bash-hackers-wiki/original_source/scripting/newbie_traps.txt

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====== Beginner Mistakes ======
{{keywords>bash shell scripting pitfalls traps beginners}}
Here are some typical traps:
===== Script execution =====
==== Your perfect Bash script executes with syntax errors ====
If you write Bash scripts with Bash specific syntax and features, run them with __Bash__, and run them with Bash in __native mode__.
**Wrong**:
* no shebang
* the interpreter used depends on the OS implementation and current shell
* **can** be run by calling bash with the script name as an argument, e.g. ''bash myscript''
* ''#!/bin/sh'' shebang
* depends on what ''/bin/sh'' actually is, for a Bash it means compatiblity mode, **not** native mode
See also:
* [[scripting:bashbehaviour#sh_mode | Bash startup mode: SH mode]]
* [[scripting:bashbehaviour#posix_run_mode | Bash run mode: POSIX mode]]
==== Your script named "test" doesn't execute ====
Give it another name. The executable ''test'' already exists.
In Bash it's a builtin. With other shells, it might be an executable file. Either way, it's bad name choice!
Workaround: You can call it using the pathname:
<code>
/home/user/bin/test
</code>
===== Globbing =====
==== Brace expansion is not globbing ====
The following command line is not related to globbing (filename expansion):
<code>
# YOU EXPECT
# -i1.vob -i2.vob -i3.vob ....
echo -i{*.vob,}
# YOU GET
# -i*.vob -i
</code>
**Why?** The brace expansion is simple text substitution. All possible text formed by the prefix, the postfix and the braces themselves are generated. In the example, these are only two: ''-i*.vob'' and ''-i''. The filename expansion happens **after** that, so there is a chance that ''-i*.vob'' is expanded to a filename - if you have files like ''-ihello.vob''. But it definitely doesn't do what you expected.
Please see:
* [[syntax:expansion:brace]]
===== Test-command =====
* ''if [ $foo ] ...''
* ''if [-d $dir] ...''
* ...
Please see:
* [[commands:classictest#pitfalls_summarized|The classic test command - pitfalls]]
===== Variables =====
==== Setting variables ====
=== The Dollar-Sign ===
There is no ''$'' (dollar-sign) when you reference the **name** of a variable! Bash is not PHP!
<code>
# THIS IS WRONG!
$myvar="Hello world!"
</code>
A variable name preceeded with a dollar-sign always means that the variable gets **expanded**. In the example above, it might expand to nothing (because it wasn't set), effectively resulting in...
<code>
="Hello world!"
</code>
...which **definitely is wrong**!
When you need the **name** of a variable, you write **only the name**, for example
* (as shown above) to set variables: ''picture=/usr/share/images/foo.png''
* to name variables to be used by the ''read'' builtin command: ''read picture''
* to name variables to be unset: ''unset picture''
When you need the **content** of a variable, you prefix its name with **a dollar-sign**, like
* echo "The used picture is: $picture"
=== Whitespace ===
Putting spaces on either or both sides of the equal-sign (''='') when assigning a value to a variable **will** fail.
<code>
# INCORRECT 1
example = Hello
# INCORRECT 2
example= Hello
# INCORRECT 3
example =Hello
</code>
The only valid form is **no spaces between the variable name and assigned value**:
<code>
# CORRECT 1
example=Hello
# CORRECT 2
example=" Hello"
</code>
==== Expanding (using) variables ====
A typical beginner's trap is quoting.
As noted above, when you want to **expand** a variable i.e. "get the content", the variable name needs to be prefixed with a dollar-sign. But, since Bash knows various ways to quote and does word-splitting, the result isn't always the same.
Let's define an example variable containing text with spaces:
<code>
example="Hello world"
</code>
^Used form^result^number of words^
|''$example'' |''Hello world''|2|
|''"$example"'' |''Hello world''|1|
|''\$example'' |''$example''|1|
|''<nowiki>'$example'</nowiki>'' |''$example''|1|
If you use parameter expansion, you **must** use the **name** (''PATH'') of the referenced variables/parameters. i.e. **not** (''$PATH''):
<code>
# WRONG!
echo "The first character of PATH is ${$PATH:0:1}"
# CORRECT
echo "The first character of PATH is ${PATH:0:1}"
</code>
Note that if you are using variables in [[syntax:arith_expr | arithmetic expressions]], then the bare **name** is allowed:
<code>
((a=$a+7)) # Add 7 to a
((a = a + 7)) # Add 7 to a. Identical to the previous command.
((a += 7)) # Add 7 to a. Identical to the previous command.
a=$((a+7)) # POSIX-compatible version of previous code.
</code>
Please see:
* [[syntax:words]]
* [[syntax:quoting]]
* [[syntax:expansion:wordsplit]]
* [[syntax:pe]]
==== Exporting ====
Exporting a variable means giving **newly created** (child-)processes a copy of that variable. It does **not** copy a variable created in a child process back to the parent process. The following example does **not** work, since the variable ''hello'' is set in a child process (the process you execute to start that script ''./script.sh''):
<code>
$ cat script.sh
export hello=world
$ ./script.sh
$ echo $hello
$
</code>
Exporting is one-way. The direction is from parent process to child process, not the reverse. The above example **will** work, when you don't execute the script, but include ("source") it:
<code>
$ source ./script.sh
$ echo $hello
world
$
</code>
In this case, the export command is of no use.
Please see:
* [[scripting:processtree]]
===== Exit codes =====
==== Reacting to exit codes ====
If you just want to react to an exit code, regardless of its specific value, you **don't need** to use ''$?'' in a test command like this:
<code bash>
grep ^root: /etc/passwd >/dev/null 2>&1
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "root was not found - check the pub at the corner"
fi
</code>
This can be simplified to:
<code bash>
if ! grep ^root: /etc/passwd >/dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "root was not found - check the pub at the corner"
fi
</code>
Or, simpler yet:
<code bash>
grep ^root: /etc/passwd >/dev/null 2>&1 || echo "root was not found - check the pub at the corner"
</code>
If you need the specific value of ''$?'', there's no other choice. But if you need only a "true/false" exit indication, there's no need for ''$?''.
See also:
* [[scripting:basics#exit_codes | Exit codes]]
==== Output vs. Return Value ====
It's important to remember the different ways to run a child command, and whether you want the output, the return value, or neither.
When you want to run a command (or a pipeline) and save (or print) the **output**, whether as a string or an array, you use Bash's ''$(command)'' syntax:
<code>
$(ls -l /tmp)
newvariable=$(printf "foo")
</code>
When you want to use the **return value** of a command, just use the command, or add ( ) to run a command or pipeline in a subshell:
<code>
if grep someuser /etc/passwd ; then
# do something
fi
if ( w | grep someuser | grep sqlplus ) ; then
# someuser is logged in and running sqlplus
fi
</code>
Make sure you're using the form you intended:
<code>
# WRONG!
if $(grep ERROR /var/log/messages) ; then
# send alerts
fi
</code>
Please see:
* [[syntax:ccmd:intro]]
* [[syntax:expansion:cmdsubst]]
* [[syntax:ccmd:grouping_subshell]]