8.4 KiB
Bash 4 - a rough overview
:V4:
| 🐚 Attention: Since Bash 4 has been around for quite some time now (4.3 will come soon), I consider it to be "standard". This page is not maintained anymore and is left here to keep your links working. See the
bashchanges page for new stuff introduced. |
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Besides many bugfixes since Bash 3.2, Bash 4 will bring some interesting new features for shell users and scripters. See also bashchanges for a small general overview with more details.
Not all of the changes and news are included here, just the biggest or most interesting ones. The changes to completion, and the readline component are not covered. Though, if you're familiar with these parts of Bash (and Bash 4), feel free to write a chapter here.
The complete list of fixes and changes is in the CHANGES or NEWS file of your Bash 4 distribution.
<WRAP center round download 60%> The current available stable version is 4.4.18 release (February 03, 2018):
</WRAP>
New or changed commands and keywords
The new "coproc" keyword
Bash 4 introduces the concepts of coprocesses, a well known feature of other shells. The basic concept is simple: It will start any command in the background and set up an array that is populated with accessible files that represent the filedescriptors of the started process.
In other words: It lets you start a process in background and communicate with its input and output data streams.
The new "mapfile" builtin
The mapfile
builtin is able to map the lines of a file directly into
an array. This avoids having to fill an array yourself using a loop. It
enables you to define the range of lines to read, and optionally call a
callback, for example to display a progress bar.
See: mapfile
Changes to the "case" keyword
The case
construct understands two new action list terminators:
The ;&
terminator causes execution to continue with the next action
list (rather than terminate the case
construct).
The ;;&
terminator causes the case
construct to test the next given
pattern instead of terminating the whole execution.
See case
Changes to the "declare" builtin
The -p
option now prints all attributes and values of declared
variables (or functions, when used with -f
). The output is fully
re-usable as input.
The new option -l
declares a variable in a way that the content is
converted to lowercase on assignment. For uppercase, the same applies to
-u
. The option -c
causes the content to be capitalized before
assignment.
declare -A
declares associative arrays (see below).
Changes to the "read" builtin
The read
builtin command has some interesting new features.
The -t
option to specify a timeout value has been slightly tuned. It
now accepts fractional values and the special value 0 (zero). When
-t 0
is specified, read
immediately returns with an exit status
indicating if there's data waiting or not. However, when a timeout is
given, and the read
builtin times out, any partial data recieved up to
the timeout is stored in the given variable, rather than lost. When a
timeout is hit, read
exits with a code greater than 128.
A new option, -i
, was introduced to be able to preload the input
buffer with some text (when Readline is used, with -e
). The user is
able to change the text, or press return to accept it.
See read
Changes to the "help" builtin
The builtin itself didn't change much, but the data displayed is more structured now. The help texts are in a better format, much easier to read.
There are two new options: -d
displays the summary of a help text,
-m
displays a manpage-like format.
Changes to the "ulimit" builtin
Besides the use of the 512 bytes blocksize everywhere in POSIX mode,
ulimit
supports two new limits: -b
for max socket buffer size and
-T
for max number of threads.
Expansions
Brace Expansion
The brace expansion was tuned to provide expansion results with leading zeros when requesting a row of numbers.
See brace
Parameter Expansion
Methods to modify the case on expansion time have been added.
On expansion time you can modify the syntax by adding operators to the parameter name.
See Case modification on parameter expansion
Substring expansion
When using substring expansion on the positional parameters, a starting index of 0 now causes $0 to be prepended to the list (if the positional parameters are used). Before, this expansion started with $1:
# this should display $0 on Bash v4, $1 on Bash v3
echo ${@:0:1}
Globbing
There's a new shell option globstar
. When enabled, Bash will perform
recursive globbing on **
-- this means it matches all directories and
files from the current position in the filesystem, rather than only the
current level.
The new shell option dirspell
enables spelling corrections on
directory names during globbing.
See globs
Associative Arrays
Besides the classic method of integer indexed arrays, Bash 4 supports associative arrays.
An associative array is an array indexed by an arbitrary string, something like
declare -A ASSOC
ASSOC[First]="first element"
ASSOC[Hello]="second element"
ASSOC[Peter Pan]="A weird guy"
See arrays
Redirection
There is a new &>>
redirection operator, which appends the standard
output and standard error to the named file. This is the same as the
good old >>FILE 2>&1
notation.
The parser now understands |&
as a synonym for 2>&1 |
, which
redirects the standard error for a command through a pipe.
See redirection
Interesting new shell variables
Variable | Description |
---|---|
BASHPID | contains the PID of the current shell (this is different than what $$ does!) |
PROMPT_DIRTRIM | specifies the max. level of unshortened pathname elements in the prompt |
FUNCNEST | control the maximum number of shell function recursions |
See shellvars
Interesting new Shell Options
The mentioned shell options are off by default unless otherwise mentioned.
Option | Description |
---|---|
checkjobs |
check for and report any running jobs at shell exit |
compat* |
set compatiblity modes for older shell versions (influences regular expression matching in [[ ... ]] |
dirspell |
enables spelling corrections on directory names during globbing |
globstar |
enables recursive globbing with ** |
lastpipe |
(4.2) to execute the last command in a pipeline in the current environment |
See shell_options
Misc
- If a command is not found, the shell attempts to execute a shell
function named
command_not_found_handle
, supplying the command words as the function arguments. This can be used to display userfriendly messages or perform different command searches - The behaviour of the
set -e
(errexit
) mode was changed, it now acts more intuitive (and is better documented in the manpage). - The output target for the
xtrace
(set -x
/set +x
) feature is configurable since Bash 4.1 (previously, it was fixed tostderr
): a variable named BASH_XTRACEFD can be set to the filedescriptor that should get the output - Bash 4.1 is able to log the history to syslog (only to be enabled at
compile time in
config-top.h
)