the ISBN number
2371 of the third edition, published in March, 2005, is 0-596-00965-8. Look for
2372 it in fine bookstores near you. This edition of the book has been updated
2373 to cover bash-3.0.
2374
2375 The GNU Bash Reference Manual has been published as a printed book by
2376 Network Theory Ltd (Paperback, ISBN: 0-9541617-7-7, Nov. 2006). It covers
2377 bash-3.2 and is available from most online bookstores (see
2378 http://www.network-theory.co.uk/bash/manual/ for details). The publisher
2379 will donate $1 to the Free Software Foundation for each copy sold.
2380
2381 Arnold Robbins and Nelson Beebe have written ``Classic Shell Scripting'',
2382 published by O'Reilly. The first edition, with ISBN number 0-596-00595-4,
2383 was published in May, 2005.
2384
2385 Chris F. A. Johnson, a frequent contributor to comp.unix.shell and
2386 gnu.bash.bug, has written ``Shell Scripting Recipes: A Problem-Solution
2387 Approach,'' a new book on shell scripting, concentrating on features of
2388 the POSIX standard helpful to shell script writers. The first edition from
2389 Apress, with ISBN number 1-59059-471-1, was published in May, 2005.
2390
2391 H3) What's coming in future versions?
2392
2393 These are features I hope to include in a future version of bash.
2394
2395 Rocky Bernstein's bash debugger (support is included with bash-4.0)
2396
2397 H4) What's on the bash `wish list' for future versions?
2398
2399 These are features that may or may not appear in a future version of bash.
2400
2401 breaking some of the shell functionality into embeddable libraries
2402 a module system like zsh's, using dynamic loading like builtins
2403 a bash programmer's guide with a chapter on creating loadable builtins
2404 a better loadable interface to perl with access to the shell builtins and
2405 variables (contributions gratefully accepted)
2406 ksh93-like `xx.yy' variables (including some of the .sh.* variables) and
2407 associated disipline functions
2408 Some of the new ksh93 pattern matching operators, like backreferencing
2409
2410 H5) When will the next release appear?
2411
2412 The next version will appear sometime in 2015. Never make predictions.
2413
2414 This document is Copyright 1995-2014 by Chester Ramey.
2415
2416 Permission is hereby granted, without written agreement and
2417 without license or royalty fees, to use, copy, and distribute
2418 this document for any purpose, provided that the above copyright
2419 notice appears in all copies of this document and that the
2420 contents of this document remain unaltered.