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Bash implements essentially the same grammar, parameter and
variable expansion, redirection, and quoting as the Bourne Shell.
Bash uses the POSIX 1003.2 standard as the specification of
how these features are to be implemented. There are some
differences between the traditional Bourne shell and Bash; this
section quickly details the differences of significance. A
number of these differences are explained in greater depth in
previous sections.
This section uses the version of sh
included in SVR4.2 as
the baseline reference.
sh
behavior (see section 6.11 Bash POSIX Mode).
bind
builtin.
complete
and compgen
, to manipulate it.
history
and fc
builtins to manipulate it.
csh
-like history expansion
(see section 9.3 History Expansion).
$'...'
quoting syntax, which expands ANSI-C
backslash-escaped characters in the text between the single quotes,
is supported (see section 3.1.2.4 ANSI-C Quoting).
$"..."
quoting syntax to do
locale-specific translation of the characters between the double
quotes. The `-D', `--dump-strings', and `--dump-po-strings'
invocation options list the translatable strings found in a script
(see section 3.1.2.5 Locale-Specific Translation).
!
keyword to negate the return value of
a pipeline (see section 3.2.2 Pipelines).
Very useful when an if
statement needs to act only if a test fails.
time
reserved word and command timing (see section 3.2.2 Pipelines).
The display of the timing statistics may be controlled with the
TIMEFORMAT
variable.
for (( expr1 ; expr2 ; expr3 ))
arithmetic for command, similar to the C language (see section 3.2.4 Looping Constructs).
select
compound command, which allows the
generation of simple menus (see section 3.2.5 Conditional Constructs).
[[
compound command, which makes conditional
testing part of the shell grammar (see section 3.2.5 Conditional Constructs).
alias
and unalias
builtins (see section 6.6 Aliases).
((
compound command
(see section 3.2.5 Conditional Constructs),
and arithmetic expansion (see section 6.5 Shell Arithmetic).
export
command.
${#xx}
, which returns the length of ${xx}
,
is supported (see section 3.5.3 Shell Parameter Expansion).
${var:
offset[:
length]}
,
which expands to the substring of var
's value of length
length, beginning at offset, is present
(see section 3.5.3 Shell Parameter Expansion).
${var/[/]
pattern[/
replacement]}
,
which matches pattern and replaces it with replacement in
the value of var
, is available (see section 3.5.3 Shell Parameter Expansion).
${!prefix}*
expansion, which expands to
the names of all shell variables whose names begin with prefix,
is available (see section 3.5.3 Shell Parameter Expansion).
${!word}
(see section 3.5.3 Shell Parameter Expansion).
$9
using
${num}
.
$()
form of command substitution
is implemented (see section 3.5.4 Command Substitution),
and preferred to the Bourne shell's "
(which
is also implemented for backwards compatibility).
UID
, EUID
, and GROUPS
), the current host
(HOSTTYPE
, OSTYPE
, MACHTYPE
, and HOSTNAME
),
and the instance of Bash that is running (BASH
,
BASH_VERSION
, and BASH_VERSINFO
). See section 5.2 Bash Variables,
for details.
IFS
variable is used to split only the results of expansion,
not all words (see section 3.5.7 Word Splitting).
This closes a longstanding shell security hole.
extglob
shell option is enabled (see section 3.5.8.1 Pattern Matching).
sh
does not separate the two name spaces.
local
builtin, and thus useful recursive functions may be written
(see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands).
sh
, all variable assignments
preceding commands are global unless the command is executed from the
file system.
noclobber
option is available to avoid overwriting existing
files with output redirection (see section 4.3 The Set Builtin).
The `>|' redirection operator may be used to override noclobber
.
cd
and pwd
builtins (see section 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins)
each take `-L' and `-P' options to switch between logical and
physical modes.
builtin
and command
builtins (see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands).
command
builtin allows selective disabling of functions
when command lookup is performed (see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands).
enable
builtin (see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands).
exec
builtin takes additional options that allow users
to control the contents of the environment passed to the executed
command, and what the zeroth argument to the command is to be
(see section 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins).
export -f
(see section 3.3 Shell Functions).
export
, readonly
, and declare
builtins can
take a `-f' option to act on shell functions, a `-p' option to
display variables with various attributes set in a format that can be
used as shell input, a `-n' option to remove various variable
attributes, and `name=value' arguments to set variable attributes
and values simultaneously.
hash
builtin allows a name to be associated with
an arbitrary filename, even when that filename cannot be found by
searching the $PATH
, using `hash -p'
(see section 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins).
help
builtin for quick reference to shell
facilities (see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands).
printf
builtin is available to display formatted output
(see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands).
read
builtin (see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands)
will read a line ending in `\' with
the `-r' option, and will use the REPLY
variable as a
default if no non-option arguments are supplied.
The Bash read
builtin
also accepts a prompt string with the `-p' option and will use
Readline to obtain the line when given the `-e' option.
The read
builtin also has additional options to control input:
the `-s' option will turn off echoing of input characters as
they are read, the `-t' option will allow read
to time out
if input does not arrive within a specified number of seconds, the
`-n' option will allow reading only a specified number of
characters rather than a full line, and the `-d' option will read
until a particular character rather than newline.
return
builtin may be used to abort execution of scripts
executed with the .
or source
builtins
(see section 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins).
shopt
builtin, for finer control of shell
optional capabilities (see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands), and allows these options
to be set and unset at shell invocation (see section 6.1 Invoking Bash).
set
builtin (see section 4.3 The Set Builtin).
test
builtin (see section 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins)
is slightly different, as it implements the POSIX algorithm,
which specifies the behavior based on the number of arguments.
trap
builtin (see section 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins) allows a
DEBUG
pseudo-signal specification, similar to EXIT
.
Commands specified with a DEBUG
trap are executed after every
simple command.
The DEBUG
trap is not inherited by shell functions.
The trap
builtin (see section 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins) allows an
ERR
pseudo-signal specification, similar to EXIT
and DEBUG
.
Commands specified with an ERR
trap are executed after a simple
command fails, with a few exceptions.
The ERR
trap is not inherited by shell functions.
type
builtin is more extensive and gives more information
about the names it finds (see section 4.2 Bash Builtin Commands).
umask
builtin permits a `-p' option to cause
the output to be displayed in the form of a umask
command
that may be reused as input (see section 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins).
csh
-like directory stack, and provides the
pushd
, popd
, and dirs
builtins to manipulate it
(see section 6.8 The Directory Stack).
Bash also makes the directory stack visible as the value of the
DIRSTACK
shell variable.
disown
builtin can remove a job from the internal shell
job table (see section 7.2 Job Control Builtins) or suppress the sending
of SIGHUP
to a job when the shell exits as the result of a
SIGHUP
.
mldmode
and priv
) not present in Bash.
stop
or newgrp
builtins.
SHACCT
variable or perform shell accounting.
sh
uses a TIMEOUT
variable like Bash uses
TMOUT
.
More features unique to Bash may be found in 6. Bash Features.
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