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OKSH(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
OKSH(1) |
oksh , rksh —
public domain Korn shell
oksh |
[-+abCefhiklmnpruvXx ]
[-+o option]
[-c string | -s | file [argument ...]] |
oksh is a command interpreter intended for both
interactive and shell script use. Its command language is a superset of the
sh(1) shell
language.
The options are as follows:
-c
string
oksh will execute the command(s) contained in
string.
-i
- Interactive shell. A shell is “interactive” if this option
is used or if both standard input and standard error are attached to a
tty(4).
An interactive shell has job control enabled, ignores the
SIGINT , SIGQUIT , and
SIGTERM signals, and prints prompts before reading
input (see the PS1 and PS2
parameters). For non-interactive shells, the
trackall option is on by default (see the
set command below).
-l
- Login shell. If the basename the shell is called with (i.e. argv[0])
starts with ‘
- ’ or if this option is
used, the shell is assumed to be a login shell and the shell reads and
executes the contents of /etc/profile and
$HOME/.profile if they exist and are
readable.
-p
- Privileged shell. A shell is “privileged” if this option is
used or if the real user ID or group ID does not match the effective user
ID or group ID (see
getuid(2)
and
getgid(2)).
A privileged shell does not process $HOME/.profile
nor the
ENV parameter (see below). Instead, the
file /etc/suid_profile is processed. Clearing the
privileged option causes the shell to set its effective user ID (group ID)
to its real user ID (group ID).
-r
- Restricted shell. A shell is “restricted” if this option is
used; if the basename the shell was invoked with was “rksh”;
or if the
SHELL parameter is set to
“rksh”. The following restrictions come into effect after
the shell processes any profile and ENV files:
- The
cd command is disabled.
- The
SHELL , ENV , and
PATH parameters cannot be changed.
- Command names can't be specified with absolute or relative paths.
- The
-p option of the built-in command
command can't be used.
- Redirections that create files can't be used (i.e.
‘
> ’,
‘>| ’,
‘>> ’,
‘<> ’).
-s
- The shell reads commands from standard input; all non-option arguments are
positional parameters.
In addition to the above, the options described in the
set built-in command can also be used on the command
line: both [-+abCefhkmnuvXx ] and
[-+o option] can be used for
single letter or long options, respectively.
If neither the -c nor the
-s option is specified, the first non-option
argument specifies the name of a file the shell reads commands from. If
there are no non-option arguments, the shell reads commands from the
standard input. The name of the shell (i.e. the contents of $0) is
determined as follows: if the -c option is used and
there is a non-option argument, it is used as the name; if commands are
being read from a file, the file is used as the name; otherwise, the
basename the shell was called with (i.e. argv[0]) is used.
If the ENV parameter is set when an
interactive shell starts (or, in the case of login shells, after any
profiles are processed), its value is subjected to parameter, command,
arithmetic, and tilde (‘~’) substitution and the resulting
file (if any) is read and executed. In order to have an interactive (as
opposed to login) shell process a startup file, ENV
may be set and exported (see below) in
$HOME/.profile - future interactive shell
invocations will process any file pointed to by
$ENV :
export ENV=$HOME/.kshrc
$HOME/.kshrc is then free to specify
instructions for interactive shells. For example, the global configuration
file may be sourced:
The above strategy may be employed to keep setup procedures for
login shells in $HOME/.profile and setup procedures
for interactive shells in $HOME/.kshrc. Of course,
since login shells are also interactive, any commands placed in
$HOME/.kshrc will be executed by login shells
too.
The exit status of the shell is 127 if the command file specified
on the command line could not be opened, or non-zero if a fatal syntax error
occurred during the execution of a script. In the absence of fatal errors,
the exit status is that of the last command executed, or zero, if no command
is executed.
The shell begins parsing its input by breaking it into words.
Words, which are sequences of characters, are delimited by unquoted whitespace
characters (space, tab, and newline) or meta-characters
(‘< ’,
‘> ’,
‘| ’,
‘; ’,
‘( ’,
‘) ’, and
‘& ’). Aside from delimiting words,
spaces and tabs are ignored, while newlines usually delimit commands. The
meta-characters are used in building the following tokens:
‘< ’,
‘<& ’,
‘<< ’,
‘> ’,
‘>& ’,
‘>> ’, etc. are used to specify
redirections (see Input/output
redirection below); ‘| ’ is used to
create pipelines; ‘|& ’ is used to
create co-processes (see Co-processes
below); ‘; ’ is used to separate
commands; ‘& ’ is used to create
asynchronous pipelines; ‘&& ’ and
‘|| ’ are used to specify conditional
execution; ‘;; ’ is used in
case statements; ‘(( ..
)) ’ is used in arithmetic expressions; and lastly,
‘( .. ) ’ is used to create subshells.
Whitespace and meta-characters can be quoted individually using a
backslash (‘\’), or in groups using double
(‘"’) or single (‘'’) quotes. The following
characters are also treated specially by the shell and must be quoted if
they are to represent themselves: ‘\ ’,
‘" ’,
‘' ’,
‘# ’,
‘$ ’,
‘` ’,
‘~ ’,
‘{ ’,
‘} ’,
‘* ’,
‘? ’, and
‘[ ’. The first three of these are the
above mentioned quoting characters (see
Quoting below);
‘# ’, if used at the beginning of a
word, introduces a comment — everything after the
‘# ’ up to the nearest newline is
ignored; ‘$ ’ is used to introduce
parameter, command, and arithmetic substitutions (see
Substitution below);
‘` ’ introduces an old-style command
substitution (see Substitution
below); ‘~ ’ begins a directory
expansion (see Tilde expansion
below); ‘{ ’ and
‘} ’ delimit
csh(1)-style
alternations (see Brace expansion
below); and finally, ‘* ’,
‘? ’, and
‘[ ’ are used in file name generation
(see File name patterns
below).
As words and tokens are parsed, the shell builds commands, of
which there are two basic types: simple-commands,
typically programs that are executed, and
compound-commands, such as for and
if statements, grouping constructs, and function
definitions.
A simple-command consists of some combination of parameter
assignments (see Parameters below),
input/output redirections (see
Input/output
redirections below), and command words; the only restriction is that
parameter assignments come before any command words. The command words, if
any, define the command that is to be executed and its arguments. The
command may be a shell built-in command, a function, or an external command
(i.e. a separate executable file that is located using the
PATH parameter; see
Command execution below).
All command constructs have an exit status. For external commands,
this is related to the status returned by
wait(2)
(if the command could not be found, the exit status is 127; if it could not
be executed, the exit status is 126). The exit status of other command
constructs (built-in commands, functions, compound-commands, pipelines,
lists, etc.) are all well-defined and are described where the construct is
described. The exit status of a command consisting only of parameter
assignments is that of the last command substitution performed during the
parameter assignment or 0 if there were no command substitutions.
Commands can be chained together using the
‘| ’ token to form pipelines, in which
the standard output of each command but the last is piped (see
pipe(2))
to the standard input of the following command. The exit status of a
pipeline is that of its last command, unless the
pipefail option is set. A pipeline may be prefixed
by the ‘! ’ reserved word, which causes
the exit status of the pipeline to be logically complemented: if the
original status was 0, the complemented status will be 1; if the original
status was not 0, the complemented status will be 0.
Lists of commands can be created by separating
pipelines by any of the following tokens:
‘&& ’,
‘|| ’,
‘& ’,
‘|& ’, and
‘; ’. The first two are for conditional
execution: “cmd1
&& cmd2”
executes cmd2 only if the exit status of
cmd1 is zero;
‘|| ’ is the opposite —
cmd2 is executed only if the exit status of
cmd1 is non-zero.
‘&& ’ and
‘|| ’ have equal precedence which is
higher than that of ‘& ’,
‘|& ’, and
‘; ’, which also have equal precedence.
The ‘&& ’ and
‘|| ’ operators are
“left-associative”. For example, both of these commands will
print only “bar”:
$ false && echo foo || echo bar
$ true || echo foo && echo bar
The ‘& ’ token causes the
preceding command to be executed asynchronously; that is, the shell starts
the command but does not wait for it to complete (the shell does keep track
of the status of asynchronous commands; see
Job control below). When an
asynchronous command is started when job control is disabled (i.e. in most
scripts), the command is started with signals SIGINT
and SIGQUIT ignored and with input redirected from
/dev/null (however, redirections specified in the
asynchronous command have precedence). The
‘|& ’ operator starts a co-process
which is a special kind of asynchronous process (see
Co-processes below). A command must
follow the ‘&& ’ and
‘|| ’ operators, while it need not
follow ‘& ’,
‘|& ’, or
‘; ’. The exit status of a list is that
of the last command executed, with the exception of asynchronous lists, for
which the exit status is 0.
Compound commands are created using the following reserved words.
These words are only recognized if they are unquoted and if they are used as
the first word of a command (i.e. they can't be preceded by parameter
assignments or redirections):
case esac in until (( }
do fi name while ))
done for select ! [[
elif function then ( ]]
else if time ) {
Note: Some shells (but not this one) execute
control structure commands in a subshell when one or more of their file
descriptors are redirected, so any environment changes inside them may fail.
To be portable, the exec statement should be used
instead to redirect file descriptors before the control structure.
In the following compound command descriptions, command lists
(denoted as list) that are followed by reserved words must
end with a semicolon, a newline, or a (syntactically correct) reserved word.
For example, the following are all valid:
$ { echo foo; echo bar; }
$ { echo foo; echo bar<newline> }
$ { { echo foo; echo bar; } }
This is not valid:
$ { echo foo; echo bar }
- (list)
- Execute list in a subshell. There is no implicit way
to pass environment changes from a subshell back to its parent.
- { list; }
- Compound construct; list is executed, but not in a
subshell. Note that ‘
{ ’ and
‘} ’ are reserved words, not
meta-characters.
case
word in [[(]
pattern [| pattern]
...) list
;; ] ... esac
- The
case statement attempts to match
word against a specified
pattern; the list associated
with the first successfully matched pattern is executed. Patterns used in
case statements are the same as those used for
file name patterns except that the restrictions regarding
‘. ’ and
‘/ ’ are dropped. Note that any
unquoted space before and after a pattern is stripped; any space within a
pattern must be quoted. Both the word and the patterns are subject to
parameter, command, and arithmetic substitution, as well as tilde
substitution. For historical reasons, open and close braces may be used
instead of in and esac
e.g. case $foo { *) echo bar; } . The exit status
of a case statement is that of the executed
list; if no list is executed,
the exit status is zero.
for
name [in [word
...]]; do list;
done
- For each word in the specified word list, the
parameter name is set to the word and
list is executed. If
in is
not used to specify a word list, the positional parameters ($1, $2, etc.)
are used instead. For historical reasons, open and close braces may be
used instead of do and
done e.g. for i; { echo $i;
} . The exit status of a for statement is
the last exit status of list. If there are no items,
list is not executed and the exit status is
zero.
if
list; then
list; [elif
list; then
list;] ... [else
list;] fi
- If the exit status of the first list is zero, the
second list is executed; otherwise, the
list following the
elif , if
any, is executed with similar consequences. If all the lists following the
if and elif s fail (i.e.
exit with non-zero status), the list following the
else is executed. The exit status of an
if statement is that of non-conditional
list that is executed; if no non-conditional
list is executed, the exit status is zero.
select
name [in
word ...];
do list;
done
- The
select statement provides an automatic method
of presenting the user with a menu and selecting from it. An enumerated
list of the specified word(s) is printed on standard
error, followed by a prompt (PS3 : normally
‘#? ’). A number corresponding to one of the
enumerated words is then read from standard input,
name is set to the selected word (or unset if the
selection is not valid), REPLY is set to what was
read (leading/trailing space is stripped), and list
is executed. If a blank line (i.e. zero or more
IFS characters) is entered, the menu is reprinted
without executing list.
When list completes, the enumerated list
is printed if REPLY is
NULL , the prompt is printed, and so on. This
process continues until an end-of-file is read, an interrupt is
received, or a break statement is executed
inside the loop. If “in word ...” is omitted, the
positional parameters are used (i.e. $1, $2, etc.). For historical
reasons, open and close braces may be used instead of
do and done e.g.
select i; { echo $i; } . The exit status of a
select statement is zero if a
break statement is used to exit the loop,
non-zero otherwise.
until
list; do
list; done
- This works like
while , except that the body is
executed only while the exit status of the first
list is non-zero.
while
list; do
list; done
- A
while is a pre-checked loop. Its body is
executed as often as the exit status of the first
list is zero. The exit status of a
while statement is the last exit status of the
list in the body of the loop; if the body is not
executed, the exit status is zero.
function
name {
list; }
- Defines the function name (see
Functions below). Note that
redirections specified after a function definition are performed whenever
the function is executed, not when the function definition is
executed.
- name() command
- Mostly the same as
function (see
Functions below).
time
[-p ] [pipeline]
- The
time reserved word is described in the
Command execution
section.
((
expression ))
- The arithmetic expression expression is evaluated;
equivalent to
let expression
(see Arithmetic
expressions and the let command, below).
[[
expression ]]
- Similar to the
test and [
... ] commands (described
later), with the following exceptions:
- Field splitting and file name generation are not performed on
arguments.
- The
-a (AND) and -o
(OR) operators are replaced with
‘&& ’ and
‘|| ’, respectively.
- Operators (e.g. ‘
-f ’,
‘=’, ‘!’) must be unquoted.
- The second operand of the ‘!=’ and ‘=’
expressions are patterns (e.g. the comparison
[[
foobar = f*r ]] succeeds).
- The ‘
< ’ and
‘> ’ binary operators do not
need to be quoted with the ‘\ ’
character.
- The single argument form of
test , which tests
if the argument has a non-zero length, is not valid; explicit
operators must always be used e.g. instead of
[ str
] use [[ -n
str ]].
- Parameter, command, and arithmetic substitutions are performed as
expressions are evaluated and lazy expression evaluation is used for
the ‘
&& ’ and
‘|| ’ operators. This means that
in the following statement, $(< foo) is
evaluated if and only if the file foo exists
and is readable:
$ [[ -r foo && $(< foo) = b*r ]]
Quoting is used to prevent the shell from treating characters or words
specially. There are three methods of quoting. First,
‘\ ’ quotes the following character,
unless it is at the end of a line, in which case both the
‘\ ’ and the newline are stripped.
Second, a single quote (‘'’) quotes everything up to the next
single quote (this may span lines). Third, a double quote
(‘"’) quotes all characters, except
‘$ ’,
‘` ’ and
‘\ ’, up to the next unquoted double
quote. ‘$ ’ and
‘` ’ inside double quotes have their
usual meaning (i.e. parameter, command, or arithmetic substitution) except no
field splitting is carried out on the results of double-quoted substitutions.
If a ‘\ ’ inside a double-quoted string
is followed by ‘\ ’,
‘$ ’,
‘` ’, or
‘" ’, it is replaced by the second
character; if it is followed by a newline, both the
‘\ ’ and the newline are stripped;
otherwise, both the ‘\ ’ and the
character following are unchanged.
There are two types of aliases: normal command aliases and tracked aliases.
Command aliases are normally used as a short hand for a long or often used
command. The shell expands command aliases (i.e. substitutes the alias name
for its value) when it reads the first word of a command. An expanded alias is
re-processed to check for more aliases. If a command alias ends in a space or
tab, the following word is also checked for alias expansion. The alias
expansion process stops when a word that is not an alias is found, when a
quoted word is found, or when an alias word that is currently being expanded
is found.
The following command aliases are defined automatically by the
shell:
Tracked aliases allow the shell to remember where it found a
particular command. The first time the shell does a path search for a
command that is marked as a tracked alias, it saves the full path of the
command. The next time the command is executed, the shell checks the saved
path to see that it is still valid, and if so, avoids repeating the path
search. Tracked aliases can be listed and created using
alias -t . Note that changing the
PATH parameter clears the saved paths for all
tracked aliases. If the trackall option is set (i.e.
set -o trackall or
set -h ), the shell tracks all commands. This option
is set automatically for non-interactive shells. For interactive shells,
only the following commands are automatically tracked:
cat(1),
cc(1),
chmod(1),
cp(1),
date(1),
ed(1),
emacs,
grep(1),
ls(1),
mail(1),
make(1),
mv(1),
pr(1),
rm(1),
sed(1),
sh(1),
vi(1), and
who(1).
The first step the shell takes in executing a simple-command is to perform
substitutions on the words of the command. There are three kinds of
substitution: parameter, command, and arithmetic. Parameter substitutions,
which are described in detail in the next section, take the form
$name or ${...}; command
substitutions take the form $(command) or
`command`; and arithmetic substitutions take the form
$((expression)).
If a substitution appears outside of double quotes, the results of
the substitution are generally subject to word or field splitting according
to the current value of the IFS parameter. The
IFS parameter specifies a list of characters which
are used to break a string up into several words; any characters from the
set space, tab, and newline that appear in the IFS
characters are called “IFS whitespace”. Sequences of one or
more IFS whitespace characters, in combination with
zero or one non-IFS whitespace characters, delimit a
field. As a special case, leading and trailing IFS
whitespace is stripped (i.e. no leading or trailing empty field is created
by it); leading non-IFS whitespace does create an
empty field.
Example: If IFS is set to
“<space>:”, and VAR is set to
“<space>A<space>:<space><space>B::D”,
the substitution for $VAR results in four fields: ‘A’,
‘B’, ‘’ (an empty field), and ‘D’.
Note that if the IFS parameter is set to the
NULL string, no field splitting is done; if the
parameter is unset, the default value of space, tab, and newline is
used.
Also, note that the field splitting applies only to the immediate
result of the substitution. Using the previous example, the substitution for
$VAR:E results in the fields: ‘A’, ‘B’,
‘’, and ‘D:E’, not ‘A’,
‘B’, ‘’, ‘D’, and
‘E’. This behavior is POSIX compliant, but incompatible with
some other shell implementations which do field splitting on the word which
contained the substitution or use IFS as a general
whitespace delimiter.
The results of substitution are, unless otherwise specified, also
subject to brace expansion and file name expansion (see the relevant
sections below).
A command substitution is replaced by the output generated by the
specified command, which is run in a subshell. For
$(command) substitutions, normal quoting rules are
used when command is parsed; however, for the
`command` form, a
‘\ ’ followed by any of
‘$ ’,
‘` ’, or
‘\ ’ is stripped (a
‘\ ’ followed by any other character is
unchanged). As a special case in command substitutions, a command of the
form <file is interpreted to mean substitute the
contents of file. Note that $(<
foo) has the same effect as $(cat foo) , but
it is carried out more efficiently because no process is started.
Arithmetic substitutions are replaced by the value of the
specified expression. For example, the command echo
$((2+3*4)) prints 14. See
Arithmetic expressions for
a description of an expression.
Parameters are shell variables; they can be assigned values and their values can
be accessed using a parameter substitution. A parameter name is either one of
the special single punctuation or digit character parameters described below,
or a letter followed by zero or more letters or digits
(‘_ ’ counts as a letter). The latter
form can be treated as arrays by appending an array index of the form
[expr] where expr is an arithmetic
expression. Parameter substitutions take the form $name,
${name}, or
${name[expr]} where
name is a parameter name. If expr
is a literal ‘@ ’ then the named array is
expanded using the same quoting rules as
‘$@ ’, while if
expr is a literal
‘* ’ then the named array is expanded
using the same quoting rules as ‘$* ’. If
substitution is performed on a parameter (or an array parameter element) that
is not set, a null string is substituted unless the
nounset option (set
-o nounset or
set -u ) is set, in which case
an error occurs.
Parameters can be assigned values in a number of ways. First, the
shell implicitly sets some parameters like
‘# ’,
‘PWD ’, and
‘$ ’; this is the only way the special
single character parameters are set. Second, parameters are imported from
the shell's environment at startup. Third, parameters can be assigned values
on the command line: for example, FOO=bar sets the
parameter “FOO” to “bar”; multiple parameter
assignments can be given on a single command line and they can be followed
by a simple-command, in which case the assignments are in effect only for
the duration of the command (such assignments are also exported; see below
for the implications of this). Note that both the parameter name and the
‘= ’ must be unquoted for the shell to
recognize a parameter assignment. The fourth way of setting a parameter is
with the export , readonly ,
and typeset commands; see their descriptions in the
Command execution section.
Fifth, for and select loops
set parameters as well as the getopts ,
read , and set -A commands.
Lastly, parameters can be assigned values using assignment operators inside
arithmetic expressions (see
Arithmetic expressions
below) or using the
${name=value} form of the
parameter substitution (see below).
Parameters with the export attribute (set using the
export or typeset
-x commands, or by parameter assignments followed by
simple commands) are put in the environment (see
environ(7))
of commands run by the shell as
name=value pairs. The order in
which parameters appear in the environment of a command is unspecified. When
the shell starts up, it extracts parameters and their values from its
environment and automatically sets the export attribute for those
parameters.
Modifiers can be applied to the ${name} form
of parameter substitution:
- ${name:-word}
- If name is set and not
NULL , it is substituted; otherwise,
word is substituted.
- ${name:+word}
- If name is set and not
NULL , word is substituted;
otherwise, nothing is substituted.
- ${name:=word}
- If name is set and not
NULL , it is substituted; otherwise, it is assigned
word and the resulting value of
name is substituted.
- ${name:?word}
- If name is set and not
NULL , it is substituted; otherwise,
word is printed on standard error (preceded by
name:) and an error occurs (normally causing
termination of a shell script, function, or script sourced using the
‘.’ built-in). If word is omitted, the
string “parameter null or not set” is used instead.
In the above modifiers, the
‘: ’ can be omitted, in which case the
conditions only depend on name being set (as opposed
to set and not NULL ). If word
is needed, parameter, command, arithmetic, and tilde substitution are
performed on it; if word is not needed, it is not
evaluated.
The following forms of parameter substitution can also be
used:
- ${#name}
- The number of positional parameters if name is
‘
* ’,
‘@ ’, or not specified; otherwise the
length of the string value of parameter name.
- ${#name[*]}
-
- ${#name[@]}
- The number of elements in the array name.
- ${name#pattern}
-
- ${name##pattern}
- If pattern matches the beginning of the value of
parameter name, the matched text is deleted from the
result of substitution. A single ‘
# ’
results in the shortest match, and two of them result in the longest
match.
- ${name%pattern}
-
- ${name%%pattern}
- Like ${..#..} substitution, but it deletes from the end of the value.
The following special parameters are implicitly set by the shell
and cannot be set directly using assignments:
!
- Process ID of the last background process started. If no background
processes have been started, the parameter is not set.
#
- The number of positional parameters ($1, $2, etc.).
$
- The PID of the shell, or the PID of the original shell if it is a
subshell. Do NOT use this mechanism for generating
temporary file names; see
mktemp(1)
instead.
-
- The concatenation of the current single letter options (see the
set command below for a list of options).
?
- The exit status of the last non-asynchronous command executed. If the last
command was killed by a signal,
$? is set to 128
plus the signal number.
0
- The name of the shell, determined as follows: the first argument to
oksh if it was invoked with the
-c option and arguments were given; otherwise the
file argument, if it was supplied; or else the
basename the shell was invoked with (i.e.
argv[0] ). $0 is also set
to the name of the current script or the name of the current function, if
it was defined with the function keyword (i.e. a
Korn shell style function).
1
... 9
- The first nine positional parameters that were supplied to the shell,
function, or script sourced using the ‘.’ built-in. Further
positional parameters may be accessed using
${number}.
*
- All positional parameters (except parameter 0) i.e. $1, $2, $3, ... If
used outside of double quotes, parameters are separate words (which are
subjected to word splitting); if used within double quotes, parameters are
separated by the first character of the
IFS
parameter (or the empty string if IFS is
NULL ).
@
- Same as
$* , unless it is used inside double
quotes, in which case a separate word is generated for each positional
parameter. If there are no positional parameters, no word is generated.
$@ can be used to access arguments, verbatim,
without losing NULL arguments or splitting
arguments with spaces.
The following parameters are set and/or used by the shell:
_
(underscore)
- When an external command is executed by the shell, this parameter is set
in the environment of the new process to the path of the executed command.
In interactive use, this parameter is also set in the parent shell to the
last word of the previous command. When
MAILPATH
messages are evaluated, this parameter contains the name of the file that
changed (see the MAILPATH parameter, below).
CDPATH
- Search path for the
cd built-in command. It works
the same way as PATH for those directories not
beginning with ‘/ ’ or
‘. ’ in cd
commands. Note that if CDPATH is set and does not
contain ‘.’ or an empty path, the current directory is not
searched. Also, the cd built-in command will
display the resulting directory when a match is found in any search path
other than the empty path.
COLUMNS
- Set to the number of columns on the terminal or window. Currently set to
the “cols” value as reported by
stty(1)
if that value is non-zero. This parameter is used by the interactive line
editing modes, and by the
select ,
set -o , and kill -l
commands to format information columns.
EDITOR
- If the
VISUAL parameter is not set, this parameter
controls the command-line editing mode for interactive shells. See the
VISUAL parameter below for how this works.
Note: traditionally, EDITOR was used
to specify the name of an (old-style) line editor, such as
ed(1),
and VISUAL was used to specify a (new-style)
screen editor, such as
vi(1).
Hence if VISUAL is set, it overrides
EDITOR .
ENV
- If this parameter is found to be set after any profile files are executed,
the expanded value is used as a shell startup file. It typically contains
function and alias definitions.
EXECSHELL
- If set, this parameter is assumed to contain the shell that is to be used
to execute commands that
execve(2)
fails to execute and which do not start with a
“#!shell” sequence.
FCEDIT
- The editor used by the
fc command (see
below).
FPATH
- Like
PATH , but used when an undefined function is
executed to locate the file defining the function. It is also searched
when a command can't be found using PATH . See
Functions below for more
information.
HISTCONTROL
- A colon separated list of history settings. If
ignoredups is present, lines identical to the
previous history line will not be saved. If
ignorespace is present, lines starting with a
space will not be saved. Unknown settings are ignored.
HISTFILE
- The name of the file used to store command history. When assigned to,
history is loaded from the specified file. Also, several invocations of
the shell running on the same machine will share history if their
HISTFILE parameters all point to the same file.
Note: If HISTFILE
isn't set, no history file is used. This is different from the original
Korn shell, which uses $HOME/.sh_history.
HISTSIZE
- The number of commands normally stored for history. The default is
500.
HOME
- The default directory for the
cd command and the
value substituted for an unqualified ~ (see
Tilde expansion below).
IFS
- Internal field separator, used during substitution and by the
read command, to split values into distinct
arguments; normally set to space, tab, and newline. See
Substitution above for details.
Note: This parameter is not imported from
the environment when the shell is started.
KSH_VERSION
- The version of the shell and the date the version was created
(read-only).
LINENO
- The line number of the function or shell script that is currently being
executed.
LINES
- Set to the number of lines on the terminal or window.
MAIL
- If set, the user will be informed of the arrival of mail in the named
file. This parameter is ignored if the
MAILPATH
parameter is set.
MAILCHECK
- How often, in seconds, the shell will check for mail in the file(s)
specified by
MAIL or
MAILPATH . If set to 0, the shell checks before
each prompt. The default is 600 (10 minutes).
MAILPATH
- A list of files to be checked for mail. The list is colon separated, and
each file may be followed by a ‘
? ’
and a message to be printed if new mail has arrived. Command, parameter,
and arithmetic substitution is performed on the message and, during
substitution, the parameter $_ contains the name
of the file. The default message is “you have mail in
$_”.
OLDPWD
- The previous working directory. Unset if
cd has
not successfully changed directories since the shell started, or if the
shell doesn't know where it is.
OPTARG
- When using
getopts , it contains the argument for a
parsed option, if it requires one.
OPTIND
- The index of the next argument to be processed when using
getopts . Assigning 1 to this parameter causes
getopts to process arguments from the beginning
the next time it is invoked.
PATH
- A colon separated list of directories that are searched when looking for
commands and files sourced using the ‘.’ command (see
below). An empty string resulting from a leading or trailing colon, or two
adjacent colons, is treated as a ‘.’ (the current
directory).
POSIXLY_CORRECT
- If set, this parameter causes the
posix option to
be enabled. See POSIX mode
below.
PPID
- The process ID of the shell's parent (read-only).
PS1
- The primary prompt for interactive shells. Parameter, command, and
arithmetic substitutions are performed, and the prompt string can be
customised using backslash-escaped special characters.
Note that since the command-line editors try to figure out how
long the prompt is (so they know how far it is to the edge of the
screen), escape codes in the prompt tend to mess things up. You can tell
the shell not to count certain sequences (such as escape codes) by using
the
\[ ...\]
substitution (see below) or by prefixing your prompt with a non-printing
character (such as control-A) followed by a carriage return and then
delimiting the escape codes with this non-printing character. By the
way, don't blame me for this hack; it's in the original
oksh .
The default prompt is the first part of the hostname, followed
by ‘$ ’ for non-root users,
‘# ’ for root.
The following backslash-escaped special characters can be used
to customise the prompt:
\a
- Insert an ASCII bell character.
\d
- The current date, in the format “Day Month Date” for
example “Wed Nov 03”.
\D {format}
- The current date, with format converted by
strftime(3).
The braces must be specified.
\e
- Insert an ASCII escape character.
\h
- The hostname, minus domain name.
\H
- The full hostname, including domain name.
\j
- Current number of jobs running (see
Job control below).
\l
- The controlling terminal.
\n
- Insert a newline character.
\r
- Insert a carriage return character.
\s
- The name of the shell.
\t
- The current time, in 24-hour HH:MM:SS format.
\T
- The current time, in 12-hour HH:MM:SS format.
\@
- The current time, in 12-hour HH:MM:SS AM/PM format.
\A
- The current time, in 24-hour HH:MM format.
\u
- The current user's username.
\v
- The current version of
oksh .
\V
- Like ‘\v’, but more verbose.
\w
- The current working directory.
$HOME is
abbreviated as ‘~’.
\W
- The basename of the current working directory.
$HOME is abbreviated as
‘~’.
\!
- The current history number. An unescaped
‘
! ’ will produce the current
history number too, as per the POSIX specification. A literal
‘! ’ can be put in the prompt by
placing ‘!! ’ in
PS1 .
\#
- The current command number. This could be different to the current
history number, if
HISTFILE contains a history
list from a previous session.
\$
- The default prompt character i.e. ‘#’ if the effective
UID is 0, otherwise ‘$’. Since the shell interprets
‘$’ as a special character within double quotes, it is
safer in this case to escape the backslash than to try quoting
it.
\ nnn
- The octal character nnn.
\\
- Insert a single backslash character.
\[
- Normally the shell keeps track of the number of characters in the
prompt. Use of this sequence turns off that count.
\]
- Use of this sequence turns the count back on.
Note that the backslash itself may be interpreted by the
shell. Hence, to set PS1 either escape the
backslash itself, or use double quotes. The latter is more
practical:
This is a more complex example, which does not rely on the
above backslash-escaped sequences. It embeds the current working
directory, in reverse video, in the prompt string:
x=$(print \\001)
PS1="$x$(print \\r)$x$(tput so)$x\$PWD$x$(tput se)$x> "
PS2
- Secondary prompt string, by default ‘> ’, used
when more input is needed to complete a command.
PS3
- Prompt used by the
select statement when reading a
menu selection. The default is ‘#? ’.
PS4
- Used to prefix commands that are printed during execution tracing (see the
set -x command below).
Parameter, command, and arithmetic substitutions are performed before it
is printed. The default is ‘+ ’.
PWD
- The current working directory. May be unset or
NULL if the shell doesn't know where it is.
RANDOM
- A random number generator. Every time
RANDOM is
referenced, it is assigned the next random number in the range 0-32767. By
default,
arc4random(3)
is used to produce values. If the variable RANDOM
is assigned a value, the value is used as the seed to
srand_deterministic(3)
and subsequent references of RANDOM produce a
predictable sequence.
REPLY
- Default parameter for the
read command if no names
are given. Also used in select loops to store the
value that is read from standard input.
SECONDS
- The number of seconds since the shell started or, if the parameter has
been assigned an integer value, the number of seconds since the assignment
plus the value that was assigned.
TERM
- The user's terminal type. If set, it will be used to determine the escape
sequence used to clear the screen.
TMOUT
- If set to a positive integer in an interactive shell, it specifies the
maximum number of seconds the shell will wait for input after printing the
primary prompt (
PS1 ). If the time is exceeded, the
shell exits.
TMPDIR
- The directory temporary shell files are created in. If this parameter is
not set, or does not contain the absolute path of a writable directory,
temporary files are created in /tmp.
VISUAL
- If set, this parameter controls the command-line editing mode for
interactive shells. If the last component of the path specified in this
parameter contains the string “vi”, “emacs”,
or “gmacs”, the
vi(1),
emacs, or gmacs (Gosling emacs) editing mode is enabled, respectively. See
also the
EDITOR parameter, above.
Tilde expansion, which is done in parallel with parameter substitution, is done
on words starting with an unquoted ‘~ ’.
The characters following the tilde, up to the first
‘/ ’, if any, are assumed to be a login
name. If the login name is empty, ‘+ ’,
or ‘- ’, the value of the
HOME , PWD , or
OLDPWD parameter is substituted, respectively.
Otherwise, the password file is searched for the login name, and the tilde
expression is substituted with the user's home directory. If the login name is
not found in the password file or if any quoting or parameter substitution
occurs in the login name, no substitution is performed.
In parameter assignments (such as those preceding a simple-command
or those occurring in the arguments of alias ,
export , readonly , and
typeset ), tilde expansion is done after any
assignment (i.e. after the equals sign) or after an unquoted colon
(‘:’); login names are also delimited by colons.
The home directory of previously expanded login names are cached
and re-used. The alias -d command may be used to
list, change, and add to this cache (e.g. alias -d
fac=/usr/local/facilities; cd ~fac/bin ).
Brace expressions take the following form:
prefix
{
str1
,...,
strN
}
suffix
The expressions are expanded to N words,
each of which is the concatenation of prefix,
stri, and suffix (e.g.
“a{c,b{X,Y},d}e” expands to four words: “ace”,
“abXe”, “abYe”, and “ade”). As
noted in the example, brace expressions can be nested and the resulting
words are not sorted. Brace expressions must contain an unquoted comma
(‘,’) for expansion to occur (e.g. {}
and {foo} are not expanded). Brace expansion is
carried out after parameter substitution and before file name
generation.
A file name pattern is a word containing one or more unquoted
‘? ’,
‘* ’,
‘+ ’,
‘@ ’, or
‘! ’ characters or “[..]”
sequences. Once brace expansion has been performed, the shell replaces file
name patterns with the sorted names of all the files that match the pattern
(if no files match, the word is left unchanged). The pattern elements have the
following meaning:
- ?
- Matches any single character.
- *
- Matches any sequence of characters.
- [..]
- Matches any of the characters inside the brackets. Ranges of characters
can be specified by separating two characters by a
‘
- ’ (e.g. “[a0-9]”
matches the letter ‘a’ or any digit). In order to represent
itself, a ‘- ’ must either be quoted
or the first or last character in the character list. Similarly, a
‘] ’ must be quoted or the first
character in the list if it is to represent itself instead of the end of
the list. Also, a ‘! ’ appearing at
the start of the list has special meaning (see below), so to represent
itself it must be quoted or appear later in the list.
Within a bracket expression, the name of a
character class enclosed in ‘[:’ and
‘:]’ stands for the list of all characters belonging to
that class. Supported character classes:
alnum cntrl lower space
alpha digit print upper
blank graph punct xdigit
These match characters using the macros specified in
isalnum(3),
isalpha(3),
and so on. A character class may not be used as an endpoint of a
range.
- [!..]
- Like [..], except it matches any character not inside the brackets.
- *(pattern|...|pattern)
- Matches any string of characters that matches zero or more occurrences of
the specified patterns. Example: The pattern
*(foo|bar) matches the strings “”,
“foo”, “bar”, “foobarfoo”,
etc.
- +(pattern|...|pattern)
- Matches any string of characters that matches one or more occurrences of
the specified patterns. Example: The pattern
+(foo|bar) matches the strings
“foo”, “bar”, “foobar”,
etc.
- ?(pattern|...|pattern)
- Matches the empty string or a string that matches one of the specified
patterns. Example: The pattern
?(foo|bar) only
matches the strings “”, “foo”, and
“bar”.
- @(pattern|...|pattern)
- Matches a string that matches one of the specified patterns. Example: The
pattern
@(foo|bar) only matches the strings
“foo” and “bar”.
- !(pattern|...|pattern)
- Matches any string that does not match one of the specified patterns.
Examples: The pattern
!(foo|bar) matches all
strings except “foo” and “bar”; the pattern
!(*) matches no strings; the pattern
!(?)* matches all strings (think about it).
Unlike most shells, ksh never matches
‘.’ and ‘..’.
Note that none of the above pattern elements match either a period
(‘.’) at the start of a file name or a slash
(‘/’), even if they are explicitly used in a [..] sequence;
also, the names ‘.’ and ‘..’ are never matched,
even by the pattern ‘.*’.
If the markdirs option is set, any
directories that result from file name generation are marked with a trailing
‘/ ’.
When a command is executed, its standard input, standard output, and standard
error (file descriptors 0, 1, and 2, respectively) are normally inherited from
the shell. Three exceptions to this are commands in pipelines, for which
standard input and/or standard output are those set up by the pipeline,
asynchronous commands created when job control is disabled, for which standard
input is initially set to be from /dev/null, and
commands for which any of the following redirections have been specified:
>
file
- Standard output is redirected to file. If
file does not exist, it is created; if it does
exist, is a regular file, and the
noclobber option
is set, an error occurs; otherwise, the file is truncated. Note that this
means the command cmd < foo > foo will open
foo for reading and then truncate it when it opens
it for writing, before cmd gets a chance to actually
read foo.
>|
file
- Same as
> , except the file is truncated, even
if the noclobber option is set.
>>
file
- Same as
> , except if file
exists it is appended to instead of being truncated. Also, the file is
opened in append mode, so writes always go to the end of the file (see
open(2)).
<
file
- Standard input is redirected from file, which is
opened for reading.
<>
file
- Same as
< , except the file is opened for
reading and writing.
<<
marker
- After reading the command line containing this kind of redirection (called
a “here document”), the shell copies lines from the command
source into a temporary file until a line matching
marker is read. When the command is executed,
standard input is redirected from the temporary file. If
marker contains no quoted characters, the contents
of the temporary file are processed as if enclosed in double quotes each
time the command is executed, so parameter, command, and arithmetic
substitutions are performed, along with backslash (‘\’)
escapes for ‘
$ ’,
‘` ’,
‘\ ’, and
‘\newline ’. If multiple here
documents are used on the same command line, they are saved in order.
<<-
marker
- Same as
<< , except leading tabs are stripped
from lines in the here document.
<&
fd
- Standard input is duplicated from file descriptor
fd. fd can be a single digit,
indicating the number of an existing file descriptor; the letter
‘
p ’, indicating the file descriptor
associated with the output of the current co-process; or the character
‘- ’, indicating standard input is to
be closed.
>&
fd
- Same as
<& , except the operation is done on
standard output.
In any of the above redirections, the file descriptor that is
redirected (i.e. standard input or standard output) can be explicitly given
by preceding the redirection with a single digit. Parameter, command, and
arithmetic substitutions, tilde substitutions, and (if the shell is
interactive) file name generation are all performed on the
file, marker, and
fd arguments of redirections. Note, however, that the
results of any file name generation are only used if a single file is
matched; if multiple files match, the word with the expanded file name
generation characters is used. Note that in restricted shells, redirections
which can create files cannot be used.
For simple-commands, redirections may appear anywhere in the
command; for compound-commands (if statements,
etc.), any redirections must appear at the end. Redirections are processed
after pipelines are created and in the order they are given, so the
following will print an error with a line number prepended to it:
$ cat /foo/bar 2>&1 > /dev/null | cat
-n
Integer arithmetic expressions can be used with the let
command, inside $((..)) expressions, inside array references (e.g.
name[expr]), as numeric arguments
to the test command, and as the value of an assignment
to an integer parameter.
Expressions may contain alpha-numeric parameter identifiers, array
references, and integer constants and may be combined with the following C
operators (listed and grouped in increasing order of precedence):
Unary operators:
Binary operators:
,
= *= /= %= += -= <<= >>= &= ^= |=
||
&&
|
^
&
== !=
< <= >= >
<< >>
+ -
* / %
Ternary operators:
?: (precedence is immediately higher than assignment)
Grouping operators:
A parameter that is NULL or unset evaluates to 0. Integer
constants may be specified with arbitrary bases using the notation
base#number, where
base is a decimal integer specifying the base, and
number is a number in the specified base.
Additionally, integers may be prefixed with ‘0X’ or
‘0x’ (specifying base 16) or ‘0’ (base 8) in all
forms of arithmetic expressions, except as numeric arguments to the
test command.
The operators are evaluated as follows:
- unary +
- Result is the argument (included for completeness).
- unary -
- Negation.
- !
- Logical NOT; the result is 1 if argument is zero, 0 if not.
- ~
- Arithmetic (bit-wise) NOT.
- ++
- Increment; must be applied to a parameter (not a literal or other
expression). The parameter is incremented by 1. When used as a prefix
operator, the result is the incremented value of the parameter; when used
as a postfix operator, the result is the original value of the
parameter.
- --
- Similar to
++ , except the parameter is decremented
by 1.
- ,
- Separates two arithmetic expressions; the left-hand side is evaluated
first, then the right. The result is the value of the expression on the
right-hand side.
- =
- Assignment; the variable on the left is set to the value on the
right.
- *=
/= += -= <<= >>= &= ^=
|=
- Assignment operators.
⟨var⟩⟨op⟩=⟨expr⟩
is the same as
⟨var⟩=
⟨var⟩⟨op⟩⟨expr⟩,
with any operator precedence in ⟨expr⟩
preserved. For example, “var1 *= 5 + 3” is the same as
specifying “var1 = var1 * (5 + 3)”.
- ||
- Logical OR; the result is 1 if either argument is non-zero, 0 if not. The
right argument is evaluated only if the left argument is zero.
- &&
- Logical AND; the result is 1 if both arguments are non-zero, 0 if not. The
right argument is evaluated only if the left argument is non-zero.
- |
- Arithmetic (bit-wise) OR.
- ^
- Arithmetic (bit-wise) XOR (exclusive-OR).
- &
- Arithmetic (bit-wise) AND.
- ==
- Equal; the result is 1 if both arguments are equal, 0 if not.
- !=
- Not equal; the result is 0 if both arguments are equal, 1 if not.
- <
- Less than; the result is 1 if the left argument is less than the right, 0
if not.
- <= >= >
- Less than or equal, greater than or equal, greater than. See
< .
- << >>
- Shift left (right); the result is the left argument with its bits shifted
left (right) by the amount given in the right argument.
- + - * /
- Addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.
- %
- Remainder; the result is the remainder of the division of the left
argument by the right. The sign of the result is unspecified if either
argument is negative.
- ⟨arg1⟩?⟨arg2⟩:⟨arg3⟩
- If ⟨arg1⟩ is non-zero, the result is
⟨arg2⟩; otherwise the result is
⟨arg3⟩.
A co-process, which is a pipeline created with the ‘|&’
operator, is an asynchronous process that the shell can both write to (using
print -p ) and read from (using read
-p ). The input and output of the co-process can also be manipulated
using >&p and
<&p redirections, respectively. Once a
co-process has been started, another can't be started until the co-process
exits, or until the co-process's input has been redirected using an
exec
n>&p redirection. If a
co-process's input is redirected in this way, the next co-process to be
started will share the output with the first co-process, unless the output of
the initial co-process has been redirected using an
exec
n<&p redirection.
Some notes concerning co-processes:
- The only way to close the co-process's input (so the co-process reads an
end-of-file) is to redirect the input to a numbered file descriptor and
then close that file descriptor e.g.
exec 3>&p;
exec 3>&- .
- In order for co-processes to share a common output, the shell must keep
the write portion of the output pipe open. This means that end-of-file
will not be detected until all co-processes sharing the co-process's
output have exited (when they all exit, the shell closes its copy of the
pipe). This can be avoided by redirecting the output to a numbered file
descriptor (as this also causes the shell to close its copy). Note that
this behaviour is slightly different from the original Korn shell which
closes its copy of the write portion of the co-process output when the
most recently started co-process (instead of when all sharing
co-processes) exits.
print
-p will ignore SIGPIPE signals during
writes if the signal is not being trapped or ignored; the same is true if
the co-process input has been duplicated to another file descriptor and
print -u n is used.
Functions are defined using either Korn shell function
function-name syntax or the Bourne/POSIX shell
function-name() syntax (see below for the difference
between the two forms). Functions are like .-scripts
(i.e. scripts sourced using the ‘.’ built-in) in that they are
executed in the current environment. However, unlike
.-scripts , shell arguments (i.e. positional parameters
$1, $2, etc.) are never visible inside them. When the shell is determining the
location of a command, functions are searched after special built-in commands,
before regular and non-regular built-ins, and before the
PATH is searched.
An existing function may be deleted using
unset -f
function-name. A list of functions can be obtained
using typeset +f and the function definitions can be
listed using typeset -f . The
autoload command (which is an alias for
typeset -fu ) may be used to create undefined
functions: when an undefined function is executed, the shell searches the
path specified in the FPATH parameter for a file
with the same name as the function, which, if found, is read and executed.
If after executing the file the named function is found to be defined, the
function is executed; otherwise, the normal command search is continued
(i.e. the shell searches the regular built-in command table and
PATH ). Note that if a command is not found using
PATH , an attempt is made to autoload a function
using FPATH (this is an undocumented feature of the
original Korn shell).
Functions can have two attributes, “trace” and
“export”, which can be set with typeset
-ft and typeset -fx , respectively. When a
traced function is executed, the shell's xtrace
option is turned on for the function's duration; otherwise, the
xtrace option is turned off. The
“export” attribute of functions is currently not used. In the
original Korn shell, exported functions are visible to shell scripts that
are executed.
Since functions are executed in the current shell environment,
parameter assignments made inside functions are visible after the function
completes. If this is not the desired effect, the
typeset command can be used inside a function to
create a local parameter. Note that special parameters (e.g.
$$ , $! ) can't be scoped in
this way.
The exit status of a function is that of the last command executed
in the function. A function can be made to finish immediately using the
return command; this may also be used to explicitly
specify the exit status.
Functions defined with the function
reserved word are treated differently in the following ways from functions
defined with the () notation:
- The $0 parameter is set to the name of the function (Bourne-style
functions leave $0 untouched).
- Parameter assignments preceding function calls are not kept in the shell
environment (executing Bourne-style functions will keep assignments).
OPTIND
is saved/reset and restored on entry and exit from the function so
getopts can be used properly both inside and
outside the function (Bourne-style functions leave
OPTIND untouched, so using
getopts inside a function interferes with using
getopts outside the function).
The shell is intended to be POSIX compliant; however, in some cases, POSIX
behaviour is contrary either to the original Korn shell behaviour or to user
convenience. How the shell behaves in these cases is determined by the state
of the posix option (set -o
posix ). If it is on, the POSIX behaviour is followed; otherwise, it is
not. The posix option is set automatically when the
shell starts up if the environment contains the
POSIXLY_CORRECT parameter. The shell can also be
compiled so that it is in POSIX mode by default; however, this is usually not
desirable.
The following is a list of things that are affected by the state
of the posix option:
kill
-l output. In POSIX mode, only signal names are listed (in a
single line); in non-POSIX mode, signal numbers, names, and descriptions
are printed (in columns).
echo
options. In POSIX mode, -e and
-E are not treated as options, but printed like
other arguments; in non-POSIX mode, these options control the
interpretation of backslash sequences.
fg
exit status. In POSIX mode, the exit status is 0 if no errors occur; in
non-POSIX mode, the exit status is that of the last foregrounded job.
eval
exit status. If eval gets to see an empty command
(i.e. eval `false` ), its exit status in POSIX mode
will be 0. In non-POSIX mode, it will be the exit status of the last
command substitution that was done in the processing of the arguments to
eval (or 0 if there were no command
substitutions).
getopts .
In POSIX mode, options must start with a
‘- ’; in non-POSIX mode, options can
start with either ‘- ’ or
‘+ ’.
- Brace expansion (also known as alternation). In POSIX mode, brace
expansion is disabled; in non-POSIX mode, brace expansion is enabled. Note
that
set -o posix (or setting the
POSIXLY_CORRECT parameter) automatically turns the
braceexpand option off; however, it can be
explicitly turned on later.
set
- . In POSIX mode, this does not clear the
verbose or xtrace options;
in non-POSIX mode, it does.
set
exit status. In POSIX mode, the exit status of set
is 0 if there are no errors; in non-POSIX mode, the exit status is that of
any command substitutions performed in generating the
set command. For example, set --
`false`; echo $? prints 0 in POSIX mode, 1 in non-POSIX mode. This
construct is used in most shell scripts that use the old
getopt(1)
command.
- Argument expansion of the
alias ,
export , readonly , and
typeset commands. In POSIX mode, normal argument
expansion is done; in non-POSIX mode, field splitting, file globbing,
brace expansion, and (normal) tilde expansion are turned off, while
assignment tilde expansion is turned on.
- Signal specification. In POSIX mode, signals can be specified as digits,
only if signal numbers match POSIX values (i.e. HUP=1, INT=2, QUIT=3,
ABRT=6, KILL=9, ALRM=14, and TERM=15); in non-POSIX mode, signals can
always be digits.
- Alias expansion. In POSIX mode, alias expansion is only carried out when
reading command words; in non-POSIX mode, alias expansion is carried out
on any word following an alias that ended in a space. For example, the
following
for loop uses parameter
‘i’ in POSIX mode and ‘j’ in non-POSIX mode:
alias a='for ' i='j'
a i in 1 2; do echo i=$i j=$j; done
test .
In POSIX mode, the expression ‘-t ’
(preceded by some number of ‘!’ arguments) is always true as
it is a non-zero length string; in non-POSIX mode, it tests if file
descriptor 1 is a
tty(4)
(i.e. the fd argument to the
-t test may be left out and defaults to 1).
When the sh option is enabled (see the
set command), oksh will behave
like sh(1) in
the following ways:
- The parameter
$_ is not set to:
- the expanded alias' full program path after entering commands that are
tracked aliases
- the last argument on the command line after entering external
commands
- the file that changed when
MAILPATH is set to
monitor a mailbox
- File descriptors are left untouched when executing
exec with no arguments.
- Backslash-escaped special characters are not substituted in
PS1 .
- Sequences of ‘((...))’ are not interpreted as arithmetic
expressions.
After evaluation of command-line arguments, redirections, and parameter
assignments, the type of command is determined: a special built-in, a
function, a regular built-in, or the name of a file to execute found using the
PATH parameter. The checks are made in the above
order. Special built-in commands differ from other commands in that the
PATH parameter is not used to find them, an error
during their execution can cause a non-interactive shell to exit, and
parameter assignments that are specified before the command are kept after the
command completes. Just to confuse things, if the
posix option is turned off (see the
set command below), some special commands are very
special in that no field splitting, file globbing, brace expansion, nor tilde
expansion is performed on arguments that look like assignments. Regular
built-in commands are different only in that the PATH
parameter is not used to find them.
The original ksh and POSIX differ somewhat
in which commands are considered special or regular:
POSIX special commands
. , : ,
break , continue ,
eval , exec ,
exit , export ,
readonly , return ,
set , shift ,
times , trap ,
unset
Additional oksh special commands
builtin ,
typeset
Very special commands (when POSIX mode is off)
alias , readonly ,
set , typeset
POSIX regular commands
alias , bg ,
cd , command ,
false , fc ,
fg , getopts ,
jobs , kill ,
pwd , read ,
true , umask ,
unalias , wait
Additional oksh regular commands
[ , echo ,
let , print ,
suspend , test ,
ulimit , whence
Once the type of command has been determined, any command-line
parameter assignments are performed and exported for the duration of the
command.
The following describes the special and regular built-in
commands:
.
file [arg ...]
- Execute the commands in file in the current
environment. The file is searched for in the directories of
PATH . If arguments are given, the positional
parameters may be used to access them while file is
being executed. If no arguments are given, the positional parameters are
those of the environment the command is used in.
:
[...]
- The null command. Exit status is set to zero.
alias
[-d | -t
[-r ] | +-x ]
[-p ] [+ ]
[name [=value]
...]
- Without arguments,
alias lists all aliases. For
any name without a value, the existing alias is listed. Any name with a
value defines an alias (see Aliases
above).
When listing aliases, one of two formats is used. Normally,
aliases are listed as
name=value, where
value is quoted. If options were preceded with
‘+ ’, or a lone
‘+ ’ is given on the command line,
only name is printed.
The -d option causes directory
aliases, which are used in tilde expansion, to be listed or set (see
Tilde expansion above).
If the -p option is used, each alias
is prefixed with the string “alias ”.
The -t option indicates that tracked
aliases are to be listed/set (values specified on the command line are
ignored for tracked aliases). The -r option
indicates that all tracked aliases are to be reset.
The -x option sets
(+x clears) the export
attribute of an alias or, if no names are given, lists the aliases with
the export attribute (exporting an alias has no effect).
bg
[job ...]
- Resume the specified stopped job(s) in the background. If no jobs are
specified,
%+ is assumed. See
Job control below for more
information.
bind
[-l ]
- The current bindings are listed. If the
-l flag is
given, bind instead lists the names of the
functions to which keys may be bound. See
Emacs editing mode for more
information.
bind
[-m ]
string=[substitute]
...
-
bind
string=[editing-command]
...
- In Emacs editing mode, the
specified editing command is bound to the given
string. Future input of the
string will cause the editing command to be
immediately invoked. Bindings have no effect in
Vi editing mode.
If the -m flag is given, the specified
input string will afterwards be immediately
replaced by the given substitute string, which may
contain editing commands. Control characters may be written using caret
notation. For example, ^X represents Control-X.
If a certain character occurs as the first character of any
bound multi-character string sequence, that
character becomes a command prefix character. Any character sequence
that starts with a command prefix character but that is not bound to a
command or substitute is implicitly considered as bound to the
‘error’ command. By default, two command prefix characters
exist: Escape (^[) and Control-X (^X).
The following default bindings show how the arrow keys on an
ANSI terminal or xterm are bound (of course some escape sequences won't
work out quite this nicely):
bind '^[[A'=up-history
bind '^[[B'=down-history
bind '^[[C'=forward-char
bind '^[[D'=backward-char
break
[level]
- Exit the levelth inner-most
for , select ,
until , or while loop.
level defaults to 1.
builtin
command [arg ...]
- Execute the built-in command command.
cd
[-LP ] [dir]
- Set the working directory to dir. If the parameter
CDPATH is set, it lists the search path for the
directory containing dir. A
NULL path or
‘. ’ means the current directory. If
dir is found in any component of the
CDPATH search path other than the
NULL path, the name of the new working directory
will be written to standard output. If dir is
missing, the home directory HOME is used. If
dir is ‘- ’,
the previous working directory is used (see the
OLDPWD parameter).
If the -L option (logical path) is
used or if the physical option isn't set (see
the set command below), references to
‘..’ in dir are relative to the path
used to get to the directory. If the -P option
(physical path) is used or if the physical
option is set, ‘..’ is relative to the filesystem
directory tree. The PWD and
OLDPWD parameters are updated to reflect the
current and old working directory, respectively.
cd
[-LP ] old new
- The string new is substituted for
old in the current directory, and the shell attempts
to change to the new directory.
command
[-pVv ] cmd
[arg ...]
- If neither the
-v nor -V
option is given, cmd is executed exactly as if
command had not been specified, with two
exceptions: firstly, cmd cannot be an alias or a
shell function; and secondly, special built-in commands lose their
specialness (i.e. redirection and utility errors do not cause the shell to
exit, and command assignments are not permanent).
If the -p option is given, a default
search path is used instead of the current value of
PATH (the actual value of the default path is
system dependent: on POSIX-ish systems, it is the value returned by
getconf PATH ). Nevertheless, reserved words,
aliases, shell functions, and builtin commands are still found before
external commands.
If the -v option is given, instead of
executing cmd, information about what would be
executed is given (and the same is done for arg
...). For special and regular built-in commands and functions,
their names are simply printed; for aliases, a command that defines them
is printed; and for commands found by searching the
PATH parameter, the full path of the command is
printed. If no command is found (i.e. the path search fails), nothing is
printed and command exits with a non-zero
status. The -V option is like the
-v option, except it is more verbose.
continue
[level]
- Jumps to the beginning of the levelth inner-most
for , select ,
until , or while loop.
level defaults to 1.
echo
[-Een ] [arg ...]
- Prints its arguments (separated by spaces) followed by a newline, to the
standard output. The newline is suppressed if any of the arguments contain
the backslash sequence ‘
\c ’. See the
print command below for a list of other backslash
sequences that are recognized.
The options are provided for compatibility with
BSD shell scripts. The
-n option suppresses the trailing newline,
-e enables backslash interpretation (a no-op,
since this is normally done), and -E suppresses
backslash interpretation. If the posix option is
set, only the first argument is treated as an option, and only if it is
exactly “-n”.
eval
command ...
- The arguments are concatenated (with spaces between them) to form a single
string which the shell then parses and executes in the current
environment.
exec
[command [arg ...]]
- The command is executed without forking, replacing the shell process.
If no command is given except for I/O redirection, the I/O
redirection is permanent and the shell is not replaced. Any file
descriptors greater than 2 which are opened or
dup(2)'d
in this way are not made available to other executed commands (i.e.
commands that are not built-in to the shell). Note that the Bourne shell
differs here; it does pass these file descriptors on.
exit
[status]
- The shell exits with the specified exit status. If
status is not specified, the exit status is the
current value of the
$? parameter.
export
[-p ]
[parameter[=value]]
- Sets the export attribute of the named parameters. Exported parameters are
passed in the environment to executed commands. If values are specified,
the named parameters are also assigned.
If no parameters are specified, the names of all parameters
with the export attribute are printed one per line, unless the
-p option is used, in which case
export commands defining all exported
parameters, including their values, are printed.
false
- A command that exits with a non-zero status.
fc
[-e editor |
-l [-n ]]
[-r ] [first
[last]]
- Fix command. first and last
select commands from the history. Commands can be selected by history
number or a string specifying the most recent command starting with that
string. The
-l option lists the command on
standard output, and -n inhibits the default
command numbers. The -r option reverses the order
of the list. Without -l , the selected commands are
edited by the editor specified with the -e option,
or if no -e is specified, the editor specified by
the FCEDIT parameter (if this parameter is not
set, /bin/ed is used), and then executed by the
shell.
fc
-s [-g ]
[old=new]
[prefix]
- Re-execute the most recent command beginning with
prefix, or the previous command if no
prefix is specified, performing the optional
substitution of old with new.
If
-g is specified, all occurrences of
old are replaced with new. The
editor is not invoked when the -s flag is used.
The obsolescent equivalent “-e
-” is also accepted. This command is
usually accessed with the predefined alias r='fc
-s' .
fg
[job ...]
- Resume the specified job(s) in the foreground. If no jobs are specified,
%+ is assumed. See
Job control below for more
information.
getopts
optstring name [arg ...]
- Used by shell procedures to parse the specified arguments (or positional
parameters, if no arguments are given) and to check for legal options.
optstring contains the option letters that
getopts is to recognize. If a letter is followed
by a colon, the option is expected to have an argument. Options that do
not take arguments may be grouped in a single argument. If an option takes
an argument and the option character is not the last character of the
argument it is found in, the remainder of the argument is taken to be the
option's argument; otherwise, the next argument is the option's argument.
Each time getopts is invoked, it
places the next option in the shell parameter name
and the index of the argument to be processed by the next call to
getopts in the shell parameter
OPTIND . If the option was introduced with a
‘+ ’, the option placed in
name is prefixed with a
‘+ ’. When an option requires an
argument, getopts places it in the shell
parameter OPTARG .
When an illegal option or a missing option argument is
encountered, a question mark or a colon is placed in
name (indicating an illegal option or missing
argument, respectively) and OPTARG is set to the
option character that caused the problem. Furthermore, if
optstring does not begin with a colon, a question
mark is placed in name,
OPTARG is unset, and an error message is printed
to standard error.
When the end of the options is encountered,
getopts exits with a non-zero exit status.
Options end at the first (non-option argument) argument that does not
start with a ‘- ’, or when a
‘-- ’ argument is encountered.
Option parsing can be reset by setting
OPTIND to 1 (this is done automatically whenever
the shell or a shell procedure is invoked).
Warning: Changing the value of the shell parameter
OPTIND to a value other than 1, or parsing
different sets of arguments without resetting
OPTIND , may lead to unexpected results.
The following code fragment shows how one might process the
arguments for a command that can take the option
-a and the option -o ,
which requires an argument.
while getopts ao: name
do
case $name in
a) flag=1 ;;
o) oarg=$OPTARG ;;
?) echo "Usage: ..."; exit 2 ;;
esac
done
shift $(($OPTIND - 1))
echo "Non-option arguments: " "$@"
hash
[-r ] [name ...]
- Without arguments, any hashed executable command pathnames are listed. The
-r option causes all hashed commands to be removed
from the hash table. Each name is searched as if it
were a command name and added to the hash table if it is an executable
command.
jobs
[-lnp ] [job ...]
- Display information about the specified job(s); if no jobs are specified,
all jobs are displayed. The
-n option causes
information to be displayed only for jobs that have changed state since
the last notification. If the -l option is used,
the process ID of each process in a job is also listed. The
-p option causes only the process group of each
job to be printed. See Job control
below for the format of job and the displayed job.
kill
[-s signame |
-signum |
-signame]
{ job |
pid | pgrp
} ...
- Send the specified signal to the specified jobs, process IDs, or process
groups. If no signal is specified, the
TERM signal
is sent. If a job is specified, the signal is sent to the job's process
group. See Job control below for the
format of job.
kill
-l [exit-status ...]
- Print the signal name corresponding to exit-status.
If no arguments are specified, a list of all the signals, their numbers,
and a short description of them are printed.
let
[expression ...]
- Each expression is evaluated (see
Arithmetic expressions
above). If all expressions are successfully evaluated, the exit status is
0 (1) if the last expression evaluated to non-zero (zero). If an error
occurs during the parsing or evaluation of an expression, the exit status
is greater than 1. Since expressions may need to be quoted,
(( expr
)) is syntactic sugar for let
"expr".
print
[-nprsu [n] |
-R [-en ]]
[argument ...]
print
prints its arguments on the standard output, separated by spaces and
terminated with a newline. The -n option
suppresses the newline. By default, certain C escapes are translated.
These include ‘\b ’,
‘\f ’,
‘\n ’,
‘\r ’,
‘\t ’,
‘\v ’, and
‘\0### ’
(‘# ’ is an octal digit, of which
there may be 0 to 3). ‘\c ’ is
equivalent to using the -n option.
‘\ ’ expansion may be inhibited with
the -r option. The -s
option prints to the history file instead of standard output; the
-u option prints to file descriptor
n (n defaults to 1 if
omitted); and the -p option prints to the
co-process (see Co-processes
above).
The -R option is used to emulate, to
some degree, the BSD
echo(1)
command, which does not process
‘\ ’ sequences unless the
-e option is given. As above, the
-n option suppresses the trailing newline.
pwd
[-LP ]
- Print the present working directory. If the
-L
option is used or if the physical option isn't set
(see the set command below), the logical path is
printed (i.e. the path used to cd to the current
directory). If the -P option (physical path) is
used or if the physical option is set, the path
determined from the filesystem (by following ‘..’
directories to the root directory) is printed.
read
[-prsu [n]]
[parameter ...]
- Reads a line of input from the standard input, separates the line into
fields using the
IFS parameter (see
Substitution above), and assigns
each field to the specified parameters. If there are more parameters than
fields, the extra parameters are set to NULL , or
alternatively, if there are more fields than parameters, the last
parameter is assigned the remaining fields (inclusive of any separating
spaces). If no parameters are specified, the REPLY
parameter is used. If the input line ends in a backslash and the
-r option was not used, the backslash and the
newline are stripped and more input is read. If no input is read,
read exits with a non-zero status.
The first parameter may have a question mark and a string
appended to it, in which case the string is used as a prompt (printed to
standard error before any input is read) if the input is a
tty(4)
(e.g. read nfoo?'number of foos: ' ).
The -u n and
-p options cause input to be read from file
descriptor n (n defaults to
0 if omitted) or the current co-process (see
Co-processes above for comments
on this), respectively. If the -s option is
used, input is saved to the history file.
readonly
[-p ] [parameter
[=value] ...]
- Sets the read-only attribute of the named parameters. If values are given,
parameters are set to them before setting the attribute. Once a parameter
is made read-only, it cannot be unset and its value cannot be changed.
If no parameters are specified, the names of all parameters
with the read-only attribute are printed one per line, unless the
-p option is used, in which case
readonly commands defining all read-only
parameters, including their values, are printed.
return
[status]
- Returns from a function or
. script, with exit
status status. If no status is
given, the exit status of the last executed command is used. If used
outside of a function or . script, it has the same
effect as exit . Note that
ksh treats both profile and
ENV files as . scripts,
while the original Korn shell only treats profiles as
. scripts.
set
[+-abCefhkmnpsuvXx ] [+-o
option] [+-A
name] [-- ]
[arg ...]
- The
set command can be used to set
(- ) or clear (+ ) shell
options, set the positional parameters, or set an array parameter. Options
can be changed using the +-o
option syntax, where option is
the long name of an option, or using the
+- letter syntax, where
letter is the option's single letter name (not all
options have a single letter name). The following table lists both option
letters (if they exist) and long names along with a description of what
the option does:
-A
name
- Sets the elements of the array parameter name to
arg ... If
-A is used,
the array is reset (i.e. emptied) first; if +A
is used, the first N elements are set (where N is the number of
arguments); the rest are left untouched.
-a |
allexport
- All new parameters are created with the export attribute.
-b |
notify
- Print job notification messages asynchronously, instead of just before
the prompt. Only used if job control is enabled
(
-m ).
-C |
noclobber
- Prevent
> redirection from overwriting
existing files. Instead, >| must be used to
force an overwrite.
-e |
errexit
- Exit (after executing the
ERR trap) as soon as
an error occurs or a command fails (i.e. exits with a non-zero
status). This does not apply to commands whose exit status is
explicitly tested by a shell construct such as
if , until ,
while , or !
statements. For && or
|| , only the status of the last command is
tested.
-f |
noglob
- Do not expand file name patterns.
-h |
trackall
- Create tracked aliases for all executed commands (see
Aliases above). Enabled by default
for non-interactive shells.
-k |
keyword
- Parameter assignments are recognized anywhere in a command.
-m |
monitor
- Enable job control (default for interactive shells).
-n |
noexec
- Do not execute any commands. Useful for checking the syntax of scripts
(ignored if interactive).
-p
|
privileged
- The shell is a privileged shell. It is set automatically if, when the
shell starts, the real UID or GID does not match the effective UID
(EUID) or GID (EGID), respectively. See above for a description of
what this means.
-s
|
stdin
- If used when the shell is invoked, commands are read from standard
input. Set automatically if the shell is invoked with no arguments.
When -s is used with the
set command it causes the specified
arguments to be sorted before assigning them to the positional
parameters (or to array name, if
-A is used).
-u |
nounset
- Referencing of an unset parameter is treated as an error, unless one
of the ‘
- ’,
‘+ ’, or
‘= ’ modifiers is used.
-v |
verbose
- Write shell input to standard error as it is read.
-X |
markdirs
- Mark directories with a trailing
‘
/ ’ during file name
generation.
-x |
xtrace
- Print commands and parameter assignments when they are executed,
preceded by the value of
PS4 .
bgnice
- Background jobs are run with lower priority.
braceexpand
- Enable brace expansion (a.k.a. alternation).
csh-history
- Enables a subset of
csh(1)-style
history editing using the ‘
! ’
character.
emacs
- Enable BRL emacs-like command-line editing (interactive shells only);
see Emacs editing
mode.
gmacs
- Enable gmacs-like command-line editing (interactive shells only).
Currently identical to emacs editing except that transpose (^T) acts
slightly differently.
ignoreeof
- The shell will not (easily) exit when end-of-file is read;
exit must be used. To avoid infinite loops,
the shell will exit if EOF is read 13 times in
a row.
interactive
- The shell is an interactive shell. This option can only be used when
the shell is invoked. See above for a description of what this
means.
login
- The shell is a login shell. This option can only be used when the
shell is invoked. See above for a description of what this means.
nohup
- Do not kill running jobs with a
SIGHUP signal
when a login shell exits. Currently set by default; this is different
from the original Korn shell (which doesn't have this option, but does
send the SIGHUP signal).
nolog
- No effect. In the original Korn shell, this prevents function
definitions from being stored in the history file.
physical
- Causes the
cd and pwd
commands to use “physical” (i.e. the filesystem's)
‘..’ directories instead of “logical”
directories (i.e. the shell handles ‘..’, which allows
the user to be oblivious of symbolic links to directories). Clear by
default. Note that setting this option does not affect the current
value of the PWD parameter; only the
cd command changes
PWD . See the cd and
pwd commands above for more details.
pipefail
- The exit status of a pipeline is the exit status of the rightmost
command in the pipeline that doesn't return 0, or 0 if all commands
returned a 0 exit status.
posix
- Enable POSIX mode. See POSIX mode
above.
restricted
- The shell is a restricted shell. This option can only be used when the
shell is invoked. See above for a description of what this means.
sh
- Enable strict Bourne shell mode (see
Strict Bourne shell
mode above).
vi
- Enable
vi(1)-like
command-line editing (interactive shells only).
vi-esccomplete
- In vi command-line editing, do command and file name completion when
escape (^[) is entered in command mode.
vi-show8
- Prefix characters with the eighth bit set with ‘M-’. If
this option is not set, characters in the range 128-160 are printed as
is, which may cause problems.
vi-tabcomplete
- In vi command-line editing, do command and file name completion when
tab (^I) is entered in insert mode. This is the default.
viraw
- No effect. In the original Korn shell, unless
viraw was set, the vi command-line mode would
let the
tty(4)
driver do the work until ESC (^[) was entered.
ksh is always in viraw mode.
These options can also be used upon invocation of the shell.
The current set of options (with single letter names) can be found in
the parameter ‘$-’. set
-o with no option name will list all the options
and whether each is on or off; set +o will print
the current shell options in a form that can be reinput to the shell to
achieve the same option settings.
Remaining arguments, if any, are positional parameters and are
assigned, in order, to the positional parameters (i.e. $1, $2, etc.). If
options end with ‘-- ’ and there
are no remaining arguments, all positional parameters are cleared. If no
options or arguments are given, the values of all names are printed. For
unknown historical reasons, a lone
‘- ’ option is treated specially -
it clears both the -x and
-v options.
shift
[number]
- The positional parameters number+1,
number+2, etc. are renamed to ‘1’,
‘2’, etc. number defaults to 1.
suspend
- Stops the shell as if it had received the suspend character from the
terminal. It is not possible to suspend a login shell unless the parent
process is a member of the same terminal session but is a member of a
different process group. As a general rule, if the shell was started by
another shell or via
su(1), it
can be suspended.
test
expression
-
[
expression ]
test
evaluates the expression and returns zero status if
true, 1 if false, or greater than 1 if there was an error. It is normally
used as the condition command of if and
while statements. Symbolic links are followed for
all file expressions except
-h and -L .
The following basic expressions are available:
-a
file
- file exists.
-b
file
- file is a block special device.
-c
file
- file is a character special device.
-d
file
- file is a directory.
-e
file
- file exists.
-f
file
- file is a regular file.
-G
file
- file's group is the shell's effective group
ID.
-g
file
- file's mode has the setgid bit set.
-h
file
- file is a symbolic link.
-k
file
- file's mode has the
sticky(8)
bit set.
-L
file
- file is a symbolic link.
-O
file
- file's owner is the shell's effective user
ID.
-o
option
- Shell option is set (see the
set command above for a list of options). As a
non-standard extension, if the option starts with a
‘! ’, the test is negated; the
test always fails if option doesn't exist (so [
-o foo -o -o !foo ] returns true if and only if option
foo exists).
-p
file
- file is a named pipe.
-r
file
- file exists and is readable.
-S
file
- file is a
unix(4)-domain
socket.
-s
file
- file is not empty.
-t
[fd]
- File descriptor fd is a
tty(4)
device. If the
posix option is not set,
fd may be left out, in which case it is taken to
be 1 (the behaviour differs due to the special POSIX rules described
above).
-u
file
- file's mode has the setuid bit set.
-w
file
- file exists and is writable.
-x
file
- file exists and is executable.
- file1
-nt
file2
- file1 is newer than file2
or file1 exists and file2
does not.
- file1
-ot
file2
- file1 is older than file2
or file2 exists and file1
does not.
- file1
-ef
file2
- file1 is the same file as
file2.
- string
- string has non-zero length.
-n
string
- string is not empty.
-z
string
- string is empty.
- string =
string
- Strings are equal.
- string ==
string
- Strings are equal.
- string !=
string
- Strings are not equal.
- string >
string
- Strings compare greater than based on the ASCII value of their
characters.
- string <
string
- Strings compare less than based on the ASCII value of their
characters.
- number
-eq
number
- Numbers compare equal.
- number
-ne
number
- Numbers compare not equal.
- number
-ge
number
- Numbers compare greater than or equal.
- number
-gt
number
- Numbers compare greater than.
- number
-le
number
- Numbers compare less than or equal.
- number
-lt
number
- Numbers compare less than.
The above basic expressions, in which unary operators have
precedence over binary operators, may be combined with the following
operators (listed in increasing order of precedence):
expr -o expr Logical OR.
expr -a expr Logical AND.
! expr Logical NOT.
( expr ) Grouping.
On operating systems not supporting
/dev/fd/n devices (where
n is a file descriptor number), the
test command will attempt to fake it for all
tests that operate on files (except the -e
test). For example, [ -w /dev/fd/2 ] tests if file descriptor 2 is
writable.
Note that some special rules are applied (courtesy of POSIX)
if the number of arguments to test or
[ ... ] is less than five: if leading
‘! ’ arguments can be stripped such
that only one argument remains then a string length test is performed
(again, even if the argument is a unary operator); if leading
‘! ’ arguments can be stripped such
that three arguments remain and the second argument is a binary
operator, then the binary operation is performed (even if the first
argument is a unary operator, including an unstripped
‘! ’).
Note: A common mistake is to use “if
[ $foo = bar ]” which fails if parameter “foo” is
NULL or unset, if it has embedded spaces (i.e.
IFS characters), or if it is a unary operator
like ‘!’ or ‘-n ’.
Use tests like “if [ "X$foo" = Xbar ]”
instead.
time
[-p ] [pipeline]
- If a pipeline is given, the times used to execute
the pipeline are reported. If no pipeline is given, then the user and
system time used by the shell itself, and all the commands it has run
since it was started, are reported. The times reported are the real time
(elapsed time from start to finish), the user CPU time (time spent running
in user mode), and the system CPU time (time spent running in kernel
mode). Times are reported to standard error; the format of the output is:
0m0.00s real 0m0.00s user 0m0.00s
system
If the -p option is given the output
is slightly longer:
real 0.00
user 0.00
sys 0.00
It is an error to specify the -p
option unless pipeline is a simple command.
Simple redirections of standard error do not affect the output
of the time command:
$ time sleep 1 2>
afile
$ { time sleep 1; } 2>
afile
Times for the first command do not go to
“afile”, but those of the second command do.
times
- Print the accumulated user and system times used both by the shell and by
processes that the shell started which have exited. The format of the
output is:
0m0.00s 0m0.00s
0m0.00s 0m0.00s
trap
[handler signal ...]
- Sets a trap handler that is to be executed when any of the specified
signals are received. handler is either a
NULL string, indicating the signals are to be
ignored, a minus sign (‘-’), indicating that the default
action is to be taken for the signals (see
signal(3)),
or a string containing shell commands to be evaluated and executed at the
first opportunity (i.e. when the current command completes, or before
printing the next PS1 prompt) after receipt of one
of the signals. signal is the name of a signal (e.g.
PIPE or ALRM ) or the
number of the signal (see the kill -l command
above).
There are two special signals: EXIT
(also known as 0), which is executed when the shell is about to exit,
and ERR , which is executed after an error occurs
(an error is something that would cause the shell to exit if the
-e or errexit option
were set - see the set command above).
EXIT handlers are executed in the environment of
the last executed command. Note that for non-interactive shells, the
trap handler cannot be changed for signals that were ignored when the
shell started.
With no arguments, trap lists, as a
series of trap commands, the current state of
the traps that have been set since the shell started. Note that the
output of trap cannot be usefully piped to
another process (an artifact of the fact that traps are cleared when
subprocesses are created).
The original Korn shell's DEBUG trap
and the handling of ERR and
EXIT traps in functions are not yet
implemented.
true
- A command that exits with a zero value.
type
- Short form of
command -V
(see above).
typeset
[[+-lprtUux ]
[-L [n]]
[-R [n]]
[-Z [n]]
[-i [n]]
| -f
[-tux ]] [name
[=value] ...]
- Display or set parameter attributes. With no name
arguments, parameter attributes are displayed; if no options are used, the
current attributes of all parameters are printed as
typeset commands; if an option is given (or
‘- ’ with no option letter), all
parameters and their values with the specified attributes are printed; if
options are introduced with ‘+ ’,
parameter values are not printed.
If name arguments are given, the
attributes of the named parameters are set (- )
or cleared (+ ). Values for parameters may
optionally be specified. If typeset is used
inside a function, any newly created parameters are local to the
function.
When -f is used,
typeset operates on the attributes of functions.
As with parameters, if no name arguments are
given, functions are listed with their values (i.e. definitions) unless
options are introduced with ‘+ ’,
in which case only the function names are reported.
-f
- Function mode. Display or set functions and their attributes, instead
of parameters.
-i [n]
- Integer attribute. n specifies the base to use
when displaying the integer (if not specified, the base given in the
first assignment is used). Parameters with this attribute may be
assigned values containing arithmetic expressions.
-L [n]
- Left justify attribute. n specifies the field
width. If n is not specified, the current width
of a parameter (or the width of its first assigned value) is used.
Leading whitespace (and zeros, if used with the
-Z option) is stripped. If necessary, values
are either truncated or space padded to fit the field width.
-l
- Lower case attribute. All upper case characters in values are
converted to lower case. (In the original Korn shell, this parameter
meant “long integer” when used with the
-i option.)
-p
- Print complete
typeset commands that can be
used to re-create the attributes (but not the values) of parameters.
This is the default action (option exists for ksh93
compatibility).
-R [n]
- Right justify attribute. n specifies the field
width. If n is not specified, the current width
of a parameter (or the width of its first assigned value) is used.
Trailing whitespace is stripped. If necessary, values are either
stripped of leading characters or space padded to make them fit the
field width.
-r
- Read-only attribute. Parameters with this attribute may not be
assigned to or unset. Once this attribute is set, it cannot be turned
off.
-t
- Tag attribute. Has no meaning to the shell; provided for application
use.
For functions, -t is the trace
attribute. When functions with the trace attribute are executed, the
xtrace (-x ) shell
option is temporarily turned on.
-U
- Unsigned integer attribute. Integers are printed as unsigned values
(only useful when combined with the
-i
option). This option is not in the original Korn shell.
-u
- Upper case attribute. All lower case characters in values are
converted to upper case. (In the original Korn shell, this parameter
meant “unsigned integer” when used with the
-i option, which meant upper case letters
would never be used for bases greater than 10. See the
-U option.)
For functions, -u is the undefined
attribute. See Functions above
for the implications of this.
-x
- Export attribute. Parameters (or functions) are placed in the
environment of any executed commands. Exported functions are not yet
implemented.
-Z [n]
- Zero fill attribute. If not combined with
-L ,
this is the same as -R , except zero padding is
used instead of space padding.
ulimit
[-acdfHlmnpSst [value]]
...
- Display or set process limits. If no options are used, the file size limit
(
-f ) is assumed. value, if
specified, may be either an arithmetic expression starting with a number
or the word “unlimited”. The limits affect the shell and any
processes created by the shell after a limit is imposed; limits may not be
increased once they are set.
-a
- Display all limits; unless
-H is used, soft
limits are displayed.
-c
n
- Impose a size limit of n blocks on the size of
core dumps.
-d
n
- Impose a size limit of n kilobytes on the size
of the data area.
-f
n
- Impose a size limit of n blocks on files written
by the shell and its child processes (files of any size may be
read).
-H
- Set the hard limit only (the default is to set both hard and soft
limits).
-l
n
- Impose a limit of n kilobytes on the amount of
locked (wired) physical memory.
-m
n
- Impose a limit of n kilobytes on the amount of
physical memory used. This limit is not enforced.
-n
n
- Impose a limit of n file descriptors that can be
open at once.
-p
n
- Impose a limit of n processes that can be run by
the user at any one time.
-S
- Set the soft limit only (the default is to set both hard and soft
limits).
-s
n
- Impose a size limit of n kilobytes on the size
of the stack area.
-t
n
- Impose a time limit of n CPU seconds spent in
user mode to be used by each process.
As far as ulimit is concerned, a block
is 512 bytes.
umask
[-S ] [mask]
- Display or set the file permission creation mask, or umask (see
umask(2)).
If the
-S option is used, the mask displayed or
set is symbolic; otherwise, it is an octal number.
Symbolic masks are like those used by
chmod(1).
When used, they describe what permissions may be made available (as
opposed to octal masks in which a set bit means the corresponding bit is
to be cleared). For example, “ug=rwx,o=” sets the mask so
files will not be readable, writable, or executable by
“others”, and is equivalent (on most systems) to the octal
mask “007”.
unalias
[-adt ] [name ...]
- The aliases for the given names are removed. If the
-a option is used, all aliases are removed. If the
-t or -d options are used,
the indicated operations are carried out on tracked or directory aliases,
respectively.
unset
[-fv ] parameter ...
- Unset the named parameters (
-v , the default) or
functions (-f ). The exit status is non-zero if any
of the parameters have the read-only attribute set, zero otherwise.
wait
[job ...]
- Wait for the specified job(s) to finish. The exit status of
wait is that of the last specified job; if the
last job is killed by a signal, the exit status is 128 + the number of the
signal (see kill -l
exit-status above); if the last specified job can't
be found (because it never existed, or had already finished), the exit
status of wait is 127. See
Job control below for the format of
job. wait will return if a
signal for which a trap has been set is received, or if a
SIGHUP , SIGINT , or
SIGQUIT signal is received.
If no jobs are specified, wait waits
for all currently running jobs (if any) to finish and exits with a zero
status. If job monitoring is enabled, the completion status of jobs is
printed (this is not the case when jobs are explicitly specified).
whence
[-pv ] [name ...]
- For each name, the type of command is listed
(reserved word, built-in, alias, function, tracked alias, or executable).
If the
-p option is used, a path search is
performed even if name is a reserved word, alias,
etc. Without the -v option,
whence is similar to
command -v except that
whence won't print aliases as alias commands. With
the -v option, whence is
the same as command -V .
Note that for whence , the
-p option does not affect the search path used, as
it does for command . If the type of one or more of
the names could not be determined, the exit status is non-zero.
Job control refers to the shell's ability to monitor and control jobs, which are
processes or groups of processes created for commands or pipelines. At a
minimum, the shell keeps track of the status of the background (i.e.
asynchronous) jobs that currently exist; this information can be displayed
using the jobs commands. If job control is fully
enabled (using set -m or set -o
monitor ), as it is for interactive shells, the processes of a job are
placed in their own process group. Foreground jobs can be stopped by typing
the suspend character from the terminal (normally ^Z), jobs can be restarted
in either the foreground or background using the fg
and bg commands, and the state of the terminal is
saved or restored when a foreground job is stopped or restarted, respectively.
Note that only commands that create processes (e.g. asynchronous
commands, subshell commands, and non-built-in, non-function commands) can be
stopped; commands like read cannot be.
When a job is created, it is assigned a job number. For
interactive shells, this number is printed inside “[..]”,
followed by the process IDs of the processes in the job when an asynchronous
command is run. A job may be referred to in the bg ,
fg , jobs ,
kill , and wait commands
either by the process ID of the last process in the command pipeline (as
stored in the $! parameter) or by prefixing the job
number with a percent sign (‘%’). Other percent sequences can
also be used to refer to jobs:
- %+ | %% | %
- The most recently stopped job or, if there are no stopped jobs, the oldest
running job.
- %-
- The job that would be the
%+ job if the latter did
not exist.
- %n
- The job with job number n.
- %?string
- The job with its command containing the string
string (an error occurs if multiple jobs are
matched).
- %string
- The job with its command starting with the string
string (an error occurs if multiple jobs are
matched).
When a job changes state (e.g. a background job finishes or
foreground job is stopped), the shell prints the following status
information:
[number] flag
status command
where...
- number
- is the job number of the job;
- flag
- is the ‘
+ ’ or
‘- ’ character if the job is the
%+ or %- job,
respectively, or space if it is neither;
- status
- indicates the current state of the job and can be:
- Done [number]
- The job exited. number is the exit status of the
job, which is omitted if the status is zero.
- Running
- The job has neither stopped nor exited (note that running does not
necessarily mean consuming CPU time - the process could be blocked
waiting for some event).
- Stopped [signal]
- The job was stopped by the indicated signal (if
no signal is given, the job was stopped by
SIGTSTP ).
- signal-description [“core
dumped”]
- The job was killed by a signal (e.g. memory fault, hangup); use
kill -l for a list of signal descriptions. The
“core dumped” message indicates the process created a
core file.
- command
- is the command that created the process. If there are multiple processes
in the job, each process will have a line showing its
command and possibly its
status, if it is different from the status of the
previous process.
When an attempt is made to exit the shell while there are jobs in
the stopped state, the shell warns the user that there are stopped jobs and
does not exit. If another attempt is immediately made to exit the shell, the
stopped jobs are sent a SIGHUP signal and the shell
exits. Similarly, if the nohup option is not set and
there are running jobs when an attempt is made to exit a login shell, the
shell warns the user and does not exit. If another attempt is immediately
made to exit the shell, the running jobs are sent a
SIGHUP signal and the shell exits.
The shell supports three modes of reading command lines from a
tty(4) in an
interactive session, controlled by the emacs ,
gmacs , and vi options (at most
one of these can be set at once). The default is
emacs . Editing modes can be set explicitly using the
set built-in, or implicitly via the
EDITOR and VISUAL environment
variables. If none of these options are enabled, the shell simply reads lines
using the normal
tty(4)
driver. If the emacs or gmacs
option is set, the shell allows emacs-like editing of the command; similarly,
if the vi option is set, the shell allows vi-like
editing of the command. These modes are described in detail in the following
sections.
In these editing modes, if a line is longer than the screen width
(see the COLUMNS parameter), a
‘> ’,
‘+ ’, or
‘< ’ character is displayed in the
last column indicating that there are more characters after, before and
after, or before the current position, respectively. The line is scrolled
horizontally as necessary.
When the emacs option is set, interactive input line
editing is enabled. Warning: This mode is slightly different from the emacs
mode in the original Korn shell. In this mode, various editing commands
(typically bound to one or more control characters) cause immediate actions
without waiting for a newline. Several editing commands are bound to
particular control characters when the shell is invoked; these bindings can be
changed using the bind command.
The following is a list of available editing commands. Each
description starts with the name of the command, suffixed with a colon; an
[n] (if the command can be prefixed with a count); and
any keys the command is bound to by default, written using caret notation
e.g. the ASCII ESC character is written as ^[. ^[A-Z] sequences are not case
sensitive. A count prefix for a command is entered using the sequence
^[n, where n is a sequence of 1
or more digits. Unless otherwise specified, if a count is omitted, it
defaults to 1.
Note that editing command names are used only with the
bind command. Furthermore, many editing commands are
useful only on terminals with a visible cursor. The default bindings were
chosen to resemble corresponding Emacs key bindings. The user's
tty(4)
characters (e.g. ERASE ) are bound to reasonable
substitutes and override the default bindings.
- abort: ^C, ^G
- Useful as a response to a request for a
search-history pattern in order to abort the
search.
- auto-insert: [n]
- Simply causes the character to appear as literal input. Most ordinary
characters are bound to this.
- backward-char: [n] ^B,
^X^D
- Moves the cursor backward n characters.
- backward-word: [n] ^[b
- Moves the cursor backward to the beginning of the word; words consist of
alphanumerics, underscore (‘_’), and dollar sign
(‘$’) characters.
- beginning-of-history: ^[<
- Moves to the beginning of the history.
- beginning-of-line: ^A
- Moves the cursor to the beginning of the edited input line.
- capitalize-word: [n] ^[C,
^[c
- Uppercase the first character in the next n words,
leaving the cursor past the end of the last word.
- clear-screen: ^L
- Clears the screen if the
TERM parameter is set and
the terminal supports clearing the screen, then reprints the prompt string
and the current input line.
- comment: ^[#
- If the current line does not begin with a comment character, one is added
at the beginning of the line and the line is entered (as if return had
been pressed); otherwise, the existing comment characters are removed and
the cursor is placed at the beginning of the line.
- complete: ^[^[
- Automatically completes as much as is unique of the command name or the
file name containing the cursor. If the entire remaining command or file
name is unique, a space is printed after its completion, unless it is a
directory name in which case ‘
/ ’ is
appended. If there is no command or file name with the current partial
word as its prefix, a bell character is output (usually causing a beep to
be sounded).
Custom completions may be configured by creating an array
named ‘complete_command ’,
optionally suffixed with an argument number to complete only for a
single argument. So defining an array named
‘complete_kill ’ provides possible
completions for any argument to the
kill(1)
command, but ‘complete_kill_1 ’
only completes the first argument. For example, the following command
makes oksh offer a selection of signal names for
the first argument to
kill(1):
set -A complete_kill_1 -- -9 -HUP
-INFO -KILL -TERM
- complete-command: ^X^[
- Automatically completes as much as is unique of the command name having
the partial word up to the cursor as its prefix, as in the
complete command above.
- complete-file: ^[^X
- Automatically completes as much as is unique of the file name having the
partial word up to the cursor as its prefix, as in the
complete command described above.
- complete-list: ^I, ^[=
- Complete as much as is possible of the current word, and list the possible
completions for it. If only one completion is possible, match as in the
complete command above.
- delete-char-backward: [n]
ERASE, ^?,
^H
- Deletes n characters before the cursor.
- delete-char-forward: [n]
Delete
- Deletes n characters after the cursor.
- delete-word-backward: [n]
WERASE, ^[ERASE,
^W, ^[^?, ^[^H,
^[h
- Deletes n words before the cursor.
- delete-word-forward: [n]
^[d
- Deletes n words after the cursor.
- down-history: [n] ^N,
^XB
- Scrolls the history buffer forward n lines (later).
Each input line originally starts just after the last entry in the history
buffer, so
down-history is not useful until either
search-history or
up-history has been performed.
- downcase-word: [n] ^[L,
^[l
- Lowercases the next n words.
- end-of-history: ^[>
- Moves to the end of the history.
- end-of-line: ^E
- Moves the cursor to the end of the input line.
- eot: ^_
- Acts as an end-of-file; this is useful because edit-mode input disables
normal terminal input canonicalization.
- eot-or-delete: [n] ^D
- Acts as
eot if alone on a line; otherwise acts as
delete-char-forward .
- error:
- Error (ring the bell).
- exchange-point-and-mark: ^X^X
- Places the cursor where the mark is and sets the mark to where the cursor
was.
- expand-file: ^[*
- Appends a ‘
* ’ to the current word
and replaces the word with the result of performing file globbing on the
word. If no files match the pattern, the bell is rung.
- forward-char: [n] ^F,
^XC
- Moves the cursor forward n characters.
- forward-word: [n] ^[f
- Moves the cursor forward to the end of the nth
word.
- goto-history: [n] ^[g
- Goes to history number n.
- kill-line: KILL
- Deletes the entire input line.
- kill-to-eol: [n] ^K
- Deletes the input from the cursor to the end of the line if
n is not specified; otherwise deletes characters
between the cursor and column n.
- list: ^[?
- Prints a sorted, columnated list of command names or file names (if any)
that can complete the partial word containing the cursor. Directory names
have ‘
/ ’ appended to them.
- list-command: ^X?
- Prints a sorted, columnated list of command names (if any) that can
complete the partial word containing the cursor.
- list-file: ^X^Y
- Prints a sorted, columnated list of file names (if any) that can complete
the partial word containing the cursor. File type indicators are appended
as described under
list above.
- newline: ^J, ^M
- Causes the current input line to be processed by the shell. The current
cursor position may be anywhere on the line.
- newline-and-next: ^O
- Causes the current input line to be processed by the shell, and the next
line from history becomes the current line. This is only useful after an
up-history or
search-history .
- no-op: QUIT
- This does nothing.
- prev-hist-word: [n] ^[.,
^[_
- The last (nth) word of the previous command is
inserted at the cursor.
- quote: ^^
- The following character is taken literally rather than as an editing
command.
- redraw:
- Reprints the prompt string and the current input line.
- search-character-backward: [n]
^[^]
- Search backward in the current line for the nth
occurrence of the next character typed.
- search-character-forward: [n]
^]
- Search forward in the current line for the nth
occurrence of the next character typed.
- search-history: ^R
- Enter incremental search mode. The internal history list is searched
backwards for commands matching the input. An initial
‘
^ ’ in the search string anchors the
search. The abort key will leave search mode. Other commands will be
executed after leaving search mode. Successive
search-history commands continue searching
backward to the next previous occurrence of the pattern. The history
buffer retains only a finite number of lines; the oldest are discarded as
necessary.
- set-mark-command: ^[⟨space⟩
- Set the mark at the cursor position.
- transpose-chars: ^T
- If at the end of line, or if the
gmacs option is
set, this exchanges the two previous characters; otherwise, it exchanges
the previous and current characters and moves the cursor one character to
the right.
- up-history: [n] ^P,
^XA
- Scrolls the history buffer backward n lines
(earlier).
- upcase-word: [n] ^[U,
^[u
- Uppercase the next n words.
- quote: ^V
- Synonym for ^^.
- yank: ^Y
- Inserts the most recently killed text string at the current cursor
position.
- yank-pop: ^[y
- Immediately after a
yank , replaces the inserted
text string with the next previously killed text string.
The following editing commands lack default bindings but can be
used with the bind command:
- kill-region
- Deletes the input between the cursor and the mark.
The vi command-line editor in oksh has basically the
same commands as the
vi(1) editor
with the following exceptions:
- You start out in insert mode.
- There are file name and command completion commands: =, \, *, ^X, ^E, ^F,
and, optionally, ⟨tab⟩ and ⟨esc⟩.
- The
_ command is different (in
oksh it is the last argument command; in
vi(1) it
goes to the start of the current line).
- The
/ and G commands move
in the opposite direction to the j command.
- Commands which don't make sense in a single line editor are not available
(e.g. screen movement commands and
ex(1)-style
colon (
: ) commands).
Note that the ^X stands for control-X; also ⟨esc⟩,
⟨space⟩, and ⟨tab⟩ are used for escape, space,
and tab, respectively (no kidding).
Like
vi(1),
there are two modes: “insert” mode and “command”
mode. In insert mode, most characters are simply put in the buffer at the
current cursor position as they are typed; however, some characters are
treated specially. In particular, the following characters are taken from
current
tty(4)
settings (see
stty(1))
and have their usual meaning (normal values are in parentheses): kill (^U),
erase (^?), werase (^W), eof (^D), intr (^C), and quit (^\). In addition to
the above, the following characters are also treated specially in insert
mode:
- ^E
- Command and file name enumeration (see below).
- ^F
- Command and file name completion (see below). If used twice in a row, the
list of possible completions is displayed; if used a third time, the
completion is undone.
- ^H
- Erases previous character.
- ^J | ^M
- End of line. The current line is read, parsed, and executed by the
shell.
- ^L
- Clear the screen (if possible) and redraw the current line. See the
clear-screen command in
Emacs editing mode for more
information.
- ^R
- Redraw the current line.
- ^V
- Literal next. The next character typed is not treated specially (can be
used to insert the characters being described here).
- ^X
- Command and file name expansion (see below).
- ⟨esc⟩
- Puts the editor in command mode (see below).
- ⟨tab⟩
- Optional file name and command completion (see
^F
above), enabled with set -o vi-tabcomplete .
In command mode, each character is interpreted as a command.
Characters that don't correspond to commands, are illegal combinations of
commands, or are commands that can't be carried out, all cause beeps. In the
following command descriptions, an [n] indicates the
command may be prefixed by a number (e.g. 10l moves
right 10 characters); if no number prefix is used, n
is assumed to be 1 unless otherwise specified. The term “current
position” refers to the position between the cursor and the character
preceding the cursor. A “word” is a sequence of letters,
digits, and underscore characters or a sequence of non-letter, non-digit,
non-underscore, and non-whitespace characters (e.g.
“ab2*&^” contains two words) and a
“big-word” is a sequence of non-whitespace characters.
Special oksh vi commands:
The following commands are not in, or are different from, the
normal vi file editor:
- [n]_
- Insert a space followed by the nth big-word from the
last command in the history at the current position and enter insert mode;
if n is not specified, the last word is
inserted.
- #
- Insert the comment character (‘#’) at the start of the
current line and return the line to the shell (equivalent to
I#^J ).
- [n]g
- Like
G , except if n is not
specified, it goes to the most recent remembered line.
- [n]v
- Edit line n using the
vi(1)
editor; if n is not specified, the current line is
edited. The actual command executed is
fc -e
${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-vi}} n.
- * and ^X
- Command or file name expansion is applied to the current big-word (with an
appended ‘
* ’ if the word contains no
file globbing characters) - the big-word is replaced with the resulting
words. If the current big-word is the first on the line or follows one of
the characters ‘; ’,
‘| ’,
‘& ’,
‘( ’, or
‘) ’, and does not contain a slash
(‘/’), then command expansion is done; otherwise file name
expansion is done. Command expansion will match the big-word against all
aliases, functions, and built-in commands as well as any executable files
found by searching the directories in the PATH
parameter. File name expansion matches the big-word against the files in
the current directory. After expansion, the cursor is placed just past the
last word and the editor is in insert mode.
- [n]\, [n]^F,
[n]⟨tab⟩, and
[n]⟨esc⟩
- Command/file name completion. Replace the current big-word with the
longest unique match obtained after performing command and file name
expansion. ⟨tab⟩ is only recognized if the
vi-tabcomplete option is set, while
⟨esc⟩ is only recognized if the
vi-esccomplete option is set (see
set -o ). If n is specified,
the nth possible completion is selected (as reported
by the command/file name enumeration command).
- = and ^E
- Command/file name enumeration. List all the commands or files that match
the current big-word.
- @c
- Macro expansion. Execute the commands found in the alias
_c.
Intra-line movement commands:
- [n]h and [n]^H
- Move left n characters.
- [n]l and
[n]⟨space⟩
- Move right n characters.
- 0
- Move to column 0.
- ^
- Move to the first non-whitespace character.
- [n]|
- Move to column n.
- $
- Move to the last character.
- [n]b
- Move back n words.
- [n]B
- Move back n big-words.
- [n]e
- Move forward to the end of the word, n times.
- [n]E
- Move forward to the end of the big-word, n
times.
- [n]w
- Move forward n words.
- [n]W
- Move forward n big-words.
- %
- Find match. The editor looks forward for the nearest parenthesis, bracket,
or brace and then moves the cursor to the matching parenthesis, bracket,
or brace.
- [n]fc
- Move forward to the nth occurrence of the character
c.
- [n]Fc
- Move backward to the nth occurrence of the character
c.
- [n]tc
- Move forward to just before the nth occurrence of
the character c.
- [n]Tc
- Move backward to just before the nth occurrence of
the character c.
- [n];
- Repeats the last
f , F ,
t , or T command.
- [n],
- Repeats the last
f , F ,
t , or T command, but moves
in the opposite direction.
Inter-line movement commands:
- [n]j, [n]+,
and [n]^N
- Move to the nth next line in the history.
- [n]k, [n]-,
and [n]^P
- Move to the nth previous line in the history.
- [n]G
- Move to line n in the history; if
n is not specified, the number of the first
remembered line is used.
- [n]g
- Like
G , except if n is not
specified, it goes to the most recent remembered line.
- [n]/string
- Search backward through the history for the nth line
containing string; if string
starts with ‘
^ ’, the remainder of
the string must appear at the start of the history line for it to
match.
- [n]?string
- Same as
/ , except it searches forward through the
history.
- [n]n
- Search for the nth occurrence of the last search
string; the direction of the search is the same as the last search.
- [n]N
- Search for the nth occurrence of the last search
string; the direction of the search is the opposite of the last
search.
Edit commands
- [n]a
- Append text n times; goes into insert mode just
after the current position. The append is only replicated if command mode
is re-entered i.e. ⟨esc⟩ is used.
- [n]A
- Same as
a , except it appends at the end of the
line.
- [n]i
- Insert text n times; goes into insert mode at the
current position. The insertion is only replicated if command mode is
re-entered i.e. ⟨esc⟩ is used.
- [n]I
- Same as
i , except the insertion is done just
before the first non-blank character.
- [n]s
- Substitute the next n characters (i.e. delete the
characters and go into insert mode).
- S
- Substitute whole line. All characters from the first non-blank character
to the end of the line are deleted and insert mode is entered.
- [n]cmove-cmd
- Change from the current position to the position resulting from
n move-cmds (i.e. delete the indicated region and go
into insert mode); if move-cmd is
c , the line starting from the first non-blank
character is changed.
- C
- Change from the current position to the end of the line (i.e. delete to
the end of the line and go into insert mode).
- [n]x
- Delete the next n characters.
- [n]X
- Delete the previous n characters.
- D
- Delete to the end of the line.
- [n]dmove-cmd
- Delete from the current position to the position resulting from
n move-cmds; move-cmd is a
movement command (see above) or
d , in which case
the current line is deleted.
- [n]rc
- Replace the next n characters with the character
c.
- [n]R
- Replace. Enter insert mode but overwrite existing characters instead of
inserting before existing characters. The replacement is repeated
n times.
- [n]~
- Change the case of the next n characters.
- [n]ymove-cmd
- Yank from the current position to the position resulting from
n move-cmds into the yank buffer; if
move-cmd is
y , the whole
line is yanked.
- Y
- Yank from the current position to the end of the line.
- [n]p
- Paste the contents of the yank buffer just after the current position,
n times.
- [n]P
- Same as
p , except the buffer is pasted at the
current position.
Miscellaneous vi commands
- ^J and ^M
- The current line is read, parsed, and executed by the shell.
- ^L
- Clear the screen (if possible) and redraw the current line.
- ^R
- Redraw the current line.
- [n].
- Redo the last edit command n times.
- u
- Undo the last edit command.
- U
- Undo all changes that have been made to the current line.
- intr and
quit
- The interrupt and quit terminal characters cause the current line to be
deleted and a new prompt to be printed.
- ~/.profile
- User's login profile.
- /etc/ksh.kshrc
- Global configuration file. Not sourced by default.
- /etc/profile
- System login profile.
- /etc/shells
- Shell database.
- /etc/suid_profile
- Privileged shell profile.
csh(1),
ed(1),
mg(1),
sh(1),
stty(1),
vi(1),
shells(5),
environ(7),
script(7)
S. R. Bourne,
The UNIX Shell, Bell System
Technical Journal, 57:6, pp.
1971-1990, 1978.
S. R. Bourne,
An Introduction to the UNIX Shell,
AT&T Bell Laboratories, Computing
Science Technical Report, 70,
1978.
Morris Bolsky and
David Korn, The KornShell Command
and Programming Language, Prentice Hall,
First Edition 1989, ISBN
0135169720.
Stephen G. Kochan and
Patrick H. Wood, UNIX Shell
Programming, 3rd Edition, Sams,
2003, ISBN
0672324903.
IEEE Inc.,
IEEE Standard for Information Technology - Portable
Operating System Interface (POSIX) - Part 2: Shell and Utilities,
1993, ISBN
1-55937-266-9.
This page documents version @(#)PD KSH v5.2.14 99/07/13.2 of the public domain
Korn shell.
This shell is based on the public domain 7th edition Bourne shell clone by
Charles Forsyth and parts of the BRL shell by
Doug A. Gwyn, Doug Kingston,
Ron Natalie, Arnold Robbins,
Lou Salkind, and others. The first release of
pdksh was created by Eric
Gisin, and it was subsequently maintained by John R.
MacMillan
<change!john@sq.sq.com>,
Simon J. Gerraty
<sjg@zen.void.oz.au>,
and Michael Rendell
<michael@cs.mun.ca>.
The CONTRIBUTORS file in the source distribution
contains a more complete list of people and their part in the shell's
development.
$(command) expressions are currently parsed by finding the
closest matching (unquoted) parenthesis. Thus constructs inside
$(command) may produce an error. For example, the
parenthesis in ‘x);; ’ is interpreted as
the closing parenthesis in ‘$(case x in x);; *);;
esac) ’.
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