# Pathname expansion (globbing) ## General Unlike on other platforms you may have seen, on UNIX(r), the shell is responsible for interpreting and expanding globs (\"filename wildcards\"). A called program will never see the glob itself; it will only see the expanded filenames as its arguments (here, all filenames matching `*.log`): grep "changes:" *.log The base syntax for the pathname expansion is the [pattern matching](../../syntax/pattern.md) syntax. The pattern you describe is matched against all existing filenames and the matching ones are substituted. Since this substitution happens **after [word splitting](../../syntax/expansion/wordsplit.md)**, all resulting filenames are literal and treated as separate words, no matter how many spaces or other `IFS`-characters they contain. ## Normal behaviour - with [the set command](../../commands/builtin/set.md) (`-f`, `noglob`) you can entirely disable pathname expansion - when matching a pathname, the slash-character (`/`) always needs to be matched explicitly - the dot at the beginning of a filename must be matched explicitly (also one following a `/` in the glob) - a glob that doesn\'t match a filename is unchanged and remains what it is ## Customization - when the shell option `nullglob` is set, non-matching globs are removed, rather than preserved - when the shell option `failglob` is set, non-matching globs produce an error message and the current command is not executed - when the shell option `nocaseglob` is set, the match is performed case-insensitive - when the shell option `dotglob` is set, wildcard-characters can match a dot at the beginning of a filename - when the shell option `dirspell` is set, Bash performs spelling corrections when matching directory names - when the shell option `globstar` is set, the glob `**` will recursively match all files and directories. This glob isn\'t \"configurable\", i.e. you **can\'t** do something like `**.c` to recursively get all `*.c` filenames. - when the shell option `globasciiranges` is set, the bracket-range globs (e.g. `[A-Z]`) use C locale order rather than the configured locale\'s order (i.e. `ABC...abc...` instead of e.g. `AaBbCc...`) - since 4.3-alpha - the variable [GLOBIGNORE](../../syntax/shellvars.md#GLOBIGNORE) can be set to a colon-separated list of patterns to be removed from the list before it is returned ### nullglob Normally, when no glob specified matches an existing filename, no pathname expansion is performed, and the globs are [**not**]{.underline} removed: $ echo "Textfiles here:" *.txt Textfiles here: *.txt In this example, no files matched the pattern, so the glob was left intact (a literal asterisk, followed by dot-txt). This can be very annoying, for example when you drive a [for-loop](../../syntax/ccmd/classic_for.md) using the pathname expansion: for filename in *.txt; do echo "=== BEGIN: $filename ===" cat "$filename" echo "=== END: $filename ===" done When no file name matches the glob, the loop will not only output stupid text (\"`BEGIN: *.txt`\"), but also will make the `cat`-command fail with an error, since no file named `*.txt` exists. Now, when the shell option `nullglob` is set, Bash will remove the entire glob from the command line. In case of the for-loop here, not even one iteration will be done. It just won\'t run. So in our first example: $ shopt -s nullglob $ echo "Textfiles here:" *.txt Textfiles here: and the glob is gone. ### Glob characters - \* - means \'match any number of characters\'. \'/\' is not matched (and depending on your settings, things like \'.\' may or may not be matched, see above) - ? - means \'match any single character\' - \[abc\] - match any of the characters listed. This syntax also supports ranges, like \[0-9\] For example, to match something beginning with either \'S\' or \'K\' followed by two numbers, followed by at least 3 more characters: [SK][0-9][0-9]???* ## See also - [Introduction to expansion and substitution](../../syntax/expansion/intro.md) - [pattern matching syntax](../../syntax/pattern.md) - [the set builtin command](../../commands/builtin/set.md) - [the shopt builtin command](../../commands/builtin/shopt.md) - [list of shell options](../../internals/shell_options.md)