TCSH(1) TCSH(1)
NAME
tcsh - C shell with file name completion and command line editing
SYNOPSIS
tcsh [-bcdefFimnqstvVxX] [-Dname[=value]] [arg ...]
tcsh -l
DESCRIPTION
tcsh is an enhanced but completely compatible version of the Berkeley UNIX C shell,
csh(1). It is a command language interpreter usable both as an interactive login
shell and a shell script command processor. It includes a command-line editor (see
The command-line editor), programmable word completion (see Completion and list-
ing), spelling correction (see Spelling correction), a history mechanism (see His-
tory substitution), job control (see Jobs) and a C-like syntax. The NEW FEATURES
section describes major enhancements of tcsh over csh(1). Throughout this manual,
features of tcsh not found in most csh(1) implementations (specifically, the 4.4BSD
csh) are labeled with ‘(+)’, and features which are present in csh(1) but not usu-
ally documented are labeled with ‘(u)’.
Argument list processing
If the first argument (argument 0) to the shell is ‘-’ then it is a login shell. A
login shell can be also specified by invoking the shell with the -l flag as the
only argument.
The rest of the flag arguments are interpreted as follows:
-b Forces a ‘‘break’’ from option processing, causing any further shell arguments
to be treated as non-option arguments. The remaining arguments will not be
interpreted as shell options. This may be used to pass options to a shell
script without confusion or possible subterfuge. The shell will not run a set-
user ID script without this option.
-c Commands are read from the following argument (which must be present, and must
be a single argument), stored in the command shell variable for reference, and
executed. Any remaining arguments are placed in the argv shell variable.
-d The shell loads the directory stack from ~/.cshdirs as described under Startup
and shutdown, whether or not it is a login shell. (+)
-Dname[=value]
Sets the environment variable name to value. (Domain/OS only) (+)
-e The shell exits if any invoked command terminates abnormally or yields a non-
zero exit status.
-f The shell ignores ~/.tcshrc, and thus starts faster.
-F The shell uses fork(2) instead of vfork(2) to spawn processes. (Convex/OS only)
(+)
-i The shell is interactive and prompts for its top-level input, even if it
appears to not be a terminal. Shells are interactive without this option if
their inputs and outputs are terminals.
-l The shell is a login shell. Applicable only if -l is the only flag specified.
-m The shell loads ~/.tcshrc even if it does not belong to the effective user.
Newer versions of su(1) can pass -m to the shell. (+)
-n The shell parses commands but does not execute them. This aids in debugging
shell scripts.
-q The shell accepts SIGQUIT (see Signal handling) and behaves when it is used
under a debugger. Job control is disabled. (u)
-s Command input is taken from the standard input.
-t The shell reads and executes a single line of input. A ‘\’ may be used to
escape the newline at the end of this line and continue onto another line.
-v Sets the verbose shell variable, so that command input is echoed after history
substitution.
-x Sets the echo shell variable, so that commands are echoed immediately before
execution.
-V Sets the verbose shell variable even before executing ~/.tcshrc.
-X Is to -x as -V is to -v.
--help
Print a help message on the standard output and exit. (+)
--version
Print the version/platform/compilation options on the standard output and exit.
This information is also contained in the version shell variable. (+)
After processing of flag arguments, if arguments remain but none of the -c, -i, -s,
or -t options were given, the first argument is taken as the name of a file of com-
mands, or ‘‘script’’, to be executed. The shell opens this file and saves its name
for possible resubstitution by ‘$0’. Because many systems use either the standard
version 6 or version 7 shells whose shell scripts are not compatible with this
shell, the shell uses such a ‘standard’ shell to execute a script whose first char-
acter is not a ‘#’, i.e., that does not start with a comment.
Remaining arguments are placed in the argv shell variable.
Startup and shutdown
A login shell begins by executing commands from the system files /etc/csh.cshrc and
/etc/csh.login. It then executes commands from files in the user’s home directory:
first ~/.tcshrc (+) or, if ~/.tcshrc is not found, ~/.cshrc, then ~/.history (or
the value of the histfile shell variable), then ~/.login, and finally ~/.cshdirs
(or the value of the dirsfile shell variable) (+). The shell may read
/etc/csh.login before instead of after /etc/csh.cshrc, and ~/.login before instead
of after ~/.tcshrc or ~/.cshrc and ~/.history, if so compiled; see the version
shell variable. (+)
Non-login shells read only /etc/csh.cshrc and ~/.tcshrc or ~/.cshrc on startup.
For examples of startup files, please consult http://tcshrc.sourceforge.net.
Commands like stty(1) and tset(1), which need be run only once per login, usually
go in one’s ~/.login file. Users who need to use the same set of files with both
csh(1) and tcsh can have only a ~/.cshrc which checks for the existence of the tcsh
shell variable (q.v.) before using tcsh-specific commands, or can have both a
~/.cshrc and a ~/.tcshrc which sources (see the builtin command) ~/.cshrc. The
rest of this manual uses ‘~/.tcshrc’ to mean ‘~/.tcshrc or, if ~/.tcshrc is not
found, ~/.cshrc’.
In the normal case, the shell begins reading commands from the terminal, prompting
with ‘> ’. (Processing of arguments and the use of the shell to process files con-
taining command scripts are described later.) The shell repeatedly reads a line of
command input, breaks it into words, places it on the command history list, parses
it and executes each command in the line.
One can log out by typing ‘^D’ on an empty line, ‘logout’ or ‘login’ or via the
shell’s autologout mechanism (see the autologout shell variable). When a login
shell terminates it sets the logout shell variable to ‘normal’ or ‘automatic’ as
appropriate, then executes commands from the files /etc/csh.logout and ~/.logout.
The shell may drop DTR on logout if so compiled; see the version shell variable.
The names of the system login and logout files vary from system to system for com-
patibility with different csh(1) variants; see FILES.
Editing
We first describe The command-line editor. The Completion and listing and Spelling
correction sections describe two sets of functionality that are implemented as edi-
tor commands but which deserve their own treatment. Finally, Editor commands lists
and describes the editor commands specific to the shell and their default bindings.
The command-line editor (+)
Command-line input can be edited using key sequences much like those used in GNU
Emacs or vi(1). The editor is active only when the edit shell variable is set,
which it is by default in interactive shells. The bindkey builtin can display and
change key bindings. Emacs-style key bindings are used by default (unless the
shell was compiled otherwise; see the version shell variable), but bindkey can
change the key bindings to vi-style bindings en masse.
The shell always binds the arrow keys (as defined in the TERMCAP environment vari-
able) to
down down-history
up up-history
left backward-char
right forward-char
unless doing so would alter another single-character binding. One can set the
arrow key escape sequences to the empty string with settc to prevent these bind-
ings. The ANSI/VT100 sequences for arrow keys are always bound.
Other key bindings are, for the most part, what Emacs and vi(1) users would expect
and can easily be displayed by bindkey, so there is no need to list them here.
Likewise, bindkey can list the editor commands with a short description of each.
Note that editor commands do not have the same notion of a ‘‘word’’ as does the
shell. The editor delimits words with any non-alphanumeric characters not in the
shell variable wordchars, while the shell recognizes only whitespace and some of
the characters with special meanings to it, listed under Lexical structure.
Completion and listing (+)
The shell is often able to complete words when given a unique abbreviation. Type
part of a word (for example ‘ls /usr/lost’) and hit the tab key to run the com-
plete-word editor command. The shell completes the filename ‘/usr/lost’ to
‘/usr/lost+found/’, replacing the incomplete word with the complete word in the
input buffer. (Note the terminal ‘/’; completion adds a ‘/’ to the end of com-
pleted directories and a space to the end of other completed words, to speed typing
and provide a visual indicator of successful completion. The addsuffix shell vari-
able can be unset to prevent this.) If no match is found (perhaps
‘/usr/lost+found’ doesn’t exist), the terminal bell rings. If the word is already
complete (perhaps there is a ‘/usr/lost’ on your system, or perhaps you were think-
ing too far ahead and typed the whole thing) a ‘/’ or space is added to the end if
it isn’t already there.
Completion works anywhere in the line, not at just the end; completed text pushes
the rest of the line to the right. Completion in the middle of a word often
results in leftover characters to the right of the cursor that need to be deleted.
Commands and variables can be completed in much the same way. For example, typing
‘em[tab]’ would complete ‘em’ to ‘emacs’ if emacs were the only command on your
system beginning with ‘em’. Completion can find a command in any directory in path
or if given a full pathname. Typing ‘echo $ar[tab]’ would complete ‘$ar’ to
‘$argv’ if no other variable began with ‘ar’.
The shell parses the input buffer to determine whether the word you want to
complete should be completed as a filename, command or variable. The first word in
the buffer and the first word following ‘;’, ‘|’, ‘|&’, ‘&&’ or ‘||’ is considered
to be a command. A word beginning with ‘$’ is considered to be a variable. Any-
thing else is a filename. An empty line is ‘completed’ as a filename.
You can list the possible completions of a word at any time by typing ‘^D’ to run
the delete-char-or-list-or-eof editor command. The shell lists the possible com-
pletions using the ls-F builtin (q.v.) and reprints the prompt and unfinished com-
mand line, for example:
> ls /usr/l[^D]
lbin/ lib/ local/ lost+found/
> ls /usr/l
If the autolist shell variable is set, the shell lists the remaining choices (if
any) whenever completion fails:
> set autolist
> nm /usr/lib/libt[tab]
libtermcap.a@ libtermlib.a@
> nm /usr/lib/libterm
If autolist is set to ‘ambiguous’, choices are listed only when completion fails
and adds no new characters to the word being completed.
A filename to be completed can contain variables, your own or others’ home directo-
ries abbreviated with ‘~’ (see Filename substitution) and directory stack entries
abbreviated with ‘=’ (see Directory stack substitution). For example,
> ls ~k[^D]
kahn kas kellogg
> ls ~ke[tab]
> ls ~kellogg/
or
> set local = /usr/local
> ls $lo[tab]
> ls $local/[^D]
bin/ etc/ lib/ man/ src/
> ls $local/
Note that variables can also be expanded explicitly with the expand-variables edi-
tor command.
delete-char-or-list-or-eof lists at only the end of the line; in the middle of a
line it deletes the character under the cursor and on an empty line it logs one out
or, if ignoreeof is set, does nothing. ‘M-^D’, bound to the editor command list-
choices, lists completion possibilities anywhere on a line, and list-choices (or
any one of the related editor commands that do or don’t delete, list and/or log
out, listed under delete-char-or-list-or-eof) can be bound to ‘^D’ with the bindkey
builtin command if so desired.
The complete-word-fwd and complete-word-back editor commands (not bound to any keys
by default) can be used to cycle up and down through the list of possible comple-
tions, replacing the current word with the next or previous word in the list.
The shell variable fignore can be set to a list of suffixes to be ignored by com-
pletion. Consider the following:
> ls
Makefile condiments.h~ main.o side.c
README main.c meal side.o
condiments.h main.c~
> set fignore = (.o \~)
> emacs ma[^D]
main.c main.c~ main.o
> emacs ma[tab]
> emacs main.c
‘main.c~’ and ‘main.o’ are ignored by completion (but not listing), because they
end in suffixes in fignore. Note that a ‘\’ was needed in front of ‘~’ to prevent
it from being expanded to home as described under Filename substitution. fignore
is ignored if only one completion is possible.
If the complete shell variable is set to ‘enhance’, completion 1) ignores case and
2) considers periods, hyphens and underscores (‘.’, ‘-’ and ‘_’) to be word separa-
tors and hyphens and underscores to be equivalent. If you had the following files
comp.lang.c comp.lang.perl comp.std.c++
comp.lang.c++ comp.std.c
and typed ‘mail -f c.l.c[tab]’, it would be completed to ‘mail -f comp.lang.c’, and
^D would list ‘comp.lang.c’ and ‘comp.lang.c++’. ‘mail -f c..c++[^D]’ would list
‘comp.lang.c++’ and ‘comp.std.c++’. Typing ‘rm a--file[^D]’ in the following
directory
A_silly_file a-hyphenated-file another_silly_file
would list all three files, because case is ignored and hyphens and underscores are
equivalent. Periods, however, are not equivalent to hyphens or underscores.
Completion and listing are affected by several other shell variables: recexact can
be set to complete on the shortest possible unique match, even if more typing might
result in a longer match:
> ls
fodder foo food foonly
> set recexact
> rm fo[tab]
just beeps, because ‘fo’ could expand to ‘fod’ or ‘foo’, but if we type another
‘o’,
> rm foo[tab]
> rm foo
the completion completes on ‘foo’, even though ‘food’ and ‘foonly’ also match.
autoexpand can be set to run the expand-history editor command before each comple-
tion attempt, autocorrect can be set to spelling-correct the word to be completed
(see Spelling correction) before each completion attempt and correct can be set to
complete commands automatically after one hits ‘return’. matchbeep can be set to
make completion beep or not beep in a variety of situations, and nobeep can be set
to never beep at all. nostat can be set to a list of directories and/or patterns
that match directories to prevent the completion mechanism from stat(2)ing those
directories. listmax and listmaxrows can be set to limit the number of items and
rows (respectively) that are listed without asking first. recognize_only_executa-
bles can be set to make the shell list only executables when listing commands, but
it is quite slow.
Finally, the complete builtin command can be used to tell the shell how to complete
words other than filenames, commands and variables. Completion and listing do not
work on glob-patterns (see Filename substitution), but the list-glob and expand-
glob editor commands perform equivalent functions for glob-patterns.
Spelling correction (+)
The shell can sometimes correct the spelling of filenames, commands and variable
names as well as completing and listing them.
Individual words can be spelling-corrected with the spell-word editor command (usu-
ally bound to M-s and M-S) and the entire input buffer with spell-line (usually
bound to M-$). The correct shell variable can be set to ‘cmd’ to correct the
command name or ‘all’ to correct the entire line each time return is typed, and
autocorrect can be set to correct the word to be completed before each completion
attempt.
When spelling correction is invoked in any of these ways and the shell thinks that
any part of the command line is misspelled, it prompts with the corrected line:
> set correct = cmd
> lz /usr/bin
CORRECT>ls /usr/bin (y|n|e|a)?
One can answer ‘y’ or space to execute the corrected line, ‘e’ to leave the uncor-
rected command in the input buffer, ‘a’ to abort the command as if ‘^C’ had been
hit, and anything else to execute the original line unchanged.
Spelling correction recognizes user-defined completions (see the complete builtin
command). If an input word in a position for which a completion is defined resem-
bles a word in the completion list, spelling correction registers a misspelling and
suggests the latter word as a correction. However, if the input word does not
match any of the possible completions for that position, spelling correction does
not register a misspelling.
Like completion, spelling correction works anywhere in the line, pushing the rest
of the line to the right and possibly leaving extra characters to the right of the
cursor.
Beware: spelling correction is not guaranteed to work the way one intends, and is
provided mostly as an experimental feature. Suggestions and improvements are wel-
come.
Editor commands (+)
‘bindkey’ lists key bindings and ‘bindkey -l’ lists and briefly describes editor
commands. Only new or especially interesting editor commands are described here.
See emacs(1) and vi(1) for descriptions of each editor’s key bindings.
The character or characters to which each command is bound by default is given in
parentheses. ‘^character’ means a control character and ‘M-character’ a meta char-
acter, typed as escape-character on terminals without a meta key. Case counts, but
commands that are bound to letters by default are bound to both lower- and upper-
case letters for convenience.
complete-word (tab)
Completes a word as described under Completion and listing.
complete-word-back (not bound)
Like complete-word-fwd, but steps up from the end of the list.
complete-word-fwd (not bound)
Replaces the current word with the first word in the list of possible com-
pletions. May be repeated to step down through the list. At the end of
the list, beeps and reverts to the incomplete word.
complete-word-raw (^X-tab)
Like complete-word, but ignores user-defined completions.
copy-prev-word (M-^_)
Copies the previous word in the current line into the input buffer. See
also insert-last-word.
dabbrev-expand (M-/)
Expands the current word to the most recent preceding one for which the
current is a leading substring, wrapping around the history list (once) if
necessary. Repeating dabbrev-expand without any intervening typing changes
to the next previous word etc., skipping identical matches much like his-
tory-search-backward does.
delete-char (not bound)
Deletes the character under the cursor. See also delete-char-or-list-or-
eof.
delete-char-or-eof (not bound)
Does delete-char if there is a character under the cursor or end-of-file on
an empty line. See also delete-char-or-list-or-eof.
delete-char-or-list (not bound)
Does delete-char if there is a character under the cursor or list-choices
at the end of the line. See also delete-char-or-list-or-eof.
delete-char-or-list-or-eof (^D)
Does delete-char if there is a character under the cursor, list-choices at
the end of the line or end-of-file on an empty line. See also those three
commands, each of which does only a single action, and delete-char-or-eof,
delete-char-or-list and list-or-eof, each of which does a different two out
of the three.
down-history (down-arrow, ^N)
Like up-history, but steps down, stopping at the original input line.
end-of-file (not bound)
Signals an end of file, causing the shell to exit unless the ignoreeof
shell variable (q.v.) is set to prevent this. See also delete-char-or-
list-or-eof.
expand-history (M-space)
Expands history substitutions in the current word. See History substitu-
tion. See also magic-space, toggle-literal-history and the autoexpand
shell variable.
expand-glob (^X-*)
Expands the glob-pattern to the left of the cursor. See Filename substitu-
tion.
expand-line (not bound)
Like expand-history, but expands history substitutions in each word in the
input buffer,
expand-variables (^X-$)
Expands the variable to the left of the cursor. See Variable substitution.
history-search-backward (M-p, M-P)
Searches backwards through the history list for a command beginning with
the current contents of the input buffer up to the cursor and copies it
into the input buffer. The search string may be a glob-pattern (see File-
name substitution) containing ‘*’, ‘?’, ‘[]’ or ‘{}’. up-history and down-
history will proceed from the appropriate point in the history list. Emacs
mode only. See also history-search-forward and i-search-back.
history-search-forward (M-n, M-N)
Like history-search-backward, but searches forward.
i-search-back (not bound)
Searches backward like history-search-backward, copies the first match into
the input buffer with the cursor positioned at the end of the pattern, and
prompts with ‘bck: ’ and the first match. Additional characters may be
typed to extend the search, i-search-back may be typed to continue search-
ing with the same pattern, wrapping around the history list if necessary,
(i-search-back must be bound to a single character for this to work) or one
of the following special characters may be typed:
^W Appends the rest of the word under the cursor to the search
pattern.
delete (or any character bound to backward-delete-char)
Undoes the effect of the last character typed and deletes a
character from the search pattern if appropriate.
^G If the previous search was successful, aborts the entire
search. If not, goes back to the last successful search.
escape Ends the search, leaving the current line in the input buffer.
Any other character not bound to self-insert-command terminates the search,
leaving the current line in the input buffer, and is then interpreted as
normal input. In particular, a carriage return causes the current line to
be executed. Emacs mode only. See also i-search-fwd and history-search-
backward.
i-search-fwd (not bound)
Like i-search-back, but searches forward.
insert-last-word (M-_)
Inserts the last word of the previous input line (‘!$’) into the input
buffer. See also copy-prev-word.
list-choices (M-^D)
Lists completion possibilities as described under Completion and listing.
See also delete-char-or-list-or-eof and list-choices-raw.
list-choices-raw (^X-^D)
Like list-choices, but ignores user-defined completions.
list-glob (^X-g, ^X-G)
Lists (via the ls-F builtin) matches to the glob-pattern (see Filename sub-
stitution) to the left of the cursor.
list-or-eof (not bound)
Does list-choices or end-of-file on an empty line. See also delete-char-
or-list-or-eof.
magic-space (not bound)
Expands history substitutions in the current line, like expand-history, and
inserts a space. magic-space is designed to be bound to the space bar, but
is not bound by default.
normalize-command (^X-?)
Searches for the current word in PATH and, if it is found, replaces it with
the full path to the executable. Special characters are quoted. Aliases
are expanded and quoted but commands within aliases are not. This command
is useful with commands that take commands as arguments, e.g., ‘dbx’ and
‘sh -x’.
normalize-path (^X-n, ^X-N)
Expands the current word as described under the ‘expand’ setting of the
symlinks shell variable.
overwrite-mode (unbound)
Toggles between input and overwrite modes.
run-fg-editor (M-^Z)
Saves the current input line and looks for a stopped job with a name equal
to the last component of the file name part of the EDITOR or VISUAL envi-
ronment variables, or, if neither is set, ‘ed’ or ‘vi’. If such a job is
found, it is restarted as if ‘fg %job’ had been typed. This is used to
toggle back and forth between an editor and the shell easily. Some people
bind this command to ‘^Z’ so they can do this even more easily.
run-help (M-h, M-H)
Searches for documentation on the current command, using the same notion of
‘current command’ as the completion routines, and prints it. There is no
way to use a pager; run-help is designed for short help files. If the spe-
cial alias helpcommand is defined, it is run with the command name as a
sole argument. Else, documentation should be in a file named command.help,
command.1, command.6, command.8 or command, which should be in one of the
directories listed in the HPATH environment variable. If there is more
than one help file only the first is printed.
self-insert-command (text characters)
In insert mode (the default), inserts the typed character into the input
line after the character under the cursor. In overwrite mode, replaces the
character under the cursor with the typed character. The input mode is
normally preserved between lines, but the inputmode shell variable can be
set to ‘insert’ or ‘overwrite’ to put the editor in that mode at the begin-
ning of each line. See also overwrite-mode.
sequence-lead-in (arrow prefix, meta prefix, ^X)
Indicates that the following characters are part of a multi-key sequence.
Binding a command to a multi-key sequence really creates two bindings: the
first character to sequence-lead-in and the whole sequence to the command.
All sequences beginning with a character bound to sequence-lead-in are
effectively bound to undefined-key unless bound to another command.
spell-line (M-$)
Attempts to correct the spelling of each word in the input buffer, like
spell-word, but ignores words whose first character is one of ‘-’, ‘!’, ‘^’
or ‘%’, or which contain ‘\’, ‘*’ or ‘?’, to avoid problems with switches,
substitutions and the like. See Spelling correction.
spell-word (M-s, M-S)
Attempts to correct the spelling of the current word as described under
Spelling correction. Checks each component of a word which appears to be a
pathname.
toggle-literal-history (M-r, M-R)
Expands or ‘unexpands’ history substitutions in the input buffer. See also
expand-history and the autoexpand shell variable.
undefined-key (any unbound key)
Beeps.
up-history (up-arrow, ^P)
Copies the previous entry in the history list into the input buffer. If
histlit is set, uses the literal form of the entry. May be repeated to
step up through the history list, stopping at the top.
vi-search-back (?)
Prompts with ‘?’ for a search string (which may be a glob-pattern, as with
history-search-backward), searches for it and copies it into the input
buffer. The bell rings if no match is found. Hitting return ends the
search and leaves the last match in the input buffer. Hitting escape ends
the search and executes the match. vi mode only.
vi-search-fwd (/)
Like vi-search-back, but searches forward.
which-command (M-?)
Does a which (see the description of the builtin command) on the first word
of the input buffer.
yank-pop (M-y)
When executed immediately after a yank or another yank-pop, replaces the
yanked string with the next previous string from the killring. This also
has the effect of rotating the killring, such that this string will be con-
sidered the most recently killed by a later yank command. Repeating yank-
pop will cycle through the killring any number of times.
Lexical structure
The shell splits input lines into words at blanks and tabs. The special characters
‘&’, ‘|’, ‘;’, ‘<’, ‘>’, ‘(’, and ‘)’ and the doubled characters ‘&&’, ‘||’, ‘<<’
and ‘>>’ are always separate words, whether or not they are surrounded by whites-
pace.
When the shell’s input is not a terminal, the character ‘#’ is taken to begin a
comment. Each ‘#’ and the rest of the input line on which it appears is discarded
before further parsing.
A special character (including a blank or tab) may be prevented from having its
special meaning, and possibly made part of another word, by preceding it with a
backslash (‘\’) or enclosing it in single (‘’’), double (‘"’) or backward (‘‘’)
quotes. When not otherwise quoted a newline preceded by a ‘\’ is equivalent to a
blank, but inside quotes this sequence results in a newline.
Furthermore, all Substitutions (see below) except History substitution can be pre-
vented by enclosing the strings (or parts of strings) in which they appear with
single quotes or by quoting the crucial character(s) (e.g., ‘$’ or ‘‘’ for Variable
substitution or Command substitution respectively) with ‘\’. (Alias substitution
is no exception: quoting in any way any character of a word for which an alias has
been defined prevents substitution of the alias. The usual way of quoting an alias
is to precede it with a backslash.) History substitution is prevented by back-
slashes but not by single quotes. Strings quoted with double or backward quotes
undergo Variable substitution and Command substitution, but other substitutions are
prevented.
Text inside single or double quotes becomes a single word (or part of one).
Metacharacters in these strings, including blanks and tabs, do not form separate
words. Only in one special case (see Command substitution below) can a double-
quoted string yield parts of more than one word; single-quoted strings never do.
Backward quotes are special: they signal Command substitution (q.v.), which may
result in more than one word.
Quoting complex strings, particularly strings which themselves contain quoting
characters, can be confusing. Remember that quotes need not be used as they are in
human writing! It may be easier to quote not an entire string, but only those
parts of the string which need quoting, using different types of quoting to do so
if appropriate.
The backslash_quote shell variable (q.v.) can be set to make backslashes always
quote ‘\’, ‘’’, and ‘"’. (+) This may make complex quoting tasks easier, but it
can cause syntax errors in csh(1) scripts.
Substitutions
We now describe the various transformations the shell performs on the input in the
order in which they occur. We note in passing the data structures involved and the
commands and variables which affect them. Remember that substitutions can be pre-
vented by quoting as described under Lexical structure.
History substitution
Each command, or ‘‘event’’, input from the terminal is saved in the history list.
The previous command is always saved, and the history shell variable can be set to
a number to save that many commands. The histdup shell variable can be set to not
save duplicate events or consecutive duplicate events.
Saved commands are numbered sequentially from 1 and stamped with the time. It is
not usually necessary to use event numbers, but the current event number can be
made part of the prompt by placing an ‘!’ in the prompt shell variable.
The shell actually saves history in expanded and literal (unexpanded) forms. If
the histlit shell variable is set, commands that display and store history use the
literal form.
The history builtin command can print, store in a file, restore and clear the his-
tory list at any time, and the savehist and histfile shell variables can be can be
set to store the history list automatically on logout and restore it on login.
History substitutions introduce words from the history list into the input stream,
making it easy to repeat commands, repeat arguments of a previous command in the
current command, or fix spelling mistakes in the previous command with little typ-
ing and a high degree of confidence.
History substitutions begin with the character ‘!’. They may begin anywhere in the
input stream, but they do not nest. The ‘!’ may be preceded by a ‘\’ to prevent
its special meaning; for convenience, a ‘!’ is passed unchanged when it is followed
by a blank, tab, newline, ‘=’ or ‘(’. History substitutions also occur when an
input line begins with ‘^’. This special abbreviation will be described later.
The characters used to signal history substitution (‘!’ and ‘^’) can be changed by
setting the histchars shell variable. Any input line which contains a history sub-
stitution is printed before it is executed.
A history substitution may have an ‘‘event specification’’, which indicates the
event from which words are to be taken, a ‘‘word designator’’, which selects par-
ticular words from the chosen event, and/or a ‘‘modifier’’, which manipulates the
selected words.
An event specification can be
n A number, referring to a particular event
-n An offset, referring to the event n before the current event
# The current event. This should be used carefully in csh(1), where
there is no check for recursion. tcsh allows 10 levels of recursion.
(+)
! The previous event (equivalent to ‘-1’)
s The most recent event whose first word begins with the string s
?s? The most recent event which contains the string s. The second ‘?’ can
be omitted if it is immediately followed by a newline.
For example, consider this bit of someone’s history list:
9 8:30 nroff -man wumpus.man
10 8:31 cp wumpus.man wumpus.man.old
11 8:36 vi wumpus.man
12 8:37 diff wumpus.man.old wumpus.man
The commands are shown with their event numbers and time stamps. The current
event, which we haven’t typed in yet, is event 13. ‘!11’ and ‘!-2’ refer to event
11. ‘!!’ refers to the previous event, 12. ‘!!’ can be abbreviated ‘!’ if it is
followed by ‘:’ (‘:’ is described below). ‘!n’ refers to event 9, which begins
with ‘n’. ‘!?old?’ also refers to event 12, which contains ‘old’. Without word
designators or modifiers history references simply expand to the entire event, so
we might type ‘!cp’ to redo the copy command or ‘!!|more’ if the ‘diff’ output
scrolled off the top of the screen.
History references may be insulated from the surrounding text with braces if neces-
sary. For example, ‘!vdoc’ would look for a command beginning with ‘vdoc’, and, in
this example, not find one, but ‘!{v}doc’ would expand unambiguously to ‘vi wum-
pus.mandoc’. Even in braces, history substitutions do not nest.
(+) While csh(1) expands, for example, ‘!3d’ to event 3 with the letter ‘d’
appended to it, tcsh expands it to the last event beginning with ‘3d’; only com-
pletely numeric arguments are treated as event numbers. This makes it possible to
recall events beginning with numbers. To expand ‘!3d’ as in csh(1) say ‘!\3d’.
To select words from an event we can follow the event specification by a ‘:’ and a
designator for the desired words. The words of an input line are numbered from 0,
the first (usually command) word being 0, the second word (first argument) being 1,
etc. The basic word designators are:
0 The first (command) word
n The nth argument
^ The first argument, equivalent to ‘1’
$ The last argument
% The word matched by an ?s? search
x-y A range of words
-y Equivalent to ‘0-y’
* Equivalent to ‘^-$’, but returns nothing if the event contains only 1
word
x* Equivalent to ‘x-$’
x- Equivalent to ‘x*’, but omitting the last word (‘$’)
Selected words are inserted into the command line separated by single blanks. For
example, the ‘diff’ command in the previous example might have been typed as ‘diff
!!:1.old !!:1’ (using ‘:1’ to select the first argument from the previous event) or
‘diff !-2:2 !-2:1’ to select and swap the arguments from the ‘cp’ command. If we
didn’t care about the order of the ‘diff’ we might have said ‘diff !-2:1-2’ or sim-
ply ‘diff !-2:*’. The ‘cp’ command might have been written ‘cp wumpus.man
!#:1.old’, using ‘#’ to refer to the current event. ‘!n:- hurkle.man’ would reuse
the first two words from the ‘nroff’ command to say ‘nroff -man hurkle.man’.
The ‘:’ separating the event specification from the word designator can be omitted
if the argument selector begins with a ‘^’, ‘$’, ‘*’, ‘%’ or ‘-’. For example, our
‘diff’ command might have been ‘diff !!^.old !!^’ or, equivalently, ‘diff !!$.old
!!$’. However, if ‘!!’ is abbreviated ‘!’, an argument selector beginning with ‘-’
will be interpreted as an event specification.
A history reference may have a word designator but no event specification. It then
references the previous command. Continuing our ‘diff’ example, we could have said
simply ‘diff !^.old !^’ or, to get the arguments in the opposite order, just ‘diff
!*’.
The word or words in a history reference can be edited, or ‘‘modified’’, by follow-
ing it with one or more modifiers, each preceded by a ‘:’:
h Remove a trailing pathname component, leaving the head.
t Remove all leading pathname components, leaving the tail.
r Remove a filename extension ‘.xxx’, leaving the root name.
e Remove all but the extension.
u Uppercase the first lowercase letter.
l Lowercase the first uppercase letter.
s/l/r/ Substitute l for r. l is simply a string like r, not a regular expres-
sion as in the eponymous ed(1) command. Any character may be used as
the delimiter in place of ‘/’; a ‘\’ can be used to quote the delimiter
inside l and r. The character ‘&’ in the r is replaced by l; ‘\’ also
quotes ‘&’. If l is empty (‘‘’’), the l from a previous substitution
or the s from a previous ‘?s?’ event specification is used. The trail-
ing delimiter may be omitted if it is immediately followed by a new-
line.
& Repeat the previous substitution.
g Apply the following modifier once to each word.
a (+) Apply the following modifier as many times as possible to a single
word. ‘a’ and ‘g’ can be used together to apply a modifier globally.
In the current implementation, using the ‘a’ and ‘s’ modifiers together
can lead to an infinite loop. For example, ‘:as/f/ff/’ will never ter-
minate. This behavior might change in the future.
p Print the new command line but do not execute it.
q Quote the substituted words, preventing further substitutions.
x Like q, but break into words at blanks, tabs and newlines.
Modifiers are applied to only the first modifiable word (unless ‘g’ is used). It
is an error for no word to be modifiable.
For example, the ‘diff’ command might have been written as ‘diff wumpus.man.old
!#^:r’, using ‘:r’ to remove ‘.old’ from the first argument on the same line
(‘!#^’). We could say ‘echo hello out there’, then ‘echo !*:u’ to capitalize
‘hello’, ‘echo !*:au’ to say it out loud, or ‘echo !*:agu’ to really shout. We
might follow ‘mail -s "I forgot my password" rot’ with ‘!:s/rot/root’ to correct
the spelling of ‘root’ (but see Spelling correction for a different approach).
There is a special abbreviation for substitutions. ‘^’, when it is the first char-
acter on an input line, is equivalent to ‘!:s^’. Thus we might have said
‘^rot^root’ to make the spelling correction in the previous example. This is the
only history substitution which does not explicitly begin with ‘!’.
(+) In csh as such, only one modifier may be applied to each history or variable
expansion. In tcsh, more than one may be used, for example
% mv wumpus.man /usr/man/man1/wumpus.1
% man !$:t:r
man wumpus
In csh, the result would be ‘wumpus.1:r’. A substitution followed by a colon may
need to be insulated from it with braces:
> mv a.out /usr/games/wumpus
> setenv PATH !$:h:$PATH
Bad ! modifier: $.
> setenv PATH !{-2$:h}:$PATH
setenv PATH /usr/games:/bin:/usr/bin:.
The first attempt would succeed in csh but fails in tcsh, because tcsh expects
another modifier after the second colon rather than ‘$’.
Finally, history can be accessed through the editor as well as through the substi-
tutions just described. The up- and down-history, history-search-backward and
-forward, i-search-back and -fwd, vi-search-back and -fwd, copy-prev-word and
insert-last-word editor commands search for events in the history list and copy
them into the input buffer. The toggle-literal-history editor command switches
between the expanded and literal forms of history lines in the input buffer.
expand-history and expand-line expand history substitutions in the current word and
in the entire input buffer respectively.
Alias substitution
The shell maintains a list of aliases which can be set, unset and printed by the
alias and unalias commands. After a command line is parsed into simple commands
(see Commands) the first word of each command, left-to-right, is checked to see if
it has an alias. If so, the first word is replaced by the alias. If the alias
contains a history reference, it undergoes History substitution (q.v.) as though
the original command were the previous input line. If the alias does not contain a
history reference, the argument list is left untouched.
Thus if the alias for ‘ls’ were ‘ls -l’ the command ‘ls /usr’ would become ‘ls -l
/usr’, the argument list here being undisturbed. If the alias for ‘lookup’ were
‘grep !^ /etc/passwd’ then ‘lookup bill’ would become ‘grep bill /etc/passwd’.
Aliases can be used to introduce parser metasyntax. For example, ‘alias print ’pr
\!* | lpr’’ defines a ‘‘command’’ (‘print’) which pr(1)s its arguments to the line
printer.
Alias substitution is repeated until the first word of the command has no alias.
If an alias substitution does not change the first word (as in the previous exam-
ple) it is flagged to prevent a loop. Other loops are detected and cause an error.
Some aliases are referred to by the shell; see Special aliases.
Variable substitution
The shell maintains a list of variables, each of which has as value a list of zero
or more words. The values of shell variables can be displayed and changed with the
set and unset commands. The system maintains its own list of ‘‘environment’’ vari-
ables. These can be displayed and changed with printenv, setenv and unsetenv.
(+) Variables may be made read-only with ‘set -r’ (q.v.) Read-only variables may
not be modified or unset; attempting to do so will cause an error. Once made read-
only, a variable cannot be made writable, so ‘set -r’ should be used with caution.
Environment variables cannot be made read-only.
Some variables are set by the shell or referred to by it. For instance, the argv
variable is an image of the shell’s argument list, and words of this variable’s
value are referred to in special ways. Some of the variables referred to by the
shell are toggles; the shell does not care what their value is, only whether they
are set or not. For instance, the verbose variable is a toggle which causes com-
mand input to be echoed. The -v command line option sets this variable. Special
shell variables lists all variables which are referred to by the shell.
Other operations treat variables numerically. The ‘@’ command permits numeric cal-
culations to be performed and the result assigned to a variable. Variable values
are, however, always represented as (zero or more) strings. For the purposes of
numeric operations, the null string is considered to be zero, and the second and
subsequent words of multi-word values are ignored.
After the input line is aliased and parsed, and before each command is executed,
variable substitution is performed keyed by ‘$’ characters. This expansion can be
prevented by preceding the ‘$’ with a ‘\’ except within ‘"’s where it always
occurs, and within ‘’’s where it never occurs. Strings quoted by ‘‘’ are inter-
preted later (see Command substitution below) so ‘$’ substitution does not occur
there until later, if at all. A ‘$’ is passed unchanged if followed by a blank,
tab, or end-of-line.
Input/output redirections are recognized before variable expansion, and are vari-
able expanded separately. Otherwise, the command name and entire argument list are
expanded together. It is thus possible for the first (command) word (to this
point) to generate more than one word, the first of which becomes the command name,
and the rest of which become arguments.
Unless enclosed in ‘"’ or given the ‘:q’ modifier the results of variable substitu-
tion may eventually be command and filename substituted. Within ‘"’, a variable
whose value consists of multiple words expands to a (portion of a) single word,
with the words of the variable’s value separated by blanks. When the ‘:q’ modifier
is applied to a substitution the variable will expand to multiple words with each
word separated by a blank and quoted to prevent later command or filename substitu-
tion.
The following metasequences are provided for introducing variable values into the
shell input. Except as noted, it is an error to reference a variable which is not
set.
$name
${name} Substitutes the words of the value of variable name, each separated by a
blank. Braces insulate name from following characters which would other-
wise be part of it. Shell variables have names consisting of up to 20 let-
ters and digits starting with a letter. The underscore character is con-
sidered a letter. If name is not a shell variable, but is set in the envi-
ronment, then that value is returned (but ‘:’ modifiers and the other forms
given below are not available in this case).
$name[selector]
${name[selector]}
Substitutes only the selected words from the value of name. The selector
is subjected to ‘$’ substitution and may consist of a single number or two
numbers separated by a ‘-’. The first word of a variable’s value is num-
bered ‘1’. If the first number of a range is omitted it defaults to ‘1’.
If the last member of a range is omitted it defaults to ‘$#name’. The
selector ‘*’ selects all words. It is not an error for a range to be empty
if the second argument is omitted or in range.
$0 Substitutes the name of the file from which command input is being read.
An error occurs if the name is not known.
$number
${number}
Equivalent to ‘$argv[number]’.
$* Equivalent to ‘$argv’, which is equivalent to ‘$argv[*]’.
The ‘:’ modifiers described under History substitution, except for ‘:p’, can be
applied to the substitutions above. More than one may be used. (+) Braces may be
needed to insulate a variable substitution from a literal colon just as with His-
tory substitution (q.v.); any modifiers must appear within the braces.
The following substitutions can not be modified with ‘:’ modifiers.
$?name
${?name}
Substitutes the string ‘1’ if name is set, ‘0’ if it is not.
$?0 Substitutes ‘1’ if the current input filename is known, ‘0’ if it is not.
Always ‘0’ in interactive shells.
$#name
${#name}
Substitutes the number of words in name.
$# Equivalent to ‘$#argv’. (+)
$%name
${%name}
Substitutes the number of characters in name. (+)
$%number
${%number}
Substitutes the number of characters in $argv[number]. (+)
$? Equivalent to ‘$status’. (+)
$$ Substitutes the (decimal) process number of the (parent) shell.
$! Substitutes the (decimal) process number of the last background process
started by this shell. (+)
$_ Substitutes the command line of the last command executed. (+)
$< Substitutes a line from the standard input, with no further interpretation
thereafter. It can be used to read from the keyboard in a shell script.
(+) While csh always quotes $<, as if it were equivalent to ‘$<:q’, tcsh
does not. Furthermore, when tcsh is waiting for a line to be typed the
user may type an interrupt to interrupt the sequence into which the line is
to be substituted, but csh does not allow this.
The editor command expand-variables, normally bound to ‘^X-$’, can be used to
interactively expand individual variables.
Command, filename and directory stack substitution
The remaining substitutions are applied selectively to the arguments of builtin
commands. This means that portions of expressions which are not evaluated are not
subjected to these expansions. For commands which are not internal to the shell,
the command name is substituted separately from the argument list. This occurs
very late, after input-output redirection is performed, and in a child of the main
shell.
Command substitution
Command substitution is indicated by a command enclosed in ‘‘’. The output from
such a command is broken into separate words at blanks, tabs and newlines, and null
words are discarded. The output is variable and command substituted and put in
place of the original string.
Command substitutions inside double quotes (‘"’) retain blanks and tabs; only new-
lines force new words. The single final newline does not force a new word in any
case. It is thus possible for a command substitution to yield only part of a word,
even if the command outputs a complete line.
By default, the shell since version 6.12 replaces all newline and carriage return
characters in the command by spaces. If this is switched off by unsetting csubst-
nonl, newlines separate commands as usual.
Filename substitution
If a word contains any of the characters ‘*’, ‘?’, ‘[’ or ‘{’ or begins with the
character ‘~’ it is a candidate for filename substitution, also known as ‘‘glob-
bing’’. This word is then regarded as a pattern (‘‘glob-pattern’’), and replaced
with an alphabetically sorted list of file names which match the pattern.
In matching filenames, the character ‘.’ at the beginning of a filename or immedi-
ately following a ‘/’, as well as the character ‘/’ must be matched explicitly.
The character ‘*’ matches any string of characters, including the null string. The
character ‘?’ matches any single character. The sequence ‘[...]’ matches any one
of the characters enclosed. Within ‘[...]’, a pair of characters separated by ‘-’
matches any character lexically between the two.
(+) Some glob-patterns can be negated: The sequence ‘[^...]’ matches any single
character not specified by the characters and/or ranges of characters in the
braces.
An entire glob-pattern can also be negated with ‘^’:
> echo *
bang crash crunch ouch
> echo ^cr*
bang ouch
Glob-patterns which do not use ‘?’, ‘*’, or ‘[]’ or which use ‘{}’ or ‘~’ (below)
are not negated correctly.
The metanotation ‘a{b,c,d}e’ is a shorthand for ‘abe ace ade’. Left-to-right order
is preserved: ‘/usr/source/s1/{oldls,ls}.c’ expands to ‘/usr/source/s1/oldls.c
/usr/source/s1/ls.c’. The results of matches are sorted separately at a low level
to preserve this order: ‘../{memo,*box}’ might expand to ‘../memo ../box ../mbox’.
(Note that ‘memo’ was not sorted with the results of matching ‘*box’.) It is not
an error when this construct expands to files which do not exist, but it is possi-
ble to get an error from a command to which the expanded list is passed. This con-
struct may be nested. As a special case the words ‘{’, ‘}’ and ‘{}’ are passed
undisturbed.
The character ‘~’ at the beginning of a filename refers to home directories.
Standing alone, i.e., ‘~’, it expands to the invoker’s home directory as reflected
in the value of the home shell variable. When followed by a name consisting of
letters, digits and ‘-’ characters the shell searches for a user with that name and
substitutes their home directory; thus ‘~ken’ might expand to ‘/usr/ken’ and
‘~ken/chmach’ to ‘/usr/ken/chmach’. If the character ‘~’ is followed by a charac-
ter other than a letter or ‘/’ or appears elsewhere than at the beginning of a
word, it is left undisturbed. A command like ‘setenv MANPATH
/usr/man:/usr/local/man:~/lib/man’ does not, therefore, do home directory substitu-
tion as one might hope.
It is an error for a glob-pattern containing ‘*’, ‘?’, ‘[’ or ‘~’, with or without
‘^’, not to match any files. However, only one pattern in a list of glob-patterns
must match a file (so that, e.g., ‘rm *.a *.c *.o’ would fail only if there were no
files in the current directory ending in ‘.a’, ‘.c’, or ‘.o’), and if the nonomatch
shell variable is set a pattern (or list of patterns) which matches nothing is left
unchanged rather than causing an error.
The noglob shell variable can be set to prevent filename substitution, and the
expand-glob editor command, normally bound to ‘^X-*’, can be used to interactively
expand individual filename substitutions.
Directory stack substitution (+)
The directory stack is a list of directories, numbered from zero, used by the
pushd, popd and dirs builtin commands (q.v.). dirs can print, store in a file,
restore and clear the directory stack at any time, and the savedirs and dirsfile
shell variables can be set to store the directory stack automatically on logout and
restore it on login. The dirstack shell variable can be examined to see the direc-
tory stack and set to put arbitrary directories into the directory stack.
The character ‘=’ followed by one or more digits expands to an entry in the direc-
tory stack. The special case ‘=-’ expands to the last directory in the stack. For
example,
> dirs -v
0 /usr/bin
1 /usr/spool/uucp
2 /usr/accts/sys
> echo =1
/usr/spool/uucp
> echo =0/calendar
/usr/bin/calendar
> echo =-
/usr/accts/sys
The noglob and nonomatch shell variables and the expand-glob editor command apply
to directory stack as well as filename substitutions.
Other substitutions (+)
There are several more transformations involving filenames, not strictly related to
the above but mentioned here for completeness. Any filename may be expanded to a
full path when the symlinks variable (q.v.) is set to ‘expand’. Quoting prevents
this expansion, and the normalize-path editor command does it on demand. The nor-
malize-command editor command expands commands in PATH into full paths on demand.
Finally, cd and pushd interpret ‘-’ as the old working directory (equivalent to the
shell variable owd). This is not a substitution at all, but an abbreviation recog-
nized by only those commands. Nonetheless, it too can be prevented by quoting.
Commands
The next three sections describe how the shell executes commands and deals with
their input and output.
Simple commands, pipelines and sequences
A simple command is a sequence of words, the first of which specifies the command
to be executed. A series of simple commands joined by ‘|’ characters forms a
pipeline. The output of each command in a pipeline is connected to the input of
the next.
Simple commands and pipelines may be joined into sequences with ‘;’, and will be
executed sequentially. Commands and pipelines can also be joined into sequences
with ‘||’ or ‘&&’, indicating, as in the C language, that the second is to be exe-
cuted only if the first fails or succeeds respectively.
A simple command, pipeline or sequence may be placed in parentheses, ‘()’, to form
a simple command, which may in turn be a component of a pipeline or sequence. A
command, pipeline or sequence can be executed without waiting for it to terminate
by following it with an ‘&’.
Builtin and non-builtin command execution
Builtin commands are executed within the shell. If any component of a pipeline
except the last is a builtin command, the pipeline is executed in a subshell.
Parenthesized commands are always executed in a subshell.
(cd; pwd); pwd
thus prints the home directory, leaving you where you were (printing this after the
home directory), while
cd; pwd
leaves you in the home directory. Parenthesized commands are most often used to
prevent cd from affecting the current shell.
When a command to be executed is found not to be a builtin command the shell
attempts to execute the command via execve(2). Each word in the variable path
names a directory in which the shell will look for the command. If it is given
neither a -c nor a -t option, the shell hashes the names in these directories into
an internal table so that it will try an execve(2) in only a directory where there
is a possibility that the command resides there. This greatly speeds command loca-
tion when a large number of directories are present in the search path. If this
mechanism has been turned off (via unhash), if the shell was given a -c or -t argu-
ment or in any case for each directory component of path which does not begin with
a ‘/’, the shell concatenates the current working directory with the given command
name to form a path name of a file which it then attempts to execute.
If the file has execute permissions but is not an executable to the system (i.e.,
it is neither an executable binary nor a script that specifies its interpreter),
then it is assumed to be a file containing shell commands and a new shell is
spawned to read it. The shell special alias may be set to specify an interpreter
other than the shell itself.
On systems which do not understand the ‘#!’ script interpreter convention the shell
may be compiled to emulate it; see the version shell variable. If so, the shell
checks the first line of the file to see if it is of the form ‘#!interpreter arg
...’. If it is, the shell starts interpreter with the given args and feeds the
file to it on standard input.
Input/output
The standard input and standard output of a command may be redirected with the fol-
lowing syntax:
< name Open file name (which is first variable, command and filename expanded) as
the standard input.
<< word Read the shell input up to a line which is identical to word. word is not
subjected to variable, filename or command substitution, and each input
line is compared to word before any substitutions are done on this input
line. Unless a quoting ‘\’, ‘"’, ‘’ or ‘‘’ appears in word variable and
command substitution is performed on the intervening lines, allowing ‘\’ to
quote ‘$’, ‘\’ and ‘‘’. Commands which are substituted have all blanks,
tabs, and newlines preserved, except for the final newline which is
dropped. The resultant text is placed in an anonymous temporary file which
is given to the command as standard input.
> name
>! name
>& name
>&! name
The file name is used as standard output. If the file does not exist then
it is created; if the file exists, it is truncated, its previous contents
being lost.
If the shell variable noclobber is set, then the file must not exist or be
a character special file (e.g., a terminal or ‘/dev/null’) or an error
results. This helps prevent accidental destruction of files. In this case
the ‘!’ forms can be used to suppress this check.
The forms involving ‘&’ route the diagnostic output into the specified file
as well as the standard output. name is expanded in the same way as ‘<’
input filenames are.
>> name
>>& name
>>! name
>>&! name
Like ‘>’, but appends output to the end of name. If the shell variable
noclobber is set, then it is an error for the file not to exist, unless one
of the ‘!’ forms is given.
A command receives the environment in which the shell was invoked as modified by
the input-output parameters and the presence of the command in a pipeline. Thus,
unlike some previous shells, commands run from a file of shell commands have no
access to the text of the commands by default; rather they receive the original
standard input of the shell. The ‘<<’ mechanism should be used to present inline
data. This permits shell command scripts to function as components of pipelines
and allows the shell to block read its input. Note that the default standard input
for a command run detached is not the empty file /dev/null, but the original stan-
dard input of the shell. If this is a terminal and if the process attempts to read
from the terminal, then the process will block and the user will be notified (see
Jobs).
Diagnostic output may be directed through a pipe with the standard output. Simply
use the form ‘|&’ rather than just ‘|’.
The shell cannot presently redirect diagnostic output without also redirecting
standard output, but ‘(command > output-file) >& error-file’ is often an acceptable
workaround. Either output-file or error-file may be ‘/dev/tty’ to send output to
the terminal.
Features
Having described how the shell accepts, parses and executes command lines, we now
turn to a variety of its useful features.
Control flow
The shell contains a number of commands which can be used to regulate the flow of
control in command files (shell scripts) and (in limited but useful ways) from ter-
minal input. These commands all operate by forcing the shell to reread or skip in
its input and, due to the implementation, restrict the placement of some of the
commands.
The foreach, switch, and while statements, as well as the if-then-else form of the
if statement, require that the major keywords appear in a single simple command on
an input line as shown below.
If the shell’s input is not seekable, the shell buffers up input whenever a loop is
being read and performs seeks in this internal buffer to accomplish the rereading
implied by the loop. (To the extent that this allows, backward gotos will succeed
on non-seekable inputs.)
Expressions
The if, while and exit builtin commands use expressions with a common syntax. The
expressions can include any of the operators described in the next three sections.
Note that the @ builtin command (q.v.) has its own separate syntax.
Logical, arithmetical and comparison operators
These operators are similar to those of C and have the same precedence. They
include
|| && | ^ & == != =~ !~ <= >=
< > << >> + - * / % ! ~ ( )
Here the precedence increases to the right, ‘==’ ‘!=’ ‘=~’ and ‘!~’, ‘<=’ ‘>=’ ‘<’
and ‘>’, ‘<<’ and ‘>>’, ‘+’ and ‘-’, ‘*’ ‘/’ and ‘%’ being, in groups, at the same
level. The ‘==’ ‘!=’ ‘=~’ and ‘!~’ operators compare their arguments as strings;
all others operate on numbers. The operators ‘=~’ and ‘!~’ are like ‘!=’ and ‘==’
except that the right hand side is a glob-pattern (see Filename substitution)
against which the left hand operand is matched. This reduces the need for use of
the switch builtin command in shell scripts when all that is really needed is pat-
tern matching.
Strings which begin with ‘0’ are considered octal numbers. Null or missing argu-
ments are considered ‘0’. The results of all expressions are strings, which repre-
sent decimal numbers. It is important to note that no two components of an expres-
sion can appear in the same word; except when adjacent to components of expressions
which are syntactically significant to the parser (‘&’ ‘|’ ‘<’ ‘>’ ‘(’ ‘)’) they
should be surrounded by spaces.
Command exit status
Commands can be executed in expressions and their exit status returned by enclosing
them in braces (‘{}’). Remember that the braces should be separated from the words
of the command by spaces. Command executions succeed, returning true, i.e., ‘1’,
if the command exits with status 0, otherwise they fail, returning false, i.e.,
‘0’. If more detailed status information is required then the command should be
executed outside of an expression and the status shell variable examined.
File inquiry operators
Some of these operators perform true/false tests on files and related objects.
They are of the form -op file, where op is one of
r Read access
w Write access
x Execute access
X Executable in the path or shell builtin, e.g., ‘-X ls’ and ‘-X ls-F’ are
generally true, but ‘-X /bin/ls’ is not (+)
e Existence
o Ownership
z Zero size
s Non-zero size (+)
f Plain file
d Directory
l Symbolic link (+) *
b Block special file (+)
c Character special file (+)
p Named pipe (fifo) (+) *
S Socket special file (+) *
u Set-user-ID bit is set (+)
g Set-group-ID bit is set (+)
k Sticky bit is set (+)
t file (which must be a digit) is an open file descriptor for a terminal
device (+)
R Has been migrated (convex only) (+)
L Applies subsequent operators in a multiple-operator test to a symbolic link
rather than to the file to which the link points (+) *
file is command and filename expanded and then tested to see if it has the speci-
fied relationship to the real user. If file does not exist or is inaccessible or,
for the operators indicated by ‘*’, if the specified file type does not exist on
the current system, then all enquiries return false, i.e., ‘0’.
These operators may be combined for conciseness: ‘-xy file’ is equivalent to ‘-x
file && -y file’. (+) For example, ‘-fx’ is true (returns ‘1’) for plain exe-
cutable files, but not for directories.
L may be used in a multiple-operator test to apply subsequent operators to a sym-
bolic link rather than to the file to which the link points. For example, ‘-lLo’
is true for links owned by the invoking user. Lr, Lw and Lx are always true for
links and false for non-links. L has a different meaning when it is the last oper-
ator in a multiple-operator test; see below.
It is possible but not useful, and sometimes misleading, to combine operators which
expect file to be a file with operators which do not, (e.g., X and t). Following L
with a non-file operator can lead to particularly strange results.
Other operators return other information, i.e., not just ‘0’ or ‘1’. (+) They have
the same format as before; op may be one of
A Last file access time, as the number of seconds since the epoch
A: Like A, but in timestamp format, e.g., ‘Fri May 14 16:36:10 1993’
M Last file modification time
M: Like M, but in timestamp format
C Last inode modification time
C: Like C, but in timestamp format
D Device number
I Inode number
F Composite file identifier, in the form device:inode
L The name of the file pointed to by a symbolic link
N Number of (hard) links
P Permissions, in octal, without leading zero
P: Like P, with leading zero
Pmode Equivalent to ‘-P file & mode’, e.g., ‘-P22 file’ returns ‘22’ if file
is writable by group and other, ‘20’ if by group only, and ‘0’ if by
neither
Pmode: Like Pmode:, with leading zero
U Numeric userid
U: Username, or the numeric userid if the username is unknown
G Numeric groupid
G: Groupname, or the numeric groupid if the groupname is unknown
Z Size, in bytes
Only one of these operators may appear in a multiple-operator test, and it must be
the last. Note that L has a different meaning at the end of and elsewhere in a
multiple-operator test. Because ‘0’ is a valid return value for many of these
operators, they do not return ‘0’ when they fail: most return ‘-1’, and F returns
‘:’.
If the shell is compiled with POSIX defined (see the version shell variable), the
result of a file inquiry is based on the permission bits of the file and not on the
result of the access(2) system call. For example, if one tests a file with -w
whose permissions would ordinarily allow writing but which is on a file system
mounted read-only, the test will succeed in a POSIX shell but fail in a non-POSIX
shell.
File inquiry operators can also be evaluated with the filetest builtin command
(q.v.) (+).
Jobs
The shell associates a job with each pipeline. It keeps a table of current jobs,
printed by the jobs command, and assigns them small integer numbers. When a job is
started asynchronously with ‘&’, the shell prints a line which looks like
[1] 1234
indicating that the job which was started asynchronously was job number 1 and had
one (top-level) process, whose process id was 1234.
If you are running a job and wish to do something else you may hit the suspend key
(usually ‘^Z’), which sends a STOP signal to the current job. The shell will then
normally indicate that the job has been ‘Suspended’ and print another prompt. If
the listjobs shell variable is set, all jobs will be listed like the jobs builtin
command; if it is set to ‘long’ the listing will be in long format, like ‘jobs -l’.
You can then manipulate the state of the suspended job. You can put it in the
‘‘background’’ with the bg command or run some other commands and eventually bring
the job back into the ‘‘foreground’’ with fg. (See also the run-fg-editor editor
command.) A ‘^Z’ takes effect immediately and is like an interrupt in that pending
output and unread input are discarded when it is typed. The wait builtin command
causes the shell to wait for all background jobs to complete.
The ‘^]’ key sends a delayed suspend signal, which does not generate a STOP signal
until a program attempts to read(2) it, to the current job. This can usefully be
typed ahead when you have prepared some commands for a job which you wish to stop
after it has read them. The ‘^Y’ key performs this function in csh(1); in tcsh,
‘^Y’ is an editing command. (+)
A job being run in the background stops if it tries to read from the terminal.
Background jobs are normally allowed to produce output, but this can be disabled by
giving the command ‘stty tostop’. If you set this tty option, then background jobs
will stop when they try to produce output like they do when they try to read input.
There are several ways to refer to jobs in the shell. The character ‘%’ introduces
a job name. If you wish to refer to job number 1, you can name it as ‘%1’. Just
naming a job brings it to the foreground; thus ‘%1’ is a synonym for ‘fg %1’,
bringing job 1 back into the foreground. Similarly, saying ‘%1 &’ resumes job 1 in
the background, just like ‘bg %1’. A job can also be named by an unambiguous pre-
fix of the string typed in to start it: ‘%ex’ would normally restart a suspended
ex(1) job, if there were only one suspended job whose name began with the string
‘ex’. It is also possible to say ‘%?string’ to specify a job whose text contains
string, if there is only one such job.
The shell maintains a notion of the current and previous jobs. In output pertain-
ing to jobs, the current job is marked with a ‘+’ and the previous job with a ‘-’.
The abbreviations ‘%+’, ‘%’, and (by analogy with the syntax of the history mecha-
nism) ‘%%’ all refer to the current job, and ‘%-’ refers to the previous job.
The job control mechanism requires that the stty(1) option ‘new’ be set on some
systems. It is an artifact from a ‘new’ implementation of the tty driver which
allows generation of interrupt characters from the keyboard to tell jobs to stop.
See stty(1) and the setty builtin command for details on setting options in the new
tty driver.
Status reporting
The shell learns immediately whenever a process changes state. It normally informs
you whenever a job becomes blocked so that no further progress is possible, but
only right before it prints a prompt. This is done so that it does not otherwise
disturb your work. If, however, you set the shell variable notify, the shell will
notify you immediately of changes of status in background jobs. There is also a
shell command notify which marks a single process so that its status changes will
be immediately reported. By default notify marks the current process; simply say
‘notify’ after starting a background job to mark it.
When you try to leave the shell while jobs are stopped, you will be warned that
‘You have stopped jobs.’ You may use the jobs command to see what they are. If you
do this or immediately try to exit again, the shell will not warn you a second
time, and the suspended jobs will be terminated.
Automatic, periodic and timed events (+)
There are various ways to run commands and take other actions automatically at var-
ious times in the ‘‘life cycle’’ of the shell. They are summarized here, and
described in detail under the appropriate Builtin commands, Special shell variables
and Special aliases.
The sched builtin command puts commands in a scheduled-event list, to be executed
by the shell at a given time.
The beepcmd, cwdcmd, periodic, precmd, postcmd, and jobcmd Special aliases can be
set, respectively, to execute commands when the shell wants to ring the bell, when
the working directory changes, every tperiod minutes, before each prompt, before
each command gets executed, after each command gets executed, and when a job is
started or is brought into the foreground.
The autologout shell variable can be set to log out or lock the shell after a given
number of minutes of inactivity.
The mail shell variable can be set to check for new mail periodically.
The printexitvalue shell variable can be set to print the exit status of commands
which exit with a status other than zero.
The rmstar shell variable can be set to ask the user, when ‘rm *’ is typed, if that
is really what was meant.
The time shell variable can be set to execute the time builtin command after the
completion of any process that takes more than a given number of CPU seconds.
The watch and who shell variables can be set to report when selected users log in
or out, and the log builtin command reports on those users at any time.
Native Language System support (+)
The shell is eight bit clean (if so compiled; see the version shell variable) and
thus supports character sets needing this capability. NLS support differs depend-
ing on whether or not the shell was compiled to use the system’s NLS (again, see
version). In either case, 7-bit ASCII is the default character code (e.g., the
classification of which characters are printable) and sorting, and changing the
LANG or LC_CTYPE environment variables causes a check for possible changes in these
respects.
When using the system’s NLS, the setlocale(3) function is called to determine
appropriate character code/classification and sorting (e.g., a ’en_CA.UTF-8’ would
yield "UTF-8" as a character code). This function typically examines the LANG and
LC_CTYPE environment variables; refer to the system documentation for further
details. When not using the system’s NLS, the shell simulates it by assuming that
the ISO 8859-1 character set is used whenever either of the LANG and LC_CTYPE vari-
ables are set, regardless of their values. Sorting is not affected for the simu-
lated NLS.
In addition, with both real and simulated NLS, all printable characters in the
range \200-\377, i.e., those that have M-char bindings, are automatically rebound
to self-insert-command. The corresponding binding for the escape-char sequence, if
any, is left alone. These characters are not rebound if the NOREBIND environment
variable is set. This may be useful for the simulated NLS or a primitive real NLS
which assumes full ISO 8859-1. Otherwise, all M-char bindings in the range
\240-\377 are effectively undone. Explicitly rebinding the relevant keys with
bindkey is of course still possible.
Unknown characters (i.e., those that are neither printable nor control characters)
are printed in the format \nnn. If the tty is not in 8 bit mode, other 8 bit char-
acters are printed by converting them to ASCII and using standout mode. The shell
never changes the 7/8 bit mode of the tty and tracks user-initiated changes of 7/8
bit mode. NLS users (or, for that matter, those who want to use a meta key) may
need to explicitly set the tty in 8 bit mode through the appropriate stty(1) com-
mand in, e.g., the ~/.login file.
OS variant support (+)
A number of new builtin commands are provided to support features in particular
operating systems. All are described in detail in the Builtin commands section.
On systems that support TCF (aix-ibm370, aix-ps2), getspath and setspath get and
set the system execution path, getxvers and setxvers get and set the experimental
version prefix and migrate migrates processes between sites. The jobs builtin
prints the site on which each job is executing.
Under BS2000, bs2cmd executes commands of the underlying BS2000/OSD operating sys-
tem.
Under Domain/OS, inlib adds shared libraries to the current environment, rootnode
changes the rootnode and ver changes the systype.
Under Mach, setpath is equivalent to Mach’s setpath(1).
Under Masscomp/RTU and Harris CX/UX, universe sets the universe.
Under Harris CX/UX, ucb or att runs a command under the specified universe.
Under Convex/OS, warp prints or sets the universe.
The VENDOR, OSTYPE and MACHTYPE environment variables indicate respectively the
vendor, operating system and machine type (microprocessor class or machine model)
of the system on which the shell thinks it is running. These are particularly use-
ful when sharing one’s home directory between several types of machines; one can,
for example,
set path = (~/bin.$MACHTYPE /usr/ucb /bin /usr/bin .)
in one’s ~/.login and put executables compiled for each machine in the appropriate
directory.
The version shell variable indicates what options were chosen when the shell was
compiled.
Note also the newgrp builtin, the afsuser and echo_style shell variables and the
system-dependent locations of the shell’s input files (see FILES).
Signal handling
Login shells ignore interrupts when reading the file ~/.logout. The shell ignores
quit signals unless started with -q. Login shells catch the terminate signal, but
non-login shells inherit the terminate behavior from their parents. Other signals
have the values which the shell inherited from its parent.
In shell scripts, the shell’s handling of interrupt and terminate signals can be
controlled with onintr, and its handling of hangups can be controlled with hup and
nohup.
The shell exits on a hangup (see also the logout shell variable). By default, the
shell’s children do too, but the shell does not send them a hangup when it exits.
hup arranges for the shell to send a hangup to a child when it exits, and nohup
sets a child to ignore hangups.
Terminal management (+)
The shell uses three different sets of terminal (‘‘tty’’) modes: ‘edit’, used when
editing, ‘quote’, used when quoting literal characters, and ‘execute’, used when
executing commands. The shell holds some settings in each mode constant, so com-
mands which leave the tty in a confused state do not interfere with the shell. The
shell also matches changes in the speed and padding of the tty. The list of tty
modes that are kept constant can be examined and modified with the setty builtin.
Note that although the editor uses CBREAK mode (or its equivalent), it takes typed-
ahead characters anyway.
The echotc, settc and telltc commands can be used to manipulate and debug terminal
capabilities from the command line.
On systems that support SIGWINCH or SIGWINDOW, the shell adapts to window resizing
automatically and adjusts the environment variables LINES and COLUMNS if set. If
the environment variable TERMCAP contains li# and co# fields, the shell adjusts
them to reflect the new window size.
REFERENCE
The next sections of this manual describe all of the available Builtin commands,
Special aliases and Special shell variables.
Builtin commands
%job A synonym for the fg builtin command.
%job & A synonym for the bg builtin command.
: Does nothing, successfully.
@
@ name = expr
@ name[index] = expr
@ name++|--
@ name[index]++|--
The first form prints the values of all shell variables.
The second form assigns the value of expr to name. The third form assigns
the value of expr to the index’th component of name; both name and its
index’th component must already exist.
expr may contain the operators ‘*’, ‘+’, etc., as in C. If expr contains
‘<’, ‘>’, ‘&’ or ‘’ then at least that part of expr must be placed within
‘()’. Note that the syntax of expr has nothing to do with that described
under Expressions.
The fourth and fifth forms increment (‘++’) or decrement (‘--’) name or its
index’th component.
The space between ‘@’ and name is required. The spaces between name and
‘=’ and between ‘=’ and expr are optional. Components of expr must be sep-
arated by spaces.
alias [name [wordlist]]
Without arguments, prints all aliases. With name, prints the alias for
name. With name and wordlist, assigns wordlist as the alias of name.
wordlist is command and filename substituted. name may not be ‘alias’ or
‘unalias’. See also the unalias builtin command.
alloc Shows the amount of dynamic memory acquired, broken down into used and free
memory. With an argument shows the number of free and used blocks in each
size category. The categories start at size 8 and double at each step.
This command’s output may vary across system types, because systems other
than the VAX may use a different memory allocator.
bg [%job ...]
Puts the specified jobs (or, without arguments, the current job) into the
background, continuing each if it is stopped. job may be a number, a
string, ‘’, ‘%’, ‘+’ or ‘-’ as described under Jobs.
bindkey [-l|-d|-e|-v|-u] (+)
bindkey [-a] [-b] [-k] [-r] [--] key (+)
bindkey [-a] [-b] [-k] [-c|-s] [--] key command (+)
Without options, the first form lists all bound keys and the editor command
to which each is bound, the second form lists the editor command to which
key is bound and the third form binds the editor command command to key.
Options include:
-l Lists all editor commands and a short description of each.
-d Binds all keys to the standard bindings for the default editor.
-e Binds all keys to the standard GNU Emacs-like bindings.
-v Binds all keys to the standard vi(1)-like bindings.
-a Lists or changes key-bindings in the alternative key map. This is the
key map used in vi command mode.
-b key is interpreted as a control character written ^character (e.g.,
‘^A’) or C-character (e.g., ‘C-A’), a meta character written M-charac-
ter (e.g., ‘M-A’), a function key written F-string (e.g., ‘F-string’),
or an extended prefix key written X-character (e.g., ‘X-A’).
-k key is interpreted as a symbolic arrow key name, which may be one of
‘down’, ‘up’, ‘left’ or ‘right’.
-r Removes key’s binding. Be careful: ‘bindkey -r’ does not bind key to
self-insert-command (q.v.), it unbinds key completely.
-c command is interpreted as a builtin or external command instead of an
editor command.
-s command is taken as a literal string and treated as terminal input when
key is typed. Bound keys in command are themselves reinterpreted, and
this continues for ten levels of interpretation.
-- Forces a break from option processing, so the next word is taken as key
even if it begins with ’-’.
-u (or any invalid option)
Prints a usage message.
key may be a single character or a string. If a command is bound to a
string, the first character of the string is bound to sequence-lead-in and
the entire string is bound to the command.
Control characters in key can be literal (they can be typed by preceding
them with the editor command quoted-insert, normally bound to ‘^V’) or
written caret-character style, e.g., ‘^A’. Delete is written ‘^?’ (caret-
question mark). key and command can contain backslashed escape sequences
(in the style of System V echo(1)) as follows:
\a Bell
\b Backspace
\e Escape
\f Form feed
\n Newline
\r Carriage return
\t Horizontal tab
\v Vertical tab
\nnn The ASCII character corresponding to the octal number nnn
‘\’ nullifies the special meaning of the following character, if it has
any, notably ‘\’ and ‘^’.
bs2cmd bs2000-command (+)
Passes bs2000-command to the BS2000 command interpreter for execution. Only
non-interactive commands can be executed, and it is not possible to execute
any command that would overlay the image of the current process, like /EXE-
CUTE or /CALL-PROCEDURE. (BS2000 only)
break Causes execution to resume after the end of the nearest enclosing foreach
or while. The remaining commands on the current line are executed. Multi-
level breaks are thus possible by writing them all on one line.
breaksw Causes a break from a switch, resuming after the endsw.
builtins (+)
Prints the names of all builtin commands.
bye (+) A synonym for the logout builtin command. Available only if the shell was
so compiled; see the version shell variable.
case label:
A label in a switch statement as discussed below.
cd [-p] [-l] [-n|-v] [name]
If a directory name is given, changes the shell’s working directory to
name. If not, changes to home. If name is ‘-’ it is interpreted as the
previous working directory (see Other substitutions). (+) If name is not a
subdirectory of the current directory (and does not begin with ‘/’, ‘./’ or
‘../’), each component of the variable cdpath is checked to see if it has a
subdirectory name. Finally, if all else fails but name is a shell variable
whose value begins with ‘/’, then this is tried to see if it is a direc-
tory.
With -p, prints the final directory stack, just like dirs. The -l, -n and
-v flags have the same effect on cd as on dirs, and they imply -p. (+)
See also the implicitcd shell variable.
chdir A synonym for the cd builtin command.
complete [command [word/pattern/list[:select]/[[suffix]/] ...]] (+)
Without arguments, lists all completions. With command, lists completions
for command. With command and word etc., defines completions.
command may be a full command name or a glob-pattern (see Filename substi-
tution). It can begin with ‘-’ to indicate that completion should be used
only when command is ambiguous.
word specifies which word relative to the current word is to be completed,
and may be one of the following:
c Current-word completion. pattern is a glob-pattern which must
match the beginning of the current word on the command line. pat-
tern is ignored when completing the current word.
C Like c, but includes pattern when completing the current word.
n Next-word completion. pattern is a glob-pattern which must match
the beginning of the previous word on the command line.
N Like n, but must match the beginning of the word two before the
current word.
p Position-dependent completion. pattern is a numeric range, with
the same syntax used to index shell variables, which must include
the current word.
list, the list of possible completions, may be one of the following:
a Aliases
b Bindings (editor commands)
c Commands (builtin or external commands)
C External commands which begin with the supplied path prefix
d Directories
D Directories which begin with the supplied path prefix
e Environment variables
f Filenames
F Filenames which begin with the supplied path prefix
g Groupnames
j Jobs
l Limits
n Nothing
s Shell variables
S Signals
t Plain (‘‘text’’) files
T Plain (‘‘text’’) files which begin with the supplied path pre-
fix
v Any variables
u Usernames
x Like n, but prints select when list-choices is used.
X Completions
$var Words from the variable var
(...) Words from the given list
‘...‘ Words from the output of command
select is an optional glob-pattern. If given, words from only list that
match select are considered and the fignore shell variable is ignored. The
last three types of completion may not have a select pattern, and x uses
select as an explanatory message when the list-choices editor command is
used.
suffix is a single character to be appended to a successful completion. If
null, no character is appended. If omitted (in which case the fourth
delimiter can also be omitted), a slash is appended to directories and a
space to other words.
Now for some examples. Some commands take only directories as arguments,
so there’s no point completing plain files.
> complete cd ’p/1/d/’
completes only the first word following ‘cd’ (‘p/1’) with a directory. p-
type completion can also be used to narrow down command completion:
> co[^D]
complete compress
> complete -co* ’p/0/(compress)/’
> co[^D]
> compress
This completion completes commands (words in position 0, ‘p/0’) which begin
with ‘co’ (thus matching ‘co*’) to ‘compress’ (the only word in the list).
The leading ‘-’ indicates that this completion is to be used with only
ambiguous commands.
> complete find ’n/-user/u/’
is an example of n-type completion. Any word following ‘find’ and immedi-
ately following ‘-user’ is completed from the list of users.
> complete cc ’c/-I/d/’
demonstrates c-type completion. Any word following ‘cc’ and beginning with
‘-I’ is completed as a directory. ‘-I’ is not taken as part of the direc-
tory because we used lowercase c.
Different lists are useful with different commands.
> complete alias ’p/1/a/’
> complete man ’p/*/c/’
> complete set ’p/1/s/’
> complete true ’p/1/x:Truth has no options./’
These complete words following ‘alias’ with aliases, ‘man’ with commands,
and ‘set’ with shell variables. ‘true’ doesn’t have any options, so x does
nothing when completion is attempted and prints ‘Truth has no options.’
when completion choices are listed.
Note that the man example, and several other examples below, could just as
well have used ’c/*’ or ’n/*’ as ’p/*’.
Words can be completed from a variable evaluated at completion time,
> complete ftp ’p/1/$hostnames/’
> set hostnames = (rtfm.mit.edu tesla.ee.cornell.edu)
> ftp [^D]
rtfm.mit.edu tesla.ee.cornell.edu
> ftp [^C]
> set hostnames = (rtfm.mit.edu tesla.ee.cornell.edu uunet.uu.net)
> ftp [^D]
rtfm.mit.edu tesla.ee.cornell.edu uunet.uu.net
or from a command run at completion time:
> complete kill ’p/*/‘ps | awk \{print\ \$1\}‘/’
> kill -9 [^D]
23113 23377 23380 23406 23429 23529 23530 PID
Note that the complete command does not itself quote its arguments, so the
braces, space and ‘$’ in ‘{print $1}’ must be quoted explicitly.
One command can have multiple completions:
> complete dbx ’p/2/(core)/’ ’p/*/c/’
completes the second argument to ‘dbx’ with the word ‘core’ and all other
arguments with commands. Note that the positional completion is specified
before the next-word completion. Because completions are evaluated from
left to right, if the next-word completion were specified first it would
always match and the positional completion would never be executed. This
is a common mistake when defining a completion.
The select pattern is useful when a command takes files with only
particular forms as arguments. For example,
> complete cc ’p/*/f:*.[cao]/’
completes ‘cc’ arguments to files ending in only ‘.c’, ‘.a’, or ‘.o’.
select can also exclude files, using negation of a glob-pattern as
described under Filename substitution. One might use
> complete rm ’p/*/f:^*.{c,h,cc,C,tex,1,man,l,y}/’
to exclude precious source code from ‘rm’ completion. Of course, one could
still type excluded names manually or override the completion mechanism
using the complete-word-raw or list-choices-raw editor commands (q.v.).
The ‘C’, ‘D’, ‘F’ and ‘T’ lists are like ‘c’, ‘d’, ‘f’ and ‘t’ respec-
tively, but they use the select argument in a different way: to restrict
completion to files beginning with a particular path prefix. For example,
the Elm mail program uses ‘=’ as an abbreviation for one’s mail directory.
One might use
> complete elm c@=@F:$HOME/Mail/@
to complete ‘elm -f =’ as if it were ‘elm -f ~/Mail/’. Note that we used
‘@’ instead of ‘/’ to avoid confusion with the select argument, and we used
‘$HOME’ instead of ‘~’ because home directory substitution works at only
the beginning of a word.
suffix is used to add a nonstandard suffix (not space or ‘/’ for directo-
ries) to completed words.
> complete finger ’c/*@/$hostnames/’ ’p/1/u/@’
completes arguments to ‘finger’ from the list of users, appends an ‘@’, and
then completes after the ‘@’ from the ‘hostnames’ variable. Note again the
order in which the completions are specified.
Finally, here’s a complex example for inspiration:
> complete find \
’n/-name/f/’ ’n/-newer/f/’ ’n/-{,n}cpio/f/’ \
´n/-exec/c/’ ’n/-ok/c/’ ’n/-user/u/’ \
’n/-group/g/’ ’n/-fstype/(nfs 4.2)/’ \
’n/-type/(b c d f l p s)/’ \
´c/-/(name newer cpio ncpio exec ok user \
group fstype type atime ctime depth inum \
ls mtime nogroup nouser perm print prune \
size xdev)/’ \
’p/*/d/’
This completes words following ‘-name’, ‘-newer’, ‘-cpio’ or ‘ncpio’ (note
the pattern which matches both) to files, words following ‘-exec’ or ‘-ok’
to commands, words following ‘user’ and ‘group’ to users and groups respec-
tively and words following ‘-fstype’ or ‘-type’ to members of the given
lists. It also completes the switches themselves from the given list (note
the use of c-type completion) and completes anything not otherwise com-
pleted to a directory. Whew.
Remember that programmed completions are ignored if the word being com-
pleted is a tilde substitution (beginning with ‘~’) or a variable (begin-
ning with ‘$’). complete is an experimental feature, and the syntax may
change in future versions of the shell. See also the uncomplete builtin
command.
continue
Continues execution of the nearest enclosing while or foreach. The rest of
the commands on the current line are executed.
default:
Labels the default case in a switch statement. It should come after all
case labels.
dirs [-l] [-n|-v]
dirs -S|-L [filename] (+)
dirs -c (+)
The first form prints the directory stack. The top of the stack is at the
left and the first directory in the stack is the current directory. With
-l, ‘~’ or ‘~name’ in the output is expanded explicitly to home or the
pathname of the home directory for user name. (+) With -n, entries are
wrapped before they reach the edge of the screen. (+) With -v, entries are
printed one per line, preceded by their stack positions. (+) If more than
one of -n or -v is given, -v takes precedence. -p is accepted but does
nothing.
With -S, the second form saves the directory stack to filename as a series
of cd and pushd commands. With -L, the shell sources filename, which is
presumably a directory stack file saved by the -S option or the savedirs
mechanism. In either case, dirsfile is used if filename is not given and
~/.cshdirs is used if dirsfile is unset.
Note that login shells do the equivalent of ‘dirs -L’ on startup and, if
savedirs is set, ‘dirs -S’ before exiting. Because only ~/.tcshrc is nor-
mally sourced before ~/.cshdirs, dirsfile should be set in ~/.tcshrc rather
than ~/.login.
The last form clears the directory stack.
echo [-n] word ...
Writes each word to the shell’s standard output, separated by spaces and
terminated with a newline. The echo_style shell variable may be set to
emulate (or not) the flags and escape sequences of the BSD and/or System V
versions of echo; see echo(1).
echotc [-sv] arg ... (+)
Exercises the terminal capabilities (see termcap(5)) in args. For example,
’echotc home’ sends the cursor to the home position, ’echotc cm 3 10’ sends
it to column 3 and row 10, and ’echotc ts 0; echo "This is a test."; echotc
fs’ prints "This is a test." in the status line.
If arg is ’baud’, ’cols’, ’lines’, ’meta’ or ’tabs’, prints the value of
that capability ("yes" or "no" indicating that the terminal does or does
not have that capability). One might use this to make the output from a
shell script less verbose on slow terminals, or limit command output to the
number of lines on the screen:
> set history=‘echotc lines‘
> @ history--
Termcap strings may contain wildcards which will not echo correctly. One
should use double quotes when setting a shell variable to a terminal capa-
bility string, as in the following example that places the date in the sta-
tus line:
> set tosl="‘echotc ts 0‘"
> set frsl="‘echotc fs‘"
> echo -n "$tosl";date; echo -n "$frsl"
With -s, nonexistent capabilities return the empty string rather than caus-
ing an error. With -v, messages are verbose.
else
end
endif
endsw See the description of the foreach, if, switch, and while statements below.
eval arg ...
Treats the arguments as input to the shell and executes the resulting com-
mand(s) in the context of the current shell. This is usually used to exe-
cute commands generated as the result of command or variable substitution,
because parsing occurs before these substitutions. See tset(1) for a sam-
ple use of eval.
exec command
Executes the specified command in place of the current shell.
exit [expr]
The shell exits either with the value of the specified expr (an expression,
as described under Expressions) or, without expr, with the value of the
status variable.
fg [%job ...]
Brings the specified jobs (or, without arguments, the current job) into the
foreground, continuing each if it is stopped. job may be a number, a
string, ‘’, ‘%’, ‘+’ or ‘-’ as described under Jobs. See also the run-fg-
editor editor command.
filetest -op file ... (+)
Applies op (which is a file inquiry operator as described under File
inquiry operators) to each file and returns the results as a space-sepa-
rated list.
foreach name (wordlist)
...
end Successively sets the variable name to each member of wordlist and executes
the sequence of commands between this command and the matching end. (Both
foreach and end must appear alone on separate lines.) The builtin command
continue may be used to continue the loop prematurely and the builtin com-
mand break to terminate it prematurely. When this command is read from the
terminal, the loop is read once prompting with ‘foreach? ’ (or prompt2)
before any statements in the loop are executed. If you make a mistake typ-
ing in a loop at the terminal you can rub it out.
getspath (+)
Prints the system execution path. (TCF only)
getxvers (+)
Prints the experimental version prefix. (TCF only)
glob wordlist
Like echo, but no ‘\’ escapes are recognized and words are delimited by
null characters in the output. Useful for programs which wish to use the
shell to filename expand a list of words.
goto word
word is filename and command-substituted to yield a string of the form
‘label’. The shell rewinds its input as much as possible, searches for a
line of the form ‘label:’, possibly preceded by blanks or tabs, and contin-
ues execution after that line.
hashstat
Prints a statistics line indicating how effective the internal hash table
has been at locating commands (and avoiding exec’s). An exec is attempted
for each component of the path where the hash function indicates a possible
hit, and in each component which does not begin with a ‘/’.
On machines without vfork(2), prints only the number and size of hash buck