SH(C) XENIX System V SH(C)
Name
sh - Invokes the shell command interpreter.
Syntax
sh [ -aceiknrstuvx ] [ args ]
Description
The shell is the standard command programming language that
executes commands read from a terminal or a file. See
Invocation below for the meaning of arguments to the shell.
Commands
A simple-command is a sequence of nonblank words separated
by blanks (a blank is a tab or a space). The first word
specifies the name of the command to be executed. Except as
specified below, the remaining words are passed as arguments
to the invoked command. The command name is passed as
argument 0 (see exec(S)). The value of a simple-command is
its exit status if it terminates normally, or (octal)
1000+status if it terminates abnormally. See signal(S) for
a list of status values.
A pipeline is a sequence of one or more commands separated
by a vertical bar ( | ). (The caret ( ^ ), is an
obsolete synonym for the vertical bar and should not be used
in a pipeline; scripts that use a caret to represent a pipe
will be incompatible with ksh(C).) The standard output of
each command but the last is connected by a pipe(S) to the
standard input of the next command. Each command is run as
a separate process; the shell waits for the last command to
terminate.
A list is a sequence of one or more pipelines separated
by ;, &, &&, or || , and optionally terminated by ; or &.
Of these four symbols, ; and & have equal precedence, which
is lower than that of && and ||. The symbols && and || also
have equal precedence. A semicolon (;) causes sequential
execution of the preceding pipeline; an ampersand (&) causes
asynchronous execution of the preceding pipeline (i.e., the
shell does not wait for that pipeline to finish). The
symbol && (|| ) causes the list following it to be executed
only if the preceding pipeline returns a zero (nonzero) exit
status. An arbitrary number of newlines may appear in a
list, instead of semicolons, to delimit commands.
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A command is either a simple-command or one of the following
commands. Unless otherwise stated, the value returned by a
command is that of the last simple-command executed in the
command:
for name [ in word ... ]
do
list
done
Each time a for command is executed, name is set to the next
word taken from the in word list. If in word is omitted, then
the for command executes the do list once for each positional
parameter that is set (see Parameter Substitution below).
Execution ends when there are no more words in the list.
case word in
[ pattern [ | pattern ] ... ) list
;; ] ...
esac
A case command executes the list associated with the first
pattern that matches word. The form of the patterns is the
same as that used for filename generation (see Filename
Generation below).
if list then
list
[ elif list then
list ]
[ else list ]
fi
The list following if is executed and, if it returns a zero
exit status, the list following the first then is executed.
Otherwise, the list following elif is executed and, if its
value is zero, the list following the next then is executed.
Failing that, the else list is executed. If no else list or
then list is executed, then the if command returns a zero exit
status.
while list
do
list
done
A while command repeatedly executes the while list and, if the
exit status of the last command in the list is zero, executes
the do list; otherwise the loop terminates. If no commands in
the do list are executed, then the while command returns a zero
exit status; until may be used in place of while to negate the
loop termination test.
(list)
Executes list in a subshell.
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{list;}
list is simply executed.
name () {list;}
Define a function which is referenced by name. The body
of functions is the list of commands between { and }.
Execution of functions is described later (see
Execution.)
The following words are recognized only as the first word of
a command and when not quoted:
if then else elif fi case esac for while until do done { }
Comments
A word beginning with # causes that word and all the
following characters up to a newline to be ignored.
Command Substitution
The standard output from a command enclosed in a pair of
grave accents (``) may be used as part or all of a word;
trailing newlines are removed.
No interpretation is done on the command string before the
string is read, except to remove backslashes (\) used to
escape other characters. Backslashes may be used to escape
grave accents (`) or other backslashes and are removed
before the command string is read. Escaping grave accents
allows nested command substitution. If the command
substitution lies within a pair of double quotes (" `
...` "), backslashes used to escape a double quote (\") will
be removed; otherwise, they will be left intact.
If a backslash is used to escape a newline character, both
the backslash and the newline are removed (see the section
on ``Quoting''). In addition, backslashes used to escape
dollar signs (\$) are removed. Since no interpretation is
done on the command string before it is read, inserting a
backslash to escape a dollar sign has no effect.
Backslashes that precede characters other than \, `, ",
newline, and $ are left intact.
Parameter Substitution
The character $ is used to introduce substitutable
parameters. There are two types of parameters, positional
and keyword. If parameter is a digit, it is a positional
parameter. Positional parameters may be assigned values by
set. Keyword parameters, (also known as variables) may be
assigned values by writing:
name=value [ name=value ] ...
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Pattern-matching is not performed on value. There cannot be
a function and a variable with the same name.
${parameter}
A parameter is a sequence of letters, digits, or
underscores (a name), a digit, or any of the
characters *, @, #, ?, -, $, and !. The value, if any,
of the parameter is substituted. The braces are
required only when parameter is followed by a letter,
digit, or underscore that is not to be interpreted as
part of its name. A name must begin with a letter or
underscore. If parameter is a digit then it is a
positional parameter. If parameter is * or @, then all
the positional parameters, starting with $1, are
substituted (separated by spaces). Parameter $0 is set
from argument zero when the shell is invoked.
${parameter:-word}
If parameter is set and is not a null argument,
substitute its value; otherwise substitute word.
${parameter:=word}
If parameter is not set or is null, then set it to
word; the value of the parameter is then substituted.
Positional parameters may not be assigned to in this
way.
${parameter:?word}
If parameter is set and is not a null argument,
substitute its value; otherwise, print word and exit
from the shell. If word is omitted, the message
``parameter null or not set'' is printed.
${parameter:+word}
If parameter is set and is not a null argument,
substitute word; otherwise substitute nothing. In the
above, word is not evaluated unless it is to be used as
the substituted string, so that in the following
example, pwd is executed only if d is not set or is
null:
echo ${d:-`pwd`}
If the colon (:) is omitted from the above expressions,
then the shell only checks whether parameter is set.
The following parameters are automatically set by the shell:
# The number of positional parameters in decimal
- Flags supplied to the shell on invocation or by the set
command
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? The decimal value returned by the last synchronously
executed command
$ The process number of this shell
! The process number of the last background command
invoked
The following parameters are used by the shell:
CDPATH
Defines search path for the cd command. See the
section Special Commands, ``cd''.
HOME The default argument (home directory) for the cd
command
PATH The search path for commands (see Execution below)
MAIL If this variable is set to the name of a mail file,
then the shell informs the user of the arrival of mail
in the specified file
MAILCHECK
This parameter specifies how often (in seconds) the
shell will check for the arrival of mail in
the files specified by the MAILPATH or MAIL parameters.
The default value is 600 seconds (10 minutes). If set
to 0, the shell will check before each prompt.
MAILPATH
A colon (:) separated list of file names. If this
parameter is set, the shell informs the user of the
arrival of mail in any of the specified files. Each
file name can be followed by % and a message that will
be printed when the modification time changes. The
default message is you have mail.
PS1 Primary prompt string, by default ``$ ''
PS2 Secondary prompt string, by default ``> ''
IFS Internal field separators, normally space, tab, and
newline
SHELL
When the shell is invoked, it scans the environment
(see Environment below) for this name. If it is found
and there is an `r' in the file name part of its value,
the shell becomes a restricted shell.
The shell gives default values to PATH, PS1, PS2, and IFS,
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while HOME and MAIL are not set at all by the shell
(although HOME is set by login(M)).
Blank Interpretation
After parameter and command substitution, the results of
substitution are scanned for internal field separator
characters (those found in IFS) and split into distinct
arguments where such characters are found. Explicit null
arguments ("" or '') are retained. Implicit null arguments
(those resulting from parameters that have no values) are
removed.
Filename Generation
Following substitution, each command word is scanned for the
characters *, ?, and [. If one of these characters appears,
the word is regarded as a pattern. The word is replaced
with alphabetically sorted filenames that match the pattern.
If no filename is found that matches the pattern, the word
is left unchanged. The character . at the start of a
filename or immediately following a /, as well as the
character / itself, must be matched explicitly. These
characters and their matching patterns are:
* Matches any string, including the null string.
? Matches any single character.
[...]
Matches any one of the enclosed characters. A pair of
characters separated by - matches any character
lexically between the pair, inclusive. If the first
character following the opening bracket ([) is an
exclamation mark (!), then any character not enclosed
is matched.
Quoting
The following characters have a special meaning to the shell
and cause termination of a word unless quoted:
; & ( ) | ^ < > newline space tab
A character may be quoted (i.e., made to stand for itself)
by preceding it with a \. The pair \newline is ignored.
All characters enclosed between a pair of single quotation
marks (''), except a single quotation mark, are quoted.
Inside double quotation marks (""), parameter and command
substitution occurs and \ quotes the characters \, `, ", and
$. "$*" is equivalent to "$1 $2 ...", whereas ``$@'' is
equivalent to "$1" "$2" ...
Prompting
When used interactively, the shell prompts with the value of
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PS1 before reading a command. If at any time a newline is
typed and further input is needed to complete a command, the
secondary prompt (i.e., the value of PS2) is issued.
Spelling Checker
When using cd(C) the shell checks spelling. For example, if
you change to a different directory using cd and misspell
the directory name, the shell responds with an alternative
spelling of an existing directory. Enter ``y'' and press
RETURN (or just press RETURN) to change to the offered
directory. If the offered spelling is incorrect, enter
``n'', then retype the command line. In this example the
sh(C) response is boldfaced:
$ cd /usr/spol/uucp
cd /usr/spool/uucp? y
ok
Input/Output
Before a command is executed, its input and output may be
redirected using a special notation interpreted by the
shell. The following may appear anywhere in a
simple-command or may precede or follow a command. They are
not passed on to the invoked command; substitution occurs
before word or digit is used:
<word Use file word as standard input (file
descriptor 0).
>word Use file word as standard output (file
descriptor 1). If the file does not exist, it
is created; otherwise, it is truncated to zero
length.
>>word Use file word as standard output. If the file
exists, output is appended to it (by first
seeking the end-of-file); otherwise, the file
is created.
<<[-]word The shell input is read up to a line that is
the same as word, or to an end-of-file. The
resulting document becomes the standard input.
If any character of word is quoted, no
interpretation is placed upon the characters
of the document; otherwise, parameter and
command substitution occurs, (unescaped)
\newline is ignored, and \ must be used to
quote the characters \, $, `, and the first
character of word. If - is appended to <<,
all leading tabs are stripped from word and
from the document.
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<&digit The standard input is duplicated from file
descriptor digit (see dup(S)). Similarly for
the standard output using >.
<&- The standard input is closed. Similarly for
the standard output using >.
If one of the above is preceded by a digit, the file
descriptor created is that specified by the digit (instead
of the default 0 or 1). For example:
... 2>&1
creates file descriptor 2 that is a duplicate of file
descriptor 1.
If a command is followed by &, the default standard input
for the command is the empty file /dev/null. Otherwise, the
environment for the execution of a command contains the file
descriptors of the invoking shell as modified by
input/output specifications.
Environment
The environment (see environ(M)) is a list of name-value
pairs that is passed to an executed program in the same way
as a normal argument list. The shell interacts with the
environment in several ways. On invocation, the shell scans
the environment and creates a parameter for each name found,
giving it the corresponding value. Executed commands
inherit the same environment. If the user modifies the
values of these parameters or creates new ones, none of
these affect the environment unless the export command is
used to bind the shell's parameter to the environment. The
environment seen by any executed command is composed of any
unmodified name-value pairs originally inherited by the
shell, minus any pairs removed by unset, plus any
modifications or additions, all of which must be noted in
export commands.
The environment for any simple-command may be augmented by
prefixing it with one or more assignments to parameters.
Thus:
TERM=wy60 cmd args
and
(export TERM; TERM=wy60; cmd args)
are equivalent (as far as the above execution of cmd is
concerned).
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If the -k flag is set, all keyword arguments are placed in
the environment, even if they occur after the command name.
Signals
The INTERRUPT and QUIT signals for an invoked command are
ignored if the command is followed by &; otherwise signals
have the values inherited by the shell from its parent, with
the exception of signal 11. See the trap command below.
Execution
Each time a command is executed, the above substitutions are
carried out. If the command name does not match a Special
Command, but matches the name of a defined function, the
function is executed in the shell process (note how this
differs from the execution of shell procedures). The
positional parameters $1, $2, ... are set to the arguments
of the function. If the command name matches neither a
Special Command nor the name of a defined function, a new
process is created and an attempt is made to execute the
command via exec(S).
The shell parameter PATH defines the search path for the
directory containing the command. Alternative directory
names are separated by a colon (:). The default path is
:/bin:/usr/bin (specifying the current directory, /bin, and
/usr/bin, in that order). Note that the current directory
is specified by a null pathname, which can appear
immediately after the equal sign or between the colon
delimiters anywhere else in the path list. If the command
name contains a /, then the search path is not used.
Otherwise, each directory in the path is searched for an
executable file. If the file has execute permission but is
not an a.out file, it is assumed to be a file containing
shell commands. A subshell (i.e., a separate process) is
spawned to read it. A parenthesized command is also
executed in a subshell.
Shell procedures are often used by users running the csh.
However, if the first character of the procedure is a #
(comment character), csh assumes the procedure is a csh
script, and invokes /bin/csh to execute it. Always start sh
procedures with some other character if csh users are to run
the procedure at any time. This invokes the standard shell
/bin/sh.
The location in the search path where a command was found is
remembered by the shell (to help avoid unnecessary execs
later). If the command was found in a relative directory,
its location must be re-determined whenever the current
directory changes. The shell forgets all remembered
locations whenever the PATH variable is changed or the
hash -r command is executed (see hash in next section).
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Special Commands
Input/output redirection is permitted for these commands:
: No effect; the command does nothing. A zero exit code
is returned.
. file
Reads and executes commands from file and returns. The
search path specified by PATH is used to find the
directory containing file.
break [ n ]
Exits from the enclosing for, while, or until loop, if
any. If n is specified, it breaks n levels.
continue [ n ]
Resumes the next iteration of the enclosing for, while,
or until loop. If n is specified, it resumes at the
n-th enclosing loop.
cd [ arg ]
Changes the current directory to arg. The shell
parameter HOME is the default arg. The shell parameter
CDPATH defines the search path for the directory
containing arg. Alternative directory names are
separated by a colon (:). The default path is <null>
(specifying the current directory). Note that the
current directory is specified by a null path name,
which can appear immediately after the equal sign or
between the colon delimiters anywhere else in the path
list. If arg begins with a /, the search path is not
used. Otherwise, each directory in the path is
searched for arg.
If the shell is reading its commands from a terminal,
and the specified directory does not exist (or some
component cannot be searched), spelling correction is
applied to each component of directory, in a search for
the ``correct'' name. The shell then asks whether or
not to try and change directory to the corrected
directory name; an answer of n means ``no'', and
anything else is taken as ``yes''.
echo [ arg ]
Writes arguments separated by blanks and terminated by
a newline on the standard output. Arguments may be
enclosed in quotes. Quotes are required so that the
shell correctly interprets these special escape
sequences:
\b Backspace
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\c Prints line without newline.
\f Form feed
\n Newline
\r Carriage return
\t Tab
\v Vertical tab
\\ Backslash
\n The 8-bit character whose ASCII code is the 1, 2 or 3-
digit octal number n which must start with a zero
eval [ arg ... ]
The arguments are read as input to the shell and the
resulting command(s) executed.
exec [ arg ... ]
The command specified by the arguments is executed in
place of this shell without creating a new process.
Input/output arguments may appear and, if no other
arguments are given, cause the shell input/output to be
modified.
exit [ n ]
Causes the shell to exit with the exit status specified
by n. If n is omitted, the exit status is that of the
last command executed. An end-of-file will also cause
the shell to exit.
export [ name ... ]
The given names are marked for automatic export to the
environment of subsequently executed commands. If no
arguments are given, a list of all names that are
exported in this shell is printed.
getopts
Used in shell scripts to support command syntax
standards (see intro(C)); it parses positional
parameters and checks for legal options. See
getopts(C) for usage and description.
hash [ -r ] [ name ... ]
For each name, the location in the search path of the
command specified by name is determined and remembered
by the shell. The -r option causes the shell to forget
all remembered locations. If no arguments are given,
information about remembered commands is presented.
Hits is the number of times a command has been invoked
by the shell process. Cost is a measure of the work
required to locate a command in the search path. There
are certain situations which require that the stored
location of a command be recalculated. Commands for
which this will be done are indicated by an asterisk
(*) adjacent to the hits information. Cost will be
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incremented when the recalculation is done.
newgrp [ arg ... ]
Equivalent to exec newgrp arg ...
pwd Print the current working directory. See pwd(C) for
usage and description.
read [ name ... ]
One line is read from the standard input and the first
word is assigned to the first name, the second word to
the second name, etc., with leftover words assigned to
the last name. The return code is 0 unless an
end-of-file is encountered.
readonly [ name ... ]
The given names are marked readonly and the values of
these names may not be changed by subsequent
assignment. If no arguments are given, a list of all
readonly names is printed.
return [ n ]
Causes a function to exit with the return value
specified by n. If n is omitted, the return status is
that of the last command executed.
set [ -aefhknuvx [ arg ... ] ]
-a Mark variables which are modified or created for
export.
-e If the shell is noninteractive, exits immediately
if a command exits with a nonzero exit status.
-f Disables file name generation.
-h Locates and remembers function commands as
functions are defined (function commands are
normally located when the function is executed).
For example, /bin/tty would be added to the hash
table if, say, showtty() { tty } is declared. If
-h was unset, it would not be added to the hash
table until showtty is called.
-k Places all keyword arguments in the environment
for a command, not just those that precede the
command name.
-n Reads commands but does not execute them.
-u Treats unset variables as an error when
substituting.
-v Prints shell input lines as they are read.
-x Prints commands and their arguments as they are
executed. Although this flag is passed to
subshells, it does not enable tracing in those
subshells.
-- Does not change any of the flags; useful in
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setting $1 to -.
Using + rather than - causes these flags to be
turned off. These flags can also be used upon
invocation of the shell. The current set of flags
may be found in $-. The remaining arguments are
positional parameters and are assigned, in order,
to $1, $2, ... If no arguments are given, the
values of all names are printed.
shift [n]
The positional parameters from $2 ... are renamed $1
... If n is specified, shift them by places. shift
is the only way to access positional parameters above
$9.
test
Evaluates conditional expressions. See test(C) for
usage and description.
times
Prints the accumulated user and system times for
processes run from the shell.
trap [ arg ] [ n ] ...
arg is a command to be read and executed when the shell
receives signal(s) n. (Note that arg is scanned once
when the trap is set and once when the trap is taken.)
Trap commands are executed in order of signal number.
The highest signal number allowed is 16. Any attempt
to set a trap on a signal that was ignored on entry to
the current shell is ineffective. An attempt to trap
on signal 11 (memory fault) produces an error. If arg
is absent, all trap(s) n are reset to their original
values. If arg is the null string, this signal is
ignored by the shell and by the commands it invokes.
If n is 0, the command arg is executed on exit from the
shell. The trap command with no arguments prints a
list of commands associated with each signal number.
type [ name ... ]
For each name, indicate how it would be interpreted if
used as a command name.
ulimit [ n ]
imposes a size limit of n blocks on files written by
the shall and its child processes (files of any size
may be read). Any user may decrease the file size
limit, but only the super-user (root) can increase the
limit. With no argument, the current limit is printed.
unset [ name ... ]
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For each name, remove the corresponding variable or
function. The variables PATH, PS1, PS2, MAILCHECK and
IFS cannot be unset.
umask [ ooo ]
The user file-creation mask is set to the octal number
ooo where o is an octal digit (see umask(C)). If ooo
is omitted, the current value of the mask is printed.
wait [ n ]
Waits for the specified process to terminate, and
reports the termination status. If n is not given, all
currently active child processes are waited for. The
return code from this command is always 0.
Invocation
If the shell is invoked through exec(S) and the first
character of argument 0 is -, commands are initially read
from /etc/profile and then from $HOME/.profile, if such
files exist. Thereafter, commands are read as described
below, which is also the case when the shell is invoked as
/bin/sh. The flags below are interpreted by the shell on
invocation only; note that unless the -c or -s flag is
specified, the first argument is assumed to be the name of a
file containing commands, and the remaining arguments are
passed as positional parameters to that command file:
-c string If the -c flag is present, commands are read from
string.
-s If the -s flag is present or if no arguments
remain, commands are read from the standard input.
Any remaining arguments specify the positional
parameters. Shell output is written to file
descriptor 2.
-t If the -t flag is present, a single command is
read and executed, and the shell exits. This flag
is intended for use by C programs only and is not
useful interactively.
-i If the -i flag is present or if the shell input
and output are attached to a terminal, this shell
is interactive. In this case, TERMINATE is
ignored (so that kill 0 does not kill an
interactive shell) and INTERRUPT is caught and
ignored (so that wait is interruptible). In all
cases, QUIT is ignored by the shell.
-r If the -r flag is present, the shell is a
restricted shell (see rsh(C)).
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The remaining flags and arguments are described under the
set command above.
Exit Status
Errors detected by the shell, such as syntax errors, cause
the shell to return a nonzero exit status. If the shell is
being used noninteractively, execution of the shell file is
abandoned. Otherwise, the shell returns the exit status of
the last command executed. See the exit command above.
Files
/etc/profile system default profile
$HOME/.profile read by login shell at login
/tmp/sh* temporary file for <<
/dev/null source of empty file
See Also
cd(C), env(C), login(M), newgrp(C), rsh(C), test(C),
umask(C), dup(S), exec(S), fork(S), pipe(S), signal(S),
umask(S), wait(S), a.out(F), profile(M), environ(M)
Notes
If << is used to provide standard input to an asynchronous
process invoked by &, the shell gets mixed up about naming
the input document; a garbage file /tmp/sh* is created and
the shell complains about not being able to find that file
by another name.
If a command is executed, and a command with the same name
is installed in a directory in the search path before the
directory where the original command was found, the shell
will continue to exec the original command. Use the hash
command to correct this situation.
If you move the current directory or one above it, pwd may
not give the correct response. Use the cd command with a
full path name to correct this situation.
When a sh(C) user logs in, the system reads and executes
commands in /etc/profile before executing commands in the
user's $HOME/.profile. You can, therefore, modify the
environment for all sh(C) users on the system by editing
/etc/profile.
The shell doesn't treat the high (eighth) bit in the
characters of a command line argument specially, nor does it
strip the eighth bit from the characters of error messages.
Previous versions of the shell used the eighth bit as a
quoting mechanism.
Existing programs that set the eighth bit of characters in
order to quote them as part of the shell command line should
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be changed to use of the standard shell quoting mechanisms
(see the section on ``Quoting'').
Words used to filenames in input/output redirection are not
interpreted for filename generation (see the section on
``File Name Generation''). For example, cat file1 > a* will
create a file named a*.
Because commands in pipelines are run as separate processes,
variables set in a pipeline have no effect on the parent
shell.
If you get the error message:
fork failed - too many processes
try using the wait(C) command to clean up your background
processes. If this doesn't help, the system process table
is probably full or you have too many active foreground
processes (there is a limit to the number of processes that
can associated with your login, and to the number the system
can keep track of). These limits are associated with the
kernel parameters NPROC and MAXUPRC.
Warnings
Not all processes of a 3- or more-stage pipeline are
children of the shell, and thus cannot be waited for.
For wait n, if n is not an active process id, all your
shell's currently active background processes are waited for
and the return code will be zero.
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