5454 lines
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5454 lines
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<ol class="chapter"><li class="chapter-item expanded affix "><a href="zshguide.html">A User's Guide to the Z-Shell</a></li><li class="chapter-item expanded "><a href="zshguide01.html"><strong aria-hidden="true">1.</strong> A short introduction</a></li><li class="chapter-item expanded "><a href="zshguide02.html"><strong aria-hidden="true">2.</strong> What to put in your startup files</a></li><li class="chapter-item expanded "><a href="zshguide03.html" class="active"><strong aria-hidden="true">3.</strong> Dealing with basic shell syntax</a></li><li class="chapter-item expanded "><a href="zshguide04.html"><strong aria-hidden="true">4.</strong> The Z-Shell Line Editor</a></li><li class="chapter-item expanded "><a href="zshguide05.html"><strong aria-hidden="true">5.</strong> Substitutions</a></li><li class="chapter-item expanded "><a href="zshguide06.html"><strong aria-hidden="true">6.</strong> Completion, old and new</a></li><li class="chapter-item expanded "><a href="zshguide07.html"><strong aria-hidden="true">7.</strong> Modules and other bits and pieces Not written</a></li></ol>
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<main>
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<!-- START doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update -->
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<!-- DON'T EDIT THIS SECTION, INSTEAD RE-RUN doctoc TO UPDATE -->
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<p><strong>Table of Contents</strong> <em>generated with <a href="https://github.com/thlorenz/doctoc">DocToc</a></em></p>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#chapter-3-dealing-with-basic-shell-syntax">Chapter 3: Dealing with basic shell syntax</a>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#31-external-commands">3.1: External commands</a></li>
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<li><a href="#32-builtin-commands">3.2: Builtin commands</a>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#321-builtins-for-printing">3.2.1: Builtins for printing</a></li>
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<li><a href="#322-other-builtins-just-for-speed">3.2.2: Other builtins just for speed</a></li>
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<li><a href="#323-builtins-which-change-the-shells-state">3.2.3: Builtins which change the shell's state</a></li>
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<li><a href="#324-cd-and-friends">3.2.4: cd and friends</a></li>
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<li><a href="#325-command-control-and-information-commands">3.2.5: Command control and information commands</a></li>
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<li><a href="#326-parameter-control">3.2.6: Parameter control</a></li>
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<li><a href="#327-history-control-commands">3.2.7: History control commands</a></li>
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<li><a href="#328-job-control-and-process-control">3.2.8: Job control and process control</a></li>
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<li><a href="#329-terminals-users-etc">3.2.9: Terminals, users, etc.</a></li>
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<li><a href="#3210-syntactic-oddments">3.2.10: Syntactic oddments</a></li>
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<li><a href="#3211-more-precommand-modifiers-exec-noglob">3.2.11: More precommand modifiers: <code>exec</code>, <code>noglob</code></a></li>
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<li><a href="#3212-testing-things">3.2.12: Testing things</a></li>
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<li><a href="#3213-handling-options-to-functions-and-scripts">3.2.13: Handling options to functions and scripts</a></li>
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<li><a href="#3214-random-file-control-things">3.2.14: Random file control things</a></li>
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<li><a href="#3215-dont-watch-this-space-watch-some-other">3.2.15: Don't watch this space, watch some other</a></li>
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<li><a href="#3216-and-also">3.2.16: And also</a></li>
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</ul>
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</li>
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<li><a href="#33-functions">3.3: Functions</a>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#331-loading-functions">3.3.1: Loading functions</a></li>
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<li><a href="#332-function-parameters">3.3.2: Function parameters</a></li>
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<li><a href="#333-compiling-functions">3.3.3: Compiling functions</a></li>
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</ul>
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</li>
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<li><a href="#34-aliases">3.4: Aliases</a></li>
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<li><a href="#35-command-summary">3.5: Command summary</a></li>
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<li><a href="#36-expansions-and-quotes">3.6: Expansions and quotes</a>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#361-history-expansion">3.6.1: History expansion</a></li>
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<li><a href="#362-alias-expansion">3.6.2: Alias expansion</a></li>
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<li><a href="#363-process-parameter-command-arithmetic-and-brace-expansion">3.6.3: Process, parameter, command, arithmetic and brace expansion</a></li>
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<li><a href="#364-filename-expansion">3.6.4: Filename Expansion</a></li>
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<li><a href="#365-filename-generation">3.6.5: Filename Generation</a></li>
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</ul>
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</li>
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<li><a href="#37-redirection-greater-thans-and-less-thans">3.7: Redirection: greater-thans and less-thans</a>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#371-clobber">3.7.1: Clobber</a></li>
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<li><a href="#372-file-descriptors">3.7.2: File descriptors</a></li>
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<li><a href="#373-appending-here-documents-here-strings-read-write">3.7.3: Appending, here documents, here strings, read write</a></li>
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<li><a href="#374-clever-tricks-exec-and-other-file-descriptors">3.7.4: Clever tricks: exec and other file descriptors</a></li>
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<li><a href="#375-multios">3.7.5: Multios</a></li>
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</ul>
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</li>
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<li><a href="#38-shell-syntax-loops-subshells-and-so-on">3.8: Shell syntax: loops, (sub)shells and so on</a>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#381-logical-command-connectors">3.8.1: Logical command connectors</a></li>
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<li><a href="#382-structures">3.8.2: Structures</a></li>
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<li><a href="#383-subshells-and-current-shell-constructs">3.8.3: Subshells and current shell constructs</a></li>
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<li><a href="#384-subshells-and-current-shells">3.8.4: Subshells and current shells</a></li>
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</ul>
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</li>
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<li><a href="#39-emulation-and-portability">3.9: Emulation and portability</a>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#391-differences-in-detail">3.9.1: Differences in detail</a></li>
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<li><a href="#392-making-your-own-scripts-and-functions-portable">3.9.2: Making your own scripts and functions portable</a></li>
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</ul>
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</li>
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<li><a href="#310-running-scripts">3.10: Running scripts</a></li>
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</ul>
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</li>
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</ul>
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<!-- END doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update -->
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<p><span id="syntax"></span><span id="l29"></span></p>
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<h1 id="chapter-3-dealing-with-basic-shell-syntax"><a class="header" href="#chapter-3-dealing-with-basic-shell-syntax">Chapter 3: Dealing with basic shell syntax</a></h1>
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<p>This chapter is a more thorough examination of much of what appeared in
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the <a href="zshguide02.html#init">chapter 2</a>; to be more specific, I assume
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you're sitting in front of your terminal about to use the features you
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just set up in your initialisation files and want to know enough to get
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them going. Actually, you will probably spend most of the time editing
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command lines and in particular completing commands --- both of these
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activities are covered in later chapters. For now I'm going to talk
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about commands and the syntax that goes along with using them. This will
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let you write shell functions and scripts to do more of your work for
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you.</p>
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<p>In the following there are often several consecutive paragraphs about
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quite minor features. If you find you read this all through the first
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time, maybe you need to get out more. Most people will probably find it
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better to skim through to find what the subject matter is, then come
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back if they later find they want to know more about a particular aspect
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of the shell's commands and syntax.</p>
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<p>One aspect of the syntax is left to <a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter 5</a>:
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there's just so much to it, and it can be so useful if you know enough
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to get it right, that it can't all be squashed in here. The subject is
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expansion, covering a multitude of things such as parameter expansion,
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globbing and history expansions. You've already met the basics of these
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in <a href="zshguide02.html#init">chapter 2</a>; but if you want to know how to
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pick a particular file with a globbing expression with pinpoint
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accuracy, or how to make a single parameter expansion reduce a long
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expression to the words you need, you should read that chapter; it's
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more or less self-contained, so you don't necessarily need to know
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everything in this one.</p>
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<p>We start with the most basic issue in any command line interpreter,
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running commands. As you know, you just type words separated by spaces,
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where the first word is a command and the remainder are arguments to it.
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It's important to distinguish between the types of command.</p>
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<p><span id="l30"></span></p>
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<h2 id="31-external-commands"><a class="header" href="#31-external-commands">3.1: External commands</a></h2>
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<p>External commands are the easiest, because they have the least
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interaction with the shell --- many of the commands provided by the
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shell itself, which are described in the next section, are built into
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the shell especially to avoid this difficulty.</p>
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<p>The only major issue is therefore how to find them. This is done through
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the parameters <code>$path</code> and <code>$PATH</code>, which, as I described in <a href="zshguide02.html#init">chapter
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2</a>, are tied together because although the first
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one is more useful inside the shell --- being an array, its various
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|
parts can be manipulated separately --- the second is the one that is
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|
used by other commands called by the shell; in the jargon, <code>$PATH</code> is
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`exported to the environment', which means exactly that other commands
|
|
called by the shell can see its value.</p>
|
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<p>So suppose your <code>$path</code> contains</p>
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<pre><code> /home/pws/bin /usr/local/bin /bin /usr/bin
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</code></pre>
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<p>and you try to run `<code>ls</code>'. The shell first looks in <code>/home/pws/bin</code> for
|
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a command called <code>ls</code>, then in <code>/usr/local/bin</code>, then in <code>/bin</code>, where
|
|
it finds it, so it executes <code>/bin/ls</code>. Actually, the operating system
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itself knows about paths if you execute a command the right way, so the
|
|
shell doesn't strictly need to.</p>
|
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<p>There is a subtlety here. The shell tries to remember where the commands
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are, so it can find them again the next time. It keeps them in a
|
|
so-called `hash table', and you find the word `hash' all over the
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place in the documentation: all it means is a fast way of finding some
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|
value, given a particular key. In this case, given the name of a
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command, the shell can find the path to it quickly. You can see this
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table, in the form `<em>key</em><code>=</code><em>value</em>', by typing `<code>hash</code>'.</p>
|
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<p>In fact the shell only does this when the option <code>HASH_CMDS</code> is set, as
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it is by default. As you might expect, it stops searching when it finds
|
|
the directory with the command it's looking for. There is an extra
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|
optimisation in the option <code>HASH_ALL</code>, also set by default: when the
|
|
shell scans a directory to find a command, it will add all the other
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|
commands in that directory to the hash table. This is sensible because
|
|
on most UNIX-like operating systems reading a whole lot of files in the
|
|
same directory is quite fast.</p>
|
|
<p>The way commands are stored has other consequences. In particular, zsh
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|
won't look for a new command if it already knows where to find one. If I
|
|
put a new <code>ls</code> command in <code>/usr/local/bin</code> in the above example, zsh
|
|
would continue to use <code>/bin/ls</code> (assuming it had already been found). To
|
|
fix this, there is the command <code>rehash</code>, which actually empties the
|
|
command hash table, so that finding commands starts again from scratch.
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|
Users of csh may remember having to type <code>rehash</code> quite a lot with new
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|
commands: it's not so bad in zsh, because if no command was already
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hashed, or the existing one disappeared, zsh will automatically scan the
|
|
path again; furthermore, zsh performs a <code>rehash</code> of its own accord if
|
|
<code>$path</code> is altered. So adding a new duplicate command somewhere towards
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|
the head of <code>$path</code> is the main reason for needing <code>rehash</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>One thing that can happen if zsh hasn't filled its command hash table
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|
and so doesn't know about all external commands is that the <code>AUTO_CD</code>
|
|
option, mentioned in the previous chapter and again below, can think you
|
|
are trying to change to a particular directory with the same name as the
|
|
command. This is one of the drawbacks of <code>AUTO_CD</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>To be a little bit more technical, it's actually not so obvious that
|
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command hashing is needed at all; many modern operating systems can find
|
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commands quickly without it. The clincher in the case of zsh is that the
|
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same hash table is necessary for command completion, a very commonly
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used feature. If you type `<code>compr<TAB></code>', the shell completes this to
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`<code>compress</code>'. It can only do this if it has a list of commands to
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complete, and this is the hash table. (In this case it didn't need to
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know where to find the command, just its name, but it's only a little
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extra work to store that too.) If you were following the previous
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paragraphs, you'll realise zsh doesn't necessarily know <em>all</em> the
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possible commands at the time you hit <code>TAB</code>, because it only looks when
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it needs to. For this purpose, there is another option, <code>HASH_LIST_ALL</code>,
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|
again set by default, which will make sure the command hash table is
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|
full when you try to complete a command. It only needs to do this once
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|
(unless you alter <code>$path</code>), but it does mean the first command
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|
completion is slow. If <code>HASH_LIST_ALL</code> is not set, command completion is
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not available: the shell could be rewritten to search the path
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laboriously every single time you try to complete a command name, but it
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|
just doesn't seem worth it.</p>
|
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<p>The fact that <code>$PATH</code> is passed on from the shell to commands called
|
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from it (strictly only if the variable is marked for export, as it
|
|
usually is --- this is described in more detail with the <code>typeset</code>
|
|
family of builtin commands below) also has consequences. Some commands
|
|
call subcommands of their own using <code>$PATH</code>. If you have that set to
|
|
something unusual, so that some of the standard commands can't be found,
|
|
it could happen that a command which <em>is</em> found nonetheless doesn't run
|
|
properly because it's searching for something it can't find in the path
|
|
passed down to it. That can lead to some strange and confusing error
|
|
messages.</p>
|
|
<p>One important thing to remember about external commands is that the
|
|
shell continues to exist while they are running; it just hangs around
|
|
doing nothing, waiting for the job to finish (though you can tell it not
|
|
to, as we'll see). The command is given a completely new environment in
|
|
which to run; changes in that don't affect the shell, which simply
|
|
starts up where it left off after the command has run. So if you need to
|
|
do something which changes the state of the shell, an external command
|
|
isn't good enough. This brings us to builtin commands.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l31"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="32-builtin-commands"><a class="header" href="#32-builtin-commands">3.2: Builtin commands</a></h2>
|
|
<p>Builtin commands, or builtins for short, are commands which are part of
|
|
the shell itself. Since builtins are necessary for controlling the
|
|
shell's own behaviour, introducing them actually serves as an
|
|
introduction to quite a lot of what is going on in the shell. So a fair
|
|
fraction of what would otherwise appear later in the chapter has
|
|
accumulated here, one way or another. This does make things a little
|
|
tricksy in places; count how many times I use the word `<code>subtle</code>' and
|
|
keep it for your grandchildren to see.</p>
|
|
<p>I just described one reason for builtins, but there's a simpler one:
|
|
speed. Going through the process of setting up an entirely new
|
|
environment for the command at the beginning, swapping between this
|
|
command and anything else which is being run on the computer, then
|
|
destroying it again at the end is considerable overkill if all you want
|
|
to do is, say, print out a message on the screen. So there are builtins
|
|
for this sort of thing.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l32"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="321-builtins-for-printing"><a class="header" href="#321-builtins-for-printing">3.2.1: Builtins for printing</a></h3>
|
|
<p>The commands `<code>echo</code>' and `<code>print</code>' are shell builtins; they just show
|
|
what you typed, after the shell has removed all the quoting. The
|
|
difference between the two is really historical: `<code>echo</code>' came first,
|
|
and only handled a few simple options; ksh provided `<code>print</code>', which
|
|
had more complex options and so became a different command. The
|
|
difference remains between the two commands in zsh; if you want wacky
|
|
effects, you should look to <code>print</code>. Note that there is usually also an
|
|
external command called <code>echo</code>, which may not be identical to zsh's;
|
|
there is no standard external command called <code>print</code>, but if someone has
|
|
installed one on your system, the chances are it sends something to the
|
|
printer, not the screen.</p>
|
|
<p>One special effect is `<code>print -z</code>' puts the arguments onto the editing
|
|
buffer stack, a list maintained by the shell of things you are about to
|
|
edit. Try:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print -z print -z print This is a line
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(it may look as if something needs quoting, but it doesn't) and hit
|
|
return three times. The first time caused everything after the first
|
|
`<code>print -z</code>' to appear for you to edit, and so on.</p>
|
|
<p>For something more useful, you can write functions that give you a line
|
|
to edit:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> fn() { print -z print The time now is $(date); }
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Now when you type `<code>fn</code>', the line with the date appears on the command
|
|
line for you to edit. The option `<code>-s</code>' is a bit similar; the line
|
|
appears in the history list, so you will see it if you use up-arrow, but
|
|
it doesn't reappear automatically.</p>
|
|
<p>A few other useful options, some of which you've already seen, are</p>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li><strong><code>-r</code></strong><br />
|
|
don't interpret special character sequences like `<code>\n</code>'</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>-P</code></strong><br />
|
|
use `<code>%</code>' as in prompts</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>-n</code></strong><br />
|
|
don't put a newline at the end in case there's more output to follow</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>-c</code></strong><br />
|
|
print the output in columns --- this means that `<code>print -c *</code>' has
|
|
the effect of a sort of poor person's `<code>ls</code>', only faster</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>-l</code></strong><br />
|
|
use one line per argument instead of one column, which is sometimes
|
|
useful for sticking lists into files, and for working out what part
|
|
of an array parameter is in each element.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p>If you don't use the <code>-r</code> option, there are a whole lot of special
|
|
character sequences. Many of these may be familiar to you from C.</p>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\n</code></strong><br />
|
|
newline</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\t</code></strong><br />
|
|
tab</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\e</code> or <code>\E</code></strong><br />
|
|
escape character</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\a</code></strong><br />
|
|
ring the bell (alarm), usually a euphemism for a hideous beep</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\b</code></strong><br />
|
|
move back one character.</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\c</code></strong><br />
|
|
don't print a newline --- like the <code>-n</code> option, but embedded in the
|
|
string. This alternative comes from Berkeley UNIX.</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\f</code></strong><br />
|
|
form feed, the phrase for `advance to next page' from the days when
|
|
terminals were called teletypes, maybe more familiar to you as <code>^L</code></li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\r</code></strong><br />
|
|
carriage return --- when printed, the annoying <code>^M</code>'s you get in DOS
|
|
files, but actually rather useful with `<code>print</code>', since it will
|
|
erase everything to the start of the line. The combination of the
|
|
<code>-n</code> option and a <code>\r</code> at the start of the print string can give the
|
|
illusion of a continuously changing status line.</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>\v</code></strong><br />
|
|
vertical tab, which I for one have never used (I just tried it now
|
|
and it behaved like a newline, only without assuming a carriage
|
|
return, but that's up to your terminal).</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p>In fact, you can get any of the 255 characters possible, although your
|
|
terminal may not like some or all of the ones above 127, by specifying a
|
|
number after the backslash. Normally this consists of three octal
|
|
characters, but you can use two hexadecimal characters after <code>\x</code>
|
|
instead --- so `<code>\n</code>', `<code>\012</code>' and `<code>\x0a</code>' are all newlines. `<code>\</code>'
|
|
itself escapes any other character, i.e. they appear as themselves even
|
|
if they normally wouldn't.</p>
|
|
<p>Two notes: first, don't get confused because `<code>n</code>' is the fourteenth
|
|
letter of the alphabet; printing `<code>\016</code>' (fourteen in octal) won't do
|
|
you any good. The remedy, after you discover your text is unreadable
|
|
(for VT100-like terminals including xterm), is to print `<code>\017</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p>Secondly, those backslashes can land you in real quoting difficulties.
|
|
Normally a backslash on the command line escapes the next character ---
|
|
this is a <em>different</em> form of escaping to <code>print</code>'s --- so</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print \n
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>doesn't produce a newline, it just prints out an `<code>n</code>'. So you need to
|
|
quote that. This means</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print \\
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>passes a single backslash to quote, and</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print \\n
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>or</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print '\n'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>prints a newline (followed by the extra one that's usually there). To
|
|
print a real backslash, you would thus need</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print \\\\
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Actually, you can get away with the two if there's nothing else after
|
|
--- <code>print</code> just shrugs its shoulders and outputs what it's been given
|
|
--- but that's not a good habit to get into. There are other ways of
|
|
doing this: since single quotes quote anything, including backslashes
|
|
(they are the only way of making backslashes behave like normal
|
|
characters), and since the `<code>-r</code>' option makes print treat characters
|
|
normally,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print -r '\'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>has the same effect. But you need to remember the two levels of quoting
|
|
for backslashes. Quotes aren't special to <code>print</code>, so</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print \'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is good enough for printing a quote.</p>
|
|
<p><strong><code>echotc</code></strong></p>
|
|
<p>There's an oddity called `<code>echotc</code>', which takes as its argument
|
|
`termcap' capabilities. This now lives in its own module,
|
|
<code>zsh/termcap</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>Termcap is a now rather old-fashioned way of giving the commands
|
|
necessary for performing various standard operations on terminals:
|
|
moving the cursor, clearing to the end of the line, turning on standout
|
|
mode, and so on. It has now been replaced almost everywhere by
|
|
`terminfo', a completely different way of specifying capabilities, and
|
|
by `curses', a more advanced system for manipulating objects on a
|
|
character terminal. This means that the arguments you need to give to
|
|
<code>echotc</code> can be rather hard to come by; try the <code>termcap</code> manual page;
|
|
if there are two, it's probably the one in section five which gives the
|
|
codes, i.e. `<code>man 5 zsh</code>' or `<code>man -s 5 zsh</code>' on Solaris. Otherwise
|
|
you'll have to search the web. The reason the <code>zsh</code> manual doesn't give
|
|
a list is that the shell only uses a few well-known sequences, and there
|
|
are very many others which will work with <code>echotc</code>, because the
|
|
sequences are interpreted by a the terminal, not the shell.</p>
|
|
<p>This chunk gives you a flavour:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> zmodload -i zsh/termcap
|
|
echotc md
|
|
echo -n bold
|
|
echotc mr
|
|
echo -n reverse
|
|
echotc me
|
|
echo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>First we make sure the module is loaded into the shell; on some older
|
|
operating systems, this only works if it was compiled in when zsh was
|
|
installed. The option <code>-i</code> to <code>zmodload</code> stops the shell from
|
|
complaining if the module was already loaded. This is a sensible way of
|
|
ensuring you have the right facilities available in a shell function,
|
|
since loading a module makes it available until it is explicitly
|
|
unloaded.</p>
|
|
<p>You should see `<code>bold</code>' in bold characters, and `<code>reverse</code>' in bold
|
|
reverse video. The `<code>md</code>' capability turns on bold mode; `<code>mr</code>' turns
|
|
on reverse video; `<code>me</code>' turns off both modes. A more typical zsh way
|
|
of doing this is:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print -P '%Bbold%Sreverse%b%s'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which should show the same thing, but using prompt escapes --- prompts
|
|
are the most common use of special fonts. The `<code>%S</code>' is because zsh
|
|
calls reverse `standout' mode, because it does. (On a colour xterm, you
|
|
may find `bold' is interpreted as `blue'.)</p>
|
|
<p>There's a lot more you can do with <code>echotc</code> if you really try. The shell
|
|
has just acquired a way of printing terminfo sequences, predictably
|
|
called <code>echoti</code>, although it's only available on systems where zsh needs
|
|
terminfo to compile --- this happens when the termcap code is actually a
|
|
part of terminfo. The good news about this is that terminfo tends to be
|
|
better documented, so you have a good chance of finding out the
|
|
capabilities you want from the <code>terminfo</code> manual page. The <code>echoti</code>
|
|
command lives in another predictably named module, <code>zsh/terminfo</code>.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l33"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="322-other-builtins-just-for-speed"><a class="header" href="#322-other-builtins-just-for-speed">3.2.2: Other builtins just for speed</a></h3>
|
|
<p>There are only a few other builtins which are there just to make things
|
|
go faster. Strictly, tests could go into this category, but as I
|
|
explained in the last chapter it's useful to have tests in the form</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ $var1 = $var2 ]]; then
|
|
print doing something
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>be treated as a special syntax by the shell, in case <code>$var1</code> or <code>$var2</code>
|
|
expands to nothing which would otherwise confuse it. This example
|
|
consists of two features described below: the test itself, between the
|
|
double square brackets, which is true if the two substituted values are
|
|
the same string, and the `<code>if</code>' construct which runs the commands in
|
|
the middle (here just the <code>print</code>) if that test was true.</p>
|
|
<p>The builtins `<code>true</code>' and `<code>false</code>' do nothing at all, except return a
|
|
command status zero or one, respectively. They're just used as
|
|
placeholders: to run a loop forever --- <code>while</code> will also be explained
|
|
in more detail later --- you use</p>
|
|
<pre><code> while true; do
|
|
print doing something over and over
|
|
done
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>since the test always succeeds.</p>
|
|
<p>A synonym for `<code>true</code>' is `<code>:</code>'; it's often used in this form to give
|
|
arguments which have side effects but which shouldn't be used ---
|
|
something like</p>
|
|
<pre><code> : ${param:=value}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which is a common idiom in all Bourne shell derivatives. In the
|
|
parameter expansion, <code>$param</code> is given the value <code>value</code> if it was empty
|
|
before, and left alone otherwise. Since that was the only reason for the
|
|
parameter expansion, you use <code>:</code> to ignore the argument. Actually, the
|
|
shell blithely builds the command line --- the colon, followed by
|
|
whatever the value of <code>$param</code> is, whether or not the assignment
|
|
happened --- then executes the command; it just so happens that `<code>:</code>'
|
|
takes no notice of the arguments it was given. If you're switching from
|
|
ksh, you may expect certain synonyms like this to be aliases, rather
|
|
than builtins themselves, but in zsh they are actually builtins; there
|
|
are no aliases predefined by the shell. (You can still get rid of them
|
|
using `<code>disable</code>', as described below.)</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l34"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="323-builtins-which-change-the-shells-state"><a class="header" href="#323-builtins-which-change-the-shells-state">3.2.3: Builtins which change the shell's state</a></h3>
|
|
<p>A more common use for builtins is that they change something inside the
|
|
shell, or report information about what's going on in the shell. There
|
|
is one vital thing to remember about external commands. It applies, too,
|
|
to other cases we'll meet where the shell `forks', literally splitting
|
|
itself into two parts, where the forked-off part behaves just like an
|
|
external command. In both of these cases, the command is in a different
|
|
<em>process</em>, UNIX's basic unit of things that run. (In fact, even Windows
|
|
knows about processes nowadays, although they interact a little bit
|
|
differently with one another.)</p>
|
|
<p>The vital thing is that no change in a separate process started by the
|
|
shell affects the shell itself. The most common case of this is the
|
|
current directory --- every process has its own current directory. You
|
|
can see this by starting a new zsh:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % pwd # show the current directory
|
|
~
|
|
% zsh # start a new shell, which
|
|
# is a separate process
|
|
% cd tmp
|
|
% pwd # now I'm in a different
|
|
# directory...
|
|
~/tmp
|
|
% exit # leave the new shell...
|
|
% pwd # now I'm back where I was...
|
|
~
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Hence the <code>cd</code> command must be a shell builtin, or this would happen
|
|
every time you ran it.</p>
|
|
<p>Here's a more useful example. Putting parentheses around a command asks
|
|
the shell to start a different process for it. That's useful when you
|
|
specifically <em>don't</em> want the effects propagating back:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> (cd some-other-dir; run-some-command)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>runs the command, but doesn't change the directory the `real' shell is
|
|
in, only its forked-off `subshell'. Hence,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % pwd
|
|
~
|
|
% (cd /; pwd)
|
|
/
|
|
% pwd
|
|
~
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>There's a more subtle case:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> cd some-other-dir | print Hello
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Remember, the `<code>|</code>' (`pipe') connects the output of the first command
|
|
to the input of the next --- though actually no information is passed
|
|
that way in this example. In zsh, all but the last portion of the
|
|
`pipeline' thus created is run in different processes. Hence the <code>cd</code>
|
|
doesn't affect the main shell. I'll refer to it as the `parent' shell,
|
|
which is the standard UNIX language for processes; when you start
|
|
another command or fork off a subshell, you are creating `children'
|
|
(without meaning to be morbid, the children usually die first in this
|
|
case). Thus, as you would guess,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print Hello | cd some-other-dir
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p><em>does</em> have the effect of changing the directory. Note that other shells
|
|
do this differently; it is always guaranteed to work this way in zsh,
|
|
because many people rely on it for setting parameters, but many shells
|
|
have the <em>left</em> hand of the pipeline being the bit that runs in the
|
|
parent shell. If both sides of the pipe symbol are external commands of
|
|
some sort, both will of course run in subprocesses.</p>
|
|
<p>There are other ways you change the state of the shell, for example by
|
|
declaring parameters of a particular type, or by telling it how to
|
|
interpret certain commands, or, of course, by changing options. Here are
|
|
the most useful, grouped in a vaguely logical fashion.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l35"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="324-cd-and-friends"><a class="header" href="#324-cd-and-friends">3.2.4: cd and friends</a></h3>
|
|
<p>You will not by now be surprised to learn that the `<code>cd</code>' command
|
|
changes directory. There is a synonym, `<code>chdir</code>', which as far as I
|
|
know no-one ever uses. (It's the same name as the system call, so if you
|
|
had been programming in C or Perl and forgot that you were now using the
|
|
shell, you might use `<code>chdir</code>'. But that seems a bit far-fetched.)</p>
|
|
<p>There are various extra features built into <code>cd</code> and <code>chdir</code>. First, if
|
|
you miss out the directory to which you want to change, you will be
|
|
taken to your home directory, although it's not as if `<code>cd ~</code>' is all
|
|
that hard to type.</p>
|
|
<p>Next, the command `<code>cd -</code>' is special: it takes you to the last
|
|
directory you were in. If you do a sequence of <code>cd</code> commands, only the
|
|
immediately preceding directory is remembered; they are not stacked up.</p>
|
|
<p>Thirdly, there is a shortcut for changing between similarly named
|
|
directories. If you type `<code>cd <old> <new></code>', then the shell will look
|
|
for the first occurrence of the string `<code><old></code>' in the current
|
|
directory, and try to replace it with `<code><new></code>'. For example,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % pwd
|
|
~/src/zsh-3.0.8/Src
|
|
% cd 0.8 1.9
|
|
~/src/zsh-3.1.9/Src
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The <code>cd</code> command actually reported the new directory, as it usually does
|
|
if it's not entirely obvious where it's taken you.</p>
|
|
<p>Note that only the <em>first</em> match of <code><old></code> is taken. It's an easy
|
|
mistake to think you can change from
|
|
<code>/home/export1/pws/mydir1/something</code> to
|
|
<code>/home/export1/pws/mydir2/something</code> with `<code>cd 1 2</code>', but that first
|
|
`<code>1</code>' messes it up. Arguably the shell could be smarter here. Of
|
|
course, `<code>cd r1 r2</code>' will work in this case.</p>
|
|
<p><code>cd</code>'s friend `<code>pwd</code>' (print working directory) tells you what the
|
|
current working directory is; this information is also available in the
|
|
shell parameter <code>$PWD</code>, which is special and automatically updated when
|
|
the directory changes. Later, when you know all about expansion, you
|
|
will find that you can do tricks with this to refer to other
|
|
directories. For example, <code>${PWD/old/new}</code> uses the parameter
|
|
substitution mechanism to refer to a different directory with <code>old</code>
|
|
replaced by <code>new</code> --- and this time <code>old</code> can be a pattern, i.e.
|
|
something with wildcard matches in it. So if you are in the
|
|
<code>zsh-3.0.8/Src</code> directory as above and want to copy a file from the
|
|
<code>zsh-3.1.9/Src</code> directory, you have a shorthand:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> cp ${PWD/0.8/1.9}/myfile.c .
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p><strong>Symbolic links</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Zsh tries to track directories across symbolic links. If you're not
|
|
familiar with these, you can think of them as a filename which behaves
|
|
like a pointer to another file (a little like Windows' shortcuts, though
|
|
UNIX has had them for much longer and they work better). You create them
|
|
like this (<code>ln</code> is not a builtin command, but its use to make symbolic
|
|
links is very standard these days):</p>
|
|
<pre><code> ln -s existing-file-name name-of-link
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>for example</p>
|
|
<pre><code> ln -s /usr/bin/ln ln
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>creates a file called <code>ln</code> in the current directory which does nothing
|
|
but point to the file <code>/usr/bin/ln</code>. Symbolic links are very good at
|
|
behaving as much like the original file as you usually want; for
|
|
example, you can run the <code>ln</code> link you've just created as if it were
|
|
<code>/usr/bin/ln</code>. They show up differently in a long file listing with
|
|
`<code>ls -l</code>', the last column showing the file they point to.</p>
|
|
<p>You can make them point to any sort of file at all, including
|
|
directories, and that is why they are mentioned here. Suppose you create
|
|
a symbolic link from your home directory to the root directory and
|
|
change into it:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> ln -s / ~/mylink
|
|
cd ~/mylink
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>If you don't know it's a link, you expect to be able to change to the
|
|
parent directory by doing `<code>cd ..</code>'. However, the operating system ---
|
|
which just has one set of directories starting from <code>/</code> and going down,
|
|
and ignores symbolic links after it has followed them, they really are
|
|
just pointers --- thinks you are in the root directory <code>/</code>. This can be
|
|
confusing. Hence zsh tries to keep track of where <em>you</em> probably think
|
|
you are, rather than where the system does. If you type `<code>pwd</code>', you
|
|
will see `<code>/home/you/mylink</code>' (wherever your home directory is), not
|
|
`<code>/</code>'; if you type `<code>cd ..</code>', you will find yourself back in your home
|
|
directory.</p>
|
|
<p>You can turn all this second-guessing off by setting the option
|
|
<code>CHASE_LINKS</code>; then `<code>cd ~/mydir; pwd</code>' will show you to be in <code>/</code>,
|
|
where changing to the parent directory has no effect; the parent of the
|
|
root directory is the root directory, except on certain slightly
|
|
psychedelic networked file systems. This does have advantages: for
|
|
example, `<code>cd ~/mydir; ls ..</code>' always lists the root directory, not
|
|
your home directory, regardless of the option setting, because <code>ls</code>
|
|
doesn't know about the links you followed, only zsh does, and it treats
|
|
the <code>..</code> as referring to the root directory. Having <code>CHASE_LINKS</code> set
|
|
allows `<code>pwd</code>' to warn you about where the system thinks you are.</p>
|
|
<p>An aside for non-UNIX-experts (over 99.9% of the population of the world
|
|
at the last count): I said `symbolic links' instead of just `links'
|
|
because there are others called `hard links'. This is what `<code>ln</code>'
|
|
creates if you don't use the <code>-s</code> option. A hard link is not so much a
|
|
pointer to a file as an alternative name for a file. If you do</p>
|
|
<pre><code> ln myfile othername
|
|
ls -l
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where <code>myfile</code> already exists you can't tell which of <code>myfile</code> and
|
|
<code>othername</code> is the original --- and in fact the system doesn't care. You
|
|
can remove either, and the other will be perfectly happy as the name for
|
|
the file. This is pretty much how renaming files works, except that
|
|
creating the hard link is done for you in that case. Hard links have
|
|
limitations --- you can't link to directories, or to a file on another
|
|
disk partition (and if you don't know what a disk partition is, you'll
|
|
see what a limitation that can be). Furthermore, you usually want to
|
|
know which is the original and which is the link --- so for most users,
|
|
creating symbolic links is more useful. The only drawback is that
|
|
following the pointers is a tiny bit slower; if you think you can notice
|
|
the difference, you definitely ought to slow down a bit.</p>
|
|
<p>The target of a symbolic link, unlike a hard link, doesn't actually have
|
|
to exist and no checking is performed until you try to use the link. The
|
|
best thing to do is to run `<code>ls -lL</code>' when you create the link; the
|
|
<code>-L</code> part tells <code>ls</code> to follow links, and if it worked you should see
|
|
that your link is shown as having exactly the same characteristics as
|
|
the file it points to. If it is still shown as a link, there was no such
|
|
file.</p>
|
|
<p>While I'm at it, I should point out one slight oddity with symbolic
|
|
links: the name of the file linked to (the first name), if it is not an
|
|
absolute path (beginning with <code>/</code> after any <code>~</code> expansion), is treated
|
|
relative to the directory where the link is created --- not the current
|
|
directory when you run <code>ln</code>. Here:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> ln -s ../mydir ~/links/otherdir
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>the link <code>otherdir</code> will refer to <code>mydir</code> in <em>its own</em> parent directory,
|
|
i.e. <code>~/links</code> --- not, as you might think, the parent of the directory
|
|
where you were when you ran the command. What makes it worse is that the
|
|
second word, if is not an absolute path, <em>is</em> interpreted relative to
|
|
the directory where you ran the command.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>$cdpath and AUTO_CD</strong></p>
|
|
<p>We're nowhere near the end of the magic you can do with directories yet
|
|
(and, in fact, I haven't even got to the zsh-specific parts). The next
|
|
trick is <code>$cdpath</code> and <code>$CDPATH</code>. They look a lot like <code>$path</code> and
|
|
<code>$PATH</code> which you met in the last chapter, and I mentioned them briefly
|
|
back in the last chapter in that context: <code>$cdpath</code> is an array of
|
|
directories, while <code>$CDPATH</code> is colon-separated list behaving otherwise
|
|
like a scalar variable. They give a list of directories whose
|
|
subdirectories you may want to change into. If you use a normal cd
|
|
command (i.e. in the form `<code>cd </code><em>dirname</em>', and <em>dirname</em> does not
|
|
begin with a <code>/</code> or <code>~</code>, the shell will look through the directories in
|
|
<code>$cdpath</code> to find one which contains the subdirectory <em>dirname</em>. If
|
|
<code>$cdpath</code> isn't set, as you'd guess, it just uses the current directory.</p>
|
|
<p>Note that <code>$cdpath</code> is always searched in order, and you can put a <code>.</code>
|
|
in it to represent the current directory. If you do, the current
|
|
directory will always be searched <em>at that point</em>, not necessarily
|
|
first, which may not be what you expect. For example, let's set up some
|
|
directories:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> mkdir ~/crick ~/crick/dna
|
|
mkdir ~/watson ~/watson/dna
|
|
cdpath=(~/crick .)
|
|
cd ~/watson
|
|
cd dna
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>So I've moved to the directory <code>~/watson</code>, which contains the
|
|
subdirectory <code>dna</code>, and done `<code>cd dna</code>'. But because of <code>$cdpath</code>, the
|
|
shell will look first in <code>~/crick</code>, and find the <code>dna</code> there, and take
|
|
you to that copy of the self-reproducing directory, not the one in
|
|
<code>~/watson</code>. Most people have <code>.</code> at the start of their <code>cdpath</code> for that
|
|
reason. However, at least <code>cd</code> warns you --- if you tried it, you will
|
|
see that it prints the name of the directory it's picked in cases like
|
|
this.</p>
|
|
<p>In fact, if you don't have <code>.</code> in your directory at all, the shell will
|
|
always look there first; there's no way of making <code>cd</code> never change to a
|
|
subdirectory of the current one, short of turning <code>cd</code> into a function.
|
|
Some shells don't do this; they use the directories in <code>$cdpath</code>, and
|
|
only those.</p>
|
|
<p>There's yet another shorthand, this time specific to zsh: the option
|
|
<code>AUTO_CD</code> which I mentioned in the last chapter. That way a command
|
|
without any arguments which is really a directory will take you to that
|
|
directory. Normally that's perfect --- you would just get a `command
|
|
not found' message otherwise, and you might as well make use of the
|
|
option. Just occasionally, however, the name of a directory clashes with
|
|
the name of a command, builtin or external, or a shell function, and
|
|
then there can be some confusion: zsh will always pick the command as
|
|
long as it knows about it, but there are cases where it doesn't, as I
|
|
described above.</p>
|
|
<p>What I didn't say in the last chapter is that <code>AUTO_CD</code> respects
|
|
<code>$cdpath</code>; in fact, it really is implemented so that `<em>dirname</em>' on its
|
|
own behaves as much like `<code>cd</code> <em>dirname</em>' as is possible without tying
|
|
the shell's insides into knots.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>The directory stack</strong></p>
|
|
<p>One very useful facility that zsh inherited from the C-shell family
|
|
(traditional Korn shell doesn't have it) is the directory stack. This is
|
|
a list of directories you have recently been in. If you use the command
|
|
`<code>pushd</code>' instead of `<code>cd</code>', e.g. `<code>pushd</code> <em>dirname</em>', then the
|
|
directory you are in is saved in this list, and you are taken to
|
|
<em>dirname</em>, using <code>$CDPATH</code> just as <code>cd</code> does. Then when you type
|
|
`<code>popd</code>', you are taken back to where you were. The list can be as long
|
|
as you like; you can <code>pushd</code> any number of directories, and each <code>popd</code>
|
|
will take you back through the list (this is how a `stack', or more
|
|
precisely a `last-in-first-out' stack usually operates in computer
|
|
jargon, hence the name `directory stack').</p>
|
|
<p>You can see the list --- which always starts with the current directory
|
|
--- with the <code>dirs</code> command. So, for example:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> cd ~
|
|
pushd ~/src
|
|
pushd ~/zsh
|
|
dirs
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>displays</p>
|
|
<pre><code> ~/zsh ~/src ~
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and the next <code>popd</code> will take you back to <code>~/src</code>. If you do it, you
|
|
will see that <code>pushd</code> reports the list given by <code>dirs</code> automatically as
|
|
it goes along; you can turn this off with the option <code>PUSHD_SILENT</code>,
|
|
when you will have to rely on typing <code>dirs</code> explicitly.</p>
|
|
<p>In fact, a lot of the use of this comes not from using simple <code>pushd</code>
|
|
and <code>popd</code> combinations, but from two other features. First, `<code>pushd</code>'
|
|
on its own swaps the top two directories on the stack. Second, <code>pushd</code>
|
|
with a numeric argument preceded by a `<code>+</code>' or `<code>-</code>' can take you to
|
|
one of the other directories in the list. The command `<code>dirs -v</code>' tells
|
|
you the numbers you need; <code>0</code> is the current directory. So if you get,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> 0 ~/zsh
|
|
1 ~/src
|
|
2 ~
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>then `<code>pushd +2</code>' takes you to <code>~</code>. (A little suspension of disbelief
|
|
that I didn't just use <code>AUTO_CD</code> and type `<code>..</code>' is required here.) If
|
|
you use a <code>-</code>, it counts from the other end of the list; <code>-0</code> (with
|
|
apologies to the numerate) is the last item, i.e. the same as <code>~</code> in
|
|
this case. Some people are used to having the `<code>-</code>' and `<code>+</code>'
|
|
arguments behave the other way around; the option <code>PUSHD_MINUS</code> exists
|
|
for this.</p>
|
|
<p>Apart from <code>PUSHD_SILENT</code> and <code>PUSHD_MINUS</code>, there are a few other
|
|
relevant options. Setting <code>PUSHD_IGNORE_DUPS</code> means that if you <code>pushd</code>
|
|
to a directory which is already somewhere in the list, the duplicate
|
|
entry will be silently removed. This is useful for most human operations
|
|
--- however, if you are using <code>pushd</code> in a function or script to
|
|
remember previous directories for a future matching <code>popd</code>, this can be
|
|
dangerous and you probably want to turn it off locally inside the
|
|
function.</p>
|
|
<p><code>AUTO_PUSHD</code> means that any directory-changing command, including an
|
|
auto-cd, is treated as a <code>pushd</code> command with the target directory as
|
|
argument. Using this can make the directory stack get very long, and
|
|
there is a parameter <code>$DIRSTACKSIZE</code> which you can set to specify a
|
|
maximum length. The oldest entry (the highest number in the `<code>dirs -v</code>'
|
|
listing) is automatically removed when this length is exceeded. There is
|
|
no limit unless this is explicitly set.</p>
|
|
<p>The final <code>pushd</code> option is <code>PUSHD_TO_HOME</code>. This makes <code>pushd</code> on its
|
|
own behave like <code>cd</code> on its own in that it takes you to your home
|
|
directory, instead of swapping the top two directories. Normally a
|
|
series of `<code>pushd</code>' commands works pretty much like a series of `<code>cd -</code>' commands, always taking you the directory you were in before, with
|
|
the obvious difference that `<code>cd -</code>' doesn't consult the directory
|
|
stack, it just remembers the previous directory automatically, and hence
|
|
it can confuse <code>pushd</code> if you just use `<code>cd -</code>' instead.</p>
|
|
<p>There's one remaining subtlety with <code>pushd</code>, and that is what happens to
|
|
the rest of the list when you bring a particular directory to the front
|
|
with something like `<code>pushd +2</code>'. Normally the list is simply cycled,
|
|
so the directories which were +3, and +4 are now right behind the new
|
|
head of the list, while the two directories which were ahead of it get
|
|
moved to the end. If the list before was:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> dir1 dir2 dir3 dir4
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>then after <code>pushd +2</code> you get</p>
|
|
<pre><code> dir3 dir4 dir1 dir2
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>That behaviour changed during the lifetime of zsh, and some of us
|
|
preferred the old behaviour, where that one directory was yanked to the
|
|
front and the rest just closed the gap:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> # Old behaviour
|
|
dir3 dir1 dir2 dir4
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>so that after a while you get a `greatest hits' group at the front of
|
|
the list. If you like this behaviour too (I feel as if I'd need to have
|
|
written papers on group theory to like the new behaviour) there is a
|
|
function <code>pushd</code> supplied with the source code, although it's short
|
|
enough to repeat here --- this is in the form for autoloading in the zsh
|
|
fashion:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> # pushd function to emulate the old zsh behaviour.
|
|
# With this, pushd +/-n lifts the selected element
|
|
# to the top of the stack instead of cycling
|
|
# the stack.
|
|
|
|
emulate -R zsh
|
|
setopt localoptions
|
|
|
|
if [[ ARGC -eq 1 && "$1" == [+-]<-> ]] then
|
|
setopt pushdignoredups
|
|
builtin pushd ~$1
|
|
else
|
|
builtin pushd "$@"
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The `<code>&&</code>' is a logical `and', requiring both tests to be true. The
|
|
tests are that there is exactly one argument to the function, and that
|
|
it has the form of a `<code>+</code>' or a `<code>-</code>' followed by any number (`<code><-></code>'
|
|
is a special zsh pattern to match any number, an extension of forms like
|
|
`<code><1-100></code>' which matches any number in the range 1 to 100 inclusive).</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Referring to other directories</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Zsh has two ways of allowing you to refer to particular directories.
|
|
They have in common that they begin with a <code>~</code> (in very old versions of
|
|
zsh, the second form actually used an `<code>=</code>', but the current way is
|
|
much more logical).</p>
|
|
<p>You will certainly be aware, because I've made a lot of use of it, that
|
|
a `<code>~</code>' on its own or followed by a <code>/</code> refers to your own home
|
|
directory. An extension of this --- again from the C-shell, although the
|
|
Korn shell has it too in this case --- is that <code>~name</code> can refer to the
|
|
home directory of any user on the system. So if your user name is <code>pws</code>,
|
|
then <code>~</code> and <code>~pws</code> are the same directory.</p>
|
|
<p>Zsh has an extension to this; you can actually name your own
|
|
directories. This was described in <a href="zshguide02.html#init">chapter 2</a>, à
|
|
propos of prompts, since that is the major use:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> host% PS1='%~? '
|
|
~? cd zsh/Src
|
|
~/zsh/Src? zsrc=$PWD
|
|
~/zsh/Src? echo ~zsrc
|
|
/home/pws/zsh/Src
|
|
~zsrc?
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Consult that chapter for the ways of forcing a parameter to be
|
|
recognised as a named directory.</p>
|
|
<p>There's a slightly more sophisticated way of doing this directly:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> hash -d zsrc=~/zsh/Src
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>makes <code>~zsrc</code> appear in prompts as before, and in this case there is no
|
|
parameter <code>$zsrc</code>. This is the purist's way (although very few zsh users
|
|
are purists). You can guess what `<code>unhash -d zsrc</code>' does; this works
|
|
with directories named via parameters, too, but leaves the parameter
|
|
itself alone.</p>
|
|
<p>It's possible to have a named directory with the same name as a user. In
|
|
that case `<code>~name</code>' refers to the directory you named explicitly, and
|
|
there is no easy way of getting <code>name</code>'s home directory without removing
|
|
the name you defined.</p>
|
|
<p>If you're using named directories with one of the <code>cd</code>-like commands or
|
|
<code>AUTO_CD</code>, you can set the option <code>CDABLEVARS</code> which allows you to omit
|
|
the leading <code>~</code>; `<code>cd zsrc</code>' with this option would take you to
|
|
<code>~zsrc</code>. The name is a historical artifact and now a misnomer; it really
|
|
is named directories, not parameters (i.e. variables), which are used.</p>
|
|
<p>The second way of referring to directories with <code>~</code>'s is to use numbers
|
|
instead of names: the numbers refer to directories in the directory
|
|
stack. So if <code>dirs -v</code> gives you</p>
|
|
<pre><code> 0 ~zsf
|
|
1 ~src
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>then <code>~+1</code> and <code>~-0</code> (not very mathematical, but quite logical if you
|
|
think about it) refer to <code>~src</code>. In this case, unlike pushd arguments,
|
|
you can omit the <code>+</code> and use <code>~1</code>. The option <code>PUSHD_MINUS</code> is
|
|
respected. You'll see this was used in the <code>pushd</code> function above: the
|
|
trick was that <code>~+3</code>, for example, refers to the same element as <code>pushd +3</code>, hence <code>pushd ~+3</code> pushed that directory onto the front of the list.
|
|
However, we set <code>PUSHD_IGNORE_DUPS</code>, so that the value in the old
|
|
position was removed as well, giving us the effect we wanted of simply
|
|
yanking the directory to the front with no trick cycling.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l36"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="325-command-control-and-information-commands"><a class="header" href="#325-command-control-and-information-commands">3.2.5: Command control and information commands</a></h3>
|
|
<p>Various builtins exist which control how you access commands, and which
|
|
show you information about the commands which can be run.</p>
|
|
<p>The first two are strictly speaking `precommand modifiers' rather than
|
|
commands: that means that they go before a command line and modify its
|
|
behaviour, rather than being commands in their own right. If you put
|
|
`<code>command</code>' in front of a command line, the command word (the next one
|
|
along) will be taken as the name of an external command, however it
|
|
would normally be interpreted; likewise, if you put `<code>builtin</code>' in
|
|
front, the shell will try to run the command as a builtin command.
|
|
Normally, shell functions take precedence over builtins which take
|
|
precedence over external commands. So, for example, if your printer
|
|
control system has the command `<code>enable</code>' (as many System V versions
|
|
do), which clashes with a builtin I am about to talk about, you can run
|
|
`<code>command enable lp</code>' to enable a printer; otherwise, the builtin
|
|
enable would have been run. Likewise, if you have defined <code>cd</code> to be a
|
|
function, but this time want to call the normal builtin <code>cd</code>, you can
|
|
say `<code>builtin cd mydir</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p>A common use for <code>command</code> is inside a shell function of the same name.
|
|
Sometimes you want to enhance an ordinary command by sticking some extra
|
|
stuff around it, then calling that command, so you write a shell
|
|
function of the same name. To call the command itself inside the shell
|
|
function, you use `<code>command</code>'. The following works, although it's
|
|
obviously not all that useful as it stands:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> ls() {
|
|
command ls "$[@]"
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>so when you run `<code>ls</code>', it calls the function, which calls the real
|
|
<code>ls</code> command, passing on the arguments you gave it.</p>
|
|
<p>You can gain longer lasting control over the commands which the shell
|
|
will run with the `<code>disable</code>' and `<code>enable</code>' commands. The first
|
|
normally takes builtin arguments; each such builtin will not be
|
|
recognised by the shell until you give an `<code>enable</code>' command for it. So
|
|
if you want to be able to run the external <code>enable</code> command and don't
|
|
particularly care about the builtin version, `<code>disable enable</code>' (sorry
|
|
if that's confusing) will do the trick. Ha, you're thinking, you can't
|
|
run `<code>enable enable</code>'. That's correct: some time in the dim and distant
|
|
past, <code>builtin enable enable</code>' would have worked, but currently it
|
|
doesn't; this may change, if I remember to change it. You can list all
|
|
disabled builtins with just `<code>disable</code>' on its own --- most of the
|
|
builtins that do this sort of manipulation work like that.</p>
|
|
<p>You can manipulate other sets of commands with <code>disable</code> and <code>enable</code> by
|
|
giving different options: aliases with the option <code>-a</code>, functions with
|
|
<code>-f</code>, and reserved words with <code>-r</code>. The first two you probably know
|
|
about, and I'll come to them anyway, but `reserved words' need
|
|
describing. They are essentially builtin commands which have some
|
|
special syntactic meaning to the shell, including some symbols such as
|
|
`<code>{</code>' and `<code>[[</code>'. They take precedence over everything else except
|
|
aliases --- in fact, since they're syntactically special, the shell
|
|
needs to know very early on that it has found a reserved word, it's no
|
|
use just waiting until it tries to execute a command. For example, if
|
|
the shell finds `<code>[[</code>' it needs to know that everything until `<code>]]</code>'
|
|
must be treated as a test rather than as ordinary command arguments.
|
|
Consequently, you wouldn't often want to disable a reserved word, since
|
|
the shell wouldn't work properly. The most obvious reason why you might
|
|
would be for compatibility with some other shell which didn't have one.
|
|
You can get a complete list with:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> whence -wm '*' | grep reserved
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which I'll explain below, since I'm coming to `<code>whence</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p>Furthermore, I tend to find that if I want to get rid of aliases or
|
|
functions I use the commands `<code>unalias</code>' and `<code>unfunction</code>' to get rid
|
|
of them permanently, since I always have the original definitions stored
|
|
somewhere, so these two options may not be that useful either. Disabling
|
|
builtins is definitely the most useful of the four possibilities for
|
|
<code>disable</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>External commands have to be manipulated differently. The types given
|
|
above are handled internally by the shell, so all it needs to do is
|
|
remember what code to call. With external commands, the issue instead is
|
|
how to find them. I mentioned <code>rehash</code> above, but didn't tell you that
|
|
the <code>hash</code> command, which you've already seen with the <code>-d</code> option, can
|
|
be used to tell the shell how to find an external command:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> hash foo=/path/to/foo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>makes <code>foo</code> execute the command using the path shown (which doesn't even
|
|
have to end in `<code>foo</code>'). This is rather like an alias --- most people
|
|
would probably do this with an alias, in fact --- although a little
|
|
faster, though you're unlikely to notice the difference. You can remove
|
|
this with <code>unhash</code>. One gotcha here is that if the path is rehashed,
|
|
either by calling <code>rehash</code> or when you alter <code>$path</code>, the entire hash
|
|
table is emptied, including anything you put in in this way; so it's not
|
|
particularly useful.</p>
|
|
<p>In the midst of all this, it's useful to be able to find out what the
|
|
shell thinks a particular command name does. The command `<code>whence</code>'
|
|
tells you this; it also exists, with slightly different options, under
|
|
the names <code>where</code>, <code>which</code> and <code>type</code>, largely to provide compatibility
|
|
with other shells. I'll just stick to <code>whence</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>Its standard output isn't actually sparklingly interesting. If it's a
|
|
command somehow known to the shell internally, it gets echoed back, with
|
|
the alias expanded if it was an alias; if it's an external command it's
|
|
printed with the full path, showing where it came from; and if it's not
|
|
known the command returns status 1 and prints nothing.</p>
|
|
<p>You can make it more useful with the <code>-v</code> or <code>-c</code> options, which are
|
|
more verbose; the first prints out an information message, while the
|
|
second prints out the definitions of any functions it was asked about
|
|
(this is also the effect of using `<code>which</code>' instead of `<code>whence</code>). A
|
|
very useful option is <code>-m</code>, which takes any arguments as patterns using
|
|
the usual zsh pattern format, in other words the same one used for
|
|
matching files. Thus</p>
|
|
<pre><code> whence -vm "*"
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>prints out every command the shell knows about, together with what it
|
|
thinks of it.</p>
|
|
<p>Note the quotes around the `<code>*</code>' --- you have to remember these
|
|
anywhere where the pattern is not to be used to generate filenames on
|
|
the command line, but instead needs to be passed to the command to be
|
|
interpreted. If this seems a rather subtle distinction, think about what
|
|
would happen if you ran</p>
|
|
<pre><code> # Oops. Better not try this at home.
|
|
# (Even better, don't do it at work either.)
|
|
whence -vm *
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>in a directory with the files `<code>foo</code>' and (guess what) `<code>bar</code>' in it.
|
|
The shell hasn't decided what command it's going to run when it first
|
|
looks at the command line; it just sees the `<code>*</code>' and expands the line
|
|
to</p>
|
|
<pre><code> whence -vm foo bar
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which isn't what you meant.</p>
|
|
<p>There are a couple of other tricks worth mentioning: <code>-p</code> makes the
|
|
shell search your path for them, even if the name is matched as
|
|
something else (say, a shell function). So if you have <code>ls</code> defined as a
|
|
function,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> which -p ls
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>will still tell what `<code>command ls</code>' would find. Also, the option <code>-a</code>
|
|
searches for all commands; in the same example, this would show you both
|
|
the <code>ls</code> command and the <code>ls</code> function, whereas <code>whence</code> would normally
|
|
only show the function because that's the one that would be run. The
|
|
<code>-a</code> option also shows if it finds more than one external command in
|
|
your path.</p>
|
|
<p>Finally, the option <code>-w</code> is useful because it identifies the type of a
|
|
command with a single word: <code>alias</code>, <code>builtin</code>, <code>command</code>, <code>function</code>,
|
|
<code>hashed</code>, <code>reserved</code> or <code>none</code>. Most of those are obvious, with
|
|
<code>command</code> being an ordinary external command; <code>hashed</code> is an external
|
|
command which has been explicitly given a path with the <code>hash</code> builtin,
|
|
and <code>none</code> means it wasn't recognised as a command at all. Now you know
|
|
how we extracted the reserved words above.</p>
|
|
<p>A close relative of <code>whence</code> is <code>functions</code>, which applies, of course,
|
|
to shell functions; it usually lists the definitions of all functions
|
|
given as arguments, but its relatives (of which <code>autoload</code> is one)
|
|
perform various other tricks, to be described in the section on shell
|
|
functions below. Be careful with <code>function</code>, without the `s', which is
|
|
completely different and not like <code>command</code> or <code>builtin</code> --- it is
|
|
actually a keyword used to <em>define</em> a function.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l37"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="326-parameter-control"><a class="header" href="#326-parameter-control">3.2.6: Parameter control</a></h3>
|
|
<p>There are various builtins for controlling the shells parameters. You
|
|
already know how to set and use parameters, but it's a good deal more
|
|
complicated than that when you look at the details.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Local parameters</strong></p>
|
|
<p>The principal command for manipulating the behaviour of parameters is
|
|
`<code>typeset</code>'. Its easiest usage is to declare a parameter; you just give
|
|
it a list of parameter names, which are created as scalar parameters.
|
|
You can create parameters just by assigning to them, but the major point
|
|
of `<code>typeset</code>' is that if a parameter is created that way inside a
|
|
function, the parameter is restored to its original value, or removed if
|
|
it didn't previously exist, at the end of the function --- in other
|
|
words, it has `local scope' like the variables which you declare in
|
|
most ordinary programming languages. In fact, to use the jargon it has
|
|
`dynamical' rather than `syntactic' scope, which means that the same
|
|
parameter is visible in any function called within the current one; this
|
|
is different from, say, C or FORTRAN where any function or subroutine
|
|
called wouldn't see any variable declared in the parent function.</p>
|
|
<p>The following makes this more concrete.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> var='Original value'
|
|
subfn() {
|
|
print $var
|
|
}
|
|
fn() {
|
|
print $var
|
|
typeset var='Value in function'
|
|
print $var
|
|
subfn
|
|
}
|
|
fn
|
|
print $var
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This chunk of code prints out</p>
|
|
<pre><code> Original value
|
|
Value in function
|
|
Value in function
|
|
Original value
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The first three chunks of the code just define the parameter <code>$var</code>, and
|
|
two functions, <code>subfn</code> and <code>fn</code>. Then we call <code>fn</code>. The first thing this
|
|
does is print out <code>$var</code>, which gives `<code>Original value</code>' since we
|
|
haven't changed the original definition. However, the <code>typeset</code> next
|
|
does that; as you see, we can assign to the parameter during the
|
|
typeset. Thus when we print <code>$var</code> out again, we get `<code>Value in function</code>'. Then <code>subfn</code> is called, which prints out the same value as
|
|
in <code>fn</code>, because we haven't changed it --- this is where C or FORTRAN
|
|
would differ, and wouldn't recognise the variable because it hadn't been
|
|
declared in that function. Finally, <code>fn</code> exits and the original value is
|
|
restored, and is printed out by the final `<code>print</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p>Note the value changes twice: first at the <code>typeset</code>, then again at the
|
|
end of <code>fn</code>. The value of <code>$var</code> at any point will be one of those two
|
|
values.</p>
|
|
<p>Although you can do assignments in a <code>typeset</code> statement, you can't
|
|
assign to arrays (I already said this in the last chapter):</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset var=(Doesn\'t work\!)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>because the syntax with the parentheses is special; it only works when
|
|
the line consists of nothing but assignments. However, the shell doesn't
|
|
complain if you try to assign an array to a scalar, or vice versa; it
|
|
just silently converts the type:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset var='scalar value'
|
|
var=(array value)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>I put in the assignment in the typeset statement to rub the point in
|
|
that it creates scalars, but actually the usual way of setting up an
|
|
array in a function is</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset var
|
|
var=()
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which creates an empty scalar, then converts that to an empty array.
|
|
Recent versions of the shell have `<code>typeset -a var</code>' to do that in one
|
|
go --- but you <em>still</em> can't assign to it in the same statement.</p>
|
|
<p>There are other catches associated with the fact that <code>typeset</code> and its
|
|
relatives are just ordinary commands with ordinary sets of arguments.
|
|
Consider this:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % typeset var=`echo two words`
|
|
% print $var
|
|
two
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>What has happened to the `<code>words</code>'? The answer is that backquote
|
|
substitution, to be discussed below, splits words when not quoted. So
|
|
the <code>typeset</code> statement is equivalent to</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % typeset var=two words
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>There are two ways to get round this; first, use an ordinary assignment:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % typeset var
|
|
% var=`echo two words`
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which can tell a scalar assignment, and hence knows not to split words,
|
|
or quote the backquotes,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % typeset var="`echo two words`"
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>There are three important types we haven't talked about; both of these
|
|
can only be created with <code>typeset</code> or one of the similar builtins I'll
|
|
list in a moment. They are integer types, floating point types, and
|
|
associative array types.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Numeric parameters</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Integers are created with `<code>typeset -i</code>', or `<code>integer</code>' which is
|
|
another way of saying the same thing. They are used for arithmetic,
|
|
which the shell can do as follows:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> integer i
|
|
(( i = 3 * 2 + 1 ))
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The double parentheses surround a complete arithmetic expression: it
|
|
behaves as if it's quoted. The expression inside can be pretty much
|
|
anything you might be used to from arithmetic in other programming
|
|
languages. One important point to note is that parameters don't need to
|
|
have the <code>$</code> in front, even when their value is being taken:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> integer i j=12
|
|
(( i = 3 * ( j + 4 ) ** 2 ))
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, <code>j</code> will be replaced by 12 and <code>$i</code> gets the value 768 (sixteen
|
|
squared times three). One thing you might not recognise is the <code>**</code>,
|
|
which is the `to the power of' operator which occurs in FORTRAN and
|
|
Perl. Note that it's fine to have parentheses inside the double
|
|
parentheses --- indeed, you can even do</p>
|
|
<pre><code> (( i = (3 * ( j + 4 )) ** 2 ))
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and the shell won't get confused because it knows that any parentheses
|
|
inside must be in balanced pairs (until you deliberately confuse it with
|
|
your buggy code).</p>
|
|
<p>You would normally use `<code>print $i</code>' to see what value had been given to
|
|
<code>$i</code>, of course, and as you would expect it gets printed out as a
|
|
decimal number. However, <code>typeset</code> allows you to specify another base
|
|
for printing out. If you do</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset -i 16 i
|
|
print $i
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>after the last calculation, you should see <code>16#900</code>, which means 900 in
|
|
base 16 (hexadecimal). That's the only effect the option `<code>-i 16</code>' has
|
|
on <code>$i</code> --- you can assign to it and use it in arithmetical expressions
|
|
just as normal, but when you print it out it appears in this form. You
|
|
can use this base notation for inputting numbers, too:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> (( i = 16#ff * 2#10 ))
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which means 255 (<code>ff</code> in hexadecimal) times 2 (<code>10</code> in binary). The
|
|
shell understands C notation too, so `<code>16#ff</code>' could have been
|
|
expressed `<code>0xff</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p>Floating point variables are very similar. You can declare them with
|
|
`<code>typeset -F</code>' or `<code>typeset -E</code>'. The only difference between the two
|
|
is, again, on output; <code>-F</code> uses a fixed point notation, while <code>-E</code> uses
|
|
scientific (mnemonic: exponential) notation. The builtin `<code>float</code>' is
|
|
equivalent to `<code>typeset -E</code>' (because Korn shell does it, that's why).
|
|
Floating point expressions also work the way you are probably used to:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset -E e
|
|
typeset -F f
|
|
(( e = 32/3, f = 32.0/3.0 ))
|
|
print $e $f
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>prints</p>
|
|
<pre><code> 1.000000000e+01 10.6666666667
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Various points: the `<code>,</code>' can separate different expressions, just like
|
|
in C, so the <code>e</code> and <code>f</code> assignments are performed separately. The <code>e</code>
|
|
assignment was actually an integer division, because neither 32 nor 3 is
|
|
a floating point number, which must contain a dot. That means an integer
|
|
division was done, producing 10, which was then converted to a floating
|
|
point number only at the end. Again, this is just how grown-up languages
|
|
work, so it's no use cursing. The <code>f</code> assignment was a full floating
|
|
point performance. Floating point parameters weren't available before
|
|
version <code>3.1.7</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>Although this is really a matter for a later chapter, there is a library
|
|
of floating point functions you can load (actually it's just a way of
|
|
linking in the system mathematical library). The usual incantation is
|
|
`<code>zmodload zsh/mathfunc</code>'; you may not have `dynamic loading' of
|
|
libraries on your system, which may mean that doesn't work. If it does,
|
|
you can do things like</p>
|
|
<pre><code> (( pi = 4.0 * atan(1.0) ))
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Broadly, all the functions which appear in most system mathematical
|
|
libraries (see the manual page for <code>math</code>) are available in zsh.</p>
|
|
<p>Like all other parameters created with <code>typeset</code> or one of its cousins,
|
|
integer and floating point parameters are local to functions. You may
|
|
wonder how to create a global parameter (i.e. one which is valid outside
|
|
as well as inside the function) which has an integer or floating point
|
|
value. There's a recent addition to the shell (in version 3.1.6) which
|
|
allows this: use the flag <code>-g</code> to typeset along with any others. For
|
|
example,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> fn() {
|
|
typeset -Fg f
|
|
(( f = 42.75 ))
|
|
}
|
|
fn
|
|
print $f
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>If you try it, you will see the value of <code>$f</code> has survived beyond the
|
|
function. The <code>g</code> stands for global, obviously, although it's not quite
|
|
that simple:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> fn() {
|
|
typeset -Fg f
|
|
}
|
|
outerfn() {
|
|
typeset f='scalar value'
|
|
fn
|
|
print $f
|
|
}
|
|
outerfn
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The function <code>outerfn</code> creates a local scalar value for <code>f</code>; that's what
|
|
<code>fn</code> sees. So it was not really operating on a `global' value, it just
|
|
didn't create a new one for the scope of <code>fn</code>. The error message comes
|
|
because it tried to preserve the value of <code>$f</code> while changing its type,
|
|
and the value wasn't a proper floating point expression. The error
|
|
message,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> fn: bad math expression: operator expected at `value'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>comes about because assigning to numeric parameters always does an
|
|
arithmetic evaluation. Operating on `<code>scalar value</code>' it found
|
|
`<code>scalar</code>' and assumed this was a parameter, then looked for an
|
|
operator like `<code>+</code>' to come next; instead it found `<code>value</code>'. If you
|
|
want to experiment, change the string to `<code>scalar + value</code>' and set
|
|
`<code>value=42</code>', or whatever, then try again. This is a little confusing
|
|
(which is a roundabout way of saying it confused me), but consistent
|
|
with how zsh usually treats parameters.</p>
|
|
<p>Actually, to a certain extent you don't need to use the integer and
|
|
floating point parameters. Any time zsh needs a numeric expression it
|
|
will force a scalar to the right value, and any time it produces a
|
|
numeric expression and assigns it to a scalar, it will convert the
|
|
result to a string. So</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset num=3 # This is the *string* `3'.
|
|
(( num = num + 1 )) # But this works anyway
|
|
# ($num is still a string).
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This can be useful if you have a parameter which is sometimes a number,
|
|
sometimes a string, since zsh does all the conversion work for you.
|
|
However, it can also be confusing if you always want a number, because
|
|
zsh can't guess that for you; plus it's a little more efficient not to
|
|
have to convert back and forth; plus you lose accuracy when you do,
|
|
because if the number is stored as a string rather than in the internal
|
|
numeric representation, what you say is what you get (although zsh tends
|
|
to give you quite a lot of decimal places when converting implicitly to
|
|
strings). Anyway, I'd recommend that if you know a parameter has to be
|
|
an integer or floating point value you should declare it as such.</p>
|
|
<p>There is a builtin called <code>let</code> to handle mathematical expressions, but
|
|
since</p>
|
|
<pre><code> let "num = num + 1"
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is equivalent to</p>
|
|
<pre><code> (( num = num + 1 ))
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and the second form is easier and more memorable, you probably won't
|
|
need to use it. If you do, remember that (unlike BASIC) each
|
|
mathematical expression should appear as one argument in quotes.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Associative arrays</strong></p>
|
|
<p>The one remaining major type of parameter is the associative array; if
|
|
you use Perl, you may call it a `hash', but we tend not to since that's
|
|
really a description of how it's implemented rather than what it does.
|
|
(All right, what it does is hash things. Now shut up.)</p>
|
|
<p>These have to be declared by a typeset statement --- there's no getting
|
|
round it. There are some quite eclectic builtins that produce a
|
|
filled-in associative array for you, but the only way to tell zsh you
|
|
want your very own associative array is</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset -A assoc
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>to create <code>$assoc</code>. As to what it does, that's best shown by example:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset -A assoc
|
|
assoc=(one eins two zwei three drei)
|
|
print ${assoc[two]}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which prints `<code>zwei</code>'. So it works a bit like an ordinary array, but
|
|
the numeric <em>subscript</em> of an ordinary array which would have appeared
|
|
inside the square bracket is replaced by the string <em>key</em>, in this case
|
|
<code>two</code>. The array assignment was a bit deceptive; the `values' were
|
|
actually pairs, with `<code>one</code>' being the key for the value `<code>eins</code>', and
|
|
so on. The shell will complain if there are an odd number of elements in
|
|
such a list. This may also be familiar from Perl. You can assign values
|
|
one at a time:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> assoc[four]=vier
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and also unset one key/value pair:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> unset 'assoc[one]'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where the quotes stop the square brackets from being interpreted as a
|
|
pattern on the command line.</p>
|
|
<p>Expansion has been held over, but you might like to know about the ways
|
|
of getting back what you put in. If you do</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print $assoc
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>you just see the values --- that's exactly the same as with an ordinary
|
|
array, where the subscripts 1, 2, 3, etc. aren't shown. Note they are in
|
|
random order --- that's the other main difference from ordinary arrays;
|
|
associative arrays have no notion of an order unless you explicitly sort
|
|
them.</p>
|
|
<p>But here the keys may be just as interesting. So there is:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print ${(k)assoc}
|
|
print ${(kv)assoc}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>giving (if you've followed through all the commands above):</p>
|
|
<pre><code> four two three
|
|
four vier two zwei three drei
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which print out the keys instead of the values, and the key and value
|
|
pairs much as you entered them. You can see that, although the order of
|
|
the pairs isn't obvious, it's the same each time. From this example you
|
|
can work out how to copy an associative array into another one:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset -A newass
|
|
newass=(${(kv)assoc})
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where the `<code>(kv)</code>' is important --- as is the <code>typeset</code> just before the
|
|
assignment, otherwise <code>$newass</code> would be a badass ordinary array. You
|
|
can also prove that <code>${(v)assoc}</code> does what you would probably expect.
|
|
There are lots of other tricks, but they are mostly associated with
|
|
clever types of parameter expansion, to be described in <a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter
|
|
5</a>.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Other typeset and type tricks</strong></p>
|
|
<p>There are variants of <code>typeset</code>, some mentioned sporadically above.
|
|
There is nothing you can do with any of them that you can't do with
|
|
<code>typeset</code> --- that wasn't always the case; we've tried to improve the
|
|
orthogonality of the options. They differ in the options which are set
|
|
by default, and the additional options which are allowed. Here's a list:
|
|
<code>declare</code>, <code>export</code>, <code>float</code>, <code>integer</code>, <code>local</code>, <code>readonly</code>. I won't
|
|
confuse you by describing all in detail; see the manual.</p>
|
|
<p>If there is an odd one out, it's <code>export</code>, which not only marks a
|
|
parameter for export but has the <code>-g</code> flag turned on by default, so that
|
|
that parameter is not local to the function; in other words, it's
|
|
equivalent to <code>typeset -gx</code>. However, one holdover from the days when
|
|
the options weren't quite so logical is that <code>typeset -x</code> behaves like
|
|
<code>export</code>, in other words the <code>-g</code> flag is turned on by default. You can
|
|
fix this by unsetting the option <code>GLOBAL_EXPORT</code> --- the option only
|
|
exists for compatibility; logically it should always be unset. This is
|
|
partly because in the old days you couldn't export local parameters, so
|
|
<code>typeset -x</code> either had to turn on <code>-g</code> or turn off <code>-x</code>; that was fixed
|
|
for the 3.1.9 release, and (for example) `<code>local -x</code>' creates a local
|
|
parameter which is exported to the environment; both the parameter
|
|
itself, and the value in the environment, will be restored when the
|
|
function exits. The builtin <code>local</code> is essentially a form of <code>typeset</code>
|
|
which renounces the <code>-g</code> flag and all its works.</p>
|
|
<p>Another old restriction which has gone is that you couldn't make special
|
|
parameters, in particular <code>$PATH</code>, local to a function; you just
|
|
modified the original parameter. Now if you say `<code>typeset PATH</code>',
|
|
things happen the way you probably expect, with <code>$PATH</code> having its usual
|
|
effect, and being restored to its old value when the function exits.
|
|
Since <code>$PATH</code> is still special, though, you should make sure you assign
|
|
something to it in the function before calling external commands, else
|
|
it will be empty and no commands will be found. It's possible that you
|
|
specifically don't want some parameter you make local to have the
|
|
special property; 3.1.7 and after allow the typeset flag <code>-h</code> to hide
|
|
the specialness for that parameter, so in `<code>typeset -h PATH</code>', <code>PATH</code>
|
|
would be an ordinary variable for the duration of the enclosing
|
|
function. Internally, the same value as was previously set would
|
|
continue to be used for finding commands, but it wouldn't be exported.</p>
|
|
<p>The second main use of <code>typeset</code> is to set attributes for the
|
|
parameters. In this case it can operate on an existing parameter, as
|
|
well as creating a new one. For example,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset -r msg='This is an important message.'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>sets the readonly flag (-r) for the parameter <code>msg</code>. If the parameter
|
|
didn't exist, it would be created with the usual scoping rules; but if
|
|
it did exist at the current level of scoping, it would be made readonly
|
|
with the value assigned to it, meaning you can't set that particular
|
|
copy of the parameter. For obvious reasons, it's normal to assign a
|
|
value to a readonly parameter when you first declare it. Here's a
|
|
reality check on how this affects scoping:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> msg='This is an ordinary parameter'
|
|
fn() {
|
|
typeset msg='This is a local ordinary parameter'
|
|
print $msg
|
|
typeset -r msg='This is a local readonly parameter'
|
|
print $msg
|
|
msg='Watch me cause an error.'
|
|
}
|
|
fn
|
|
print $msg
|
|
msg='This version of the parameter'\
|
|
' can still be overwritten'
|
|
print $msg
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>outputs</p>
|
|
<pre><code> This is a local ordinary parameter
|
|
This is a local readonly parameter
|
|
fn:5: read-only variable: msg
|
|
This is an ordinary parameter
|
|
This version of the parameter can still be overwritten
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Unfortunately there was a bug with this code until recently --- thirty
|
|
seconds ago, actually: the second <code>typeset</code> in <code>fn</code> incorrectly added
|
|
the readonly flag to the existing <code>msg</code> <em>before</em> attempting to set the
|
|
new value, which was wrong and inconsistent with what happens if you
|
|
create a new local parameter. Maybe it's reassuring that the shell can
|
|
get confused about local parameters, too. (I don't find it reassuring in
|
|
the slightest, since <code>typeset</code> is one of the parts of the code where I
|
|
tend to fix the bugs, but maybe you do.)</p>
|
|
<p>Anyway, when the bug is fixed, you should get the output shown, because
|
|
the first typeset created a local variable which the second typeset made
|
|
readonly, so that the final assignment caused an error. Then the <code>$msg</code>
|
|
in the function went out of scope, and the ordinary parameter, with no
|
|
readonly restriction, was visible again.</p>
|
|
<p>I mentioned another special typeset option in the previous chapter:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset -T TEXINPUTS texinputs
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>to tie together the scalar <code>$TEXINPUTS</code> and the array <code>$texinputs</code> in
|
|
the same way that <code>$PATH</code> and <code>$path</code> work. This is a one-off; it's the
|
|
only time <code>typeset</code> takes exactly two parameter names on the command
|
|
line. All other uses of typeset take a list of parameters to which any
|
|
flags given are applied. See the manual for the remaining flags,
|
|
although most of the more interesting ones have been discussed.</p>
|
|
<p>The other thing you need to know about flags is that you use them with a
|
|
`<code>+</code>' sign to turn off the corresponding attribute. So</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset +r msg
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>allows you to set <code>$msg</code> again. From version <code>4.1</code>, you won't be able to
|
|
turn off the readonly attribute for a special parameter; that's because
|
|
there's too much scope for confusion, including attempting to set
|
|
constant strings in the code. For example, `<code>$ZSH_VERSION</code>' always
|
|
prints a fixed string; attempting to change that is futile.</p>
|
|
<p>The final use of typeset is to list parameters. If you type `<code>typeset</code>'
|
|
on its own, you get a complete list of parameters and their values. From
|
|
3.1.7, you can turn on the flag <code>-H</code> for a parameter, which means to
|
|
hide its value while you're doing this. This can be useful for some of
|
|
the more enormous parameters, particularly special parameters which I'll
|
|
talk about in the section in <a href="zshguide07.html#ragbag">chapter 7</a> on
|
|
modules, which tend to swamp the display <code>typeset</code> produces.</p>
|
|
<p>You can also list parameters of a particular type, by listing the flags
|
|
you want to know about. For example,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> typeset -r
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>lists all readonly parameters. You might expect `<code>typeset +r</code>' to list
|
|
parameters which <em>don't</em> have that attribute, but actually it lists the
|
|
same parameters but without showing their value. `<code>typeset +</code>' lists
|
|
all parameters in this way.</p>
|
|
<p>Another good way of finding out about parameters is to use the special
|
|
expansion `<code>${(t)</code><em>param</em><code>}</code>', for example</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print ${(t)PATH}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>prints `<code>scalar-export-special</code>': <code>$PATH</code> is a scalar parameter, with
|
|
the <code>-x</code> flag set, and has a special meaning to the shell. Actually,
|
|
`<code>special</code>' means something a bit more than that: it means the internal
|
|
code to get and set the parameter behaves in a way which has side
|
|
effects, either to the parameter itself or elsewhere in the shell. There
|
|
are other parameters, like <code>$HISTFILE</code>, which are used by the shell, but
|
|
which are get and set in a normal way --- they are only special in that
|
|
the value is looked at by the shell; and, after all, any old shell
|
|
function can do that, too. Contrast this with <code>$PATH</code> which has all that
|
|
paraphernalia to do with hashing commands to take care of when it's set,
|
|
as I discussed above, and I hope you'll see the difference.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Reading into parameters</strong></p>
|
|
<p>The `<code>read</code>' builtin, as its name suggests, is the opposite to
|
|
`<code>print</code>' (there's no `<code>write</code>' command in the shell, though there is
|
|
often an external command of that name to send a message to another
|
|
user), but reading, unlike printing, requires something in the shell to
|
|
change to take the value, so unlike <code>print</code>, <code>read</code> is forced to be a
|
|
builtin. Inevitably, the values are read into a parameter. Normally they
|
|
are taken from standard input, very often the terminal (even if you're
|
|
running a script, unless you redirected the input). So the simplest case
|
|
is just</p>
|
|
<pre><code> read param
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and if you type a line, and hit return, it will be put into <code>$param</code>,
|
|
without the final newline.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>read</code> builtin actually does a bit of processing on the input. It
|
|
will usually strip any initial or final whitespace (spaces or tabs) from
|
|
the line read in, though any in the middle are kept. You can read a set
|
|
of values separated by whitespace just by listing the parameters to
|
|
assign them to; the last parameter gets all the remainder of the line
|
|
without it being split. Very often it's easiest just to read into an
|
|
array:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % read -A array
|
|
this is a line typed in now, \
|
|
by me, in this space
|
|
% print ${array[1]} ${array[12]}
|
|
this space
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(I'm assuming you're using the native zsh array format, rather than the
|
|
one set with <code>KSH_ARRAYS</code>, and shall continue to assume this.)</p>
|
|
<p>It's useful to be able to print a prompt when you want to read
|
|
something. You can do this with `<code>print -n</code>', but there's a shorthand:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % read line'?Please enter a line: '
|
|
Please enter a line: some words
|
|
% print $line
|
|
some words
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Note the quotes surround the `<code>?</code>' to prevent it being taken as part of
|
|
a pattern on the command line. You can quote the whole expression from
|
|
the beginning of `<code>line</code>', if you like; I just write it like that
|
|
because I know parameter names don't need quoting, because they can't
|
|
have funny characters in. It's almost logical.</p>
|
|
<p>Another useful trick with <code>read</code> is to read a single character; the
|
|
`<code>-k</code>' option does this, and in fact you can stick a number immediately
|
|
after the `<code>k</code>' which specifies a number to read. Even easier, the
|
|
`<code>-q</code>' option reads a single character and returns status 0 if it was
|
|
<code>y</code> or <code>Y</code>, and status 1 otherwise; thus you can read the answer to
|
|
yes/no questions without using a parameter at all. Note, however, that
|
|
if you don't supply a parameter, the reply gets assigned in any case to
|
|
<code>$REPLY</code> if it's a scalar --- as it is with <code>-q</code> --- or <code>$reply</code> if it's
|
|
an array --- i.e. if you specify <code>-A</code>, but no parameter name. These are
|
|
more examples of the non-special parameters which the shell uses --- it
|
|
sets <code>$REPLY</code> or <code>$reply</code>, but only in the same way you would set them;
|
|
there are no side-effects.</p>
|
|
<p>Like <code>print</code>, <code>read</code> has a <code>-r</code> flag for raw mode. However, this just
|
|
has one effect for <code>read</code>: without it, a <code>\</code> at the end of the line
|
|
specifies that the next line is a continuation of the current one (you
|
|
can do this when you're typing at the terminal). With it, <code>\</code> is not
|
|
treated specially.</p>
|
|
<p>Finally, a more sophisticated note about word-splitting. I said that,
|
|
when you are reading to many parameters or an array, the word is split
|
|
on whitespace. In fact the shell splits words on any of the characters
|
|
found in the (genuinely special, because it affects the shell's guts)
|
|
parameter <code>$IFS</code>, which stands for `input field separator'. By default
|
|
--- and in the vast majority of uses --- it contains space, tab, newline
|
|
and a null character (character zero: if you know that these are usually
|
|
used to mark the end of strings, you might be surprised the shell
|
|
handles these as ordinary characters, but it does, although printing
|
|
them out usually doesn't show anything). However, you can set it to any
|
|
string: enter</p>
|
|
<pre><code> fn() {
|
|
local IFS=:
|
|
read -A array
|
|
print -l $array
|
|
}
|
|
fn
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and type</p>
|
|
<pre><code>one word:two words:three words:four
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The shell will show you what's in the array it's read, one `word' per
|
|
line:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> one word
|
|
two words
|
|
three words
|
|
four
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>You'll see the bananas, er, words (joke for the over-thirties) have been
|
|
treated as separated by a colon, not by whitespace. Making <code>$IFS</code> local
|
|
didn't work in old versions of zsh, as with other specials; you had to
|
|
save it and restore it.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>read</code> command in zsh doesn't let you do line editing, which some
|
|
shells do. For that, you should use the <code>vared</code> command, which runs the
|
|
line editor to edit a parameter, with the <code>-c</code> option, which allows
|
|
<code>vared</code> to create a new parameter. It also takes the option <code>-p</code> to
|
|
specify a prompt, so one of the examples above can be rewritten</p>
|
|
<pre><code> vared -c -p 'Please enter a line: ' line
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which works rather like read but with full editing support. If you give
|
|
the option <code>-h</code> (history), you can even retrieve values from previous
|
|
command lines. It doesn't have all the formatting options of read,
|
|
however, although when reading an array (use the option <code>-a</code> with <code>-c</code>
|
|
if creating a new array) it will perform splitting.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Other builtins to control parameters</strong></p>
|
|
<p>The remaining builtins which handle parameters can be dealt with more
|
|
swiftly.</p>
|
|
<p>The builtin <code>set</code> simply sets the special parameter which is passed as
|
|
an argument to functions or scripts, and which you access as <code>$*</code> or
|
|
<code>$@</code>, or <code>$<number></code> (Bourne-like format), or via <code>$argv</code> (csh-like
|
|
format), known however you set them as the `positional parameters':</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % set a whole load of words
|
|
% print $1
|
|
a
|
|
% print $*
|
|
a whole load of words
|
|
% print $argv[2,-2]
|
|
whole load of
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>It's exactly as if you were in a function and had called the function
|
|
with the arguments `<code>a whole load of words</code>'. Actually, set can also be
|
|
used to set shell options, either as flags, e.g. `<code>set -x</code>', or as
|
|
words after `<code>-o</code>' , e.g. `<code>set -o xtrace</code>' does the same as the
|
|
previous example. It's generally easier to use <code>setopt</code>, and the upshot
|
|
is that you need to be careful when setting arguments this way in case
|
|
they begin with a `<code>-</code>'. Putting `<code>-``-</code>' before the real arguments
|
|
fixes this.</p>
|
|
<p>One other use of <code>set</code> is to set any array, via</p>
|
|
<pre><code> set -A any_array words to assign to any_array
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which is equivalent to (and the standard Korn shell version of)</p>
|
|
<pre><code> any_array=(words to assign to any_array)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>One case where the <code>set</code> version is more useful is if the name of an
|
|
array itself comes from a parameter:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> arrname=myarray
|
|
set -A $arrname words to assign
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>has no easy equivalent in the other form; the left hand side of an
|
|
ordinary assignment won't expand a parameter:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> # Doesn't work; syntax error
|
|
$arrname=(words to assign)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This worked in old versions of zsh, but that was on the non-standard
|
|
side. The <code>eval</code> command, described below, gives another way around
|
|
this.</p>
|
|
<p>Next comes `<code>shift</code>', which simply moves an array up one element,
|
|
deleting the original first one. Without an array name, it operates on
|
|
the positional parameters. You can also give it a number to shift other
|
|
than one, before the array name.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> shift array
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is equivalent to</p>
|
|
<pre><code> array=(${array[2,-1]})
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(almost --- I'll leave the subtleties here for the chapter on expansion)
|
|
which picks the second to last elements of the array and assigns them
|
|
back to the original array. Note, yet again, that <code>shift</code> operates using
|
|
the <em>name</em>, not the <em>value</em> of the array, so no `<code>$</code>' should appear in
|
|
front, otherwise you get something similar to the trick I showed for
|
|
`<code>set -A</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p>Finally, <code>unset</code> unsets a parameter, and I already showed you could
|
|
unset a key/value pair of an associative array. There is one subtlety to
|
|
be mentioned here. Normally, <code>unset</code> just makes the parameter named
|
|
disappear off the face of the earth. However, if you call <code>unset</code> in a
|
|
function, its ghost lives on in the sense that any parameter you create
|
|
in the same name will be scoped as the original parameter was. Hence:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> var='global value'
|
|
fn() {
|
|
typeset var='local value'
|
|
unset var
|
|
var='what about this?'
|
|
}
|
|
fn
|
|
print $var
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The final statement prints `<code>global value</code>': even though the local copy
|
|
of <code>$var</code> was unset, the shell remembers that it was local, so the
|
|
second <code>$var</code> in the function is also local and its value disappears at
|
|
the end of the function.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l38"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="327-history-control-commands"><a class="header" href="#327-history-control-commands">3.2.7: History control commands</a></h3>
|
|
<p>The easiest way to access the shell's command history is by editing it
|
|
directly. The second easiest way is to use the `<code>!</code>'-history mechanism.
|
|
Other ways of manipulating it are based around the <code>fc</code> builtin, which
|
|
probably once stood for something (according to Oliver Kiddle, `fix
|
|
command', which is as good as anything). I talked quite a bit about it
|
|
in the last chapter, and don't really have anything to add. Just note
|
|
that the two other commands based around it are <code>history</code> and <code>r</code>.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l39"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="328-job-control-and-process-control"><a class="header" href="#328-job-control-and-process-control">3.2.8: Job control and process control</a></h3>
|
|
<p>One of the major contributions of the C-shell was job control. You need
|
|
to know about foreground and background tasks, and again I introduced
|
|
these in the last chapter along with the options that control them. Here
|
|
is an introduction to the relevant builtins.</p>
|
|
<p>You start a background job in two ways. First, directly, by putting an
|
|
`<code>&</code>' after it:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> sleep 10 &
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and secondly by starting it in the normal way (i.e. in the foreground),
|
|
then typing <code>^Z</code>, and using the <code>bg</code> command to put it in the
|
|
background. Between typing <code>^Z</code> and <code>bg</code>, the job is still there, but is
|
|
not running; it is `suspended' or `stopped' (systems use different
|
|
descriptions for the same thing), waiting for you to decide what to do
|
|
with it. In either case, the job then continues without the shell
|
|
waiting for it. It will still try and read from or write to the terminal
|
|
if that's how you started it; you need to use the shell's redirection
|
|
facilities right at the start if you want to change that, there's
|
|
nothing you can do after the job has already started.</p>
|
|
<p>By the way, `sleep' isn't a builtin. Oddly enough, you can suspend a
|
|
builtin command or sequence of commands (such as shell function) with
|
|
<code>^Z</code>, although since the shell has to continue executing your commands
|
|
as well as being suspended, it does the only thing it can do --- fork,
|
|
so that the commands you suspend are put into the background. Probably
|
|
you will only rarely do this with builtins. No other shell, so far as I
|
|
know, has this feature.</p>
|
|
<p>A job will stop if it needs to read from the terminal. You see a message
|
|
like:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> [1] + 1348 suspended (tty input) jobname and arguments
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which means the job is suspended very much like you had just typed <code>^Z</code>.
|
|
You need to bring the job into the forground, as described below, so
|
|
that you can type something to it.</p>
|
|
<p>By the way, the key to type to suspend a command may not be <code>^Z</code>; it
|
|
usually is, but that can be changed. Run `<code>stty -a</code>' and look for what
|
|
is listed after `<code>susp =</code>' --- probably, but not necessarily, <code>^Z</code>. So
|
|
if you want to use another character --- it must be a single character;
|
|
this is handled deep in the terminal interface, not in the shell --- you
|
|
can run</p>
|
|
<pre><code> stty susp '^]'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>or whatever. You will note from the <code>stty</code> output that various other job
|
|
control characters can be changed similarly. The <code>stty</code> command is
|
|
external and its format for both output and input can vary quite a bit
|
|
from system to system.</p>
|
|
<p>Instead of putting the command into the background, you can bring it
|
|
back to the foreground again with <code>fg</code>. This is useful for temporarily
|
|
stopping what you are doing so you can do something else. These days you
|
|
would probably do it in another window; in the old days when people
|
|
logged in from simple terminals this was even more useful. A typical
|
|
example of this is</p>
|
|
<pre><code> more file # look at file
|
|
^Z # suspend
|
|
[1] + 8592 suspended more file # message printed
|
|
... # do something else
|
|
fg %1 # resume the `more'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The `<code>%</code>' is the usual way of referring to jobs. The number after it is
|
|
what appeared in square brackets with the suspended message; I don't
|
|
know why the shell doesn't use the `<code>%</code>' notation there, too. You also
|
|
see that with the `continued' message when you put something into the
|
|
background, and again at the end with the `done' message which tells
|
|
you a background job is finished. The `<code>%</code>' can take other forms; the
|
|
most common is to follow it by the name of a command, such as `<code>%more</code>'
|
|
in this case. The forms <code>%+</code> and <code>%-</code> refer to the most recent and
|
|
second most recent jobs --- the `<code>+</code>' in the `suspended' message is
|
|
telling you that the <code>more</code> job could be referred to like that.</p>
|
|
<p>Most of the job control commands will actually assume you are talking
|
|
about `<code>%+</code>' if you don't give an argument, so assuming I hadn't
|
|
started any other commands in the background, I could just have put
|
|
`<code>fg</code>' at the end of the sequence of commands above. This actually cuts
|
|
both ways: <code>fg</code> is the default operation on jobs referred to with the
|
|
`<code>%</code>' notation, so just typing `<code>%1</code>' with no command name would have
|
|
worked, too.</p>
|
|
<p>You can jog your memory about what's going on with the `<code>jobs</code>'
|
|
command. It looks like a series of messages of the form beginning with
|
|
the number in square brackets; usually the jobs will either be
|
|
`running' or `suspended'. This will tell you the numbers you need.</p>
|
|
<p>One other useful thing you can do with a job is to tell the shell to
|
|
forget about it. This is only really useful if it is already running in
|
|
the background; then you can run `<code>disown</code>' with the job identifier.
|
|
It's useful for jobs you want to continue after you've logged out, as
|
|
well as jobs that have their own windows which you can therefore control
|
|
directly. With disowned jobs, the shell doesn't warn you that they are
|
|
still there when you log out. You can actually disown a background job
|
|
when you start it by putting `<code>&|</code>' or `<code>&!</code>' at the end of the line
|
|
instead of simply `<code>&</code>'. Note that if the job was suspended when you
|
|
disowned it, it will stay disowned; this is pretty pointless, so you
|
|
probably should run `<code>bg</code>' on it first.</p>
|
|
<p>The next most likely thing you want to do with a job is kill it, or
|
|
maybe suspend it when it's already in the background and you can't just
|
|
type <code>^Z</code>. This is where the <code>kill</code> builtin comes in. There's more to
|
|
this than there is to the builtins mentioned above. First, you can use
|
|
<code>kill</code> with other processes that weren't started from the current shell.
|
|
In that case, you would use a number to identify it, with no <code>%</code> ---
|
|
that's why the <code>%</code>'s were there in the other cases. Of course, you need
|
|
to find out the number; the usual way is with the <code>ps</code> command, which is
|
|
not a builtin but which appears on all UNIX-like systems. As a stupid
|
|
example, here I start a disowned process which does very little, look
|
|
for it, then kill it:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % sleep 60 &|
|
|
% ps -f
|
|
UID PID PPID C STIME TTY TIME CMD
|
|
pws 623 614 0 22:12 pts/0 00:00:00 zsh
|
|
pws 8613 623 0 23:12 pts/0 00:00:00 sleep 60
|
|
pws 8615 623 0 23:12 pts/0 00:00:00 ps -f
|
|
% kill 8613
|
|
% ps -f
|
|
UID PID PPID C STIME TTY TIME CMD
|
|
pws 623 614 0 22:12 pts/0 00:00:00 zsh
|
|
pws 8616 623 0 23:12 pts/0 00:00:00 ps -f
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The process has disappeared the second time I look. Notice that in the
|
|
usual lugubrious UNIX way the shell didn't bother to tell you the
|
|
process had been killed; however, it will report an error if it failed
|
|
to send it the signal. Sending it the signal is all the shell cares
|
|
about; the shell won't warn if you if the process decided it didn't want
|
|
to die when told to, so it's still a good idea to check.</p>
|
|
<p>Sometimes you want to wait for a process to exit; the <code>wait</code> builtin can
|
|
do this, and like <code>kill</code> can take a process number as well as a job
|
|
number. However, that's a bit deceptive --- you can't actually wait for
|
|
a process which wasn't started directly from the shell. Indeed, the
|
|
mechanism for waiting is all bound up with the way UNIX handles
|
|
processes; unless its parent waits for it, a process becomes a `zombie'
|
|
and hangs around until the system's foster parent, the `init' process
|
|
(always process number 1) waits for it instead. It's all a little bit
|
|
baroque, but for the shell user, wait just means you can hang on until
|
|
something you started has finished. Indeed, that's how foreground
|
|
processes work: the shell in effect uses the internal version of <code>wait</code>
|
|
to hang around until the job exits. (Well, actually that's a lie; the
|
|
system wakes it up from whatever it's doing to tell it a child has
|
|
finished, so all it has to do is doze off to wait.)</p>
|
|
<p>Furthermore, you can wait for a process even if job control isn't
|
|
running. Job control, basically anything involving those <code>%</code>'s, is only
|
|
useful when you are sitting at a terminal fiddling with commands; it
|
|
doesn't operate when you run scripts, say. Then the shell has much less
|
|
freedom in how to control its jobs, but it can still wait for a
|
|
background process, and it can still use <code>kill</code> on a process if it knows
|
|
its number. For this purpose, the shell stores the ID of the last
|
|
process started in the background in the parameter <code>$!</code>; there's
|
|
probably a good reason for the `<code>!</code>', but I don't know what it is. This
|
|
happens regardless of job control.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Signals</strong></p>
|
|
<p>The <code>kill</code> command can do a good deal more than just kill a process.
|
|
That is the default action, which is why the command has that name. But
|
|
what it's really doing is sending a `signal' to a process. Signals are
|
|
the simplest way of communicating to another process; in fact, they are
|
|
about the only simple way if you haven't made special arrangements for
|
|
the process to read messages from you. Signal names are written like
|
|
<code>SIGINT</code>, <code>SIGTSTP</code>, <code>SIGKILL</code>; to send a particular signal to a
|
|
process, you remove the <code>SIG</code>, stick a hyphen in front, and use that as
|
|
the first argument to <code>kill</code>, e.g.:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> kill -KILL 8613
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Some of the things you already know about are actually doing just that.
|
|
When you type <code>^C</code> to stop a process, you are actually sending it a
|
|
<code>SIGINT</code> for `interrupt', as if you had done</p>
|
|
<pre><code> kill -INT 8613
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The usual signal sent by <code>kill</code> is not, as you might have guessed,
|
|
<code>SIGKILL</code>, but actually <code>SIGTERM</code> for `terminate'; <code>SIGKILL</code> is
|
|
stronger as the process can't block that signal, as it can with many
|
|
(we'll see how the shell can do that in a moment). It's familiar to UNIX
|
|
hackers as `<code>kill -9</code>', because all the signals also have numbers. You
|
|
can see the list of signals in zsh by doing:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print $signals
|
|
EXIT HUP INT QUIT ILL TRAP ABRT BUS FPE KILL USR1
|
|
SEGV USR2 PIPE ALRM TERM STKFLT CLD CONT STOP TSTP
|
|
TTIN TTOU URG XCPU XFSZ VTALRM PROF WINCH POLL PWR
|
|
UNUSED ZERR DEBUG
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Your list will probably be different from mine; this is for Linux, and
|
|
the list is very system-specific, even though the first nine are
|
|
generally the same, and many of the others are virtually always present.
|
|
Actually, <code>SIGEXIT</code> is an invention by the shell for you to allow the
|
|
shell to do something when a function exits (see the section on `traps'
|
|
below); you can't actually use `<code>kill -EXIT</code>'. Thus <code>SIGHUP</code> is the
|
|
first real signal, and indeed that's number one, so you have to shift
|
|
the contents of <code>$signals</code> along one to get the right numbers. <code>SIGTERM</code>
|
|
and <code>SIGINT</code> usually have the same effect, stopping the process, unless
|
|
that has decided to handle the signal some other way.</p>
|
|
<p>The last two signals are bogus, too: <code>SIGZERR</code> is to allow the shell to
|
|
do something on an error (non-zero exit status), while with <code>SIGDEBUG</code>
|
|
you can do it on every command. Again, the `something' to be executed
|
|
is a `trap', as I'll discuss in a short while.</p>
|
|
<p>Typing <code>^Z</code> to suspend a process actually sends the process a <code>SIGTSTP</code>
|
|
(terminal stop, since it usually comes from the terminal), while
|
|
<code>SIGSTOP</code> is similar but usually doesn't come from a terminal. Even
|
|
restarting a process as with <code>bg</code> sends it a signal, in this case
|
|
<code>SIGCONT</code>. It seems a bit odd to signal a process to restart; why can't
|
|
the operating system just restart it when you ask? The real answer is
|
|
probably that signals provide an easy way for you to talk to the
|
|
operating system without grovelling around in the dirt too much.</p>
|
|
<p>Before I talk about how you make the shell handle signals it receives,
|
|
there is one extra oddment: the <code>suspend</code> builtin effectively sends the
|
|
shell a signal to suspend it, as if you'd typed <code>^Z</code>, though as you've
|
|
probably found by now that doesn't suspend the shell itself. It's only
|
|
useful to do this if the shell is running under some other programme,
|
|
else there's no way of restoring it and suspending is effectively the
|
|
same as exiting the shell. For this reason, the shell won't let you call
|
|
<code>suspend</code> in a login shell, because it assumes that is running as the
|
|
top level (though in the previous chapter you learnt there's actually
|
|
nothing that special about login shells; you can start one just with
|
|
`zsh -l'). If you're logged in remotely via <code>rsh</code> or <code>ssh</code>, it's
|
|
usually more convenient to use the keystrokes `<code>~^Z</code>' which those
|
|
define, rather than zsh's mechanism; they have to be at the beginning of
|
|
a line, so hit return first if necessary. This returns you to your local
|
|
terminal; you can resume the remote login with `<code>fg</code>' just like any
|
|
other programme.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Traps</strong></p>
|
|
<p>The way of making the shell handle signals is called `traps'. There are
|
|
actually two mechanisms for this. I'll present the more standard one and
|
|
then talk about the advantages and drawbacks of the other one at the
|
|
end.</p>
|
|
<p>The standard version (shared with other shells) is via the `<code>trap</code>'
|
|
builtin. The first argument is a chunk of shell code to execute, which
|
|
obviously needs to be quoted when you pass it as an argument, and the
|
|
remaining arguments are a list of signals to handle, minus the <code>SIG</code>
|
|
prefix. So:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> trap "echo I\\'m trapped." INT
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>tells the shell what to do on <code>SIGINT</code>, i.e. <code>^C</code>. Note the extra layer
|
|
of quoting: the double quotes surround the code, so that when they are
|
|
stripped <code>trap</code> sees the chunk</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo I\'m trapped
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Usually the shell would abort what it was doing and return to the main
|
|
prompt when you hit <code>^C</code>. Now, however, it will simply print the message
|
|
and carry on. You can try this, for example, with</p>
|
|
<pre><code> read line
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>If you hit <code>^C</code> while it's waiting for input, you'll see the message go
|
|
up, but the shell will still wait for you to type a line.</p>
|
|
<p>A warning about this: <code>^C</code> is only trapped within the shell itself. If
|
|
you start up an external programme, it will have its own mechanism for
|
|
handling signals, and if it usually aborts on <code>^C</code> it still will. But
|
|
there's a sting in the tail: do</p>
|
|
<pre><code> cat
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which waits for input to output again (you need to use <code>^D</code> to exit
|
|
normally). If you type <code>^C</code> here, the command will be aborted, as I said
|
|
--- but you still get the message `<code>I'm trapped</code>'. That's because the
|
|
shell is able to tell that the command got that particular signal, and
|
|
calls the trap when the <code>cat</code> exits. Not all shells do this;
|
|
furthermore, some commands which handle signals themselves won't give
|
|
the shell enough information to know that a signal arrived, and in that
|
|
case the trap won't be called. Such commands are usually the more
|
|
sophisticated things like editors or screen managers or whatever; you
|
|
just have to find out by trial and error.</p>
|
|
<p>You can also make the shell ignore the signal completely. To do this,
|
|
the first argument should be an empty string:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> trap '' INT
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Now <code>^C</code> will have no effect, and <em>this</em> time the effect <em>is</em> passed on
|
|
directly to commands called from the shell --- try the <code>cat</code> example and
|
|
you won't be able to interrupt it; type <code>^D</code> or use the lesser known but
|
|
more powerful <code>^\</code> (control with backslash), which sends <code>SIGQUIT</code>. If
|
|
it hasn't been disabled, this will also produce a file <code>core</code>, which
|
|
contains debugging information about what the programme was doing when
|
|
it exited --- never call your own files <code>core</code>. You can trap <code>SIGQUIT</code>
|
|
too, if you want. (The shell itself usually ignores <code>SIGQUIT</code>; it's only
|
|
useful for external commands.)</p>
|
|
<p>Now the other sort of trap. I could have written for the first example:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> TRAPINT() {
|
|
print I\'m trapped.
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>As you can see, this is just a function: functions beginning <code>TRAP</code> are
|
|
special. However, it's a real function too; you can call it by hand with
|
|
the command `TRAPINT', and it will run perfectly happily with no funny
|
|
side effects.</p>
|
|
<p>There is a difference between the way the two types work. In the
|
|
`<code>trap</code>' sort of trap, the code is just evaluated just as if it
|
|
appeared as instructions to the shell at the point where the trap
|
|
happened. So if you were in a function, you would see the environment of
|
|
that function with its local variables; if you set a local variable with
|
|
<code>typeset</code>, it would be visible in the function just as if it were
|
|
created there.</p>
|
|
<p>However, in the function type of trap, the code is provided with its own
|
|
function environment. Now if you use <code>typeset</code> the parameter created is
|
|
local only to the trap. In most cases, that's all the difference there
|
|
is; it's up to you to decide which is more convenient. As you can see,
|
|
the function type of trap doesn't require the extra layer of quoting, so
|
|
looks a little smarter. Conveniently, the `<code>trap</code>' command on its own
|
|
lists all traps in the form of the shell code you'd need to recreate
|
|
them, and you can see which sort is which.</p>
|
|
<p>There are two cases where the difference sticks out. One is that the
|
|
function type has some extra wiring to allow you both to trap a signal,
|
|
and pretend to anyone watching that the shell didn't handle it. An
|
|
example will show this:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> TRAPINT() {
|
|
print "Signal caught, stopping anyway."
|
|
return $(( 128 + $1 ))
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>That second line may look as rococo as the Amalienburg, but it's meaning
|
|
is this: <code>$1</code>, the first argument to the function, is set to the number
|
|
of the signal. In this case it will be 2 because that's the standard
|
|
number for <code>SIGINT</code>. That means the arithmetic substitution <code>$((...))</code>
|
|
returns 130, the command `<code>return 130</code>' is executed, and the function
|
|
returns with status 130. Returning with non-zero status is special in
|
|
function traps: it tells the shell you want to abort the surrounding
|
|
command even though the trap was handled, and that you want the status
|
|
associated with that to be 130. It so happens that this is how UNIX
|
|
handles returns from normal traps. Without setting a trap, do</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % cat
|
|
^C
|
|
% print $?
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and you'll see that this, too, has given the status 130, 128 plus the
|
|
value of <code>SIGINT</code>. So if you <em>do</em> have the trap set, you'll see the
|
|
message, but the command will abort --- even if it was running inside
|
|
the shell.</p>
|
|
<p>Try</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % read line
|
|
^C
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>to see that happening. If you look at the status in <code>$?</code> you'll find
|
|
it's actually 1, not 130; that's because the <code>read</code> command, when it
|
|
aborted, overrode the return value from the trap. But it does that with
|
|
an untrapped <code>^C</code>, too, so that's not really an exception to what I've
|
|
just said.</p>
|
|
<p>If you've been paying attention, you'll realise that traps set with the
|
|
<code>trap</code> builtin can't do it in quite this way, because the function they
|
|
return from would be whatever function you were in. You can see that:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> trap 'echo Returning...; return;' INT
|
|
fn() {
|
|
print In fn...
|
|
read param
|
|
print Leaving fn..
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>If you run <code>fn</code> and hit <code>^C</code>, the signal is trapped and the message
|
|
printed, but because of the <code>return</code>, the shell quits <code>fn</code> immediately
|
|
and you don't see the final message. If you missed out the `<code>return;</code>'
|
|
(try it), the shell would carry on with the rest of <code>fn</code> after you typed
|
|
something to <code>read</code>. Of course you can use this mechanism to leave
|
|
functions after trapping a signal; it just so happens that in this case
|
|
the mechanism with <code>TRAPINT</code> is a little closer to what untrapped
|
|
signals do and hence a little neater.</p>
|
|
<p>One final flourish of late Baroque splendour: the trap for <code>SIGEXIT</code>,
|
|
the one called when a function (or the shell itself, in fact) exits is a
|
|
bit special because in the case of exiting a function it will be called
|
|
in the environment of the calling function. So if you need to do
|
|
something like set a local variable for an enclosing function you can
|
|
have</p>
|
|
<pre><code> trap 'typeset param_in_enclosing_func=value' EXIT
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>do it for you; you couldn't do that with <code>TRAPEXIT</code> because the code
|
|
would have its own function, so that even though it would be called
|
|
after the first function exited, it wouldn't run directly in the
|
|
enclosing one but in a separate <code>TRAPEXIT</code> function. You can even set an
|
|
EXIT trap for the enclosing function by defining a nested `<code>trap .. EXIT</code>' inside that trap itself.</p>
|
|
<p>I lied, because there is one more special thing about <code>TRAPEXIT</code>: it's
|
|
always reset after you exit a function and the trap itself has been
|
|
called. Most traps just hang around until you explicitly unset them.
|
|
There is an option, <code>LOCAL_TRAPS</code>, which makes traps set inside
|
|
functions as well insulated as possible from those outside, or inside
|
|
deeper functions. In other words, the old trap is saved and then
|
|
restored when you exit the function; the scoping works pretty much like
|
|
that for <code>typeset</code>, and in the same way traps for the enclosing scope,
|
|
apart from any for <code>EXIT</code>, remain in effect inside a function unless you
|
|
explicitly override them; and, again in the same way, if you unset it
|
|
inside the function it will still be restored on exit.</p>
|
|
<p><code>LOCAL_TRAPS</code> is the fixed behaviour of some other shells. In zsh,
|
|
without the option set:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> trap 'echo Hi.' INT
|
|
fn() {
|
|
trap 'echo Bye.' INT
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Calling <code>fn</code> simply replaces the trap defined outside the function with
|
|
the one defined inside while:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> trap 'echo Hi.' INT
|
|
fn() {
|
|
setopt localtraps
|
|
trap 'echo Bye.' INT
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>puts the original `Hi' trap back after the function exits.</p>
|
|
<p>I haven't told you how to unset a trap for good: the answer is</p>
|
|
<pre><code> trap - INT
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>As you would guess, you can use <code>unfunction</code> with function-type traps;
|
|
that will correctly remove the trap as well as deleting the function.
|
|
However, `<code>trap -</code>' works with both, so that's the recommended way.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Limits on processes</strong></p>
|
|
<p>One other way that jobs started by the shell can be controlled is by
|
|
using limits. These are actually limits set by the operating system, but
|
|
the shell gives you a way of controlling them: the <code>limit</code> and <code>unlimit</code>
|
|
commands. Type `<code>limit</code>' on its own to see a summary. I get:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> cputime unlimited
|
|
filesize unlimited
|
|
datasize unlimited
|
|
stacksize 8MB
|
|
coredumpsize 0kB
|
|
memoryuse unlimited
|
|
maxproc 2048
|
|
descriptors 1024
|
|
memorylocked unlimited
|
|
addressspace unlimited
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where the item on the left of each line is what is being limited, and on
|
|
the right is the value. The manual page to look at, at least on Linux is
|
|
for the function <code>getrusage</code>; that's the function the shell is calling
|
|
when you run <code>limit</code> or <code>unlimit</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>In this case, the items are:</p>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li><strong><code>cputime</code></strong><br />
|
|
the total CPU time used by a process</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>filesize</code></strong><br />
|
|
maximum size of a file</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>datasize</code></strong><br />
|
|
the maximum size of data in use by a programme</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>stacksize</code></strong><br />
|
|
the maximum size of the stack, which is the area of memory used to
|
|
store information during function calls</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>coredumpsize</code></strong><br />
|
|
the maximum size of a <code>core</code> file, which is an image of memory left
|
|
by a programme that crashes, allowing you to debug it with <code>gdb</code>,
|
|
<code>dbx</code>, <code>ddd</code> or some other debugger</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>memoryuse</code></strong><br />
|
|
the maximum main memory, i.e. programme memory which is in active
|
|
use and hasn't been `swapped out' to disk</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>maxproc</code></strong><br />
|
|
the maximum number of simultaneous processes</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>descriptors</code></strong><br />
|
|
the maximum number of simultaneously open files (`descriptors' are
|
|
the internal mechanism for referring to an open file on UNIX-like
|
|
systems)</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>memorylocked</code></strong><br />
|
|
the maximum amount of memory locked in (I don't know what that is,
|
|
either)</li>
|
|
<li><strong><code>addressspace</code></strong><br />
|
|
the total amount of virtual memory, i.e. any memory whether it is
|
|
main memory, or refers to somewhere on a disk, or indeed anything
|
|
else.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p>You may well see other names; the shell decides when it is compiled what
|
|
limits are supported by the system.</p>
|
|
<p>Of those, the one I use most commonly is <code>coredumpsize</code>: sometimes when
|
|
I'm debugging a file I want a crashed programme to produce a `<code>core</code>'
|
|
files so I can run <code>gdb</code> or <code>dbx</code> on it (`<code>unlimit coredumpsize</code>'),
|
|
while other times they are just untidy (`<code>limit coredumpsize 0</code>').
|
|
Probably you would only alter any of the others if you knew there was a
|
|
problem, for example a number-crunching programme used so much memory
|
|
that the rest of the system was badly affected and you wanted to limit
|
|
<code>datasize</code> to 64 megabyte or whatever. You could write this as:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> limit datasize 64m
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>There is a distinction made between `hard' and `soft' limits. Both
|
|
have the same effect on programmes, but you can remove or reduce `soft'
|
|
limits, while only the superuser (the system administrator's login,
|
|
root) can do that to `hard' limits. Usually, therefore, <code>limit</code> and
|
|
<code>unlimit</code> manipulate soft limits; to show or set hard limits, give the
|
|
option <code>-h</code>. If I do `<code>limit -h</code>', I get the same list of limits as
|
|
above, but with <code>stacksize</code> and <code>coredumpsize</code> unlimited --- that means
|
|
I can reduce or remove the limits on those if I want, they're just set
|
|
for my own convenience.</p>
|
|
<p>Why is <code>stacksize</code> set in this way? As I said, it refers to the memory
|
|
in which the functions in programmes store variables and any other local
|
|
information. If one function calls another, it uses more memory. You can
|
|
get into a situation where functions call themselves recursively and
|
|
there is no way out until the machine runs out of memory; limiting
|
|
<code>stacksize</code> prevents this. You can actually see this with zsh itself
|
|
(probably better not to try this if you'd rather the shell you're
|
|
running didn't crash):</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % fn() { fn; }
|
|
% fn
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>defines a function which keeps calling itself. To do this, all the
|
|
functions <em>inside</em> zsh are calling themselves as well, using more and
|
|
more stack memory. Actually, zsh uses other forms of memory inside each
|
|
function and my version of zsh crashes due to exhaustion of that memory
|
|
instead. However, it depends on the system how this works out.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Times</strong></p>
|
|
<p>One way of returning information on process resources is with the
|
|
`<code>times</code>' command. It simply shows the total CPU time used by the shell
|
|
and by the programmes called for it --- in that order, and without
|
|
description, so you need to remember. On each line, the first number is
|
|
the time spent in user space and the second is the time spent in system
|
|
space. If you're not concerned about the details of programmes the
|
|
difference is pretty irrelevant, but if you are, then the difference is
|
|
very roughly that between the time spent in the code you actually see
|
|
before you compile a programme, and the time spent in `hidden' code
|
|
where the system is doing something for you. It's not such an obvious
|
|
distinction, because many library routines, such as mathematical
|
|
functions, are run in user mode as no privileged access to internal bits
|
|
of the system is required. Typically, system time is concerned with the
|
|
details of input and output --- though even there it's not so simple,
|
|
because the C output routines <code>printf</code>, <code>puts</code>, <code>fread</code> and others have
|
|
user mode code which then calls the system routines <code>read</code>, <code>write</code> and
|
|
so on.</p>
|
|
<p>You can measure the time taken by a particular external command by
|
|
putting `<code>time</code>', in the singular this time, in front of it; this is
|
|
essentially another precommand modifier, and is a shell reserved word
|
|
rather than a builtin. This gives fairly obvious information. You can
|
|
specify the information using the <code>$TIMEFMT</code> parameter, which has its
|
|
own percent escapes, different from the ones used in prompts. It exists
|
|
partly because the shell allowed you to access all sorts of other
|
|
information about the process which ran, such as `page faults' ---
|
|
occasions when the system had to fetch a part of the programme or data
|
|
from disk because it wasn't in the main memory. However, that
|
|
disappeared because it was too much work to convert the feature to
|
|
configure itself automatically for different operating systems. It may
|
|
be time to resurrect it.</p>
|
|
<p>You can also force the time to be shown automatically by setting the
|
|
parameter <code>$REPORTTIME</code>; if a command runs for more than this many
|
|
seconds, the <code>$TIMEFMT</code> output will be shown automatically.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l40"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="329-terminals-users-etc"><a class="header" href="#329-terminals-users-etc">3.2.9: Terminals, users, etc.</a></h3>
|
|
<p><strong>Watching for other users</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Although this is more associated with parameters than builtins, the
|
|
`<code>log</code>' command will tell you whether any of a group of people you want
|
|
to watch out for have logged in or out. To use this, you set the
|
|
<code>$watch</code> array parameter to a list of user names, or `<code>all</code>' for
|
|
everyone, or `<code>notme</code>' for everyone except yourself. Even if you don't
|
|
use <code>log</code>, any changes will be reported just before the shell prints a
|
|
prompt. It will be printed using the <code>$WATCHFMT</code> parameter: once again,
|
|
this takes its own set of percent escapes, listed in the <code>zshparam</code>
|
|
manual.</p>
|
|
<p><strong><code>ttyctl</code></strong></p>
|
|
<p>There is a command <code>ttyctl</code> which is designed to keep badly behaved
|
|
external commands from messing up the terminal settings. Most programmes
|
|
are careful to restore any settings they change, but there are
|
|
exceptions. After `<code>ttyctl -f</code>', the terminal is frozen; zsh will
|
|
restore the settings, no matter what an external programme does with it.
|
|
This includes deliberate attempts to change the terminal settings with
|
|
the `<code>stty</code>' command, so the default is unfrozen, `<code>ttyctl -u</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l41"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="3210-syntactic-oddments"><a class="header" href="#3210-syntactic-oddments">3.2.10: Syntactic oddments</a></h3>
|
|
<p>This section collects together a few builtins which, rather than
|
|
controlling the behaviour of some feature of the shell, have some other
|
|
special effect.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Controlling programme flow</strong></p>
|
|
<p>The four functions here are <code>exit</code>, <code>return</code>, <code>break</code>, <code>continue</code> and
|
|
<code>source</code> or <code>.</code>: they determine what the shell does next. You've met
|
|
<code>exit</code> --- leave the shell altogether --- and <code>return</code> --- leave the
|
|
current function. Be very careful not to confuse them. Calling <code>exit</code> in
|
|
a shell function is usually bad:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % fn() { exit; }
|
|
% fn
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This makes you entire shell session go away, not just the function. If
|
|
you write C programmes, you should be very familiar with both, although
|
|
there is one difference in this case: <code>return</code> at the top level in an
|
|
interactive shell actually does nothing, rather than leaving the shell
|
|
as you might expect. However, in a script, return outside a function
|
|
<em>does</em> cause the entire script to stop. The reason for this is that zsh
|
|
allows you to write autoloaded functions in the same form as scripts, so
|
|
that they can be used as either; this wouldn't work if <code>return</code> did
|
|
nothing when the file was run as a script. Other shells don't do this:
|
|
<code>return</code> does nothing at the top level of a script, as well as
|
|
interactively. However, other shells don't have the feature that
|
|
function definition files can be run as scripts, either.</p>
|
|
<p>The next two commands, <code>break</code> and <code>continue</code>, are to do with constructs
|
|
like `<code>if</code>'-blocks and loops, and it will be much easier if I introduce
|
|
them when I talk about those below. They will also already be familiar
|
|
to C programmers. (If you are a FORTRAN programmer, however, <code>continue</code>
|
|
is <em>not</em> the statement you are familiar with; it is instead equivalent
|
|
to <code>CYCLE</code> in FORTRAN90.)</p>
|
|
<p>The final pair of commands are <code>.</code> and <code>source</code>. They are similar to one
|
|
another and cause another file to be read as a stream of commands in the
|
|
current shell --- not as a script, for which a new shell would be
|
|
started which would finish at the end of the script. The two are
|
|
intended for running a series of commands which have some effect on the
|
|
current shell, exactly like the startup files. Indeed, it's a very
|
|
common use to have a call to one or other in a startup file; I have in
|
|
my <code>~/.zshrc</code></p>
|
|
<pre><code> [[ -f ~/.aliasrc ]] && . ~/.aliasrc
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which tests if the file <code>~/.aliasrc</code> exists, and if so runs the commands
|
|
in it; they are treated exactly as if they had appeared directly at that
|
|
point in <code>.zshrc</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>Note that your <code>$path</code> is used to find the file to read from; this is a
|
|
little surprising if you think of this as like a script being run, since
|
|
zsh doesn't search for a script, it uses the name exactly as you gave
|
|
it. In particular, if you don't have `<code>.</code>' in your <code>$path</code> and you use
|
|
the form `<code>.</code>' rather than `<code>source</code>' you will need to say explicitly
|
|
when you want to source a file in the current directory:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> . ./file
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>otherwise it won't be found.</p>
|
|
<p>It's a little bit like running a function, with the file as the function
|
|
body. Indeed, the shell will set the positional parameters <code>$*</code> in just
|
|
the same way. However, there's a crucial difference: there is no local
|
|
parameter scope. Any variables in a sourced file, as in one of the
|
|
startup files, are in the same scope as the point from which it was
|
|
started. You can, therefore, source a file from inside a function and
|
|
have the parameters in the sourced file local, but normally the only way
|
|
of having parameters only for use in a sourced file is to unset them
|
|
when you are finished.</p>
|
|
<p>The fact that both <code>.</code> and <code>source</code> exist is historical: the former
|
|
comes from the Bourne shell, and the latter from the C shell, which
|
|
seems deliberately to have done everything differently. The point noted
|
|
above, that source always searches the current directory (and searches
|
|
it first), is the only difference.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Re-evaluating an expression</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Sometimes it's very useful to take a string and run it as if it were a
|
|
set of shell commands. This is what <code>eval</code> does. More precisely, it
|
|
sticks the arguments together with spaces and calls them. In the case of
|
|
something like</p>
|
|
<pre><code> eval print Hello.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>this isn't very useful; that's no different from a simple</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print Hello.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The difference comes when what's on the command line has something to be
|
|
expanded, like a parameter:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> param='print Hello.'
|
|
eval $param
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, the <code>$param</code> is expanded just as it would be for a normal command.
|
|
Then <code>eval</code> gets the string `<code>print Hello.</code>' and executes it as shell
|
|
command line. Everything --- really everything --- that the shell would
|
|
normally do to execute a command line is done again; in effect, it's run
|
|
as a little function, except that no local context for parameters is
|
|
created. If this sounds familiar, that's because it's exactly the way
|
|
traps defined in the form</p>
|
|
<pre><code> trap 'print Hello.' EXIT
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>are called. This is one simple way out of the hole you can sometimes get
|
|
yourself into when you have a parameter which contains the name of
|
|
another parameter, instead of some data, and you want to get your hands
|
|
on the data:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> # somewhere above...
|
|
origdata='I am data.'
|
|
# but all you know about is
|
|
paramname=origdata
|
|
# so to extract the data you can do...
|
|
eval data=\$$paramname
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Now <code>$data</code> contains the value you want. Make sure you understand the
|
|
series of expansions going on: this sort of thing can get very
|
|
confusing. First the command line is expanded just as normal. This turns
|
|
the argument to <code>eval</code> into `<code>data=$origdata</code>'. The `<code>$</code>' that's still
|
|
there was quoted by a backslash; the backslash was stripped and the
|
|
`<code>$</code>' left; the <code>$paramname</code> was evaluated completely separately ---
|
|
quoted characters like the <code>\$</code> don't have any effect on expansions ---
|
|
to give <code>origdata</code>. Eval calls the new line `<code>data=$origdata</code>' as a
|
|
command in its own right, with the now obvious effect. If you're even
|
|
slightly confused, the best thing to do is simply to quote everything
|
|
you don't want to be immediately expanded:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> eval 'data=$'$paramname
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>or even</p>
|
|
<pre><code> eval 'data=${'$paramname'}'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>may perhaps make your intentions more obvious.</p>
|
|
<p>It's possible when you're starting out to confuse `<code>eval</code>' with the
|
|
<code>`...`</code> and <code>$(...)</code> commands, which also take the command in the
|
|
middle `<code>...</code>' and evaluate it as a command line. However, these two
|
|
(they're identical except for the syntax) then insert the output of that
|
|
command back into the command line, while <code>eval</code> does no such thing; it
|
|
has no effect at all on where input and output go. Conversely, the two
|
|
forms of command substitution don't do an extra level of expansion.
|
|
Compare:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % foo='print bar'
|
|
% eval $foo
|
|
bar
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>with</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % foo='print bar'
|
|
% echo $($foo)
|
|
zsh: command not found: print bar
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The <code>$</code>(<em>...</em>) substitution took <code>$foo</code> as the command line. As you are
|
|
now painfully aware, zsh doesn't split scalar parameters, so this was
|
|
turned into the single word `<code>print bar</code>', which isn't a command. The
|
|
blank line is `<code>echo</code>' printing the empty result of the failed
|
|
substitution.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l42"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="3211-more-precommand-modifiers-exec-noglob"><a class="header" href="#3211-more-precommand-modifiers-exec-noglob">3.2.11: More precommand modifiers: <code>exec</code>, <code>noglob</code></a></h3>
|
|
<p>Sometimes you want to run a command <em>instead</em> of the shell. This
|
|
sometimes happens when you write a shell script to process the arguments
|
|
to an external command, or set parameters for it, then call that
|
|
command. For example:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> export MOZILLA_HOME=/usr/local/netscape
|
|
netscape "$@"
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Run as a script, this sets an environment variable, then starts
|
|
<code>netscape</code>. However, as always the shell waits for the command to
|
|
finish. That's rather wasteful here, since there's nothing more for the
|
|
shell to do; you'd rather it simply magically turned into the <code>netscape</code>
|
|
command. You can actually do this:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> export MOZILLA_HOME=/usr/local/netscape
|
|
exec netscape "$@"
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>`<code>exec</code>' tells the shell that it doesn't need to wait; it can just make
|
|
the command to run replace the shell. So this only uses a single
|
|
process.</p>
|
|
<p>Normally, you should be careful not to use <code>exec</code> interactively, since
|
|
normally you don't want the shell to go away. One legitimate use is to
|
|
replace the current zsh with a brand new one if (say) you've set a whole
|
|
load of options you don't like and want to restore the ones you usually
|
|
have on startup:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> exec zsh
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Or you may have the bad taste to start a completely different shell
|
|
altogether. Conversely, a good piece of news about <code>exec</code> is that it is
|
|
common to all shells, so you can use it from another shell to start zsh
|
|
in the way I've just shown.</p>
|
|
<p>Like `<code>command</code>' and `<code>builtin</code>', `<code>exec</code>' is a `precommand
|
|
modifier' in that it alters the way a command line is interpreted.
|
|
Here's one more:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> noglob print *
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>If you've remembered what `glob' means, this is all fairly obvious. It
|
|
instructs the shell not to turn the `<code>*</code>' into a list of all the files
|
|
in the directory, but instead to let well alone. You can do this by
|
|
quoting the `<code>*</code>', of course; often <code>noglob</code> is used as part of an
|
|
alias to set up commands where you never need filename generation and
|
|
don't want to have to bother quoting everything. However, note that
|
|
<code>noglob</code> has no effect on any other type of expansion: parameter
|
|
expansion and backquote (<code>`....`</code>) expansion, for example, happen as
|
|
normal; the only thing that doesn't is turning patterns into a list of
|
|
matching files. So it doesn't take away the necessity of knowing the
|
|
rules of shell expansion. If you need that, the best thing to do is to
|
|
use <code>read</code> or <code>vared</code> (see below) to read a line into a parameter, which
|
|
you pass to your function:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> read -r param
|
|
print $param
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The <code>-r</code> makes sure <code>$param</code> is the unadulterated input.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l43"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="3212-testing-things"><a class="header" href="#3212-testing-things">3.2.12: Testing things</a></h3>
|
|
<p>I told you in the last chapter that the right way to write tests in zsh
|
|
was using the `<code>[[ ... ]]</code>' form, and why. So you can ignore the two
|
|
builtins `<code>test</code>' and `<code>[</code>', even though they're the ones that
|
|
resemble the Bourne shell. You can safely write</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ $foo = '' ]]; then
|
|
print The parameter foo is empty. O, misery me.
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>or</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ -z $foo ]]; then
|
|
print Alack and alas, foo still has nothing in it.
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>instead of monstrosities like</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if test x$foo != x; then
|
|
echo The emptiness of foo. Yet are we not all empty\?
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>because even if <code>$foo</code> does expand to an empty string, which is what is
|
|
implied if the tests are true, `<code>[[ ... ]]</code>' remembers there was
|
|
something there and gets the syntax right. Rather than a builtin, this
|
|
is actually a reserved word --- in fact it has to be, to be
|
|
syntactically special --- but you probably aren't too bothered about the
|
|
difference.</p>
|
|
<p>There are two sorts of tests, both shown above: those with three
|
|
arguments, and those with two. The three-argument forms all have some
|
|
comparison in the middle; in addition to `<code>=</code>' (or `<code>==</code>', which means
|
|
the same here, and which according to the manual page we should be
|
|
using, though none of us does), there are `<code>!=</code>' (not equal), `<code><</code>',
|
|
`<code>></code>', `<code><=</code>' and `<code>>=</code>'. All these do <em>string</em> comparisons, i.e.
|
|
they compare the sort order of the strings.</p>
|
|
<p>Since there are better ways of sorting things in zsh, the `<code>=</code>' and
|
|
`<code>!=</code>' forms are by far the most common. Actually, they do something a
|
|
bit more than string comparison: the expression on the right can be a
|
|
pattern. The patterns understood are just the same as for matching
|
|
filenames, except that `<code>/</code>' isn't special, so it can be matched by a
|
|
`<code>*</code>'. Note that, because `<code>=</code>' and `<code>!=</code>' are treated specially by
|
|
the shell, you shouldn't quote the patterns: you might think that unless
|
|
you do, they'll be turned into file names, but they won't. So</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ biryani = b* ]]; then
|
|
print Word begins with a b.
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>works. If you'd written <code>'b*'</code>, including the quotes, it wouldn't have
|
|
been treated as a pattern; it would have tested for a string which was
|
|
exactly the two letters `<code>b*</code>' and nothing else. Pattern matching like
|
|
this can be very powerful. If you've done any Bourne shell programming,
|
|
you may remember the only way to use patterns there was via the
|
|
`<code>case</code>' construction: that's still in zsh (see below), and uses the
|
|
same sort of patterns, but the test form shown above is often more
|
|
useful.</p>
|
|
<p>Then there are other three-argument tests which do numeric comparison.
|
|
Rather oddly, these use letters rather than mathematical symbols:
|
|
`<code>-eq</code>', `<code>-lt</code>' and `<code>-le</code>' compare if two numbers are equal, less
|
|
than, or less than or equal, to one another. You can guess what `<code>-gt</code>'
|
|
and `<code>-ge</code>' do. Note this is the other way round to Perl, which much
|
|
more logically uses `<code>==</code>' to test for equality of numbers (not `<code>=</code>',
|
|
since that's always an assignment operator in Perl) and `<code>eq</code>' (minus
|
|
the minus) to test for equality of strings. Unfortunately we're now
|
|
stuck with it this way round. If you are only comparing numbers, it's
|
|
better to use the `<code>(( ... ))</code>' expression, because that has a proper
|
|
understanding of arithmetic. However,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ $number -gt 3 ]]; then
|
|
print Wow, that\'s big
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if (( $number > 3 )); then
|
|
print Wow, that\'s STILL big
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>are essentially equivalent. In the second case, the status is zero
|
|
(true) if the number in the expression was non-zero (sorry if I'm
|
|
confusing you again) and vice versa. This means that</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if (( 3 )); then
|
|
print It seems that 3 is non-zero, Watson.
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is a perfectly valid test. As in C, the test operators in arithmetic
|
|
return 1 for true and 0 for false, i.e. `<code>$number > 3</code>' is 1 if
|
|
<code>$number</code> is greater than 3 and 0 otherwise; the inversion to shell
|
|
logic, zero for true, only occurs at the final step when the expression
|
|
has been completely evaluated and the `<code>(( ... ))</code>' command returns. At
|
|
least with `<code>[[ ... ]]</code>' you don't need to worry about the extra
|
|
negation; you can simply think in logical terms (although that's hard
|
|
enough for a lot of people).</p>
|
|
<p>Finally, there are a few other odd comparisons in the three-argument
|
|
form:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ file1 -nt file2 ]]; then
|
|
print file1 is newer than file2
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>does the test implied by the example; there is also `<code>-ot</code>' to test for
|
|
an older file, and there is also the little-used `<code>-ef</code>' which tests
|
|
for an `equivalent file', meaning that they refer to the same file ---
|
|
in other words, are linked; this can be a hard or a symbolic link, and
|
|
in the second case it doesn't matter which of the two is the symbolic
|
|
link. (If you were paying attention above, you'll know it can't possibly
|
|
matter in the first case.)</p>
|
|
<p>In addition to these tests, which are pretty recognisable from most
|
|
programming languages --- although you'll just have to remember that the
|
|
`<code>=</code>' family compares strings and not numbers --- there are another set
|
|
which are largely peculiar to UNIXy scripting languages. These are all
|
|
in the form of a hyphen followed by a letter as the test, which always
|
|
takes a single argument. I showed one: `-z $var' tests whether
|
|
`<code>$var</code>' has zero length. It's opposite is `-n $var' which tests for
|
|
non-zero length. Perhaps this is as good a time as any to point out that
|
|
the arguments to these commands can be any single word expression, not
|
|
just variables or filenames. You are quite at liberty to test</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ -z "$var is sqrt(`print bibble`)" ]]; then
|
|
print Flying pig detected.
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>if you like. In fact, the tests are so eager to make sure that they only
|
|
have a one word argument that they will treat things like arrays, which
|
|
usually return a whole set of words, as if they were in double quotes,
|
|
joining the bits with spaces:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> array=(two words)
|
|
if [[ $array = 'two words' ]]; then
|
|
print "The array \$array is OK. O, joy."
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Apart from `<code>-z</code>' and `<code>-n</code>', most of the two-argument tests are to do
|
|
with files: `<code>-e</code>' tests that the file named next exists, whatever type
|
|
of file it is (it might be a directory or something weirder); `<code>-f</code>'
|
|
tests if it exists and is a regular file (so it isn't a directory or
|
|
anything weird this time); `<code>-x</code>' tests whether you can execute it.
|
|
There are all sorts of others which are listed in the manual page for
|
|
various properties of files. Then there are a couple of others: ``-o</p>
|
|
<option>`' you've met and tests whether the option is set, and \``-t
|
|
<fd>`' tests whether the file descriptor is attached to a terminal. A
|
|
file descriptor is a number which for the shell must be between 0 and 9
|
|
inclusive (others may exist, but you can't access them directly); 0 is
|
|
the standard input, 1 the standard output, and 2 the channel on which
|
|
errors are usually printed. Hence \``[[ -t 0 ]]`' tests whether the
|
|
input is coming from a terminal.
|
|
<p>There are only four other things making up tests. `<code>&&</code>' and `<code>||</code>'
|
|
mean logical `and' and `or', `<code>!</code>' negates the effect of a test, and
|
|
parentheses `<code>( ... )</code>' can be used to surround a set of tests which
|
|
are to be treated as one. These are all essentially the same as in C. So</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ 3 -gt 2 && ( me > you || ! -z bah ) ]]; then
|
|
print will I, won\'t I...
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>will, because 3 is numerically greater than 2; the expression in
|
|
parentheses is evaluated and though `me' actually comes before `you'
|
|
in the alphabet, so the first test fails, `<code>-z bah</code>' is false because
|
|
you gave it a non-empty string, and hence `<code>! -z bah</code>' is true. So both
|
|
sides of the `<code>&&</code>' are true and the test succeeds.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l44"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="3213-handling-options-to-functions-and-scripts"><a class="header" href="#3213-handling-options-to-functions-and-scripts">3.2.13: Handling options to functions and scripts</a></h3>
|
|
<p>It's often convenient to have your own functions and scripts process
|
|
single-letter options in the way a lot of builtin commands (as well as a
|
|
great many other UNIX-style commands) do. The shell provides a builtin
|
|
for this called `<code>getopts</code>'. This should always be called in some kind
|
|
of loop, usually a `<code>while</code>' loop. It's easiest to explain by example.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> testopts() {
|
|
# $opt will hold the current option
|
|
local opt
|
|
while getopts ab: opt; do
|
|
# loop continues till options finished
|
|
# see which pattern $opt matches...
|
|
case $opt in
|
|
(a)
|
|
print Option a set
|
|
;;
|
|
(b)
|
|
print Option b set to $OPTARG
|
|
;;
|
|
# matches a question mark
|
|
# (and nothing else, see text)
|
|
(\?)
|
|
print Bad option, aborting.
|
|
return 1
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
done
|
|
(( OPTIND > 1 )) && shift $(( OPTIND - 1 ))
|
|
print Remaining arguments are: $*
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>There's quite a lot here if you're new to shell programming. You might
|
|
want to read the stuff on structures like <code>while</code> and <code>case</code> below and
|
|
then come back and look at this. First let's see what it does.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % testopts -b foo -a -- args
|
|
Option b set to foo
|
|
Option a set
|
|
Remaining arguments are: args
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here's what's happening. `<code>getopts ab: opt</code>' is the argument to the
|
|
`<code>while</code>'. That means that the <code>getopts</code> gets run; if it succeeds
|
|
(returns status zero), then the loop after the `<code>do</code>' is run. When
|
|
that's finished, the <code>getopts</code> command is run again, and so on until it
|
|
fails (returns a non-zero status). It will do that when there are no
|
|
more options left on the command line. So the loop processes the options
|
|
one by one. Each time through, the number of the next argument to look
|
|
at is left in the parameter <code>$OPTIND</code>, so this gradually increases;
|
|
that's how <code>getopts</code> knows how far it has got.</p>
|
|
<p>The first argument to the <code>getopts</code> is `<code>ab:</code>'. That means `<code>a</code>' is an
|
|
option which doesn't take an argument, while `<code>b</code>' is an argument which
|
|
takes a single argument, signified by the colon after it. You can have
|
|
any number of single-letter (or even digit) arguments, which are
|
|
case-sensitive; for example `<code>ab:c:ABC:</code>' are six different options,
|
|
three with arguments. If the option found has an argument, that is
|
|
stored in the parameter <code>$OPTARG</code>; <code>getopts</code> then increments <code>$OPTIND</code>
|
|
by however much is necessary, which may be 2 or just 1 since `<code>-b foo</code>'
|
|
and `<code>-bfoo</code>' are both valid ways of giving the argument.</p>
|
|
<p>If an option is found, we use the `<code>case</code>' mechanism to find out what
|
|
it was. The idea of this is simple, even if the syntax has the look of
|
|
an 18th-century French chateau: the argument `<code>$opt</code>' is tested against
|
|
all of the patterns in the `<code>pattern</code>)' lines until one matches, and
|
|
the commands are executed until the next `<code>;;</code>'. It's the shell's
|
|
equivalent of C's `<code>switch</code>'. In this example, we just print out what
|
|
the <code>getopts</code> brought in. Note the last line, which is called if <code>$opt</code>
|
|
is a question mark --- it's quoted because `<code>?</code>' on its own can stand
|
|
for any single character. This is how <code>getopts</code> signals an unknown
|
|
option. If you try it, you'll see that <code>getopts</code> prints its own error
|
|
message, so ours was unnecessary: you can turn the former off by putting
|
|
a colon right at the start of the list of options, making it `<code>:ab:</code>'
|
|
here.</p>
|
|
<p>Actually, having this last pattern as an <em>un</em>quoted `<code>?</code>' isn't such a
|
|
bad idea. Suppose you add a letter to the list that <code>getopts</code> should
|
|
handle and forget to add a corresponding item in the <code>case</code> list for it.
|
|
If the last item matches any character, you will get the behaviour for
|
|
an unhandled option, which is probably the best thing to do. Otherwise
|
|
nothing in the <code>case</code> list will match, the shell will sail blithely on
|
|
to the next call to <code>getopts</code>, and when you try to use the function with
|
|
the new option you will be left wondering quite what happened to it.</p>
|
|
<p>The last piece of the <code>getopts</code> jigsaw is the next line, which tests if
|
|
<code>$OPTIND</code> is larger than 1, i.e. an option was found and <code>$OPTIND</code> was
|
|
advanced --- it is automatically set to 1 at the start of every function
|
|
or script. If it was, the `<code>shift</code>' builtin with a numeric argument,
|
|
but no array name, moves the positional parameters, i.e. the function's
|
|
arguments, to shift away the options that have been processed. The
|
|
<code>print</code> in the next line shows you that only the remaining non-option
|
|
arguments are left. You don't need to do that --- you can just start
|
|
using the remaining arguments from <code>$argv[$OPTIND]</code> on --- but it's a
|
|
pretty good way of doing it.</p>
|
|
<p>In the call, I showed a line with `<code>-``-</code>' in it: that's the standard
|
|
way of telling <code>getopts</code> that the options are finished; even if later
|
|
words start with a <code>-</code>, they are not treated as options. However,
|
|
<code>getopts</code> stops anyway when it reaches a word not beginning with `<code>-</code>',
|
|
so that wasn't necessary here. But it works anyway.</p>
|
|
<p>You can do all of what <code>getopts</code> does without <em>that</em> much difficulty
|
|
with a few extra lines of shell programming, of course. The best
|
|
argument for using <code>getopts</code> is probably that it allows you to group
|
|
single-letter options, e.g. `<code>-abc</code>' is equivalent to `<code>-a -b -c</code>' if
|
|
none of them was defined to have an argument. In this case, <code>getopts</code>
|
|
has to remember the position <em>inside</em> the word on the command line for
|
|
you to call it next, since the `<code>a</code>' `<code>b</code>' and `<code>c</code>' still appear on
|
|
different calls. Rather unsatisfactorily, this is hidden inside the
|
|
shell (as it is in other shells --- we haven't fixed <em>all</em> of everybody
|
|
else's bad design decisions); you can't get at it or reset it without
|
|
altering <code>$OPTIND</code>. But if you read the small print at the top of the
|
|
guide, you'll find I carefully avoided saying everything was
|
|
satisfactory.</p>
|
|
<p>While we're at it, why do blocks starting with `<code>if</code>' and `<code>then</code>' end
|
|
with `<code>fi</code>', and blocks starting with `<code>case</code>' end with `<code>esac</code>',
|
|
while those starting with `<code>while</code>' and `<code>do</code>' end with `<code>done</code>', not
|
|
`<code>elihw</code>' (perfectly pronounceable in Welsh, after all) or `<code>od</code>'?
|
|
Don't ask me.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l45"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="3214-random-file-control-things"><a class="header" href="#3214-random-file-control-things">3.2.14: Random file control things</a></h3>
|
|
<p>We're now down into the odds and ends. If you know UNIX at all, you will
|
|
already be familiar with the <code>umask</code> command and its effect on file
|
|
creation, but as it is a builtin I will describe it here. Create a file
|
|
and look at it:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % touch tmpfile
|
|
% ls -l tmpfile
|
|
-rw-r--r-- 1 pws pws 0 Jul 19 21:19 tmpfile
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(I've shortened the output line for the TeX version of this document.)
|
|
You'll see that the permissions are read for everyone, write-only for
|
|
the owner. How did the command (<code>touch</code>, not a builtin, creates an empty
|
|
file if there was none, or simply updates the modification time of an
|
|
existing file) know what permissions to set?</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % umask
|
|
022
|
|
% umask 077
|
|
% rm tmpfile; touch tmpfile
|
|
% ls -l tmpfile
|
|
-rw------- 1 pws pws 0 Jul 19 21:22 tmpfile
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p><code>umask</code> was how it knew. It gives an octal number corresponding to the
|
|
permissions which should <em>not</em> be given to a newly created file (only
|
|
newly created files are affected; operations on existing files don't
|
|
involve <code>umask</code>). Each digit is made up of a 4 for read, 2 for write, 1
|
|
for executed, in the same order that <code>ls</code> shows for permissions: user,
|
|
then group, then everyone else. (On this Linux/GNU-based system, like
|
|
many others, users have their own groups, so both are called `<code>pws</code>'.)
|
|
So my original `022' specified that everything should be allowed except
|
|
writing for group and other, while `077' disallowed any operation by
|
|
group and other. These are the two most common settings, although here
|
|
`002' or `007' would be useful because of the way groups are specific
|
|
to users, making it easier to grant permission to specific other users
|
|
to write in my directories. (Except there aren't any other users.)</p>
|
|
<p>You can also use <code>chmod</code>-like permission changing expressions in
|
|
<code>umask</code>. So</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % umask go+rx
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>would restore group and other permissions for reading and executing,
|
|
hence returning the mask to 022. Note that because it is <em>adding</em>
|
|
permissions, just like <code>chmod</code> does, it is <em>removing</em> numbers from the
|
|
umask.</p>
|
|
<p>You might have wondered about execute permissions, since `<code>touch</code>'
|
|
didn't give any, even where it was allowed by <code>umask</code>. That's because
|
|
only operations which create executable programmes, such as running a
|
|
compiler and linker, set that bit; the normal way of opening a new file
|
|
--- internally, the UNIX <code>open</code> function, with the <code>O_CREAT</code> flag set
|
|
--- doesn't touch it. For the same reason, if you create shell scripts
|
|
which you want to be able to execute by typing the name, you have to
|
|
make them executable yourself:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % chmod +x myscript
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and, indeed, you can think of <code>chmod</code> as <code>umask</code>'s companion for files
|
|
which already exist. It doesn't need to be a builtin, because the files
|
|
you are operating on are external to <code>zsh</code>; <code>umask</code>, on the other hand,
|
|
operates when you create a file from within <code>zsh</code> or any child process,
|
|
so needs to be a builtin. The fact that it's inherited means you can set
|
|
<code>umask</code> before you start an editor, and files created by that editor
|
|
will reflect the permissions.</p>
|
|
<p>Note that the value set by <code>umask</code> is also inherited and used by
|
|
<code>chmod</code>. In the example of <code>chmod</code> I gave, I didn't see <em>which</em> type of
|
|
execute permission to add; <code>chmod</code> looks at my <code>umask</code> and decides based
|
|
on that --- in other words, with 022, everybody would be allowed to
|
|
execute <code>myscript</code>, while with 077, only I would, because of the 1's in
|
|
the number: (0+0+0)+(4+2+1)+(4+2+1). Of course, you can be explicit with
|
|
chmod and say `<code>chmod u+x myscript</code>' and so on.</p>
|
|
<p>Something else that may or may not be obvious: if you run a script by
|
|
passing it as an argument to the shell,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % zsh myscript
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>what matters is <em>read</em> permission. That's what the shell's doing to the
|
|
script to find the commands, after all. Execute permission applies when
|
|
the system (or, in some cases, including zsh, the parent shell where you
|
|
typed `<code>myscript</code>') has to decide whether to find a shell to run the
|
|
script by itself.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l46"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="3215-dont-watch-this-space-watch-some-other"><a class="header" href="#3215-dont-watch-this-space-watch-some-other">3.2.15: Don't watch this space, watch some other</a></h3>
|
|
<p>Finally for builtins, some things which really belong elsewhere. There
|
|
are three commands you use to control the shell's editor. These will be
|
|
described in <a href="zshguide04.html#zle">chapter 4</a>, where I talk all about
|
|
the editor.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>bindkey</code> command allows you to attach a set of keystrokes to a
|
|
command. It understands an abbreviated notation for the keystrokes.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % bindkey '^Xc' copy-prev-word
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This binds the keystrokes consisting of <code>Ctrl</code> held down with <code>x</code>, then
|
|
<code>c</code>, to the command which copies the previous word on the line to the
|
|
current position. The commands are listed in the <code>zshzle</code> manual page.
|
|
<code>bindkey</code> can also do things with keymaps, which are a complete set of
|
|
mappings between keys and commands like the one I showed.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>vared</code> command is an extremely useful builtin for editing a shell
|
|
variable. Usually much the easiest way to change <code>$path</code> (or <code>$PS1</code>, or
|
|
whatever) is to run `<code>vared path</code>': note the lack of a `<code>$</code>', since
|
|
otherwise you would be editing whatever <code>$path</code> was expanded to. This is
|
|
because very often you want to leave most of what's there and just
|
|
change the odd character or word. Otherwise, you would end up doing this
|
|
with ordinary parameter substitutions, which are a lot more complicated
|
|
and error prone. Editing a parameter is exactly like editing a command
|
|
line, except without the prompt at the start.</p>
|
|
<p>Finally, there is the <code>zle</code> command. This is the most mysterious, as it
|
|
offers a fairly low-level interface to the line editor; you use it to
|
|
define your own editing commands. So I'll leave this alone for now.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l47"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="3216-and-also"><a class="header" href="#3216-and-also">3.2.16: And also</a></h3>
|
|
<p>There is one more standard builtin that I haven't covered: <code>zmodload</code>,
|
|
which allows you to manipulate add-on packages for zsh. Many extras are
|
|
supplied with the shell which aren't normally loaded to keep down the
|
|
use of memory and to avoid having too many rarely used builtins, etc.,
|
|
getting in the way. In the last chapter I will talk about some of these.
|
|
To be more honest, a lot of the stuff in between actually uses these
|
|
addons, generically referred to as modules --- the line editor, zle, is
|
|
itself a separate module, though heavily dependent on the main shell ---
|
|
and you've probably forgotten I mentioned above using `<code>zmodload zsh/mathfunc</code>' to load mathematical functions.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l48"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="33-functions"><a class="header" href="#33-functions">3.3: Functions</a></h2>
|
|
<p>Now it's time to look at functions in more detail. The various issues to
|
|
be discussed are: loading functions, handling parameters, compiling
|
|
functions, and repairing bike tyres when the rubber solution won't stick
|
|
to the surface. Unfortunately I've already used so much space that I'll
|
|
have to skip the last issue, however topical it might be for me at the
|
|
moment.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l49"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="331-loading-functions"><a class="header" href="#331-loading-functions">3.3.1: Loading functions</a></h3>
|
|
<p>Well, you know what happens now. You can define functions on the command
|
|
line:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> fn() {
|
|
print I am a function
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which you call under the name `<code>fn</code>'. As you type, the shell knows that
|
|
it's in the middle of a function definition, and prompts you until you
|
|
get to the closing brace.</p>
|
|
<p>Alternatively, and much more normally, you put a file called <code>fn</code>
|
|
somewhere in a directory listed in the <code>$fpath</code> array. At this point,
|
|
you need to be familiar with the <code>KSH_AUTOLOAD</code> option described in the
|
|
last chapter. From now on, I'm just going to assume your autoloadable
|
|
function files contain just the body of the function, i.e.
|
|
<code>KSH_AUTOLOAD</code> is not set. Then the file <code>fn</code> would contain:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print I am a function
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and nothing else.</p>
|
|
<p>Recent versions of zsh, since <code>3.1.6</code>, set up <code>$fpath</code> for you. It
|
|
contains two parts, although the second may have multiple directories.
|
|
The first is, typically, <code>/usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions</code>, although
|
|
the prefix may vary. This is empty unless your system administrator has
|
|
put something in it, which is what it's there for.</p>
|
|
<p>The remaining part may be either a single directory such as
|
|
<code>/usr/local/share/zsh/3.1.9/functions</code>, or a whole set of directories
|
|
starting with that path. It simply depends whether the person installing
|
|
zsh wanted to keep all the functions in the same directory, or have them
|
|
sorted according to what they do. These directories are full of
|
|
functions. However, none of the functions is autoloaded automatically,
|
|
so unless you specifically put `<code>autoload ...</code>' in a startup file, the
|
|
shell won't actually take any notice of them. As you'll see, part of the
|
|
path is the shell version. This makes it very easy to keep multiple
|
|
versions of zsh with functions which use features that may be different
|
|
between the two versions. By the way, if these directories don't exist,
|
|
you should check <code>$fpath</code> to see if they are in some other location, and
|
|
if you can't find any correspondence between what's in <code>$fpath</code> and
|
|
what's on the disk even when you start the shell with <code>zsh -f</code> to
|
|
suppress loading of startup files, complain to the system administrator:
|
|
he or she has either not installed them properly, or has made
|
|
<code>/etc/zshenv</code> stomp on <code>$fpath</code>, both of which are thoroughly evil
|
|
things to do. (<code>/etc/zshrc</code>, <code>/etc/zprofile</code> and <code>/etc/zlogin</code> shouldn't
|
|
stomp on <code>$fpath</code> either, of course. In fact, they shouldn't do very
|
|
much; that's up to the user.)</p>
|
|
<p>One point about <code>autoload</code> is the `<code>-U</code>' option. This turns off the use
|
|
of any aliases you have defined when the function is actually loaded ---
|
|
the flag is remembered with the name of the function for future
|
|
reference, rather than being interpreted immediately by the <code>autoload</code>
|
|
command. Since aliases can pretty much redefine any command into any
|
|
other, and are usually interpreted while a function is being defined or
|
|
loaded, you can see that without this flag there is fair scope for
|
|
complete havoc.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> alias ls='echo Your ls command has been requisitioned.'
|
|
lsroot() {
|
|
ls -l /
|
|
}
|
|
lsroot
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>That's not what the function writer intended. (Yes, I know it actually
|
|
<em>is</em>, because I wrote it to show the problem, but that's not what I
|
|
<em>meant</em>.) So <code>-U</code> is recommended for all standard functions, where you
|
|
have no easy way of telling quite what could be run inside.</p>
|
|
<p>Recently, the functions for the new completion system (described in
|
|
<a href="zshguide06.html#comp">chapter 6</a>) have been changing the fastest. They
|
|
either begin with <code>comp</code> or an underscore, `<code>_</code>'. If the <code>functions</code>
|
|
directory is subdivided, most of the subdirectories refer to this. There
|
|
are various other classes of functions distributed with the shell:</p>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>Functions beginning <code>zf</code> are associated with zftp, a builtin system
|
|
for FTP transfers. Traditional FTP clients, ones which don't use a
|
|
graphical interface, tend to be based around a set of commands on a
|
|
command line --- exactly what zsh is good at. This also makes it
|
|
very easy to write macros for FTP jobs --- they're just shell
|
|
functions. This is described in the final chapter along with other
|
|
modules. It's based around a single builtin, <code>zftp</code>, which is loaded
|
|
from the module <code>zsh/zftp</code>.</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>Functions beginning <code>prompt</code>, which may be in the <code>Prompts</code>
|
|
subdirectory, are part of a `prompt themes' system which makes it
|
|
easy for you to switch between preexisting prompts. You load it with
|
|
`<code>autoload -U promptinit; promptinit</code>'. Then `<code>prompt -h</code>' will
|
|
tell you what to do next. If you have new completion loaded (with
|
|
`<code>autoload -U compinit; compinit</code>', what else) the arguments to
|
|
`<code>prompt</code>' can be listed with <code>^D</code> and completed with a TAB; they
|
|
are various sorts of prompt which you may or may not like.</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>Functions with long names and hyphens, like <code>predict-on</code> and
|
|
<code>incremental-complete-word</code>. These are editor functions; you use
|
|
them with</p>
|
|
<pre><code> zle -N predict-on
|
|
bindkey <keystroke> predict-on
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, the <code>predict-on</code> function automatically looks back in the
|
|
history list for matching lines as you type. You should also bind
|
|
<code>predict-off</code>, which is loaded when <code>predict-on</code> is first called.
|
|
<code>incremental-complete-word</code> is a fairly simple attempt at showing
|
|
possible completions for the current word as you type; it could do
|
|
with improving.</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>Everything else; these may be in the <code>Misc</code> subdirectory. These are
|
|
a very mixed bag which you should read to see if you like any. One
|
|
of the most useful is <code>zed</code>, which allows you to edit a small file
|
|
(it's really just a simple front-end to <code>vared</code>). The <code>run-help</code>
|
|
file shows you the sort of thing you might want to define for use
|
|
with the <code>\eh</code> (<code>run-help</code>) keystroke. <code>is-at-least</code> is a function
|
|
for finding out if the version of the shell running is recent
|
|
enough, assuming you know what version you need for a given feature.
|
|
Several of the other functions refer to the old completion system
|
|
--- which you won't need, since you will be reading <a href="zshguide06.html#comp">chapter
|
|
6</a> and using the new completion system, of
|
|
course.</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p>If you have your own functions --- and if you use zsh a lot, you almost
|
|
certainly will eventually --- it's a good idea to add your own personal
|
|
directory to the front of <code>$fpath</code>, so that everything there takes
|
|
precedence over the standard functions. That allows you to override a
|
|
completion function very easily, just by copying it and editing it. I
|
|
tend to do something like this in my <code>.zshenv</code>:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> [[ $fpath = *pws* ]] || fpath=(~pws/bin/fns $fpath)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>to protect against the possibility that the directory I want to add is
|
|
already there, in case I source that startup file again, and there are
|
|
other similar ways. (You may well find your own account isn't called
|
|
<code>pws</code>, however.)</p>
|
|
<p>Chances are you will always want your own functions to be autoloaded.
|
|
There is an easy way of doing this: put it just after the line I showed
|
|
above:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> autoload ${fpath[1]}/*(:t)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The <code>${fpath[1]}/*</code> expands to all the files in the directory at the
|
|
head of the <code>$fpath</code> array. The <code>(:t)</code> is a `glob modifier': applied to
|
|
a filename generation pattern, it takes the tail (basename) of all the
|
|
files in the list. These are exactly the names of the functions you want
|
|
to autoload. It's up to you whether you want the <code>-U</code> argument here.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l50"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="332-function-parameters"><a class="header" href="#332-function-parameters">3.3.2: Function parameters</a></h3>
|
|
<p>I covered local parameters in some detail when I talked about <code>typeset</code>,
|
|
so I won't talk about that here. I didn't mention the other parameters
|
|
which are effectively local to a function, the ones that pass down the
|
|
arguments to the function, so here is more detail. They work pretty much
|
|
identically in scripts.</p>
|
|
<p>There are basically two forms. There is the form inherited from Bourne
|
|
shell via Korn shell, with the typically uninformative names: <code>$#</code>,
|
|
<code>$*</code>, <code>$@</code> and the numerical parameters <code>$1</code> etc. --- as high a number
|
|
as the shell will parse is allowed, not just single digits. Then there
|
|
is the form inherited from the C shell: <code>$ARGC</code> and <code>$argv</code>. I'll mainly
|
|
use the Bourne shell versions, which are far more commonly used, and
|
|
come back to some oddities of the C shell variety at the end.</p>
|
|
<p><code>$#</code> tells you how many arguments were passed to the function, while
|
|
<code>$*</code> gives those arguments as an array. This was the only array
|
|
available in the Bourne shell, otherwise there would probably have been
|
|
a more obvious way of doing it. To get the size and the number of
|
|
elements of the array you don't use <code>${#*}</code> and <code>${*[1]}</code> etc. (well,
|
|
you usually don't --- zsh is typically permissive here), you use <code>$1</code>,
|
|
<code>$2</code>. Despite the syntax, these are rather like ordinary array elements;
|
|
if you refer to one off the end, you will get an empty string, but no
|
|
error, unless you have the option <code>NO_UNSET</code> set. It is this not-quite
|
|
array which gets shifted if you use the <code>shift</code> builtin without an
|
|
argument: the old <code>$1</code> disappears, the old <code>$2</code> becomes <code>$1</code>, and so on,
|
|
while <code>$#</code> is reduced by one. If there were no arguments (<code>$#</code> was
|
|
zero), nothing happens.</p>
|
|
<p>The form <code>$@</code> is very similar to <code>$*</code>, and you can use it in place of
|
|
that in most contexts. There is one place where they differ. Let's
|
|
define a function which prints the number of its arguments, then the
|
|
arguments.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> args() {
|
|
print $# $*
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Now some arguments. We'll do this for the current shell --- it's a
|
|
slightly odd idea, that you can set the arguments for what's already
|
|
running, or that an interactive shell has arguments at all, but
|
|
nonetheless it's true:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> set arguments to the shell
|
|
print $*
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>sets <code>$*</code> and hence prints the message `<code>arguments to the shell</code>'. We
|
|
now pass <em>these</em> arguments on to the function in two different ways:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> args $*
|
|
args $@
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This outputs</p>
|
|
<pre><code> 4 arguments to the shell
|
|
4 arguments to the shell
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>-- no surprises so far. Remember, too, that zsh doesn't split words on
|
|
spaces unless you ask it too. So:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % set 'one word'
|
|
% args $*
|
|
1 one word
|
|
% args $@
|
|
1 one word
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Now here's the difference:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % set two words
|
|
% args "$*"
|
|
1 two words
|
|
% args "$@"
|
|
2 two words
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>In quotes, <code>"$*"</code> behaves as a normal array, joining the words with
|
|
spaces. However, <code>"$@"</code> doesn't --- it still behaves as if it was
|
|
unquoted. You can't see from the arguments themselves in this case, but
|
|
you can from the digit giving the number of arguments the function has.</p>
|
|
<p>This probably seems pretty silly. Why quote something to have it behave
|
|
like an unquoted array? The original answer lies back in Bourne shell
|
|
syntax, and relates to the vexed question of word splitting. Suppose we
|
|
turn on Bourne shell behaviour, and try the example of a word with
|
|
spaces again:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % setopt shwordsplit
|
|
% set 'one word'
|
|
% args $*
|
|
2 one word
|
|
% args $@
|
|
2 one word
|
|
% args "$*"
|
|
1 one word
|
|
% args "$@"
|
|
1 one word
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Aha! <em>This</em> time <code>"$@"</code> kept the single word with the space intact. In
|
|
other words, <code>"$@"</code> was a slightly primitive mechanism for suppressing
|
|
splitting of words, while allowing the splitting of arrays into
|
|
elements. In zsh, you would probably quite often use <code>$*</code>, not <code>"$@"</code>,
|
|
safe in the knowledge that nothing was split until you asked it to be;
|
|
and if you wanted it split, you would use the special form of
|
|
substitution <code>${=*}</code> which does that:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % unsetopt shwordsplit
|
|
% args $*
|
|
1 one word
|
|
% args ${=*}
|
|
2 one word
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(I can't tell you why the `<code>=</code>' was chosen for this purpose, except
|
|
that it consists of two split lines, or in an assignment it splits two
|
|
things, or something.) This works with any parameter, whether scalar or
|
|
array, quoted or unquoted.</p>
|
|
<p>However, that's actually not quite the whole story. There are times when
|
|
the shell removes arguments, because there's nothing there:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % set hello '' there
|
|
% args $*
|
|
2 hello there
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The second element of the array was empty, as if you'd typed</p>
|
|
<pre><code> 2=
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>--- yes, you can assign to the individual positional parameters
|
|
directly, instead of using <code>set</code>. When the array was expanded on the
|
|
command line, the empty element was simply missed out altogether. The
|
|
same happens with all empty variables, including scalars:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % empty=
|
|
% args $empty
|
|
0
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>But there are times when you don't want that, any more than you want
|
|
word splitting --- you want <em>all</em> arguments passed just as you gave
|
|
them. This is another side effect of the <code>"$@"</code> form.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % args "$@"
|
|
3 hello there
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, the empty element was passed in as well. That's why you often find
|
|
<code>"$@"</code> being used in zsh when wordsplitting is already turned off.</p>
|
|
<p>Another note: why does the following not work like the example with
|
|
<code>$*</code>?</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % args hello '' there
|
|
3 hello there
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The quotes were kept here. Why? The reason is that the shell doesn't
|
|
elide an argument if there were quotes, even if the result was empty:
|
|
instead, it provides an empty string. So this empty string was passed as
|
|
the second argument. Look back at:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> set hello '' there
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Although you probably didn't think about it at the time, the same thing
|
|
was happening here. Only with the <code>'``'</code> did we get an empty string
|
|
assigned to <code>$2</code>; later, this was missed out when passing <code>$*</code> to the
|
|
function. The same difference occurs with scalars:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % args $empty
|
|
0
|
|
% args "$empty"
|
|
1
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The <code>$empty</code> expanded to an empty string in each case. In the first case
|
|
it was unquoted and was removed; this is like passing an empty part of
|
|
<code>$*</code> to a command. In the second case, the quotes stopped that from
|
|
being removed completely; this is similar to setting part of <code>$*</code> to an
|
|
empty string using <code>''</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>That's all thoroughly confusing the first time round. Here's a table to
|
|
try and make it a bit clearer.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> | Number of arguments
|
|
| if $* contains...
|
|
| (two words)
|
|
Expression Word | 'one word'
|
|
on line splitting? | empty string
|
|
--------------------------------------------------
|
|
$* n | 2 1 0
|
|
$@ n | 2 1 0
|
|
"$*" n | 1 1 1
|
|
"$@" n | 2 1 1
|
|
|
|
|
$* y | 2 2 0
|
|
$@ y | 2 2 0
|
|
"$*" y | 1 1 1
|
|
"$@" y | 2 1 1
|
|
|
|
|
${=*} n | 2 2 0
|
|
${=@} n | 2 2 0
|
|
"${=*}" n | 2 2 1
|
|
"${=@}" n | 2 2 1
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>On the left is shown the expression to be passed to the function, and in
|
|
the three right hand columns the number of arguments the function will
|
|
get if the positional parameters are set to an array of two words, a
|
|
single word with a space in the middle, or a single word which is an
|
|
empty string (the effect of `<code>set -- '``'</code>') respectively. The second
|
|
column shows whether word splitting is in effect, i.e. whether the
|
|
<code>SH_WORD_SPLIT</code> option is set. The first four lines show the normal zsh
|
|
behaviour; the second four show the normal sh/ksh behaviour, with word
|
|
splitting turned on --- only the case where a word has a space in it
|
|
changes, and then only when no quotes are supplied. The final four show
|
|
what happens when you use the `<code>${=..}</code>' method to turn on word
|
|
splitting, for convenience: that's particularly simple, since it always
|
|
forces words to be split, even inside quotation marks.</p>
|
|
<p>I would recommend that anyone not wedded to the Bourne shell behaviour
|
|
use the top set as standard: in particular, `<code>$*</code>' for normal array
|
|
behaviour with removal of empty items, `<code>"$@"</code>' for normal array
|
|
behaviour with empty items left as empty items, and `<code>"$*"</code>' for
|
|
turning arrays into single strings. If you need word-splitting, you
|
|
should use `<code>${=*}</code>' or `<code>"${=@}"</code>' for splitting with/without removal
|
|
of empty items (obviously there's no counterpart to the quoted-array
|
|
behaviour here). Then keep <code>SH_WORD_SPLIT</code> turned off. If you are wedded
|
|
to the Bourne shell behaviour, you're on your own.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>It's a bug</strong></p>
|
|
<p>There's a bug in handling of the the form <code>${1+"$@"}</code>. This looks rather
|
|
an arcane and unlikely combination, but actually it is commonly used to
|
|
get around a bug in some versions of the Bourne shell (which is not in
|
|
zsh): that <code>"$@"</code> generates a single empty argument if there are no
|
|
arguments. The form shown tests whether there is a first argument, and
|
|
if so substitutes <code>"$@"</code>, else it doesn't substitute anything, avoiding
|
|
the bug.</p>
|
|
<p>Unfortunately, in zsh, when <code>shwordsplit</code> is set --- which is the time
|
|
you usually run across attempts like this to standardise the way
|
|
different shells work --- this will actually cause too much
|
|
word-splitting. The way the shell is written at the moment, the embedded
|
|
<code>"$@"</code> will force extra splitting on spaces inside the arguments. So if
|
|
the first argument is `<code>one word</code>', and <code>shwordsplit</code> is set,
|
|
<code>${1+"$@"}</code> produces <em>two</em> words `<code>one</code>' and `<code>word</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p>Oliver Kiddle spotted a way of getting round this which has been adapted
|
|
for use in the GNU autoconf package: in your initialisation code, have</p>
|
|
<pre><code> [ x$ZSH_VERSION != x ] && alias -g '${1+"$@"}'='"$@"'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This uses a global alias to turn <code>${1+"$@"}</code> wherever it occurs as a
|
|
single word into <code>"$@"</code> which doesn't have the problem. Aliasing occurs
|
|
so early in processing that the fact that most of the characters have a
|
|
special meaning to the shell is irrelevant; the shell behaves as if it
|
|
read in <code>"$@"</code>. The only catch is that for this to work the script or
|
|
function must use <em>exactly</em> the character string <code>${1+"$@"}</code>, with no
|
|
leading or trailing word characters (whitespace, obviously, or
|
|
characters which terminate parsing such as `<code>;</code>' are all right). Some
|
|
day, we may fix the underlying bug, but it's not very easy with the way
|
|
the parameter substitution code is written at the moment.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Parameters inherited from csh</strong></p>
|
|
<p>The final matter is the C-shell syntax. There are two extra variables
|
|
but, luckily, there is not much extra in the way of complexity. <code>$ARGC</code>
|
|
is essentially identical to <code>$#</code>, and <code>$argv</code> corresponds to <code>$*</code>, but
|
|
is a real array this time, so instead of <code>$1</code> you have <code>${argv[1]}</code> and
|
|
so on. They use the convention that scalars used by the shell are all
|
|
uppercase, while arrays are all lowercase. This feature is probably the
|
|
only reason anyone would need these variants. For example,
|
|
<code>${argv[2,-1]}</code> means all arguments from the second to the last,
|
|
inclusive: negative indices count from the end, and a comma indicates a
|
|
slice of an array, so that <code>${argv[1,-1]}</code> is always the same as the
|
|
full array. Otherwise, my advice would be to stick with the Bourne shell
|
|
variants, however cryptic they may look at first sight, for the usual
|
|
reason that zsh isn't really like the C shell and if you pretend it is,
|
|
you will come a cropper sooner or later.</p>
|
|
<p>It looks like you're missing <code>"$@"</code>, but actually you can do that with
|
|
<code>"${argv[@]}"</code>. This, like negative indices and slices, works with all
|
|
arrays.</p>
|
|
<p>There's one slight oddity with <code>$ARGC</code> and <code>$argv</code>, which isn't really a
|
|
deliberate feature of the shell at all, but just in case you run into
|
|
it: although the values in them are of course local to functions, the
|
|
variables <code>$ARGC</code> and <code>$argv</code> <em>themselves</em> are actually treated like
|
|
global variables. That means if you apply a <code>typeset -g</code> command to
|
|
them, it will affect the behaviour of <code>$ARGC</code> and <code>$argv</code> in all
|
|
functions, even though they have different values. It's probably not a
|
|
good idea to rely on this behaviour.</p>
|
|
<p>nusubsect(Arguments to all commands work the same)</p>
|
|
<p>I've been a little tricky here, because I've been talking about two
|
|
levels of functions at once: <code>$*</code> and friends as set in the current
|
|
function, or even at the top level, as well as how they are passed down
|
|
to commands such as my <code>args</code> function. Of course, in the second case
|
|
the same behaviour applies to all commands, not just functions. What I
|
|
mean is, in</p>
|
|
<pre><code> fn() {
|
|
cat $*
|
|
cat "$*"
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>the `<code>cat</code>' command will see the differences in behaviour between the
|
|
two calls just as <code>args</code> would. That should be obvious.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>It's not a bug</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Let me finally mention again a feature I noted in passing:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> 1='first argument'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>sets the first command argument for the current shell or function,
|
|
independently of any others. People sometimes complain that</p>
|
|
<pre><code> 1000000='millionth argument'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>suddenly makes the shell use a lot more memory. That's not a bug at all:
|
|
you've asked the shell to set the millionth element of an array, but not
|
|
any others, so the shell creates an array a million elements long with
|
|
the first 999,999 empty, except for any arguments which were already
|
|
set. It's not surprising this takes up a lot of memory.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l51"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="333-compiling-functions"><a class="header" href="#333-compiling-functions">3.3.3: Compiling functions</a></h3>
|
|
<p>Since version 3.1.7, it has been possible to compile functions to their
|
|
internal format. It doesn't make the functions run any faster, it just
|
|
reduces their loading time; the shell just has to bring the function
|
|
into memory, then it `runs it as it does any other function. On many
|
|
modern computers, therefore, you don't gain a great deal from this. I
|
|
have to admit I don't use it, but there are other definite advantages.</p>
|
|
<p>Note that when I say `compiled' I don't mean the way a C compiler, say,
|
|
would take a file and turn it into the executable code which the
|
|
processor understands; here, it's simply the format that the shell
|
|
happens to use internally --- it's useless without a suitable version of
|
|
zsh to run it. Also, it's no use thinking you can hide your code from
|
|
prying eyes this way, like you can to some extent with an ordinary
|
|
compiler (disassembling anything non-trivial from scratch being a
|
|
time-consuming job): first of all, ordinary command lines appear inside
|
|
the compiled files, except in slightly processed form, and secondly
|
|
running `<code>functions</code>' on a compiled function which has been loaded will
|
|
show you just as much as it would if the function had been loaded
|
|
normally.</p>
|
|
<p>One other advantage is that you can create `digest' files, which are
|
|
sets of functions stored in a single file. If you often use a large
|
|
fraction of those files, or they are small, or you like the function
|
|
itself to appear when you run `functions' rather than a message saying
|
|
it hasn't been loaded, then this works well. In fact, you can compile
|
|
all the functions in a single directory in one go. You might think this
|
|
uses a lot of memory, but often zsh will simply `memory map' the file,
|
|
which means rather than reserving extra main memory for it and reading
|
|
it in --- the obvious way of reading files --- it will tell the
|
|
operating system to make the file available as if it were memory, and
|
|
the system will bring it into memory piece by piece, `paging' the file
|
|
as it is needed. This is a very efficient way of doing it. Actually, zsh
|
|
supports both this method and the obvious method of simply reading in
|
|
the file (as long as your operating system does); this is described
|
|
later on.</p>
|
|
<p>A little extra, in case you're interested: if you read in a file
|
|
normally, the system will usually reserve space on a disk for it, the
|
|
`swap', and do paging from there. So in this case you still get the
|
|
saving of main memory --- this is standard in all modern operating
|
|
systems. However, it's not <em>as</em> efficient: first of all, you had to read
|
|
the file in in the first place. Secondly it eats up swap space, which is
|
|
usually a fixed amount of disk, although if you've got enough main
|
|
memory, the system probably won't bother allocating swap. Thirdly ---
|
|
this is probably the clincher for standard zsh functions on a large
|
|
system --- if the file is directly mapped read-only, as it is in this
|
|
case, the system only needs one place in main memory, plus the single
|
|
original file on disk, to keep the function, which is very much more
|
|
efficient. With the other method, you would get multiple copies in both
|
|
main memory and (where necessary) swap. This is how the system treats
|
|
directly executable programmes like the shell itself --- the data is
|
|
specific to each process, but the programme itself can be shared because
|
|
it doesn't need to be altered when it's running.</p>
|
|
<p>Here's a simple example.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % echo 'echo hello, world' >hw
|
|
% zcompile hw
|
|
% ls
|
|
hw hw.zwc
|
|
% rm hw
|
|
% fpath=(. $fpath)
|
|
% autoload hw
|
|
% hw
|
|
hello, world
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>We created a simple `hello, world' function, and compiled it. This
|
|
produces a file called `<code>hw.zwc</code>'. The extension stands for `Z-shell
|
|
Word Code', because it's based on the format of words (integers longer
|
|
than a single byte) used internally by the shell. Then we made sure the
|
|
current directory was in our <code>$fpath</code>, and autoloaded the function,
|
|
which ran as expected. We deleted the original file for demonstration
|
|
purposes, but as long as the `<code>.zwc</code>' file is newer, that will be used,
|
|
so you don't need to remove the originals in normal use. In fact, you
|
|
shouldn't, because you will lose any comments and formatting information
|
|
in it; you can regenerate the function itself with the `<code>functions</code>'
|
|
command (try it here), but the shell only remembers the information
|
|
actually needed to run the commands. Note that the function was in the
|
|
zsh autoload format, not the ksh one, in this case (but see below).</p>
|
|
<p><strong>And there's more</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Now some bells and whistles. Remember the <code>KSH_AUTOLOAD</code> thing? When you
|
|
compile a function, you can specify which format --- native zsh or ksh
|
|
emulation --- will be used for loading it next time, by using the option
|
|
<code>-k</code> or <code>-z</code>, instead of the default, which is to examine the option (as
|
|
would happen if you were autoloading directly from the file). Then you
|
|
don't need to worry about that option. So, for example, you could
|
|
compile all the standard zsh functions using `<code>zcompile -z</code>' and save
|
|
people the trouble of making sure they are autoloaded correctly.</p>
|
|
<p>You can also specify that aliases shouldn't be expanded when the files
|
|
are compiled by using <code>-U</code>: this has roughly the same effect as saying
|
|
<code>autoload -U</code>, since when the shell comes to load a compiled file, it
|
|
will never expand aliases, because the internal format assumes that all
|
|
processing of that kind has already been done. The difference in this
|
|
case is if you <em>don't</em> specify <code>-U</code>: then the aliases found when you
|
|
compile the file, not when you load the function from it, will be used.</p>
|
|
<p>Now digest files. Here's one convenient way of doing it.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % ls ~/tmp/fns
|
|
hw1 hw2
|
|
% fpath=(~/tmp/fns $fpath)
|
|
% cd ~/tmp
|
|
% zcompile fns fns/*
|
|
% ls
|
|
fns fns.zwc
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>We've made a directory to put functions in, <code>~/tmp/fns</code>, and stuck some
|
|
random files in it. The <code>zcompile</code> command, this time, was given several
|
|
arguments: a filename to use for the compiled functions, and then a list
|
|
of functions to compile into it. The new file, <code>fns.zwc</code>, sits in the
|
|
same directory where the directory <code>fns</code>, found in <code>$fpath</code>, is. The
|
|
shell will actually search the digest file instead of the directory.
|
|
More precisely, it will search both, and see which is the more recent,
|
|
and use that as the function. So now</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % autoload hw1
|
|
% hw1
|
|
echo hello, first world
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>You can test what's in the digest file with:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % zcompile -t fns
|
|
zwc file (read) for zsh-3.1.9-dev-3
|
|
fns/hw1
|
|
fns/hw2
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Note that the names appear as you gave them on the command line, i.e.
|
|
with <code>fns/</code> in front. Only the basenames are important for autoloading
|
|
functions. The note `<code>(read)</code>' in the first line means that zsh has
|
|
marked the functions to be read into the shell, rather than memory
|
|
mapped as discussed above; this is easier for small functions,
|
|
particularly if you are liable to remove or alter a file which is
|
|
mapped, which will confuse the shell. It usually decides which method to
|
|
use based on size; you can force memory mapping by giving the <code>-M</code>
|
|
option. Memory mapping doesn't work on all systems (currently including
|
|
Cygwin).</p>
|
|
<p>I showed this for compiling files, but you can actually tell the shell
|
|
to output compiled functions --- in other words, it will look along
|
|
<code>$fpath</code> and compile the functions you specify. I find compiling files
|
|
easier, when I do it at all, since then I can use patterns to find them
|
|
as I did above. But if you want to do it the other way, you should note
|
|
two other options: <code>-a</code> will compile files by looking along <code>$fpath</code>,
|
|
while <code>-c</code> will output any functions already loaded by the shell (you
|
|
can combine the two to use either). The former is recommended, because
|
|
then you don't lose any information which was present in the autoload
|
|
file, but not in the function stored in memory ---- this is what would
|
|
happen if the file defined some extra widgets (in the non-technical
|
|
sense) which weren't part of the function called subsequently.</p>
|
|
<p>If you're perfectly happy with the shell <em>only</em> searching a digest file,
|
|
and not comparing the datestamp with files in the directory, you can put
|
|
that directly into your <code>$fpath</code>, i.e. <code>~/tmp/fns.zwc</code> in this case.
|
|
Then you can get rid of the original directory, or archive it somewhere
|
|
for reuse.</p>
|
|
<p>You can compile scripts, too. Since these are in the same format as a
|
|
zsh autoload file, you don't need to do anything different from
|
|
compiling a single function. You then run (say) <code>script.zwc</code> by typing
|
|
`<code>zsh script</code>' --- note that you should omit the <code>.zwc</code>, as zsh decides
|
|
if there's a compiled version of a script by explicitly appending the
|
|
suffix. What's more, you can run it using `<code>.</code>' or `<code>source</code>' in just
|
|
the same way (`<code>. script</code>') --- this means you can compile your startup
|
|
files if you find they take too long to run through; the shell will spot
|
|
a <code>~/.zshrc.zwc</code> as it would any other sourceable file. It doesn't make
|
|
much sense to use the memory mapping method in this case, since once
|
|
you've sourced the files you never want to run them again, so you might
|
|
as well specify `<code>zcompile -R</code>' to use the reading (non-memory-mapping)
|
|
method explicitly.</p>
|
|
<p>If you ever look inside a <code>.zwc</code> file, you will see that the information
|
|
is actually included twice. That's because systems differ about the
|
|
order in which numbers are stored: some have the least significant byte
|
|
first (notably Intel and some versions of Mips) and some the most
|
|
significant (notably SPARC and Cambridge Consultants' XAP processor,
|
|
which is notable here mainly because I spend my working hours
|
|
programming for it --- you can't run zsh on it). Since zsh uses integers
|
|
a great deal in the compiled code, it saves them in both possible orders
|
|
for ease of use. Why not just save it for the machine where you compiled
|
|
it? Then you wouldn't be able to share the files across a heterogeneous
|
|
network --- or even worse, if you made a distribution of compiled files,
|
|
they would work on some machines, and not on others. Think how Emacs
|
|
users would complain if the <code>.elc</code> files that arrived weren't the right
|
|
ones. (Worse, think how the vi users would laugh.) The shell never reads
|
|
or maps in the version it doesn't use, however; only extra disk space is
|
|
used.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>A little -Xtra help</strong></p>
|
|
<p>There are two final autoloading issues you might want to know about. In
|
|
versions of zsh since 3.1.7, you will see that when you run <code>functions</code>
|
|
on a function which is marked for autoload but hasn't yet been loaded,
|
|
you get:</p>
|
|
<pre><code>afunctionmarkedforautoloadwhichhasntbeenloaded () {
|
|
# undefined
|
|
builtin autoload -XU
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The `<code># undefined</code>' is just printed to alert you that this was a
|
|
function marked as autoloadable by the <code>autoload</code> command: you can tell,
|
|
because it's the only time <code>functions</code> will emit a comment (though there
|
|
might be other `<code>#</code>' characters around). What's interesting is the
|
|
<code>autoload</code> command with the <code>-X</code> option. That option means `Mark me for
|
|
autoloading and run me straight away'. You can actually put it in a
|
|
function yourself, and it will have the same effect as running
|
|
`<code>autoload</code>' on a not-yet-existent function. Obviously, the <code>autoload</code>
|
|
command will disappear as soon as you do run it, to be replaced by the
|
|
real contents. If you put this inside a file to be autoloaded, the shell
|
|
will complain --- the alternative is rather more unpalatable.</p>
|
|
<p>Note also the <code>-U</code> option was set in that example: that simply means
|
|
that I used <code>autoload</code> with the <code>-U</code> option when I originally told the
|
|
shell to autoload the function.</p>
|
|
<p>There's another option, <code>+X</code>, the complete opposite of <code>-X</code>. This one
|
|
can <em>only</em> be used with autoload outside the function you're loading,
|
|
just as <code>-X</code> was only meaningful inside. It means `load the file
|
|
immediately, but don't run it', so it's a more active (or, as they say
|
|
nowadays, since they like unnecessarily long words, proactive) form of
|
|
<code>autoload</code>. It's useful if you want to be able to run the <code>functions</code>
|
|
command to see the function, but don't want to run the function itself.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Special functions</strong></p>
|
|
<p>I'm in danger of simply quoting the manual, but there are various
|
|
functions with a special meaning to the shell (apart from <code>TRAP...</code>
|
|
functions, which I've already covered). That is, the functions
|
|
themselves are perfectly normal, but the shell will run them
|
|
automatically on certain occasions if they happen to exist, and silently
|
|
skip them if they don't.</p>
|
|
<p>The two most frequently used are <code>chpwd</code> and <code>precmd</code>. The former is
|
|
called whenever the directory changes, either via <code>cd</code>, or <code>pushd</code>, or
|
|
an <code>AUTO_CD</code> --- you could turn the first two into functions, and avoid
|
|
needing <code>chpwd</code> but not the last. Here's how to force an xterm, or a
|
|
similar windowing terminal, to put the current directory into the title
|
|
bar.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> chpwd() {
|
|
[[ -t 1 ]] || return
|
|
case $TERM in
|
|
(sun-cmd) print -Pn "\e]l%~\e\\"
|
|
;;
|
|
(*xterm*|rxvt|(dt|k|E)term) print -Pn "\e]2;%~\a"
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The first line tests that standard output is really a terminal --- you
|
|
don't want to print the string in the middle of a script which is
|
|
directing its output to a file. Then we look to see if we have a
|
|
<code>sun-cmd</code> terminal, which has its own <em>sui generis</em> sequence for putting
|
|
a string into the title bar, or something which recognises xterm escape
|
|
sequences. In either case, the special sequences (a bit like termcap
|
|
sequences as discussed for <code>echotc</code>) are interpreted by the terminal,
|
|
and instead of being printed out cause it to put the string in the
|
|
middle into the title bar. The string here is `<code>%~</code>': I added the <code>-P</code>
|
|
option to <code>print</code> so it would expand prompt escapes. I could just have
|
|
used <code>$PWD</code>, but this way has the useful effect of shortening your home
|
|
directory, or any other named directory, into <code>~</code>-notation, which is a
|
|
bit more readable. Of course, you can put other stuff there if you like,
|
|
or, if you're really sophisticated, put in a parameter <code>$HEADER</code> and
|
|
define that elsewhere.</p>
|
|
<p>If programmes other than the shell alter what appears in the xterm title
|
|
bar, you might consider changing that <code>chwpd</code> function to <code>precmd</code>. The
|
|
function <code>precmd</code> is called just before every prompt; in this case it
|
|
will restore the title line after every command has run. Some people
|
|
make the mistake of using it to set up a prompt, but there are enough
|
|
ways of getting varying information into a fixed prompt string that you
|
|
shouldn't do that unless you have <em>very</em> odd things in your prompt. It's
|
|
a big nuisance having to redefine <code>precmd</code> to alter your prompt ---
|
|
especially if you don't know it's there, since then your prompt
|
|
apparently magically returns to the same format when you change it.
|
|
There are some good reasons for using <code>precmd</code>, too, but most of them
|
|
are fairly specialised. For example, on one system I use it to check if
|
|
there is new input from a programme which is sending data to the shell
|
|
asynchronously, and if so printing it out onto the terminal. This is
|
|
pretty much what happens with job control notification if you don't have
|
|
the <code>NOTIFY</code> option set.</p>
|
|
<p>The name <code>precmd</code> is a bit of a misnomer: <code>preprompt</code> would have been
|
|
better. It usurps the name more logically applied to the function
|
|
actually called <code>preexec</code>, which is run after you finished editing a
|
|
command line, but just before the line is executed. <code>preexec</code> has one
|
|
additional feature: the line about to be executed is passed down as an
|
|
argument. You can't alter what's going to be executed by editing the
|
|
parameter, however: that has been suggested as an upgrade, but it would
|
|
make it rather easy to get the shell into a state where you can't
|
|
execute any commands because <code>preexec</code> always messes them up. It's
|
|
better, where possible, to write function front-ends to specific
|
|
commands you want to handle specially. For example, here's my <code>ls</code>
|
|
function:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> local ls
|
|
if [[ -n $LS_COLORS ]]; then
|
|
ls=(ls --color=auto)
|
|
else
|
|
ls=(ls -F)
|
|
fi
|
|
command $ls $*
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This handles GNU and non-GNU versions of ls. If <code>$LS_COLORS</code> is set, it
|
|
assumes we are using GNU ls, and hence colouring (or colorizing, in
|
|
geekspeak) is available. Otherwise, it uses the standard option <code>-F</code> to
|
|
show directories and links with a special symbol. Then it uses <code>command</code>
|
|
to run the real <code>ls</code> --- this is a key thing to remember any time you
|
|
use a function front-end to a command. I could have done this another
|
|
way: test in my initialisation files which version of <code>ls</code> I was using,
|
|
then alias <code>ls</code> to one of the two forms. But I didn't.</p>
|
|
<p>Apart from the trap functions, there is one remaining special function.
|
|
It is <code>periodic</code>, which is executed before a prompt, like <code>precmd</code>, but
|
|
only every now and then, in fact every <code>$PERIOD</code> seconds; it's up to you
|
|
to set <code>$PERIOD</code> when you defined <code>periodic</code>. If <code>$PERIOD</code> isn't set, or
|
|
is zero, nothing happens. Don't get <code>$PERIOD</code> confused with <code>$SECONDS</code>,
|
|
which just counts up from 0 when the shell starts.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l52"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="34-aliases"><a class="header" href="#34-aliases">3.4: Aliases</a></h2>
|
|
<p>Aliases are much simpler than functions. In the C shell and its
|
|
derivatives, there are no functions, so aliases take their place and can
|
|
have arguments, which involve expressions rather like those which
|
|
extract elements of previous history lines with `<code>!</code>'. Zsh's aliases,
|
|
like ksh's, don't take arguments; you have to use functions for that.
|
|
However, there are things aliases can do which functions can't, so
|
|
sometimes you end up using both, for example</p>
|
|
<pre><code> zfget() {
|
|
# function to retrieve a file by FTP,
|
|
# using globbing on the remote host
|
|
}
|
|
alias zfget='noglob zfget'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The function here does the hard work; this is a function from the zftp
|
|
function suite, supplied with the shell, which retrieves a file or set
|
|
of files from another machine. The function allows patterns, so you can
|
|
retrieve an entire directory with `<code>zfget *</code>'. However, you need to
|
|
avoid the `<code>*</code>' being expanded into the set of files in the current
|
|
directory on the machine you're logged into; this is where the alias
|
|
comes in, supplying the `<code>noglob</code>' in front of the function. There's no
|
|
way of doing this with the function alone; by the time the function is
|
|
called, the `<code>*</code>' would already have been expanded. Of course you could
|
|
quote it, but that's what we're trying to avoid. This is a common reason
|
|
for using the alias/function combination.</p>
|
|
<p>Remember to include the `<code>=</code>' in alias definition, necessary in zsh,
|
|
unlike csh and friends. If you do:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> alias zfget noglob zfget
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>they are treated as a list of aliases. Since none has the `<code>=</code>' and a
|
|
definition, the shell thinks you want to list the definitions of the
|
|
listed words; I get the output</p>
|
|
<pre><code> zfget='noglob zfget'
|
|
zfget='noglob zfget'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>since <code>zfget</code> was aliased as before, but <code>noglob</code> wasn't aliased and was
|
|
skipped, although the failed alias lookup caused status 1 to be
|
|
returned. Remember that the <code>alias</code> command takes as many arguments as
|
|
you like; any with `<code>=</code>' is a definition, any without is a request to
|
|
print the current definition.</p>
|
|
<p>Aliases can in fact be allowed to expand to almost anything the shell
|
|
understands, not just sets of words. That's because the text retrieved
|
|
from the alias is put back into the input, and reread more or less as if
|
|
you'd typed it. That means you can get away with strange combinations
|
|
like</p>
|
|
<pre><code> alias tripe="echo foo | sed 's/foo/bar/' |"
|
|
tripe cat
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which is interpreted exactly the same way as</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo foo | sed 's/foo/bar/' | cat
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where the word `<code>foo</code>' is sent to the stream editor, which alters it to
|
|
`<code>bar</code>' (`<code>s/old/new/</code>' is <code>sed</code>'s syntax for a substitution), and
|
|
passes it on to `<code>cat</code>', which simply dumps the output. It's useless,
|
|
of course, but it does show what can lurk behind an apparently simple
|
|
command if it happens to be an alias. It is usually not a good idea to
|
|
do this, due to the potential confusion.</p>
|
|
<p>As the manual entry explains, you can prevent an alias from being
|
|
expanded by quoting it. This isn't like quoting any other expansion,
|
|
though; there's no particular important character which has to be
|
|
interpreted literally to stop the expansion. The point is that because
|
|
aliases are expanded early on in processing of the command line, looking
|
|
up an alias is done on a string without quotes removed. So if you have
|
|
an alias `<code>drivel</code>', none of the strings `<code>\drivel</code>', `<code>'d'rivel</code>',
|
|
or `<code>drivel""</code>' will be expanded as the alias: they all would have the
|
|
same effect as proper commands, after the quotes are removed, but as
|
|
aliases they appear different. The manual entry also notes that you can
|
|
actually make aliases for any of these special forms, e.g. `<code>alias '\drivel'=...</code>' (note the quotes, since you need the backslash to be
|
|
passed down to the alias command). You would need a pretty good reason
|
|
to do so.</p>
|
|
<p>Although my `<code>tripe</code>' example was silly, you know from the existence of
|
|
`precommand modifiers' that it's sometimes useful to have a special
|
|
command which precedes a command line, like <code>noglob</code> or the non-shell
|
|
command <code>nice</code>. Since they have commands following, you would probably
|
|
expect aliases to be expanded there, too. But this doesn't work:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % alias foo='echo an alias for foo'
|
|
% noglob foo
|
|
zsh: command not found: foo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>because the <code>foo</code> wasn't in command position. The way round this is to
|
|
use a special feature: aliases whose definitions end in a space force
|
|
the next word along to be looked up as a possible alias, too:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % alias noglob='noglob '
|
|
% noglob foo
|
|
an alias for foo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which is useful for any command which can take a command line after it.
|
|
This also shows another feature of aliases: unlike functions, they
|
|
remember that you have already called an alias of a particular name, and
|
|
don't look it up again. So the `<code>noglob</code>' which comes from expanding
|
|
the alias is not treated as an alias, but as the ordinary precommand
|
|
modifier.</p>
|
|
<p>You may be a little mystified about this difference. A simple answer is
|
|
that it's useful that way. It's sometimes useful for functions to call
|
|
themselves; for example if you are handling a directory hierarchy in one
|
|
go you might get a function to examine a directory, do something for
|
|
every ordinary file, and for every directory file call itself with the
|
|
new directory name tacked on. Aliases are too simple for this to be a
|
|
useful feature. Another answer is that it's particularly easy to mark
|
|
aliases as being `in use' while they are being expanded, because it
|
|
happens while the strings inside them are being examined, before any
|
|
commands are called, where things start to get complicated.</p>
|
|
<p>Lastly, there are `global aliases'. If aliases can get you into a lot
|
|
of trouble, global aliases can get you into a lot of a lot of trouble.
|
|
They are defined with the option <code>-g</code> and are expanded not just in
|
|
command position, but anywhere on the command line.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> alias -g L='| less'
|
|
echo foo L
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This turns into `<code>echo foo | less</code>'. It's a neat trick if you don't
|
|
mind your command lines having only a minimal amount to do with what is
|
|
actually executed.</p>
|
|
<p>I already pointed out that alias lookups are done so early that aliases
|
|
are expanded when you define functions:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % alias hello='echo I have been expanded'
|
|
% fn() {
|
|
function> hello
|
|
function> }
|
|
% which fn
|
|
fn () {
|
|
echo I have been expanded
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>You can't stop this when typing in functions directly, except by quoting
|
|
part of the name you type. When autoloading, the <code>-U</code> option is
|
|
available, and recommended for use with any non-trivial function.</p>
|
|
<p>A brief word about that `<code>function></code>' which appears to prompt you while
|
|
you are editing a function; I mentioned this in the previous chapter but
|
|
here I want to be clearer about what's going on. While you are being
|
|
prompted like that, the shell is not actually executing the commands you
|
|
are typing in. Only when it is satisfied that it has a complete set of
|
|
commands will it go away and execute them (in this case, defining the
|
|
function). That means that it won't always spot errors until right at
|
|
the end. Luckily, zsh has multi-line editing, so if you got it wrong you
|
|
should just be able to hit up-arrow and edit what you typed; hitting
|
|
return will execute the whole thing in one go. If you have redefined
|
|
<code>$PS2</code> (or <code>$PROMPT2</code>), or you have an old version of the shell, you may
|
|
not see the full prompt, but you will usually see something ending in
|
|
`<code>></code>' which means the same.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l53"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="35-command-summary"><a class="header" href="#35-command-summary">3.5: Command summary</a></h2>
|
|
<p>As a reminder, the shell looks up commands in this order:</p>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>aliases, which will immediately be interpreted again as texts for
|
|
commands, possible even other aliases; they can be deleted with
|
|
`<code>unalias</code>',</li>
|
|
<li>reserved words, those special to the shell which often need to be
|
|
interpreted differently from ordinary commands due to the syntax,
|
|
although they can be disabled if you really need to,</li>
|
|
<li>functions; these can also be disabled, although it's usually easier
|
|
to `<code>unfunction</code>' them,</li>
|
|
<li>builtin commands, which can be disabled, or called as a builtin by
|
|
putting `<code>builtin</code>' in front,</li>
|
|
<li>external commands, which can be called as such, even if the name
|
|
clashes with one of the above types, by putting `<code>command</code>' in
|
|
front.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p><span id="l54"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="36-expansions-and-quotes"><a class="header" href="#36-expansions-and-quotes">3.6: Expansions and quotes</a></h2>
|
|
<p>As I keep advertising, there will be a whole chapter dedicated to the
|
|
subject of shell expansions and what to do with them. However, it's a
|
|
rather basic subject, which definitely comes under the heading of basic
|
|
shell syntax, so I shall here list all the forms of expansion. As given
|
|
in the manual, there are five stages.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l55"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="361-history-expansion"><a class="header" href="#361-history-expansion">3.6.1: History expansion</a></h3>
|
|
<p>This is the earliest, and is only done on an interactive command line,
|
|
and only if you have not set <code>NO_BANG_HIST</code>. It was described in the
|
|
section `<em>The history mechanism; types of history</em>' in the previous
|
|
chapter. It is almost independent of the shell's processing of the
|
|
command line; it takes place as the command line is read in, not when
|
|
the commands are interpreted. However, in zsh it is done late enough
|
|
that the `<code>!</code>'s can be quoted by putting them in single quotes:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo 'Hello!!'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>doesn't insert the previous line at that point, but</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo "Hello!!"
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>does. You can always quote active `<code>!</code>'s with a backslash, so</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo "Hello\!\!"
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>works, with or without the double quotes. Amusingly, since single quotes
|
|
aren't special in double quotes, if you set the <code>HIST_VERIFY</code> option,
|
|
which puts the expanded history line back on the command line for
|
|
possible further editing, and try the first two of the three
|
|
possibilities above in order, then keep hitting return, you will find
|
|
ever increasing command lines:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % echo 'Hello!!'
|
|
Hello!!
|
|
% echo "Hello!!"
|
|
% echo "Helloecho 'Hello!!'"
|
|
% echo "Helloecho 'Helloecho 'Hello!!''"
|
|
% echo "Helloecho 'Helloecho 'Helloecho 'Hello!!'''"
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and if you understand why, you have a good grasp of how quotes work.</p>
|
|
<p>There's another way of quoting exclamation marks in a line: put a
|
|
`<code>!"</code>' in it. It can appear anywhere (as long as it's not in single
|
|
quotes) and will be removed from the line, but it has the effect of
|
|
disabling any subsequent exclamation marks till the end of the line.
|
|
This is the only time quote marks which are significant to the shell
|
|
(i.e. are not themselves quoted) don't have to occur in a matching pair.</p>
|
|
<p>Note that as exclamation marks aren't active in any text read
|
|
non-interactively --- and this includes autoloaded functions and sourced
|
|
files, such as startup files, read inside interactive shells --- it is
|
|
an error to quote any `<code>!</code>'s in double quotes in files. This will
|
|
simply pass on the backslashes to the next level of parsing. Other forms
|
|
of quoting are all right: `<code>\!</code>', because any character quoted with a
|
|
backslash is treated as itself, and <code>'!'</code> because single quotes can
|
|
quote anything anyway.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l56"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="362-alias-expansion"><a class="header" href="#362-alias-expansion">3.6.2: Alias expansion</a></h3>
|
|
<p>As discussed above, alias expansion also goes on as the command line is
|
|
read, so is to a certain extent similar to history expansion. However,
|
|
while a history expansion may produce an alias for expansion, `<code>!</code>'s in
|
|
the text resulting from alias expansions are normal characters, so it
|
|
can be thought of as a later phase (and indeed it's implemented that
|
|
way).</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l57"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="363-process-parameter-command-arithmetic-and-brace-expansion"><a class="header" href="#363-process-parameter-command-arithmetic-and-brace-expansion">3.6.3: Process, parameter, command, arithmetic and brace expansion</a></h3>
|
|
<p>There are a whole group of expansions which are done together, just by
|
|
looking at the line constructed from the input after history and alias
|
|
expansion and reading it from left to right, picking up any active
|
|
expansions as the line is examined. Whenever a complete piece of
|
|
expandable text is found, it is expanded; the text is not re-examined,
|
|
except in the case of brace expansion, so none of these types of
|
|
expansion is performed on any resulting text. Whether later forms of
|
|
expansion --- in other words, filename generation and filename expansion
|
|
are performed --- is another matter, depending largely on the
|
|
<code>GLOB_SUBST</code> option as discussed in the previous chapter. Here's a brief
|
|
summary of the different types.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Process substitution</strong></p>
|
|
<p>There are three forms that result in a command line argument which
|
|
refers to a file from or to which input or output is taken:
|
|
`<code><</code>(<em>process</em>)' runs the process which is expected to generate output
|
|
which can be used as input by a command; `<code>></code>(<em>process</em>)' runs the
|
|
process which will take input to it; and `<code>=</code>(<em>process</em>)' acts like the
|
|
first one, but it is guaranteed that the file is a plain file.</p>
|
|
<p>This probably sounds like gobbledygook. Here are some simple examples.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> cat < <(echo This is output)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(There are people in the world with nothing better to do than compile
|
|
lists of dummy uses of the `<code>cat</code>' command, as in that example, and
|
|
pour scorn on them, but I'll just have to brave it out.) What happens is
|
|
that the command `<code>echo This is output</code>' is run, with the obvious
|
|
result. That output is <em>not</em> put straight into the command line, as it
|
|
would be with command substitution, to be described shortly. Instead,
|
|
the command line is given a filename which, when read, gets that output.
|
|
So it's more like:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo This is output >tmpfile
|
|
cat < tmpfile
|
|
rm tmpfile
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(note that the temporary file is cleaned up automatically), except that
|
|
it's more compact. In this example I could have missed out the remaining
|
|
`<code><</code>', since <code>cat</code> does the right thing with a filename, but I put it
|
|
there to emphasise the fact that if you want to redirect input from the
|
|
process substitution you need an <em>extra</em> `<code><</code>', over and above the one
|
|
in the substitution syntax.</p>
|
|
<p>Here's an example for the corresponding output substitution:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo This is output > \
|
|
>(sed 's/output/rubbish/' >outfile)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which is a perfectly foul example, but works essentially like:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo This is output >tmpfile
|
|
sed 's/output/rubbish/' <tmpfile >outfile
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>There's an obvious relationship to pipes here, and in fact this example
|
|
could be better written,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo This is output | sed 's/output/rubbish/' >outfile
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>A good example of an occasion where the output process substitution
|
|
can't be replaced by a pipe is when it's on the error output, and
|
|
standard output is being piped:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> ./myscript 2> >(grep -v idiot >error.log) |
|
|
process-output >output.log
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>a little abstract, but here the main point of the script `myscript' is
|
|
to produce some output which undergoes further processing on the
|
|
right-hand side of the pipe. However, we want to process the error
|
|
output here, by filtering out occurrences of lines which use the word
|
|
`idiot', before dumping those errors into a file <code>error.log</code>. So we get
|
|
an effect similar to having two pipelines at once, one for output and
|
|
one for error. Note again the <em>two</em> `<code>></code>' signs present next to one
|
|
another to get that effect.</p>
|
|
<p>Finally, the `<code>=</code>(<em>process</em>)' form. Why do we need this as well as the
|
|
one with `<code><</code>'? To understand that, you need to know a little of how
|
|
zsh tries to implement the latter type efficiently. Most modern
|
|
UNIX-like systems have `named pipes', which are essentially files that
|
|
behave like the `<code>|</code>' on the command line: one process writes to the
|
|
file, another reads from it, and the effect is essentially that data
|
|
goes straight through. If your system has them, you will usually find
|
|
the following demonstration works:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % mknod tmpfile p
|
|
% echo This is output >tmpfile &
|
|
[2] 1507
|
|
% read line <tmpfile
|
|
%
|
|
[2] + 1507 done echo This is output >> tmpfile
|
|
% print -- $line
|
|
This is output
|
|
%
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The syntax to create a named pipe is that rather strange `<code>mknod</code>'
|
|
command, with `<code>p</code>' for pipe. We stick this in the background, because
|
|
it won't do anything yet: you can't write to the pipe when there's
|
|
no-one to read it (a fundamental rule of pipes which isn't <em>quite</em> as
|
|
obvious as it may seem, since it <em>is</em> possible for data to lurk in the
|
|
pipe, buffered, before the process reading from it extracts it), so we
|
|
put that in the background to wait for action. This comes in the next
|
|
line, where we read from the pipe: that allows the <code>echo</code> to complete
|
|
and exit. Then we print out the line we've read.</p>
|
|
<p>The problem with pipes is that they are just temporary storage spaces
|
|
for data on the way through. In particular, you can't go back to the
|
|
beginning (in C-speak, `you can't seek backwards on a pipe') and
|
|
re-read what was there. Sometimes this doesn't matter, but some
|
|
commands, such as editors, need that facility. As the `<code><</code>' process
|
|
substitution is implemented with named pipes (well, maybe), there is
|
|
also the `<code>=</code>' form, which produces a real, live temporary file,
|
|
probably in the `<code>/tmp</code>' directory, containing the output from the
|
|
file, and then puts the name of that file on the command line. The
|
|
manual notes, unusually helpfully, that this is useful with the
|
|
`<code>diff</code>' command for comparing the output of two processes:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> diff =(./myscript1) =(./myscript2)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where, presumably, the two scripts produce similar, but not identical,
|
|
output which you want to compare.</p>
|
|
<p>I said `well, maybe' in that paragraph because there's another way zsh
|
|
can do `<code><</code>' process substitutions. Many modern systems allow you to
|
|
access a file with a name like `<code>/dev/fd/0</code>' which corresponds to file
|
|
descriptor 0, in this case standard input: to anticipate the section on
|
|
redirection, a `file descriptor' is a number assigned to a particular
|
|
input or output stream. This method allows you to access it as a file;
|
|
and if this facility is available, zsh will use it to pass the name of
|
|
the file in process substitution instead of using a named pipe, since in
|
|
this case it doesn't have to create a temporary file; the system does
|
|
everything. Now, if you are really on the ball, you will realise that
|
|
this doesn't get around the problem of pipes --- where is data on this
|
|
file descriptor going to come from? The answer is that it will either
|
|
have to come from a real temporary file --- which is pointless, because
|
|
that's what we wanted to avoid --- or from a pipe opened from some
|
|
process --- which is equivalent to the named pipe method, except with
|
|
just a file descriptor instead of a name. So even if zsh does it this
|
|
way, you still need the `<code>=</code>' form for programmes which need to go
|
|
backwards in what they're reading.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Parameter substitution</strong></p>
|
|
<p>You've seen enough of this already. This comes from a `<code>$</code>' followed
|
|
either by something in braces, or by alphanumeric characters forming the
|
|
name of the parameter: `<code>$foo</code>' or `<code>${foo}</code>', where the second form
|
|
protects the expansion from any other strings at the ends and also
|
|
allows a veritable host of extra things to appear inside the braces to
|
|
modify the substitution. More detail will be held over to till <a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter
|
|
5</a>; there's a lot of it.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Command substitution</strong></p>
|
|
<p>This has two forms, <code>$</code>(<em>process</em>) and <code>`</code><em>process</em><code>`</code>. They
|
|
function identically; the first form has two advantages: substitutions
|
|
can be nested, since the end character is different from the start
|
|
character, and (because it uses a `<code>$</code>') it reminds you that, like
|
|
parameter substitutions, command substitutions can take place inside
|
|
double-quoted strings. In that case, like most other things in quotes,
|
|
the result will be a single word; otherwise, the result is split into
|
|
words on any field separators you have defined, usually whitespace or
|
|
the null character. I'll use the <code>args</code> function again:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % args() { print $# $*; }
|
|
% args $(echo two words)
|
|
2 two words
|
|
% args "$(echo one word)"
|
|
1 one word
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The first form will split on newlines, not just spaces, so an equivalent
|
|
is</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % args $(echo two; echo words)
|
|
2 two words
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Thus entire screens of text will be flattened out into a single line of
|
|
single-word command arguments. By contrast, with the double quotes no
|
|
processing is done whatsoever; the entire output is put verbatim into
|
|
one command argument, with newlines intact. This means that the quite
|
|
common case of wanting a single complete line from a file per command
|
|
argument has to be handled by trickery; zsh has such trickery, but
|
|
that's the stuff of <a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter 5</a>.</p>
|
|
<p>Note the difference from process substitution: no intermediate file name
|
|
is involved, the output itself goes straight onto the command line. This
|
|
form of substitution is considerably more common, and, unlike the other,
|
|
is available in all UNIX shells, though not in all shells with the more
|
|
modern form `<code>$</code>(<code>...</code>)'.</p>
|
|
<p>The rule that the command line is evaluated only once, left to right, is
|
|
adhered to here, but it's a little more complicated in this case since
|
|
the expression being substituted is scanned <em>as a complete command
|
|
line</em>, so can include anything a command usually can, with all the rules
|
|
of quoting and expansion being applied. So if you get confused about
|
|
what a command substitution is actually up to, you should extract the
|
|
commands from it and think of them as a command line in their own right.
|
|
When you've worked out what that's doing, decide what it's output will
|
|
be, and that's the result of the substitution. You can ignore any error
|
|
output; that isn't captured, so will go straight to the terminal. If you
|
|
want to ignore it, use the standard trick (see below) `<code>2>/dev/null</code>'
|
|
<em>inside</em> the command substitution --- not on the main command line,
|
|
where it won't work because substitutions are performed before
|
|
redirection of the main command line, and in any case that will have the
|
|
obvious side effect of changing the error output from the command line
|
|
itself.</p>
|
|
<p>The only real catch with command substitution is that, as it is run as a
|
|
separate process --- even if it only involves shell builtins --- no
|
|
effects other than the output will percolate back to the main shell:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print $(bar=value; print bar is $bar)
|
|
bar is value
|
|
% print bar is $bar
|
|
bar is
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>There is maybe room for a form of substitution that runs inside the
|
|
shell, instead; however, with modern computers the overhead in starting
|
|
the extra process is pretty small --- and in any case we seem to have
|
|
run out of new forms of syntax.</p>
|
|
<p>Once you know and are comfortable with command substitution, you will
|
|
probably start using it all the time, so there is one good habit to get
|
|
into straight away. A particularly common use is simply to put the
|
|
contents of a file onto the command line.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> # Don't do this, do the other.
|
|
process_cmd `cat file_arguments`
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>But there's a shortcut.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> # Do do this, don't do the other
|
|
process_cmd $(<file_arguments)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>It's not only less writing, it's more efficient: zsh spots the special
|
|
syntax, with the <code><</code> immediately inside the parentheses, reads the file
|
|
directly without bothering to start `<code>cat</code>', and inserts its contents:
|
|
no external process is involved. You shouldn't confuse this with `null
|
|
redirections' as described below: the syntax is awfully similar,
|
|
unfortunately, but the feature shown here is not dependent on that other
|
|
feature being enabled or set up in a particular way. In fact, this
|
|
feature works in ksh, which doesn't have zsh's null redirections.</p>
|
|
<p>You can quote the file-reading form too, of course: in that case, the
|
|
contents of the file `<code>cmd_arguments</code>' would be passed as just one
|
|
argument, with newlines and spaces intact.</p>
|
|
<p>Sometimes, the rule about splitting the result of a command substitution
|
|
can get you into trouble:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % typeset foo=`echo words words`
|
|
% print $foo
|
|
words
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>You probably expected the command substitution <em>not</em> to be split here.
|
|
but it was, and the shell executed typeset with the arguments
|
|
`<code>foo=words</code>' and `words'. That's because in zsh arguments to
|
|
<code>typeset</code> are treated pretty much normally, except for some jiggery
|
|
pokery with tildes described below. Other shells do this differently,
|
|
and zsh (from 4.0.2 and 4.1.1) provides a compatibility option,
|
|
<code>KSH_TYPESET</code>. In earlier versions you need to use quotes:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % typeset foo="`echo words words`"
|
|
% print $foo
|
|
words words
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>A really rather technical afterword: using `<code>$(cat file_arguments)</code>',
|
|
you might have counted two extra processes to be started, one being the
|
|
usual one for a command substitution, and another the `<code>cat</code>' process,
|
|
since that's an external command itself. That would indeed be the
|
|
obvious way of doing it, but in fact zsh has an optimisation in cases
|
|
like this: if it knows the shell is about to exit --- in this case, the
|
|
forked process which is just interpreting the command line for the
|
|
substitution --- it will not bother to start a new process for the last
|
|
command, and here just replaces itself with the <code>cat</code>. So actually
|
|
there's only one extra process here. Obviously, an interactive shell is
|
|
never replaced in this way, since clairvoyance is not yet a feature of
|
|
the shell.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Arithmetic substitution</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Arithmetic substitution is easy to explain: everything I told you about
|
|
the <code>(( ... ))</code> command under numerical parameters, above, applies to
|
|
arithmetic substitution. You simply bang a `<code>$</code>' in front, and it
|
|
becomes an expansion.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print $(( 32 + 2 * 5 ))
|
|
42
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>You can perform everything inside arithmetic substitution that you can
|
|
inside the builtin, including assignments; the only difference is that
|
|
the status is not set, instead the value is put directly onto the
|
|
command line in place of the original expression. As in C, the value of
|
|
an assignment is the value being assigned, `<code>$(( param = 3 + 2))</code>'
|
|
substitutes the value 5 as well as assigning it to <code>$param</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>By the way, there's an extra level of substitution involved in all
|
|
arithmetic expansions, since scalar parameters are subject to arithmetic
|
|
expansion when they're read in. This is simple if they only contain
|
|
numbers, but less obvious if they contain complete expressions:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % foo=3+5
|
|
% print $(( foo + 2))
|
|
10
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The foo was evaluated into 8 before it was substituted in. Note this
|
|
means there were two evaluations: this doesn't work:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % foo=3+
|
|
% print $(( foo 2 ))
|
|
zsh: bad math expression: operand expected at `'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>--- the complaint here is about the missing operand after the `<code>+</code>' in
|
|
the <code>$foo</code>. However the following <em>does</em> work:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % foo=3+
|
|
% print $(( $foo 2 ))
|
|
5
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>That's because the scalar <code>$foo</code> is turned into <code>3+</code> first. This is more
|
|
logical than you might think: with the rule about left to right
|
|
evaluation, the <code>$foo</code> is picked up inside the <code>$((...))</code> and expanded
|
|
as an ordinary parameter substitution while the argument of <code>$((...))</code>
|
|
is being scanned. Then the complete argument `<code>3+ 2</code>' is expanded as an
|
|
arithmetical expression. (Unfortunately, zsh isn't always this logical;
|
|
there could easily be cases where we haven't thought it through --- you
|
|
should feel free to bring these to our attention.)</p>
|
|
<p>There's an older form with single square brackets instead of double
|
|
parentheses; there is now no reason to use it, as it's non-standard, but
|
|
you may sometimes still meet it.</p>
|
|
<p><strong>Brace expansion</strong></p>
|
|
<p>Brace expansion is a feature acquired from the C shell and it's
|
|
relatives, although some versions of ksh have it, as it's a compile time
|
|
option there. It's a useful way of saving you from typing the same thing
|
|
twice on a single command line:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print -l {foo,bar}' is used far too often in examples'
|
|
foo is used far too often in examples
|
|
bar is used far too often in examples
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>`<code>print</code>' is given two arguments which it is told to print out one per
|
|
line. The text in quotes is common to both, but one has `<code>foo</code>' in
|
|
front, while the other has `<code>bar</code>' in front. The brace expression can
|
|
equally be in the middle of an argument: for example, a common use of
|
|
this among programmers is for similarly named source files:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print zle_{tricky,vi,word}.c
|
|
zle_tricky.c zle_vi.c zle_word.c
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>As you see, you're not limited to two; you can have any number. You can
|
|
quote a comma if you need a real one:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print -l \`{\,,.}\'' is a punctuation character'
|
|
`,' is a punctuation character
|
|
`.' is a punctuation character
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The quotes needed quoting with a backslash to get them into the output.
|
|
The second comma is the active one for the braces.</p>
|
|
<p>You can nest braces. Once again, this is done left to right. In</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print {now,th{en,ere{,abouts}}}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>the first argument of the outer brace is `<code>now</code>', and the second is
|
|
`<code>th{en,ere{,abouts}}</code>'. This brace expands to `<code>then</code>' and then the
|
|
expansion of `<code>there{,abouts}</code>', which is `<code>there thereabouts</code>' ---
|
|
there's nothing to stop you having an empty argument. Putting this all
|
|
together, we have</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print now then there thereabouts
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>There's more to know about brace expansion, which will appear in
|
|
<a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter 5</a> on clever expansions.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l58"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="364-filename-expansion"><a class="header" href="#364-filename-expansion">3.6.4: Filename Expansion</a></h3>
|
|
<p>It's a shame the names `filename expansion' and `filename generation'
|
|
sound so similar, but most people just refer to `<code>~</code> and <code>=</code> expansion'
|
|
and `globbing' respectively, which is all that is meant by the two. The
|
|
first is by far the simpler. The rule is: unquoted `<code>~</code>'s at the
|
|
beginning of words perform expansion of named directories, which may be
|
|
your home directory:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print ~
|
|
/home/pws
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>some user's home directory:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print ~root
|
|
/root
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(that may turn up `<code>/</code>' on your system), a directory named directly by
|
|
you:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % t=/tmp
|
|
% print ~t
|
|
/tmp
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>a directory you've recently visited:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % pwd
|
|
/home/pws/zsh/projects/zshguide
|
|
% print ~+
|
|
/home/pws/zsh/projects/zshguide
|
|
% cd /tmp
|
|
% print ~-
|
|
/home/pws/zsh/projects/zshguide
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>or a directory in your directory stack:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % pushd /tmp
|
|
% pushd ~
|
|
% pushd /var/tmp
|
|
% print ~2
|
|
/tmp
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>These forms were discussed above. There are various extra rules. You can
|
|
add a `<code>/</code>' after any of them, and the expansions still take place, so
|
|
you can use them to specify just the first part of a longer expression
|
|
(as you almost certainly have done with a simple `<code>~</code>'). If you quote
|
|
the `<code>~</code>' in any of the ways quoting normally takes place, the
|
|
expansion doesn't happen.</p>
|
|
<p>A <code>~</code> in the middle of the word means something completely different, if
|
|
you have the <code>EXTENDED_GLOB</code> option set; if you don't, it doesn't mean
|
|
anything. There are a few exceptions here; assignments are a fairly
|
|
natural one:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % foo=~pws
|
|
% print $foo
|
|
/home/pws
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(note that the `<code>~pws</code>', being unquoted, was expanded straight away at
|
|
the assignment, not at the print statement). But the following works
|
|
too:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % PATH=$PATH:~pws/bin
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>because colons are special in assignments. Note that this happens even
|
|
if the variable isn't a colon-separated path; the shell doesn't know
|
|
what use you're going to make of all the different variables.</p>
|
|
<p>The companion of `<code>~</code>' is `<code>=</code>', which again has to occur at the start
|
|
of a word or assignment to be special. The remainder of the word (here
|
|
the <em>entire</em> remainder, because directory paths aren't useful) is taken
|
|
as the name of an external command, and the word is expanded to the
|
|
complete path to that command, using <code>$PATH</code> just as if the command were
|
|
to be executed:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % print =ls
|
|
/bin/ls
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and, slightly confusingly,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % foo==ls
|
|
% print $foo
|
|
/bin/ls
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where the two `<code>=</code>'s have two different meanings. This form is useful
|
|
in a number of cases. For example, you might want to look at or edit a
|
|
script which you know is in your path; the form</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % vi =scriptname
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is more convenient than the more traditional</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % vi `whence -p ls`
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where I put the `<code>-p</code>' in to force <code>whence</code> to follow the path,
|
|
ignoring builtins, functions, etc. This brings us to another use for
|
|
`<code>=</code>' expansion,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % =ls
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is a neat and extremely short way of referring to an external command
|
|
when <code>ls</code> is usually a function. It has some of the same effect as
|
|
`<code>command ls</code>', but is easier to type.</p>
|
|
<p>In versions up to and including <code>4.0</code>, this syntax will also expand
|
|
aliases, so you need to be a bit careful if you really want a path to an
|
|
external command:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % alias foo='ls -F'
|
|
% print =foo
|
|
ls -F
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>(Path expansion is done in preference, so you are safe if you use <code>ls</code>,
|
|
unless your <code>$PATH</code> is strange.) Putting `<code>=foo</code>' at the start of the
|
|
command line doesn't work, and the reason why bears examination:
|
|
<code>=</code>-expansion occurs quite late on, after ordinary alias expansion and
|
|
word splitting, so that the result is the single word `<code>ls -F</code>', where
|
|
the space is part of the word, which probably doesn't mean anything (and
|
|
if it does, don't lend me your computer when I need something done in a
|
|
hurry). It's probably already obvious that alias expansion here is more
|
|
trouble than it's worth. A less-than-exhaustive search failed to find
|
|
anyone who liked this feature, and it has been removed from the shell
|
|
from 4.1, so that `<code>=</code>'-expansion now only expands paths to external
|
|
commands.</p>
|
|
<p>If you don't like <code>=</code>-expansion, you can turn it off by setting the
|
|
option <code>NO_EQUALS</code>. One catch, which might make you want to do that, is
|
|
that the commands <code>mmv</code>, <code>mcp</code> and <code>mln</code>, which are a commonly used
|
|
though non-standard piece of free software, use `<code>=</code>' followed by a
|
|
number to replace a pattern, for example</p>
|
|
<pre><code> mmv '*.c' '=1.old.c'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>renames all files ending with <code>.c</code> to end with <code>.old.c</code>. If you were not
|
|
alert, you might forget to quote the second word. Otherwise, however,
|
|
<code>=</code>' isn't very common at the start of a word, so you're probably fairly
|
|
safe. For a way to do that with zsh patterns, see the discussion of the
|
|
function <code>zmv</code> below (the answer is `<code>zmv '(*).c' '$1.old.c'</code>').</p>
|
|
<p>Note that zsh is smart enough to complete the names of commands after an
|
|
`<code>=</code>' of the expandable sort when you hit TAB.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l59"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="365-filename-generation"><a class="header" href="#365-filename-generation">3.6.5: Filename Generation</a></h3>
|
|
<p>Filename generation is exactly the same as `globbing': the expanding of
|
|
any unquoted wildcards to match files. This is only done in one
|
|
directory at a time. So for example</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print *.c
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>won't match files in a subdirectory ending in `<code>.c</code>'. However, it <em>is</em>
|
|
done on all parts of a path, so</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print */*.c
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>will match all `<code>.c</code>' files in all immediate subdirectories of the
|
|
current directory. Furthermore, zsh has an extension --- one of its most
|
|
commonly used special features --- to match files in any subdirectory at
|
|
any depth, including the current directory: use two `<code>*</code>'s as part of
|
|
the path:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print **/*.c
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>will match `<code>prog.c</code>', `<code>version1/prog.c</code>', `<code>version2/test/prog.c</code>',
|
|
`<code>oldversion/working/saved/prog.c</code>', and so on. I will talk about
|
|
filename generation and other uses of zsh's extremely powerful patterns
|
|
at much greater length in <a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter 5</a>. My main
|
|
thrust here is to fit it into other forms of expansion; the main thing
|
|
to remember is that it comes last, after everything has already been
|
|
done.</p>
|
|
<p>So although you would certainly expect this to work,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print ~/*
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>generating all files in your home directory, you now know why: it is
|
|
first expanded to `<code>/home/pws/*</code>' (or wherever), then the shell scans
|
|
down the path until it finds a pattern, and looks in the directory it
|
|
has reached (<code>/home/pws</code>) for matching files. Furthermore,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> foo=~/
|
|
print $foo*
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>works. However, as I explained in the last chapter, you need to be
|
|
careful with</p>
|
|
<pre><code> foo=*
|
|
print ~/$foo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This just prints `<code>/home/pws/*</code>'. To get the `<code>*</code>' from the parameter
|
|
to be a wildcard, you need to tell the shell explicitly that's what you
|
|
want:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> foo=*
|
|
print ~/${~foo}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>As also noted, other shells do expand the <code>*</code> as a wildcard anyway. The
|
|
zsh attitude here, as with word splitting, is that parameters should do
|
|
exactly what they're told rather than waltz off generating extra words
|
|
or expansions.</p>
|
|
<p>Be even more careful with arrays:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> foo=(*)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>will expand the <code>*</code> immediately, in the current directory --- the
|
|
elements of the array assignment are expanded exactly like a normal
|
|
command line glob. This is often very useful, but note the difference
|
|
from scalar assignments, which do other forms of expansion, but not
|
|
globbing.</p>
|
|
<p>I'll mention a few possible traps for the unwary, which might confuse
|
|
you until you are a zsh globbing guru. Firstly, parentheses actually
|
|
have two uses. Consider:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print (foo|bar)(.)
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The first set of parentheses means `match either <code>foo</code> or <code>bar</code>'. If
|
|
you've used <code>egrep</code>, you will probably be familiar with this. The
|
|
second, however, simply means `match only regular files'. The `<code>(.)</code>'
|
|
is called a `globbing qualifier', because it limits the scope of any
|
|
matches so far found. For example, if either or both of <code>foo</code> and <code>bar</code>
|
|
were found, but were directories, they would not now be matched. There
|
|
are many other possibilities for globbing qualifiers. For now, the
|
|
easiest way to tell if something at the end is <em>not</em> a globbing
|
|
qualifier is if it contains a `<code>|</code>'.</p>
|
|
<p>The second point is about forms like this:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print file-<1-10>.dat
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The `<code><</code>' and `<code>></code>' smell of redirection, as described next, but
|
|
actually the form `<code><</code>', optional start number, `<code>-</code>', optional finish
|
|
number, `<code>></code>' means match any positive integer in the range between the
|
|
two numbers, inclusive; if either is omitted, there is no limit on that
|
|
end, hence the cryptic but common `<code><-></code>' to match any positive integer
|
|
--- in other words, any group of decimal digits (bases other than ten
|
|
are not handled by this notation). Older versions of the shell allowed
|
|
the form `<code><></code>' as a shorthand to match any number, but the overlap
|
|
with redirection was too great, as you'll see, so this doesn't work any
|
|
more.</p>
|
|
<p>Another two cryptic symbols are the two that do negation. These only
|
|
work with the option `<code>EXTENDED_GLOB</code>' set: this is necessary to get
|
|
the most out of zsh's patterns, but it can be a trap for the unwary by
|
|
turning otherwise innocuous characters into patterns:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print ^foo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This means any file in the current directory <em>except</em> the file <code>foo</code>.
|
|
One way of coming unstuck with `<code>^</code>' is something like</p>
|
|
<pre><code> stty kill ^u
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where you would hope `<code>^u</code>' means control with `<code>u</code>', i.e. ASCII
|
|
character 21. But it doesn't, if <code>EXTENDED_GLOB</code> is set: it means `any
|
|
file in the current directory except one called `<code>u</code>' ', which is
|
|
definitely a different thing. The other negation operator isn't usually
|
|
so fraught, but it can look confusing:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print *.c~f*
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is a pattern of two halves; the shell tries to match `<code>*.c</code>', but
|
|
rejects any matches which also match `<code>f*</code>'. Luckily, a `<code>~</code>' right at
|
|
the end isn't special, so</p>
|
|
<pre><code> rm *.c~
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>removes all files ending in `<code>.c~</code>' --- it wouldn't be very nice if it
|
|
matched all files ending in `<code>.c</code>' and treated the final `<code>~</code>' as an
|
|
instruction not to reject any, so it doesn't. The most likely case I can
|
|
think of where you might have problems is with Emacs' numeric backup
|
|
files, which can have a `<code>~</code>' in the middle which you should quote.
|
|
There is no confusion with the directory use of `<code>~</code>', however: that
|
|
only occurs at the beginning of a word, and this use only occurs in the
|
|
middle.</p>
|
|
<p>The final oddments that don't fit into normal shell globbing are forms
|
|
with `<code>#</code>'. These also require that <code>EXTENDED_GLOB</code> be set. In the
|
|
simplest use, a `<code>#</code>' after a pattern says `match this zero or more
|
|
times'. So `<code>(foo|bar)#.c</code>' matches <code>foo.c</code>, <code>bar.c</code>, <code>foofoo.c</code>,
|
|
<code>barbar.c</code>, <code>foobarfoo.c</code>, ... With an extra <code>#</code>, the pattern before (or
|
|
single character, if it has no special meaning) must match at least
|
|
once. The other use of `<code>#</code>' is in a facility called `globbing flags',
|
|
which look like `<code>(#X)</code>' where `<code>X</code>' is some letter, possibly followed
|
|
by digits. These turn on special features from that point in the pattern
|
|
and are one of the newest features of zsh patterns; they will receive
|
|
much more space in <a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter 5</a>.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l60"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="37-redirection-greater-thans-and-less-thans"><a class="header" href="#37-redirection-greater-thans-and-less-thans">3.7: Redirection: greater-thans and less-thans</a></h2>
|
|
<p>Redirection means retrieving input from some other file than the usual
|
|
one, or sending output to some other file than the usual one. The
|
|
simplest examples of these are `<code><</code>' and `<code>></code>', respectively.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % echo 'This is an announcement' >tempfile
|
|
% cat <tempfile >newfile
|
|
% cat newfile
|
|
This is an announcement
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, <code>echo</code> sends its output to the file <code>tempfile</code>; <code>cat</code> took its
|
|
input from that file and sent its output --- the same as its input ---
|
|
to the file <code>newfile</code>; the second <code>cat</code> takes its input from <code>newfile</code>
|
|
and, since its output wasn't redirected, it appeared on the terminal.</p>
|
|
<p>The other basic form of redirection is a pipe, using `<code>|</code>'. Some people
|
|
loosely refer to all redirections as pipes, but that's rather confusing.
|
|
The input and output of a pipe are <em>both</em> programmes, unlike the case
|
|
above where one end was a file. You've seen lots of examples already:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo foo | sed 's/foo/bar/'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, <code>echo</code> sends its output to the programme <code>sed</code>, which substitutes
|
|
foo by bar, and sends its own output to standard output. You can chain
|
|
together as many pipes as you like; once you've grasped the basic
|
|
behaviour of a single pipe, it should be obvious how that works:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo foo is a word |
|
|
sed 's/foo/bar/' |
|
|
sed 's/a word/an unword/'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>runs another <code>sed</code> on the output of the first one. (You can actually
|
|
type it like that, by the way; the shell knows a pipe symbol can't be at
|
|
the end of a command.) In fact, a single <code>sed</code> will suffice:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo foo is a word |
|
|
sed -e 's/foo/bar/' -e 's/a word/an unword/'
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>has the same effect in this case.</p>
|
|
<p>Obviously, all three forms of redirection only work if the programme in
|
|
question expects input from standard input, and sends output to standard
|
|
output. You can't do:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo 'edit me' | vi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>to edit input, since <code>vi</code> doesn't use the input sent to it; it always
|
|
deals with files. Most simple UNIX commands can be made to deal with
|
|
standard input and output, however. This is a big difference from other
|
|
operating systems, where getting programmes to talk to each other in an
|
|
automated fashion can be a major headache.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l61"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="371-clobber"><a class="header" href="#371-clobber">3.7.1: Clobber</a></h3>
|
|
<p>The word `clobber', as in the option <code>NO_CLOBBER</code> which I mentioned in
|
|
the previous chapter, may be unfamiliar to people who don't use English
|
|
as their first language. Its basic meaning is `hit' or `defeat' or
|
|
`destroy', as in `Itchy and Scratchy clobbered each other with
|
|
mallets'. If you do:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % echo first go >file
|
|
% echo second go >file
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>then <code>file</code> will contain only the words `second go'. The first thing
|
|
you put into the file, `first go', has been clobbered. Hence the
|
|
<code>NO_CLOBBER</code> option: if this is set, the shell will complain when you
|
|
try to overwrite the file. You can use `<code>>|file</code>' or `<code>>! file</code>' to
|
|
override this. You usually can't use `<code>>!file</code>' because history
|
|
expansion will try to expand `<code>!file</code>' before the shell parses the
|
|
line; hence the form with the vertical bar tends to be more useful.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l62"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="372-file-descriptors"><a class="header" href="#372-file-descriptors">3.7.2: File descriptors</a></h3>
|
|
<p>UNIX-like systems refer to different channels such as input, output and
|
|
error by `file descriptors', which are small integers. Usually three
|
|
are special: 0, standard input; 1, standard output; and 2, standard
|
|
error. Bourne-like shells (but not csh-like shells) allow you to refer
|
|
to a particular file descriptor, instead of standard input or output, by
|
|
putting the integer immediately before the `<code><</code>' or `<code>></code>' (no space is
|
|
allowed). What's more, if the `<code><</code>' or `<code>></code>' is followed immediately
|
|
by `<code>&</code>', a file descriptor can follow the redirection (the one before
|
|
is optional as usual). A common use is:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % echo This message will go to standard error >&2
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The command sends its message to standard output, file descriptor 1. As
|
|
usual, `<code>></code>' redirects standard output. This time, however, it is
|
|
redirected not to a file, but to file descriptor 2, which is standard
|
|
error. Normally this is the same device as standard output, but it can
|
|
be redirected completely separately. So:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % { echo A message
|
|
cursh> echo An error >&2 } >file
|
|
An error
|
|
% cat file
|
|
A message
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Apologies for the slightly unclear use of the continuation prompt
|
|
`<code>cursh></code>': this guide goes into a lot of different formats, and some
|
|
are a bit finicky about long lines in preformatted text. As pointed out
|
|
above, the `<code>>file</code>' here will redirect all output from the stuff in
|
|
braces, just as if it were a single command. However, the `<code>>&2</code>'
|
|
inside redirects the output of the second <code>echo</code> to standard error.
|
|
Since this wasn't redirected, it goes straight to the terminal.</p>
|
|
<p>Note the form in braces in the previous example --- I'm going to use
|
|
that in a few more examples. It simply sends something to standard
|
|
output, and something else to standard error; that's its only use. Apart
|
|
from that, you can treat the bit in braces as a black box --- anything
|
|
which can produce both sorts of output.</p>
|
|
<p>Sometimes you want to redirect both at once. The standard Bourne-like
|
|
way of doing this is:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % { echo A message
|
|
cursh> echo An error >&2 } >file 2>&1
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The `<code>>file</code>' redirects standard output from the <code>{</code><em>...</em><code>}</code> to the
|
|
file; the following <code>2>&1</code> redirects standard error to wherever standard
|
|
output happens to be at that point, which is the same file. This allows
|
|
you to copy two file descriptors to the same place. Note that the order
|
|
is important; if you swapped the two around, `<code>2>&1</code>' would copy
|
|
standard error to the initial destination of standard output, which is
|
|
the terminal, before it got around to redirecting standard output.</p>
|
|
<p>Zsh has a shorthand for this borrowed from csh-like shells:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % { echo A message
|
|
cursh> echo An error >&2 } >&file
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is exactly equivalent to the form in the previous paragraph, copying
|
|
standard output and standard error to the same file. There is obviously
|
|
a clash of syntax with the descriptor-copying mechanism, but if you
|
|
don't have files whose names are numbers you won't run into it. Note
|
|
that csh-like shells don't have the descriptor-copying mechanism: the
|
|
simple `<code>>&</code>' and the same thing with pipes are the only uses of `<code>&</code>'
|
|
for redirections, and it's not possible there to refer to particular
|
|
file descriptors.</p>
|
|
<p>To copy standard error to a pipe, there are also two forms:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % { echo A message
|
|
cursh> echo An error >&2 } 2>&1 | sed -e 's/A/I/'
|
|
I message
|
|
In error
|
|
% { echo A message
|
|
cursh> echo An error >&2 } |& sed -e 's/A/I/'
|
|
I message
|
|
In error
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>In the first case, note that the pipe is opened before the other
|
|
redirection, so that `<code>2>&1</code>' copies standard error to the pipe, not
|
|
the original standard output; you couldn't put that after the pipe in
|
|
any case, since it would refer to the `<code>sed</code>' command's output. The
|
|
second way is like csh; unfortunately, `<code>|&</code>' has a different meaning
|
|
in ksh (start a coprocess), so zsh is incompatible with ksh in this
|
|
respect.</p>
|
|
<p>You can also close a file descriptor you don't need: the form `<code>2<&-</code>'
|
|
will close standard error for the command where it appears.</p>
|
|
<p>One thing not always appreciated about redirections is that they can
|
|
occur anywhere on the command line, not just at the end.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % >file echo foo
|
|
% cat file
|
|
foo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p><span id="l63"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="373-appending-here-documents-here-strings-read-write"><a class="header" href="#373-appending-here-documents-here-strings-read-write">3.7.3: Appending, here documents, here strings, read write</a></h3>
|
|
<p>There are various other forms which use multiple `<code>></code>'s and `<code><</code>'s.
|
|
First,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % echo foo >file
|
|
% echo bar >>file
|
|
% cat file
|
|
foo
|
|
bar
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The `<code>>``></code>' appends to the file instead of overwriting it. Note,
|
|
however, that if you use this a lot you may find there are neater ways
|
|
of doing the same thing. In this example,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % { echo foo
|
|
cursh> echo bar } >file
|
|
% cat file
|
|
foo
|
|
bar
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, `<code>cursh></code>' is a prompt from the shell that it is waiting for you
|
|
to close the `<code>{</code>' construct which executes a set of commands in the
|
|
current shell. This construct can have a redirection applied to the
|
|
entire sequence of commands: `<code>>file</code>' after the closing brace
|
|
therefore redirects the output from both <code>echo</code>s.</p>
|
|
<p>In the case of input, doubling the sign has a totally different effect.
|
|
The word after the <code><``<</code> is not a file, but a string which will be used
|
|
to mark in the end of input. Input is read until a line with only this
|
|
string is found:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % sed -e 's/foo/bar/' <<HERE
|
|
heredoc> This line has foo in it.
|
|
heredoc> There is another foo in this one.
|
|
heredoc> HERE
|
|
This line has a bar in it.
|
|
There is another bar in this one.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The shell prompts you with `<code>heredoc></code>' to tell you it is reading a
|
|
`here document', which is how this feature is referred to. When it
|
|
finds the final string, in this case `<code>HERE</code>', it passes everything you
|
|
have typed as input to the command as if it came from a file. The
|
|
command in this case is the stream editor, which has been told to
|
|
replace the first `<code>foo</code>' on each line with a `<code>bar</code>'. (Replacing
|
|
things with a bar is a familiar experience from the city centre of my
|
|
home town, Newcastle upon Tyne.)</p>
|
|
<p>So far, the features are standard in Bourne-like shells, but zsh has an
|
|
extension to here documents, sometimes referred to as `here strings'.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % sed -e 's/string/nonsense/' \
|
|
> <<<'This string is the entire document.'
|
|
This nonsense is the entire document.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Note that `<code>></code>' on the second line is a continuation prompt, not part
|
|
of the command line; it was just too long for the TeX version of this
|
|
document if I didn't split it. This is a shorthand form of `here'
|
|
document if you just want to pass a single string to standard input.</p>
|
|
<p>The final form uses both symbols: `<code><>file</code>' opens the file for reading
|
|
and writing --- but only on standard input. In other words, a programme
|
|
can now both read from and write to standard input. This isn't used all
|
|
that often, and when you do use it you should remember that you need to
|
|
open standard output explicitly to the same file:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % echo test >/tmp/redirtest
|
|
% sed 's/e/Z/g' <>/tmp/redirtest 1>&0
|
|
% cat /tmp/redirtest
|
|
tZtst
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>As standard input (the 0) was opened for writing, you can perform the
|
|
unusual trick of copying standard output (the 1) into it. This is
|
|
generally not a particularly safe way of doing in-place editing,
|
|
however, though it seems to work fine with sed. Note that in older
|
|
versions of zsh, `<code><></code>' was equivalent to `<code><-></code>', which is a pattern
|
|
that matches any number; this was changed quite some time ago.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l64"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="374-clever-tricks-exec-and-other-file-descriptors"><a class="header" href="#374-clever-tricks-exec-and-other-file-descriptors">3.7.4: Clever tricks: exec and other file descriptors</a></h3>
|
|
<p>All Bourne-like shells have two other features. First, the `command'
|
|
<code>exec</code>, which I described above as being used to replace the shell with
|
|
the command you give after it, can be used with only redirections after
|
|
it. These redirections then apply permanently to the shell itself,
|
|
rather than temporarily to a single command. So</p>
|
|
<pre><code> exec >file
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>makes <code>file</code> the destination for standard output from that point on.
|
|
This is most useful in scripts, where it's quite common to want to
|
|
change the destination of all output.</p>
|
|
<p>The second feature is that you can use file descriptors which haven't
|
|
even been opened yet, as long as they are single digits --- in other
|
|
words, you can use numbers 3 to 9 for your own purposes. This can be
|
|
combined with the previous feature for some quite clever effects:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> exec 3>&1
|
|
# 3 refers to stdout
|
|
exec >file
|
|
# stdout goes to `file', 3 untouched
|
|
# random commands output to `file'
|
|
exec 1>&3
|
|
# stdout is now back where it was
|
|
exec 3>&-
|
|
# file descriptor 3 closed to tidy up
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, file descriptor 3 has been used simply as a placeholder to
|
|
remember where standard output was while we temporarily divert it. This
|
|
is an alternative to the `<code>{</code><em>...</em><code>} >file</code>' trick. Note that you can
|
|
put more than one redirection on the <code>exec</code> line: `<code>exec 3>&1 >file</code>'
|
|
also works, as long as you keep the order the same.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l65"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="375-multios"><a class="header" href="#375-multios">3.7.5: Multios</a></h3>
|
|
<p>Multios allow you to do an implicit `<code>cat</code>' (concatenate files) on
|
|
input and `<code>tee</code>' (send the same data to different files) on output.
|
|
They depend on the option <code>MULTIOS</code> being set, which it is by default. I
|
|
described this in the last chapter in discussing whether or not you
|
|
should have the option set, so you can look at the examples there.</p>
|
|
<p>Here's one fact I didn't mention. You use output multios like this:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> command-generating-output >file1 >file2
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where the command's output is copied to both files. This is done by a
|
|
process forked off by the shell: it simply sits waiting for input, then
|
|
copies it to all the files in its list. There's a problem in all
|
|
versions of the shell to date (currently 4.0.6): this process is
|
|
asynchronous, so you can't rely on it having finished when the shell
|
|
starts executing the next command. In other words, if you look at
|
|
<code>file1</code> or <code>file2</code> immediately after the command has finished, they may
|
|
not yet contain all the output because the forked process hasn't
|
|
finished writing to it.</p>
|
|
<p>This is really a bug, but for the time being you will have to live with
|
|
it as it's quite complicated to fix in all cases. Multios are most
|
|
useful as a shorthand in interactive use, like so much of zsh; in a
|
|
script or function it is safer to use <code>tee</code>,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> command-generating-output | tee file1 file2
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which does the same thing, but as <code>tee</code> is handled as a synchronous
|
|
process <code>file1</code> and <code>file2</code> are guaranteed to be complete when the
|
|
pipeline exits.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l66"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="38-shell-syntax-loops-subshells-and-so-on"><a class="header" href="#38-shell-syntax-loops-subshells-and-so-on">3.8: Shell syntax: loops, (sub)shells and so on</a></h2>
|
|
<p><span id="l67"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="381-logical-command-connectors"><a class="header" href="#381-logical-command-connectors">3.8.1: Logical command connectors</a></h3>
|
|
<p>I have been rather cavalier in using a couple of elements of syntax
|
|
without explaining them:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> true && print Previous command returned true
|
|
false || print Previous command returned false
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The relationship between `<code>&&</code>' and `<code>||</code>' and tests is fairly
|
|
obvious, but in this case they connect complete commands, not test
|
|
arguments. The `<code>&&</code>' executes the following command if the one before
|
|
succeeded, and the `<code>||</code>' executes the following command if the one
|
|
before failed. In other words, the first is equivalent to</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if true; then
|
|
print Previous command returned true
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>but is more compact.</p>
|
|
<p>There is a perennial argument about whether to use these or not. In the
|
|
comp.unix.shell newsgroup on Usenet, you see people arguing that the
|
|
`<code>&&</code>' syntax is unreadable, and only an idiot would use it, while
|
|
other people argue that the full `<code>if</code>' syntax is slower and clumsier,
|
|
and only an idiot would use that for a simple test; but Usenet is like
|
|
that, and both answers are a bit simplistic. On the one hand, the
|
|
difference in speed between the two forms is minute, probably measurable
|
|
in microseconds rather than milliseconds on a modern computer; the
|
|
scheduling of the shell process running the script by the operating
|
|
system is likely to make more difference if these are embedded inside a
|
|
much longer script or function, as they will be. And on the other hand,
|
|
the connection between `<code>&&</code>' and a logical `and' is so strong in the
|
|
minds of many programmers that to anyone with moderate shell experience
|
|
they are perfectly readable. So it's up to you. I find I use the `<code>&&</code>'
|
|
and `<code>||</code>' forms for a pair of simple commands, but use `<code>if</code>' for
|
|
anything more complicated.</p>
|
|
<p>I would certainly advise you to avoid chains like:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> true || print foo && print bar || false
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>If you try that, you will see `<code>bar</code>' but not `<code>foo</code>', which is not
|
|
what a C programmer might expect. Using the usual rules of precedence,
|
|
you would parse it as: either <code>true</code> must be true; or both the <code>print</code>
|
|
statements must be true; or the false must be true. However, the shell
|
|
parses it differently, using these rules:</p>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>If you encounter an `<code>&&</code>',
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>if the command before it (really the complete pipeline)
|
|
succeeded, execute the command immediately after, and execute
|
|
what follows normally</li>
|
|
<li>else if the command failed, skip the next command and any others
|
|
until an `<code>||</code>' is encountered, or until the group of commands
|
|
is ended by a newline, a semicolon, or the end of an enclosing
|
|
group. Then execute whatever follows in the normal way.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>If you encounter an `<code>||</code>',
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>if the command before it succeeded, skip the next command and
|
|
any others until an `<code>&&</code>' is encountered, or until the end of
|
|
the group, and execute what follows normally</li>
|
|
<li>else if the command failed, execute the command immediately
|
|
after the `<code>||</code>'.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p>If that's hard to follow, just note that the rule is completely
|
|
symmetric; a simple summary is that the logical connectors don't
|
|
remember their past state. So in the example shown, the `<code>true</code>'
|
|
succeeds, we skip `<code>print foo</code>' but execute `<code>print bar</code>' and then
|
|
skip <code>false</code>. The expression returns status zero because the last thing
|
|
it executed did so. Oddly enough, this is completely standard behaviour
|
|
for shells. This is a roundabout way of saying `don't use combined
|
|
chains of `<code>&&</code>'s and `<code>||</code>'s unless you think Gödel's theorem is for
|
|
sissies'.</p>
|
|
<p>Strictly speaking, the and's and or's come in a hierarchy of things
|
|
which connect commands. They are above pipelines, which explains my
|
|
remark above --- an expression like `<code>echo $ZSH_VERSION | sed '/dev//'</code>' is treated as a single command between any logical connectors
|
|
--- and they are below newlines and semicolons --- an expression like
|
|
`<code>true && print yes; false || print no</code>' is parsed as two distinct sets
|
|
of logically connected command sequences. In the manual, a list is a
|
|
complete set of commands executed in one go:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> echo foo; echo bar
|
|
|
|
echo small furry animals
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>--- a shell function is basically a glorified list with arguments and a
|
|
name. A sublist is a set of commands up to a newline or semicolon, in
|
|
other words a complete expression possibly involving the logical
|
|
connectors:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> show -nomoreproc |
|
|
grep -q foo &&
|
|
print The word '`foo'\' occurs.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>A pipeline is a chain of one or more commands connected by `<code>|</code>', for
|
|
example both individual parts of the previous sublist,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> show -nomoreproc | grep -q foo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print The word '`foo'\' occurs.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>count as pipelines. A simple command is one single unit of execution
|
|
with a command name, so to use the same example that includes all three
|
|
of the following,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> show -nomoreproc
|
|
grep -q foo
|
|
print The word '`foo'\' occurs.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This means that in something like</p>
|
|
<pre><code> print foo
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>where the command is terminated by a newline and then executed in one
|
|
go, the expression is all of the above --- list, sublist, pipeline and
|
|
simple command. Mostly I won't need to make the formal distinction; it
|
|
sometimes helps when you need to break down a complicated set of
|
|
commands. It's a good idea, and usually possible, to write in such a way
|
|
that it's obvious how the commands break down. It's not too important to
|
|
know the details, as long as you've got a feel for how the shell finds
|
|
the next command.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l68"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="382-structures"><a class="header" href="#382-structures">3.8.2: Structures</a></h3>
|
|
<p>I've shown plenty of examples of one sort of shell structure already,
|
|
the <code>if</code> statement:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if [[ black = white ]]; then
|
|
print Yellow is no colour.
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The main points are: the `<code>if</code>' itself is followed by some command
|
|
whose return status is tested; a `<code>then</code>' follows as a new command; any
|
|
number of commands may follow, as complex as you like; the whole
|
|
sequence is ended by a `<code>fi</code>' as a command on its own. You can write
|
|
the `<code>then</code>' on a new line if you like, I just happen to find it neater
|
|
to stick it where it is. If you follow the form here, remember the
|
|
semicolon before it; the <code>then</code> must start a separate command. (You can
|
|
put another command immediately after the <code>then</code> without a newline or
|
|
semicolon, though, although people tend not to.)</p>
|
|
<p>The double-bracketed test is by far the most common thing to put here in
|
|
zsh, as in ksh, but any command will do; only the status is important.</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if true; then
|
|
print This always gets executed
|
|
fi
|
|
if false; then
|
|
print This never gets executed
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, <code>true</code> always returns true (status 0), while <code>false</code> always
|
|
returns false (status 1 in zsh, although some versions return status 255
|
|
--- anything nonzero will do). So the statements following the <code>print</code>s
|
|
are correct.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>if</code> construct can be extended by `<code>elif</code>' and `<code>else</code>':</p>
|
|
<pre><code> read var
|
|
if [[ $var = yes ]]; then
|
|
print Read yes
|
|
elif [[ $var = no ]]; then
|
|
print Read no
|
|
else
|
|
print Read something else
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The extension is pretty straightforward. You can have as many `<code>elif</code>'s
|
|
with different tests as you like; the code following the first test to
|
|
succeed is executed. If no test succeeded, and there is an `<code>else</code>'
|
|
(there doesn't need to be), the code following that is executed. Note
|
|
that the form of the `<code>elif</code>' is identical to that of `<code>if</code>',
|
|
including the `<code>then</code>', while the else just appears on its own.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>while</code>-loop is quite similar to <code>if</code>. There are two differences:
|
|
the syntax uses <code>while</code>, <code>do</code> and <code>done</code> instead of <code>if</code>, <code>then</code> and
|
|
<code>fi</code>, and after the loop body is executed (if it is), the test is
|
|
evaluated again. The process stops as soon as the test is false. So</p>
|
|
<pre><code> i=0
|
|
while (( i++ < 3 )); do
|
|
print $i
|
|
done
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>prints 1, then 2, then 3. As with <code>if</code>, the commands in the middle can
|
|
be any set of zsh commands, so</p>
|
|
<pre><code> i=0
|
|
while (( i++ < 3 )); do
|
|
if (( i & 1 )); then
|
|
print $i is odd
|
|
else
|
|
print $i is even
|
|
fi
|
|
done
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>tells you that 1 and 3 are odd while 2 is even. Remember that the
|
|
indentation is irrelevant; it is purely there to make the structures
|
|
more easy to understand. You can write the code on a single line by
|
|
replacing all the newlines with semicolons.</p>
|
|
<p>There is also an <code>until</code> loop, which is identical to the <code>while</code> loop
|
|
except that the loop is executed until the test is true. `<code>until [[</code><em>...</em>' is equivalent to `<code>while ! [[</code><em>...</em>'.</p>
|
|
<p>Next comes the <code>for</code> loop. The normal case can best be demonstrated by
|
|
another example:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> for f in one two three; do
|
|
print $f
|
|
done
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which prints out `<code>one</code>' on the first iteration, then `<code>two</code>', then
|
|
`<code>three</code>'. The <code>f</code> is set to each of the three words in turn, and the
|
|
body of the loop executed for each. It is very useful that the words
|
|
after the `<code>in</code>' may be anything you would normally have on a shell
|
|
command line. So `<code>for f in *; do</code>' will execute the body of the loop
|
|
once for each file in the current directory, with the file available as
|
|
<code>$f</code>, and you can use arrays or command substitutions or any other kind
|
|
of substitution to generate the words to loop over.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>for</code> loop is so useful that the shell allows a shorthand that you
|
|
can use on the command line: try</p>
|
|
<pre><code> for f in *; print $f
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and you will see the files in the current directory printed out, one per
|
|
line. This form, without the <code>do</code> and the <code>done</code>, involves less typing,
|
|
but is also less clear, so it is recommended that you only use it
|
|
interactively, not in scripts or functions. You can turn the feature off
|
|
with <code>NO_SHORT_LOOPS</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>case</code> statement is used to test a pattern against a series of
|
|
possibilities until one succeeds. It is really a short way of doing a
|
|
series of <code>if</code> and <code>elif</code> tests on the same pattern:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> read var
|
|
case $var in
|
|
(yes) print Read yes
|
|
;;
|
|
(no) print Read no
|
|
;;
|
|
(*) print Read something else
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is identical to the <code>if</code>/<code>elif</code>/<code>else</code> example above. The <code>$var</code> is
|
|
compared against each pattern in turn; if one matches, the code
|
|
following that is executed --- then the statement is exited; no further
|
|
matches are looked for. Hence the `<code>*</code>' at the end, which can match
|
|
anything, acts like the `<code>else</code>' of an <code>if</code> statement.</p>
|
|
<p>Note the quirks of the syntax: the pattern to test must appear in
|
|
parentheses. For historical reasons, you can miss out the left
|
|
parenthesis before the pattern. I haven't done that mainly because
|
|
unbalanced parentheses confuse the system I am using for writing this
|
|
guide. Also, note the double semicolon: this is the only use of double
|
|
semicolons in the shell. That explains the fact that if you type `<code>;;</code>'
|
|
on its own the shell will report a `parse error'; it couldn't find a
|
|
<code>case</code> to associate it with.</p>
|
|
<p>You can also use alternative patterns by separating them with a vertical
|
|
bar. Zsh allows alternatives with extended globbing anyway; but this is
|
|
actually a separate feature, which is present in other shells which
|
|
don't have zsh's extended globbing feature; it doesn't depend on the
|
|
<code>EXTENDED_GLOB</code> option:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> read var
|
|
case $var in
|
|
(yes|true|1) print Reply was affirmative
|
|
;;
|
|
(no|false|0) print Reply was negative
|
|
;;
|
|
(*) print Reply was cobblers
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The first `<code>print</code>' is used if the value of <code>$var</code> read in was
|
|
`<code>yes</code>', `<code>true</code>' or `<code>1</code>', and so on. Each of the separate items can
|
|
be a pattern, with any of the special characters allowed by zsh, this
|
|
time depending on the setting of the option <code>EXTENDED_GLOB</code>.</p>
|
|
<p>The <code>select</code> loop is not used all that often, in my experience. It is
|
|
only useful with interactive input (though the code may certainly appear
|
|
in a script or function):</p>
|
|
<pre><code> select var in earth air fire water; do
|
|
print You selected $var
|
|
done
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>This prints a menu; you must type 1, 2, 3 or 4 to select the
|
|
corresponding item; then the body of the loop is executed with <code>$var</code>
|
|
set to the value in the list corresponding to the number. To exit the
|
|
loop hit the break key (usually <code>^G</code>) or end of file (usually <code>^D</code>: the
|
|
feature is so infrequently used that currently there is a bug in the
|
|
shell that this tells you to use `<code>exit</code>' to exit, which is nonsense).
|
|
If the user entered a bogus value, then the loop is executed with <code>$var</code>
|
|
set to the empty string, though the actual input can be retrieved from
|
|
<code>$REPLY</code>. Note that the prompt printed for the user input is <code>$PROMPT3</code>,
|
|
the only use of this parameter in the shell: all normal prompt
|
|
substitutions are available.</p>
|
|
<p>There is one final type of loop which is special to zsh, unlike the
|
|
others above. This is `<code>repeat</code>'. It can be used two ways:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % repeat 3 print Hip Hip Hooray
|
|
Hip Hip Hooray
|
|
Hip Hip Hooray
|
|
Hip Hip Hooray
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Here, the first word after <code>repeat</code> is a count, which could be a
|
|
variable as normal substitutions are performed. The rest of the line (or
|
|
until the first semicolon) is a command to repeat; it is executed
|
|
identically each time.</p>
|
|
<p>The second form is a fully fledged loop, just like <code>while</code>:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % repeat 3; do
|
|
repeat> print Hip Hip Hooray
|
|
repeat> done
|
|
Hip Hip Hooray
|
|
Hip Hip Hooray
|
|
Hip Hip Hooray
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which has the identical effect to the previous one. The `<code>repeat></code>' is
|
|
the shell's prompt to show you that it is parsing the contents of a
|
|
`<code>repeat</code>' loop.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l69"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="383-subshells-and-current-shell-constructs"><a class="header" href="#383-subshells-and-current-shell-constructs">3.8.3: Subshells and current shell constructs</a></h3>
|
|
<p>More catching up with stuff you've already seen. The expression in
|
|
parentheses here:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % (cd ~; ls)
|
|
<all the files in my home directory>
|
|
% pwd
|
|
<where I was before, not necessarily ~>
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is run in a subshell, as if it were a script. The main difference is
|
|
that the shell inherits almost everything from the main shell in which
|
|
you are typing, including options settings, functions and parameters.
|
|
The most important thing it doesn't inherit is probably information
|
|
about jobs: if you run <code>jobs</code> in a subshell, you will get no output; you
|
|
can't use <code>fg</code> to resume a job in a subshell; you can't use `<code>kill %</code><em>n</em>' to kill a job (though you can still use the process ID); and so
|
|
on. By now you should have some feel for the effect of running in a
|
|
separate process. Running a command, or set of commands, in a different
|
|
directory, as in this example, is one quite common use for this
|
|
construct. (In zsh 4.1, you can use <code>jobs</code> in a subshell; it lists the
|
|
jobs running in the parent shell; this is because it is very useful to
|
|
be able to pipe the output of jobs into some processing loop.)</p>
|
|
<p>On the other hand, the expression in braces here:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % {cd ~; ls}
|
|
<all the files in my home directory>
|
|
% pwd
|
|
/home/pws
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>is run in the current shell. This is what I was blathering on about in
|
|
the section on redirection. Indeed, unless you need some special effect
|
|
like redirecting a whole set of commands, you won't use the
|
|
current-shell construct. The example here would behave just the same way
|
|
if the braces were missing.</p>
|
|
<p>As you might expect, the syntax of the subshell and current-shell forms
|
|
is very similar. You can use redirection with both, just as with simple
|
|
commands, and they can appear in most places where a simple command can
|
|
appear:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> [[ $test = true ]] && {
|
|
print Hello.
|
|
print Well, this is exciting.
|
|
}
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>That would be much clearer using an `<code>if</code>', but it works. For some
|
|
reason, you often find expressions of this form in system start-up files
|
|
located in the directory <code>/etc/rc.d</code> or, on older systems, in files
|
|
whose names begin with `<code>/etc/rc.</code>'. You can even do:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> if { foo=bar; [[ $foo = bar ]] }; then
|
|
print yes
|
|
fi
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>but that's also pretty gross.</p>
|
|
<p>One use for <code>{</code><em>...</em><code>}</code> is to make sure a whole set of commands is
|
|
executed at once. For example, if you copy a set of commands from a
|
|
script in one window and want them to be run in one go in a shell in
|
|
another window, you can do:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % {
|
|
cursh> # now paste your commands in here...
|
|
...
|
|
cursh> }
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and the commands will only be executed when you hit return after the
|
|
final `<code>}</code>'. This is also a workaround for some systems where cut and
|
|
paste has slightly odd effects due to the way different states of the
|
|
terminal are handled. The current-shell construct is a little bit like
|
|
an anonymous function, although it doesn't have any of the usual
|
|
features of functions --- you can't pass it arguments, and variables
|
|
declared inside aren't local to that section of code.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l70"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="384-subshells-and-current-shells"><a class="header" href="#384-subshells-and-current-shells">3.8.4: Subshells and current shells</a></h3>
|
|
<p>In case you're confused about what happens in the current shell and what
|
|
happens in a subshell, here's a summary.</p>
|
|
<p>The following are run in the current shell.</p>
|
|
<ol>
|
|
<li>All shell builtins and anything which looks like one, such as a
|
|
precommand modifier and tests with `<code>[[</code>'.</li>
|
|
<li>All complex statements and loops such as <code>if</code> and <code>while</code>. Tests and
|
|
code inside the block must both be considered separately.</li>
|
|
<li>All shell functions.</li>
|
|
<li>All files run by `<code>source</code>' or `<code>.</code>' as well as startup files.</li>
|
|
<li>The code inside a `<code>{</code><em>...</em><code>}</code>'.</li>
|
|
<li>The right hand side of a pipeline: this is guaranteed in zsh, but
|
|
don't rely on it for other shells.</li>
|
|
<li>All forms of substitution except <code>`</code><em>...</em><code>`</code>, <code>$</code>(<em>...</em>),
|
|
<code>=</code>(<em>...</em>), <code><</code>(<em>...</em>) and <code>></code>(<em>...</em>).</li>
|
|
</ol>
|
|
<p>The following are run in a subshell.</p>
|
|
<ol>
|
|
<li>All external commands.</li>
|
|
<li>Anything on the left of a pipe, i.e. all sections of a pipeline but
|
|
the last.</li>
|
|
<li>The code inside a `<code> </code>(<em>...</em>)'.</li>
|
|
<li>Substitutions involving execution of code, i.e. <code>`</code><em>...</em><code>`</code>,
|
|
<code>$</code>(<em>...</em>), <code>=</code>(<em>...</em>), <code><</code>(<em>...</em>) and <code>></code>(<em>...</em>). (TCL fans note
|
|
that this is different from the `<code>[</code><em>...</em><code>]</code>' command substitution
|
|
in that language.)</li>
|
|
<li>Anything started in the background with `<code>&</code>' at the end.</li>
|
|
<li>Anything which has ever been suspended. This is a little subtle:
|
|
suppose you execute a set of commands in the current shell and
|
|
suspend it with <code>^Z</code>. Since the shell needs to return you to the
|
|
prompt, it forks a subshell to remember the commands it was
|
|
executing when you interrupted it. If you use <code>fg</code> or <code>bg</code> to
|
|
restart, the commands will stay in the subshell. This is a special
|
|
feature of zsh; most shells won't let you interrupt anything in the
|
|
current shell like that, though you can still abort it with <code>^C</code>.</li>
|
|
</ol>
|
|
<p>With an alias, you can't tell where it will be executed --- you need to
|
|
find out what it expands too first. The expansion naturally takes place
|
|
in the current shell.</p>
|
|
<p>Of course, if for some reason the current set of commands is already
|
|
running in a subshell, it doesn't get magically returned to the current
|
|
shell --- so a shell builtin on the left hand side of a pipeline is
|
|
running in a subshell. However, it doesn't get an extra subshell, as an
|
|
external command would. What I mean is:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> { print Hello; cat file } |
|
|
while read line; print $line; done
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The shell forks, producing a subshell, to execute the left hand side of
|
|
the pipeline, and that subshell forks to execute the <code>cat</code> external
|
|
command, but nothing else in that set of commands will cause a new
|
|
subshell to be created.</p>
|
|
<p>(For the curious only: actually, that's not quite true, and I already
|
|
pointed this out when I talked about command substitutions: the shell
|
|
keeps track of occasions when it is in a subshell and has no more
|
|
commands to execute. In this case it will not bother forking to create a
|
|
new process for the <code>cat</code>, it will simply replace the subshell which is
|
|
not needed any more. This can only happen in simple cases where the
|
|
shell has no clearing up to do.)</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l71"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="39-emulation-and-portability"><a class="header" href="#39-emulation-and-portability">3.9: Emulation and portability</a></h2>
|
|
<p>I described the options you need to set for compatibility with ksh in
|
|
the previous chapter. Here I'm more interested in the best way of
|
|
running ksh scripts and functions.</p>
|
|
<p>First, you should remember that because of all zsh's options you can't
|
|
assume that a piece of zsh code will simply run a piece of sh or ksh
|
|
code without any extra changes. Our old friend <code>SH_WORD_SPLIT</code> is the
|
|
most common problem, but there are plenty of others. In addition to
|
|
options, there are other differences which simply need to be worked
|
|
around. I will list some of them a bit later. Generally speaking, Bourne
|
|
shell is simple enough that zsh emulates it pretty well --- although
|
|
beware in case you are using bash extensions, since to many Linux users
|
|
bash is the nearest approximation to the Bourne shell they ever come
|
|
across. Zsh makes no attempt to emulate bash, even though some of bash's
|
|
features have been incorporated.</p>
|
|
<p>To make zsh emulate ksh or sh as closely as it knows how, there are
|
|
various things you can do.</p>
|
|
<ol>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>Invoke zsh under the name sh or ksh, as appropriate. You can do this
|
|
by creating a symbolic link from zsh to sh or ksh. Then when zsh
|
|
starts up all the options will be set appropriately. If you are
|
|
starting that shell from another zsh, you can use the feature of zsh
|
|
that tricks a programme into thinking it has a different name:
|
|
`<code>ARGV0=sh zsh</code>' runs zsh under the name sh, just like the symbolic
|
|
link method.</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>Use `<code>emulate ksh</code>' at the top of the script or function you want
|
|
to run. In the case of a function, it is better to run `<code>emulate -L ksh</code>' since this makes sure the normal options will be restored when
|
|
the function exits; this is irrelevant for a script as the options
|
|
cannot be propagated to the process which ran the script. You can
|
|
also use the option `<code>-R</code>' after <code>emulate</code>, which forces more
|
|
options to be like ksh; these extra options are generally for user
|
|
convenience and not relevant to basic syntax, but in some cases you
|
|
may want the extra cover provided.</p>
|
|
<p>If it's possible the script may already be running under ksh, you
|
|
can instead use</p>
|
|
<pre><code> [[ -z $ZSH_VERSION ]] && emulate ksh
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>or for sh, using the simpler test command there,</p>
|
|
<pre><code> [ x$ZSH_VERSION = x ] && emulate sh
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
</li>
|
|
</ol>
|
|
<p>Both these methods have drawbacks, and if you plan to be a heavy zsh
|
|
user there's no substitute for simply getting used to zsh's own basic
|
|
syntax. If you think there is some useful element of emulation we
|
|
missed, however, you should certainly tell the zsh-workers mailing list
|
|
about it.</p>
|
|
<p>Emulation of ksh88 is much better than emulation of ksh93. Support for
|
|
the latter is gradually being added, but only patchily.</p>
|
|
<p>There is no easy way of converting code written for any csh-like shell;
|
|
you will just have to convert it by hand. See the FAQ for some hints on
|
|
converting aliases to functions.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l72"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="391-differences-in-detail"><a class="header" href="#391-differences-in-detail">3.9.1: Differences in detail</a></h3>
|
|
<p>Here are some differences from ksh88 which might prove significant for
|
|
ksh programmers. This is lifted straight from the corresponding section
|
|
of the FAQ; it is not complete, and indeed some of the `differences'
|
|
could be interpreted as bugs. Those marked `*' perform in a ksh-like
|
|
manner if the shell is invoked with the name `ksh', or if `emulate
|
|
ksh' is in effect.</p>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>Syntax:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>* Shell word splitting.</li>
|
|
<li>* Arrays are (by default) more csh-like than ksh-like:
|
|
subscripts start at 1, not 0; <code>array[0]</code> refers to <code>array[1]</code>;
|
|
<code>$array</code> refers to the whole array, not <code>$array[0]</code>; braces are
|
|
unnecessary: <code>$a[1] == ${a[1]}</code>, etc. The <code>KSH_ARRAYS</code> option is
|
|
now available.</li>
|
|
<li>Coprocesses are established by <code>coproc</code>; <code>|&</code> behaves like csh.
|
|
Handling of coprocess file descriptors is also different.</li>
|
|
<li>In <code>cmd1 && cmd2 &</code>, only <code>cmd2</code> instead of the whole expression
|
|
is run in the background in zsh. The manual implies this is a
|
|
bug. Use <code>{ cmd1 && cmd2 } &</code> as a workaround.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>Command line substitutions, globbing etc.:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>* Failure to match a globbing pattern causes an error (use
|
|
<code>NO_NOMATCH</code>).</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>* The results of parameter substitutions are treated as plain
|
|
text: <code>foo="*"; print $foo</code> prints all files in ksh but <code>*</code> in
|
|
zsh (unset <code>GLOB_SUBST</code>).</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>* <code>$PSn</code> do not do parameter substitution by default (use
|
|
<code>PROMPT_SUBST</code>).</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>* Standard globbing does not allow ksh-style `pattern-lists'.
|
|
See <a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter 5</a> for a list of equivalent
|
|
zsh forms. The <code>^</code>, <code>~</code> and <code>#</code> (but not <code>|</code>) forms require
|
|
<code>EXTENDED_GLOB</code>. From version 3.1.3, the ksh forms are fully
|
|
supported when the option <code>KSH_GLOB</code> is in effect.</p>
|
|
<p>[1] Note that <code>~</code> is the only globbing operator to have a
|
|
lower precedence than <code>/</code>. For example, <code>**/foo~*bar*</code> matches
|
|
any file in a subdirectory called <code>foo</code>, except where <code>bar</code>
|
|
occurred somewhere in the path (e.g. <code>users/barstaff/foo</code> will
|
|
be excluded by the <code>~</code> operator). As the <code>**</code> operator cannot be
|
|
grouped (inside parentheses it is treated as <code>*</code>), this is the
|
|
way to exclude some subdirectories from matching a <code>**</code>.</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p>Unquoted assignments do file expansion after colons (intended
|
|
for PATHs).</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p><code>integer</code> does not allow <code>-i</code>.</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>
|
|
<p><code>typeset</code> and <code>integer</code> have special behaviour for assignments
|
|
in ksh, but not in zsh. For example, this doesn't work in zsh:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> integer k=$(wc -l ~/.zshrc)
|
|
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>because the return value from <code>wc</code> includes leading whitespace
|
|
which causes wordsplitting. Ksh handles the assignment specially
|
|
as a single word.</p>
|
|
</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>Command execution:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>* There is no <code>$ENV</code> variable (use <code>/etc/zshrc</code>, <code>~/.zshrc</code>;
|
|
note also <code>$ZDOTDIR</code>).</li>
|
|
<li><code>$PATH</code> is not searched for commands specified at invocation
|
|
without -c.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>Aliases and functions:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>The order in which aliases and functions are defined is
|
|
significant: function definitions with () expand aliases.</li>
|
|
<li>Aliases and functions cannot be exported.</li>
|
|
<li>There are no tracked aliases: command hashing replaces these.</li>
|
|
<li>The use of aliases for key bindings is replaced by `bindkey'.</li>
|
|
<li>* Options are not local to functions (use LOCAL_OPTIONS; note
|
|
this may always be unset locally to propagate options settings
|
|
from a function to the calling level).</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>Traps and signals:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>* Traps are not local to functions. The option LOCAL_TRAPS is
|
|
available from 3.1.6.</li>
|
|
<li>TRAPERR has become TRAPZERR (this was forced by UNICOS which has
|
|
SIGERR).</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>Editing:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>The options <code>emacs</code>, <code>gmacs</code>, <code>viraw</code> are not supported. Use
|
|
bindkey to change the editing behaviour: <code>set -o {emacs,vi}</code>
|
|
becomes <code>bindkey -{e,v}</code>; for gmacs, go to emacs mode and use
|
|
<code>bindkey \^t gosmacs-transpose-characters</code>.</li>
|
|
<li>The <code>keyword</code> option does not exist and <code>-k</code> is instead
|
|
interactivecomments. (<code>keyword</code> will not be in the next ksh
|
|
release either.)</li>
|
|
<li>Management of histories in multiple shells is different: the
|
|
history list is not saved and restored after each command. The
|
|
option <code>SHARE_HISTORY</code> appeared in 3.1.6 and is set in ksh
|
|
compatibility mode to remedy this.</li>
|
|
<li><code>\</code> does not escape editing chars (use <code>^V</code>).</li>
|
|
<li>Not all ksh bindings are set (e.g. <code><ESC>#</code>; try <code><ESC>q</code>).</li>
|
|
<li>* <code>#</code> in an interactive shell is not treated as a comment by
|
|
default.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>Built-in commands:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>Some built-ins (<code>r</code>, <code>autoload</code>, <code>history</code>, <code>integer</code> ...) were
|
|
aliases in ksh.</li>
|
|
<li>There is no built-in command newgrp: use e.g. <code>alias newgrp="exec newgrp"</code></li>
|
|
<li><code>jobs</code> has no <code>-n</code> flag.</li>
|
|
<li><code>read</code> has no <code>-s</code> flag.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
<li>Other idiosyncrasies:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li><code>select</code> always redisplays the list of selections on each loop.</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
</li>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p><span id="l73"></span></p>
|
|
<h3 id="392-making-your-own-scripts-and-functions-portable"><a class="header" href="#392-making-your-own-scripts-and-functions-portable">3.9.2: Making your own scripts and functions portable</a></h3>
|
|
<p>There are also problems in making your own scripts and functions
|
|
available to other people, who may have different options set.</p>
|
|
<p>In the case of functions, it is always best to put `<code>emulate -L zsh</code>'
|
|
at the top of the function, which will reset the options to the default
|
|
zsh values, and then set any other necessary options. It doesn't take
|
|
the shell a great deal of time to process these commands, so try and get
|
|
into the habit of putting them any function you think may be used by
|
|
other people. (Completion functions are a special case as the
|
|
environment is already standardised --- see <a href="zshguide06.html#comp">chapter
|
|
6</a> for this.)</p>
|
|
<p>The same applies to scripts, since if you run the script without using
|
|
the option `<code>-f</code>' to zsh the user's non-interactive startup files will
|
|
be run, and in any case the file <code>/etc/zshenv</code> will be run. We urge
|
|
system administrators not to set options unconditionally in that file
|
|
unless absolutely necessary; but they don't always listen. Hence an
|
|
<code>emulate</code> can still save a lot of grief.</p>
|
|
<p><span id="l74"></span></p>
|
|
<h2 id="310-running-scripts"><a class="header" href="#310-running-scripts">3.10: Running scripts</a></h2>
|
|
<p>Here are some final comments on running scripts: they apply regardless
|
|
of the problems of portability, but you should certainly also be aware
|
|
of what I was saying in the previous section.</p>
|
|
<p>You may be aware that you can force the operating system to run a script
|
|
using a particular interpreter by putting `<code>#!</code>' and the path to the
|
|
interpreter at the top of the script. For example, a zsh script could
|
|
start with</p>
|
|
<pre><code> #!/usr/local/bin/zsh
|
|
print The arguments are $*
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>assuming that zsh lives in the directory <code>/usr/local/bin</code>. Then you can
|
|
run the script under its name as if it were an ordinary command. Suppose
|
|
the script were called `<code>scriptfile</code>' and in the current directory, and
|
|
you want to run it with the arguments `<code>one two forty-three</code>'. First
|
|
you must make sure the script is executable:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % chmod +x scriptfile
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>and then you can run it with the arguments:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> % ./scriptfile one two forty-three
|
|
The arguments are one two forty-three
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>The shell treats the first line as a comment, since it begins with a
|
|
`<code>#</code>', but note it still gets evaluated by the shell; the system simply
|
|
looks inside the file to see if what's there, it doesn't change it just
|
|
because the first line tells it to execute the shell.</p>
|
|
<p>I put the `<code>./</code>' in front to refer to the current directory because I
|
|
don't usually have that in my path --- this is for safety, to avoid
|
|
running things which happen to have names like commands simply because
|
|
they were in the current directory. But many people aren't so paranoid,
|
|
and if `<code>.</code>' is in your path, you can omit the `<code>./</code>'. Hence,
|
|
obviously, it can be anywhere else in your path: it is searched for as
|
|
an ordinary executable.</p>
|
|
<p>The shell actually provides this mechanism even on operating systems
|
|
(now few and far between in the UNIX world) that don't have the feature
|
|
built into them. The way this works is that if the shell found the file,
|
|
and it was executable, but running it didn't work, then it will look for
|
|
the <code>#!</code>, extract the name following and run (in this example)
|
|
`<code>/usr/local/bin/zsh</code> <em><path></em>/scriptfile <code>one two forty-three</code>',
|
|
where <em><path></em> is the path where the file was found. This is, in fact,
|
|
pretty much what the system does if it handles it itself.</p>
|
|
<p>Some shells search for scripts using the path when they are given as
|
|
filenames at invocation, but zsh happens not to. In other words, `<code>zsh scriptfile</code>' only runs <code>scriptfile</code> in the current directory.</p>
|
|
<p>There are two other features you may want to be aware of. Both are down
|
|
to the operating system, if that is what is responsible for the `<code>#!</code>'
|
|
trick (true of all the most common UNIX-like systems at the moment).
|
|
First, you are usually allowed to supply one, but only one, argument or
|
|
option in the `<code>#!</code>' line, thus:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> #!/usr/local/bin/zsh -f
|
|
print other stuff here
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>which stops startup files other than <code>/etc/zshenv</code> from being run, but
|
|
otherwise works the same as before. If you need more options, you should
|
|
combine them in the same word. However, it's usually clearer, for
|
|
anything apart from <code>-f</code>, <code>-i</code> (which forces the shell into interactive
|
|
mode) and a few other options which need to take effect immediately, to
|
|
put a `<code>setopt</code>' line at the start of the body of the script. In a few
|
|
versions of zsh, there was an unexpected consequence of the fact that
|
|
the line would only be split once: if you accidentally left some spaces
|
|
at the end of the line (e.g. `<code>#!/usr/local/bin/zsh -f </code>') they would
|
|
be passed down to the shell, which would report an error, which was hard
|
|
to interpret. The spaces will still usually be passed down, but the
|
|
shell is now smart enough to ignore spaces in an option list.</p>
|
|
<p>The second point is that the length of the `<code>#!</code>' line which will be
|
|
evaluated is limited. Often the limit is 32 characters, in total, That
|
|
means if your path to zsh is long, e.g.
|
|
`<code>/home/users/psychology/research/dreams/freud/solaris_2.5/bin/zsh</code>'
|
|
the system won't be able to find the shell. Your only recourse is to
|
|
find a shorter path, or execute the shell directly, or some sneakier
|
|
trick such as running the script under <code>/bin/sh</code> and making that start
|
|
zsh when it detects that zsh isn't running yet. That's a fairly nasty
|
|
way of doing it, but just in case you find it necessary, here's an
|
|
example:</p>
|
|
<pre><code> #!/bin/sh
|
|
|
|
if [ x$ZSH_VERSION = x ]; then
|
|
# Put the right path in here ---
|
|
# or just rely on finding zsh in
|
|
# $path, since `exec' handles that.
|
|
exec /usr/local/bin/zsh $0 "$@"
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
print $ZSH_VERSION
|
|
print Hello, this is $0
|
|
print with arguments $*.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>Note that first `<code>$0</code>', which passes down the name of the script that
|
|
was originally executed. Running this as `<code>testexec foo bar</code>' gives me</p>
|
|
<pre><code> 3.1.9-dev-8
|
|
Hello, this is /home/pws/tmp/testexec
|
|
with arguments foo bar.
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
<p>I hope you won't have to resort to that. By the way, really,
|
|
excruciatingly old versions of zsh didn't have <code>$ZSH_VERSION</code>. Rather
|
|
than fix the script, I suggest you upgrade the shell. Also, on some old
|
|
Bourne shells you might need to replace <code>"$@"</code> with <code>${1+"$@"}</code>, which
|
|
is more careful about only putting in arguments if there were any (this
|
|
is the sort of thing we'll see in <a href="zshguide05.html#subst">chapter 5</a>).
|
|
Usually this isn't necessary.</p>
|
|
<p>You can use the same trick on ancient versions of UNIX which didn't
|
|
handle `<code>#!</code>'. On some such systems, anything with a `<code>:</code>' as the
|
|
first character is run with the Bourne shell, so this serves as an
|
|
alternative to `<code>#!/bin/sh</code>', while on some Berkeley systems, a plain
|
|
`<code>#</code>' caused csh to be used. In the second case, you will need to
|
|
change the syntax of the first test to be understood by both zsh and
|
|
csh. I'll leave that as an exercise for the reader. If you have perl
|
|
(very probable these days) you can look at the <code>perlrun</code> manual page,
|
|
which discusses the corresponding problem of starting perl scripts from
|
|
a shell, for some ideas.</p>
|
|
<p>There's one other glitch you may come across. Sometimes if you type the
|
|
name of a script which you know is in your path and is executable, the
|
|
shell may tell you `<code>file not found</code>', or some equivalent message. What
|
|
this usually means is that the <em>interpreter</em> wasn't found, because you
|
|
mistyped the line after the `<code>#!</code>'. This confusing message isn't the
|
|
shell's fault: a lot of operating systems return the same system error
|
|
in this case as if the script were really not found. It's not worth the
|
|
shell searching the path to see if the script is there, because in the
|
|
vast majority of cases the error refers to the programme in the
|
|
execution path. If the operating system returned the more natural error,
|
|
`<code>exec format error</code>', then the shell would know that there was
|
|
something wrong with the file, and could investigate; but unfortunately
|
|
life's not that simple.</p>
|
|
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|
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