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7.7. Built-in Commands

Examples to be entered as a command line are shown with the $ prompt. Otherwise, examples should be treated as code fragments that might be included in a shell script. For convenience, some of the reserved words used by multiline commands also are included.

#

#

Ignore all text that follows on the same line. # is used in shell scripts as the comment character and is not really a command.

#!

#!shell

Used as the first line of a script to invoke the named shell (with optional arguments). Some older, non-Linux systems do not support scripts starting with this line. For example:

#!/bin/bash
:

:

Null command. Returns an exit status of 0. Sometimes used as the first character in a file to denote a bash script. Shell variables can be placed after the : to expand them to their values.

Example

Check whether someone is logged in:

if who | grep $1 > /dev/null
then :     # do nothing
     # if pattern is found
else echo "User $1 is not logged in"
fi
.

. file [arguments]

Same as source.

alias

alias [-p] [name[='cmd']]

Assign a shorthand name as a synonym for cmd. If ='cmd' is omitted, print the alias for name; if name also is omitted or if [-p] is specified, print all aliases. See also unalias.

bg

bg [jobIDs]

Put current job or jobIDs in the background. See Section 7.8, "Job Control" later in this chapter.

bind

bind [options]

bind [options] key:function

Print or set the bindings that allow keys to invoke functions such as cursor movement and line editing. Typical syntax choices for keys are "\C-t" for Ctrl-T and "\M-t" or "\et" for Esc T (quoting is needed to escape the sequences from the shell). Function names can be seen though the -l option.

Options

-f filename

Consult filename for bindings, which should be in the same format as on the bind command line.

-l

Print all Readline functions, which are functions that can be bound to keys.

-m keymap

Specify a keymap for this and further bindings. Possible keymaps are emacs, emacs-standard, emacs-meta, emacs-ctlx, vi, vi-move, vi-command, and vi-insert.

-p

Display all functions and the keys that invoke them, in the format by which keys can be set.

-q function

Display the key bindings that invoke function.

-r key

Remove the binding attached to key, so it no longer works.

-s

Display all macros and the keys that invoke them, in the format by which keys can be set.

-u function

Remove all the bindings attached to function, so no keys will invoke it.

-v

Display all Readline variables (settings that affect history and line editing) and their current settings, in the format by which variables can be set.

-x key:command

Bind key to a shell command (recent; not in all bash versions in common use).

-P

Display all bound keys and the functions they invoke.

-S

Display all macros and the keys that invoke them.

-V

Display all Readline variables (settings that affect history and line editing) and their current settings.

Example

Bind Ctrl-T to copy-forward-word, the function that copies the part of the word following the cursor so it can be repasted:

$ bind "\C-t":copy-forward-word
break

break [n]

Exit from the innermost (most deeply nested) for, while, or until loop, or from the n innermost levels of the loop. Also exits from a select list.

builtin

builtin command [arguments]

Execute command, which must be a shell built-in. Useful for invoking built-ins within scripts of the same name.

case

case string

in

regex)

commands

;;

...

esac

If string matches regular expression regex, perform the following commands. Proceed down the list of regular expressions until one is found (to catch all remaining strings, use * as regex at the end).

cd

cd [dir&]

With no arguments, change to home directory of user. Otherwise, change working directory to dir. If dir is a relative pathname but is not in the current directory, then the CDPATH variable is searched.

command

command [options] command [arguments]

Execute command; do not perform function look-up (i.e., refuse to run any command that is neither in PATH nor a built-in). Set exit status to that returned by command, unless command cannot be found, in which case exit with a status of 127.

-p

Search default path, ignoring the PATH variable's value.

--

Treat everything that follows as an argument, not an option.

continue

continue [n]

Skip remaining commands in a for, while, or until loop, resuming with the next iteration of the loop (or skipping n loops).

declare

declare [options] [name[=value]]

typeset [options] [name[=value]]

Print or set variables. Options prefaced by + instead of - are inverted in meaning.

-a

Treat the following names as array variables.

-f

Treat the following names as functions.

-i

Expect variable to be an integer, and evaluate its assigned value.

-p

Print names and settings of all shell variables and functions; take no other action.

-r

Do not allow variables to be reset later.

-x

Mark variables for subsequent export.

-F

Print names of all shell functions; take no other action.

dirs

dirs [options]

Print directories currently remembered for pushd/popd operations.

Options

+entry

Print entryth entry (list starts at 0).

-entry

Print entryth entry from end of list.

-l

Long listing.

disown

disown [options] [jobIDs]

Let job run, but disassociate it from the shell. By default, do not even list the job as an active job; commands like jobs and fg will no longer recognize it. When -h is specified, the job is recognized but simply is kept from being killed when the shell dies.

Options

-a

Act on all jobs.

-h

Do not pass a SIGHUP signal received by the shell on to the job.

echo

echo [options] [string]

Write string to standard output, terminated by a newline. If no string is supplied, echo a newline. In bash, echo is just an alias for print -. (See also echo in Chapter 3, "Linux Commands").

-e

Enable interpretation of escape characters:

\a

Audible alert

\b

Backspace

\c

Suppress the terminating newline (same as -n)

\f

Form feed

\n

Newline

\r

Carriage return

\t

Horizontal tab

\v

Vertical tab

\\

Backslash

\nnn

The character in the ASCII set corresponding to the octal number nnn.

\xnnn

The character in the ASCII set corresponding to the hexadecimal number nnn.

-n

Do not append a newline to the output.

-E

Disable interpretation of escape characters.

enable

enable [options] [built-in ...]

Enable (or when -n is specified, disable) built-in shell commands. Without built-in argument or with -p option, print enabled built-ins. With -a, print the status of all built-ins. You can disable shell commands in order to define your own functions with the same names.

Options

-a

Display all built-ins, both enabled and disabled.

-n builtin

Disable builtin.

-p

Display enabled built-ins.

-s

Restrict display to special built-ins defined by POSIX standard.

eval

eval [command args...]

Perform command, passing args.

exec

exec [options] [command]

Execute command in place of the current process (instead of creating a new process). exec also is useful for opening, closing, or copying file descriptors.

Options

-a name

Tell command that it was invoked as name.

-c

Remove all environment variables from the process when the new command runs.

-l

Treat the new process as if the user were logging in.

Examples

$ trap 'exec 2>&-' 0     Close standard error when
     shell script exits (signal 0)
$ exec /bin/tcsh         Replace current shell with extended C shell
$ exec < infile          Reassign standard input to infile
exit

exit [n]

Exit a shell script with status n (e.g., exit 1). n can be zero (success) or nonzero (failure). If n is not given, exit status will be that of the most recent command. exit can be issued at the command line to close a window (log out).

Example

if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
   echo "Usage:  $0 [-c] [-d] file(s)"
   exit 1     # Error status
fi
export

export [options] [variables]

export [options] [name=[value]]...

Pass (export) the value of one or more shell variables, giving global meaning to the variables (which are local by default). For example, a variable defined in one shell script must be exported if its value will be used in other programs called by the script. If no variables are given, export lists the variables exported by the current shell. If name and value are specified, assign value to a variable name.

Options

--

Treat all subsequent strings as arguments, not options.

-f

Expect variables to be functions.

-n

Unexport variable.

-p

List variables exported by current shell.

fc

fc [options] [first] [last]

fc -e - [old=new] [command]

Display or edit commands in the history list. (Use only one of -l or -e.) fc provides capabilities similar to the C shell's history and ! syntax. first and last are numbers or strings specifying the range of commands to display or edit. If last is omitted, fc applies to a single command (specified by first). If both first and last are omitted, fc edits the previous command or lists the last 16. The second form of fc takes a history command, replaces old string with new string, and executes the modified command. If no strings are specified, command is just reexecuted. If no command is given either, the previous command is reexecuted. command is a number or string like first. See examples under Section 7.6, "Command History".

Options

-e [editor]

Invoke editor to edit the specified history commands. The default editor is set by the shell variable FCEDIT.

-l [first last]

List the specified command or range of commands, or list the last 16.

-n

Suppress command numbering from the -l listing.

-r

Reverse the order of the -l listing.

-s pattern=newpattern

Edit command(s), replacing all occurrences of pattern with newpattern. Then reexecute.

fg

fg [jobIDs]

Bring current job or jobIDs to the foreground. See Section 7.8, "Job Control".

for

for x [in list]

do

commands

done

Assign each word in list to x in turn and execute commands. If list is omitted, $@ (positional parameters) is assumed.

Examples

Paginate all files in the current directory; save each result:

for file in *
do
     pr $file > $file.tmp
done

Search chapters for a list of words (like fgrep -f):

for item in `cat program_list`
do
     echo "Checking chapters for"
     echo "references to program $item..."
     grep -c "$item.[co]" chap*
done
function

function command

{

...

}

Define a function. Refer to arguments the same way as positional parameters in a shell script ($1, etc.) and terminate with }.

getopts

getopts string name [args]

Process command-line arguments (or args, if specified) and check for legal options. getopts is used in shell script loops and is intended to ensure standard syntax for command-line options. string contains the option letters to be recognized by getopts when running the shell script. Valid options are processed in turn and stored in the shell variable name. If an option letter is followed by a colon, the option must be followed by one or more arguments.

hash

hash [-r] [commands]

Search for commands and remember the directory in which each command resides. Hashing causes the shell to remember the association between a "name" and the absolute pathname of an executable, so that future executions don't require a search of PATH. With no arguments, hash lists the current hashed commands. The display shows hits (the number of times the command is called by the shell) and command (the full pathname).

help

help [-s] [string]

Print help text on all built-in commands or those matching string. With -s, display only brief syntax, otherwise display summary paragraph also.

history

history [options]

history [lines]

Print a numbered command history, denoting modified commands with a *. Include commands from previous sessions. You may specify how many lines of history to print.

Options

-a [file]

bash maintains a file called .bash_history in the user's home directory, a record of previous sessions' commands. Ask bash to append the current session's commands to .bash_history or to file.

-c

Clear history list: remove all previously entered commands from the list remembered by the shell.

-n [file]

Append to the history list those lines in the .bash_history file or in file that have not yet been included.

-r [file]

Use .bash_history or file as the history list, instead of the working history list.

-s command

Add command to working history list without executing it.

-w [file]

Overwrite .bash_history or file with working history list.

if

if test-cmds

Begin a conditional statement. Possible formats are:

if test-cmds    if test-cmds      if test-cmds
then          then             then
   cmds1        cmds1             cmds1
fi            else             elif test-cmds
                cmds2          then
              fi                  cmds2
                              ...
                               else
                                  cmdsn
                               fi

Usually, the initial if and any elif lines execute one test or [] command (although any series of commands is permitted). When if succeeds (that is, the last of its test-cmds returns 0), cmds1 are performed; otherwise each succeeding elif or else line is tried.

jobs

jobs [options] [jobIDs]

List all running or stopped jobs, or those specified by jobIDs. For example, you can check whether a long compilation or text format is still running. Also useful before logging out. See also Section 7.8, "Job Control" later in this chapter.

Options

-l

List job IDs and process group IDs.

-n

List only jobs whose status changed since last notification.

-p

List process group IDs only.

-r

List active, running jobs only.

-s

List stopped jobs only.

-x command [arguments]

Execute command. If jobIDs are specified, replace them with command.

kill

kill [options] IDs

Terminate each specified process ID or job ID. You must own the process or be a privileged user. See also Section 7.8, "Job Control".

Options

-signal

The signal number (from ps -f) or name (from kill -l). With a signal number of 9, the kill cannot be caught. The default is TERM.

--

Consider all subsequent strings to be arguments, not options.

-l

List the signal names. (Used by itself.)

-s signal

Specify signal. May be a name.

let

let expressions

Perform arithmetic as specified by one or more integer expressions. expressions consist of numbers, operators, and shell variables (which don't need a preceding $). Expressions must be quoted if they contain spaces or other special characters. For more information and examples, see Section 7.5, "Arithmetic Expressions" earlier in this chapter. See also expr in Chapter 3, "Linux Commands".

Examples

Both of the following examples add 1 to variable i:

let i=i+1
let "i = i + 1"
local

local [options] [variable[=value]] [variable2[=value]] ...

Without arguments, print all local variables. Otherwise, create (and set, if specified) one or more local variables. See the declare built-in command for options.

logout

logout [status]

Exit the shell, returning status as exit status to invoking program if specified. Can be used only in a login shell. Otherwise, use exit.

popd

popd [options]

Manipulate the directory stack. By default, remove the top directory and cd to it.

Options

+n

Remove the nth directory in the stack, counting from 0.

-n

Remove nth entry from the bottom of the stack, counting from 0.

printf

printf string [arguments]

Format a string like the C library printf function. Standard percent-sign formats are recognized in string, such as %i for integer. Escape sequences such as \n can be included in string and are automatically recognized; if you want to include them in arguments, specify a string of %b. You can escape characters in arguments to output a string suitable for input to other commands by specifying a string of %q.

Examples

$ printf "Previous command: %i\n" "$(($HISTCMD-1))"
Previous command: 534
$ echo $PAGER
less -E
$ printf "%q\n" "\t$PAGER"
\\tless\ -E

The last command probably would be used to record a setting in a file where it could be read and assigned by another shell script.

pushd

pushd directory

pushd [options]

By default, switch top two directories on stack. If specified, add a new directory to the top of the stack instead, and cd to it.

Options

+n

Rotate the stack to place the nth (counting from 0) directory at the top.

-n

Rotate the stack to place the nth directory from the bottom of the stack at the top.

pwd

pwd [-P]

Display the current working directory's absolute pathname. By default, any symbolic directories used when reaching the current directory are displayed, but with the -P option the real names are displayed instead.

read

read [options] variable1 [variable2 ...]

Read one line of standard input, and assign each word (as defined by IFS) to the corresponding variable, with all leftover words assigned to the last variable. If only one variable is specified, the entire line will be assigned to that variable. The return status is 0 unless EOF is reached, a distinction that is useful for running loops over input files. If no variable names are provided, read the entire string into the environment variable REPLY.

Options

-a var

Read each word into an element of var, which is treated as an array variable.

-d char

Stop reading the line at char instead of at the newline.

-e

Line editing and command history are enabled during input.

-n num

Read only num characters from the line.

-p string

Display the prompt string to the user before reading each line, if input is interactive.

-r

Raw mode; ignore \ as a line continuation character.

-s

Do not echo the characters entered by the user (useful for reading a password).

-t seconds

Time out and return without setting any variables if input is interactive and no input has been entered for seconds seconds.

Examples

$ read first last address
Sarah Caldwell 123 Main Street
$ echo "$last, $first\n$address"
Caldwell, Sarah
123 Main Street

The following commands, which read a password into the variable $user_pw and then display its value, use recently added options that are not in all versions of bash in current use.

$ read -sp "Enter password (will not appear on screen)" user_pw
Enter password (will not appear on screen)
$ echo $user_pw
You weren't supposed to know!

The following script reads input from the system's password file, which uses colons to delimit fields (making it a popular subject for examples of input parsing).

IFS=:
cat /etc/passwd |
while
read account pw user group gecos home shell
do
echo "Account name $account has user info: $gecos"
done
readonly

readonly [options] [variable1 variable2 ...]

Prevent the specified shell variables from being assigned new values. Variables can be accessed (read) but not overwritten. In bash, the syntax variable=value can be used to assign a new value that cannot be changed.

Options

-a

Treat the following names as array variables.

-f

Treat the following names as functions, and set them read-only so that they cannot be changed.

-p

Display all read-only variables (default).

return

return [n]

Used inside a function definition. Exit the function with status n or with the exit status of the previously executed command.

select

select name [ in wordlist ; ]

do

commands

done

Choose a value for name by displaying the words in wordlist to the user and prompting for a choice. Store user input in the variable REPLY and the chosen word in name. Then execute commands repeatedly until they execute a break or return. Default prompt can be changed by setting the PS3 shell variable.

set

set [options] [arg1 arg2 ...]

With no arguments, set prints the values of all variables known to the current shell. Options can be enabled (-option) or disabled (+option). Options also can be set when the shell is invoked, via bash. Arguments are assigned in order to $1, $2, and so on.

Options

-

Turn off -v and -x, and turn off option processing.

--

Used as the last option; -- turns off option processing so that arguments beginning with - are not misinterpreted as options. (For example, you can set $1 to -1.) If no arguments are given after --, unset the positional parameters.

-a

From now on, automatically mark variables for export after defining or changing them.

-b

Report background job status at termination, instead of waiting for next shell prompt.

-e

Exit if a command yields a nonzero exit status.

-f

Do not expand filename metacharacters (e.g., * ? [ ]). Wildcard expansion is sometimes called globbing.

-h

Locate commands as they are defined, and remember them.

-k

Assignment of environment variables (var=value) will take effect regardless of where they appear on the command line. Normally, assignments must precede the command name.

-m

Monitor mode. Enable job control; background jobs executes in a separate process group. -m usually is set automatically.

-n

Read commands, but don't execute. Useful for checking errors, particularly for shell scripts.

-o [m]

List shell modes, or turn on mode m. Many modes can be set by other options. The modes can be turned off through the +o option. Modes are:

allexport

Same as -a.

braceexpand

Same as -B.

emacs

Enter Emacs editing mode (on by default).

errexit

Same as -e.

hashall

Same as -h.

histexpand

Same as -H.

history

Default. Preserve command history.

ignoreeof

Don't allow use of a single Ctrl-D (the end-of-file or EOF character) to log off; use the exit command to log off. This has the same effect as setting the shell variable IGNOREEOF=1.

interactive-comments

Treat all words beginning with #, and all subsequent words, as comments.

keyword

Same as -k.

monitor

Same as -m.

noclobber

Same as -C.

noexec

Same as -n.

noglob

Same as -f.

notify

Same as -b.

nounset

Same as -u.

onecmd

Same as -t.

physical

Same as -P.

posix

Match POSIX standard.

privileged

Same as -p.

verbose

Same as -v.

vi

Enable vi-style command-line editing.

xtrace

Same as -x.

+o [m]

Display modes or turn off mode m. See the -o option for a list of modes.

-p

Start up as a privileged user; don't process $HOME/.profile.

-t

Exit after one command is executed.

-u

Indicate an error when user tries to use a variable that is undefined.

-v

Show each shell command line when read.

-x

Show commands and arguments when executed, preceded by a + or the prompt defined by the PS4 shell variable. This provides step-by-step debugging of shell scripts. (Same as -o xtrace.)

-B

Default. Enable brace expansion.

-C

Don't allow output redirection (>) to overwrite an existing file.

-H

Default. Enable ! and !! commands.

-P

Print absolute pathnames in response to pwd. By default, bash includes symbolic links in its response to pwd.

Examples

set -- "$num" -20 -30  Set $1 to $num, $2 to -20, $3 to -30
set -vx                Read each command line; show it;
                                              execute it; show it again (with arguments)
set +x                 Stop command tracing
set -o noclobber       Prevent file overwriting
set +o noclobber       Allow file overwriting again
shift

shift [n]

Shift positional arguments (e.g., $2 becomes $1). If n is given, shift to the left n places.

source

source file [arguments]

Read and execute lines in file. file does not have to be executable but must reside in a directory searched by PATH.

suspend

suspend [-f]

Same as Ctrl-Z. Often used to stop an su command.

Option

-f

Force suspend, even if shell is a login shell.

test

test condition

or

[ condition ]

Evaluate a condition and, if its value is true, return a zero exit status; otherwise, return a nonzero exit status. An alternate form of the command uses [] rather than the word test. condition is constructed using the following expressions. Conditions are true if the description holds true.

File conditions

-a file

file exists.

-b file

file is a block special file.

-c file

file is a character special file.

-d file

file is a directory.

-e file

file exists.

-f file

file is a regular file.

-g file

file has the set-group-ID bit set.

-h file

file is a symbolic link.

-k file

file has its sticky bit (no longer used) set.

-p file

file is a named pipe (FIFO).

-r file

file is readable.

-s file

file has a size greater than 0.

-t [n]

The open file descriptor n is associated with a terminal device; default n is 1.

-u file

file has its set-user-ID bit set.

-w file

file is writable.

-x file

file is executable.

-G file

file's group is the process's effective group ID.

-L file

file is a symbolic link.

-N file

file has been modified since its last time of access.

-O file

file's owner is the process's effective user ID.

-S file

file is a socket.

f1 -ef f2

Files f1 and f2 are linked (refer to same file through a hard link).

f1 -nt f2

File f1 is newer than f2.

f1 -ot f2

File f1 is older than f2.

String conditions

-n s1

String s1 has nonzero length.

-o s1

Shell option s1 is set. Shell options are described under the set built-in command.

-z s1

String s1 has 0 length.

s1 = s2

Strings s1 and s2 are identical.

s1 == s2

Strings s1 and s2 are identical.

s1 != s2

Strings s1 and s2 are not identical.

s1 < s2

String s1 is lower in the alphabet (or other sort in use) than s2. By default, the check is performed character-by-character against the ASCII character set.

s1 > s2

String s1 is higher in the alphabet (or other sort in use) than s2.

string

string is not null.

Integer comparisons

n1 -eq n2

n1 equals n2.

n1 -ge n2

n1 is greater than or equal to n2.

n1 -gt n2

n1 is greater than n2.

n1 -le n2

n1 is less than or equal to n2.

n1 -lt n2

n1 is less than n2.

n1 -ne n2

n1 does not equal n2.

Combined forms

! condition

True if condition is false.

condition1 -a condition2

True if both conditions are true.

condition1 -o condition2

True if either condition is true.

Examples

Each of the following examples shows the first line of various statements that might use a test condition:

while test $# -gt 0            While there are arguments . . .
while [ -n "$1" ]              While the first argument is nonempty . . .
if [ $count -lt 10 ]           If $count is less than 10 . . .
if [ -d RCS ]                  If the RCS directory exists . . .
if [ "$answer" != "y" ]        If the answer is not y . . .
if [ ! -r "$1" -o ! -f "$1" ]  If the first argument is not a
               readable file or a regular file . . .
times

times

Print accumulated process times for user and system.

trap

trap [-l] [ [commands] signals]

Execute commands if any of signals is received. Common signals include 0, 1, 2, and 15. Multiple commands should be quoted as a group and separated by semicolons internally. If commands is the null string (i.e., trap ""signals), then signals will be ignored by the shell. If commands is omitted entirely, reset processing of specified signals to the default action. If both commands and signals are omitted, list current trap assignments. See examples at the end of this entry and under exec.

Option

-l

List signals.

Signals

Signals are listed along with what triggers them.

0

Exit from shell (usually when shell script finishes).

1

Hang up (usually logout).

2

Interrupt (usually through Ctrl-C).

3

Quit.

4

Illegal instruction.

5

Trace trap.

6

Abort.

7

Unused.

8

Floating-point exception.

9

Termination.

10

User-defined.

11

Reference to invalid memory.

12

User-defined.

13

Write to a pipe without a process to read it.

14

Alarm timeout.

15

Software termination (usually via kill).

16

Unused.

17

Termination of child process.

18

Continue (if stopped).

19

Stop process.

20

Process suspended (usually through Ctrl-Z).

21

Background process has tty input.

22

Background process has tty output.

23

Unused.

24

Unused.

25

Unused.

26

Unused.

27

Unused.

28

Unused.

29

I/O possible on a channel.

Examples

trap "" 2     Ignore signal 2 (interrupts)
trap 2        Obey interrupts again

Remove a $tmp file when the shell program exits or if the user logs out, presses Ctrl-C, or does a kill:

trap "rm -f $tmp; exit" 0 1 2 15
type

type [options] commands

Report absolute pathname of programs invoked for commands and whether or not they are hashed.

--

Consider all subsequent strings to be arguments, not options.

-a, -all

Print all occurrences of command, not just that which would be invoked.

-p, -path

Print the hashed value of command, which may differ from the first appearance of command in the PATH.

-t, -type

Determine and state if command is an alias, keyword, function, built-in, or file.

Example

$ type mv read
mv is /bin/mv
read is a shell built-in
typeset

typeset

See declare.

ulimit

ulimit [options] [n]

Print the value of one or more resource limits, or, if n is specified, set a resource limit to n. Resource limits can be either hard (-H) or soft (-S). By default, ulimit sets both limits or prints the soft limit. The options determine which resource is acted on.

Options

--

Consider all subsequent strings to be arguments, not options.

-a

Print all current limits.

-H

Hard resource limit.

-S

Soft resource limit.

Specific limits

These options limit specific resource sizes.

-c

Core files.

-d

Size of processes' data segments.

-f

Size of shell-created files.

-l

Size of memory that the process can lock.

-m

Resident set size.

-n

Number of file descriptors. On many systems, this cannot be set.

-p

Pipe size, measured in blocks of 512 bytes.

-s

Stack size.

-t

Amount of CPU time, counted in seconds.

-u

Number of processes per user.

-v

Virtual memory used by shell.

umask

umask [nnn]

umask [-p] [-S]

Display file creation mask or set file creation mask to octal value nnn. The file creation mask determines which permission bits are turned off (e.g., umask 002 produces rw-rw-r--).

Options

-p

Display mask within an umask command so that a caller can read and execute it.

-S

Display umask symbolically, rather than in octal.

unalias

unalias [-a] names

Remove names from the alias list. See also alias.

Option

-a

Remove all aliases.

unset

unset [options] names

Erase definitions of functions or variables listed in names.

Options

-f

Expect name to refer to a function.

-v

Expect name to refer to a variable (default).

until

until

test-commands

do

commands

done

Execute test-commands (usually a test or [ ] command), and if the exit status is nonzero (that is, the test fails), perform commands; repeat.

wait

wait [ID]

Pause in execution until all background jobs complete (exit status 0 will be returned), or pause until the specified background process ID or job ID completes (exit status of ID is returned). Note that the shell variable $! contains the process ID of the most recent background process. If job control is not in effect, ID can be only a process ID number. See Section 7.8, "Job Control".

Example

wait $! Wait for last background process to finish
while

while

test-commands

do

commands

done

Execute test-commands (usually a test or [] command) and if the exit status is 0, perform commands; repeat.



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