| 6.11 Bash POSIX Mode |
| ==================== |
| |
| Starting Bash with the '--posix' command-line option or executing 'set |
| -o posix' while Bash is running will cause Bash to conform more closely |
| to the POSIX standard by changing the behavior to match that specified |
| by POSIX in areas where the Bash default differs. |
| |
| When invoked as 'sh', Bash enters POSIX mode after reading the startup |
| files. |
| |
| The following list is what's changed when 'POSIX mode' is in effect: |
| |
| 1. Bash ensures that the 'POSIXLY_CORRECT' variable is set. |
| |
| 2. When a command in the hash table no longer exists, Bash will |
| re-search '$PATH' to find the new location. This is also available |
| with 'shopt -s checkhash'. |
| |
| 3. Bash will not insert a command without the execute bit set into the |
| command hash table, even if it returns it as a (last-ditch) result |
| from a '$PATH' search. |
| |
| 4. The message printed by the job control code and builtins when a job |
| exits with a non-zero status is 'Done(status)'. |
| |
| 5. The message printed by the job control code and builtins when a job |
| is stopped is 'Stopped(SIGNAME)', where SIGNAME is, for example, |
| 'SIGTSTP'. |
| |
| 6. Alias expansion is always enabled, even in non-interactive shells. |
| |
| 7. Reserved words appearing in a context where reserved words are |
| recognized do not undergo alias expansion. |
| |
| 8. The POSIX 'PS1' and 'PS2' expansions of '!' to the history number |
| and '!!' to '!' are enabled, and parameter expansion is performed |
| on the values of 'PS1' and 'PS2' regardless of the setting of the |
| 'promptvars' option. |
| |
| 9. The POSIX startup files are executed ('$ENV') rather than the |
| normal Bash files. |
| |
| 10. Tilde expansion is only performed on assignments preceding a |
| command name, rather than on all assignment statements on the line. |
| |
| 11. The default history file is '~/.sh_history' (this is the default |
| value of '$HISTFILE'). |
| |
| 12. Redirection operators do not perform filename expansion on the |
| word in the redirection unless the shell is interactive. |
| |
| 13. Redirection operators do not perform word splitting on the word in |
| the redirection. |
| |
| 14. Function names must be valid shell 'name's. That is, they may not |
| contain characters other than letters, digits, and underscores, and |
| may not start with a digit. Declaring a function with an invalid |
| name causes a fatal syntax error in non-interactive shells. |
| |
| 15. Function names may not be the same as one of the POSIX special |
| builtins. |
| |
| 16. POSIX special builtins are found before shell functions during |
| command lookup. |
| |
| 17. When printing shell function definitions (e.g., by 'type'), Bash |
| does not print the 'function' keyword. |
| |
| 18. Literal tildes that appear as the first character in elements of |
| the 'PATH' variable are not expanded as described above under *note |
| Tilde Expansion::. |
| |
| 19. The 'time' reserved word may be used by itself as a command. When |
| used in this way, it displays timing statistics for the shell and |
| its completed children. The 'TIMEFORMAT' variable controls the |
| format of the timing information. |
| |
| 20. When parsing and expanding a ${...} expansion that appears within |
| double quotes, single quotes are no longer special and cannot be |
| used to quote a closing brace or other special character, unless |
| the operator is one of those defined to perform pattern removal. |
| In this case, they do not have to appear as matched pairs. |
| |
| 21. The parser does not recognize 'time' as a reserved word if the |
| next token begins with a '-'. |
| |
| 22. The '!' character does not introduce history expansion within a |
| double-quoted string, even if the 'histexpand' option is enabled. |
| |
| 23. If a POSIX special builtin returns an error status, a |
| non-interactive shell exits. The fatal errors are those listed in |
| the POSIX standard, and include things like passing incorrect |
| options, redirection errors, variable assignment errors for |
| assignments preceding the command name, and so on. |
| |
| 24. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if a variable |
| assignment error occurs when no command name follows the assignment |
| statements. A variable assignment error occurs, for example, when |
| trying to assign a value to a readonly variable. |
| |
| 25. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if a variable |
| assignment error occurs in an assignment statement preceding a |
| special builtin, but not with any other simple command. |
| |
| 26. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if the |
| iteration variable in a 'for' statement or the selection variable |
| in a 'select' statement is a readonly variable. |
| |
| 27. Non-interactive shells exit if FILENAME in '.' FILENAME is not |
| found. |
| |
| 28. Non-interactive shells exit if a syntax error in an arithmetic |
| expansion results in an invalid expression. |
| |
| 29. Non-interactive shells exit if a parameter expansion error occurs. |
| |
| 30. Non-interactive shells exit if there is a syntax error in a script |
| read with the '.' or 'source' builtins, or in a string processed by |
| the 'eval' builtin. |
| |
| 31. While variable indirection is available, it may not be applied to |
| the '#' and '?' special parameters. |
| |
| 32. When expanding the '*' special parameter in a pattern context |
| where the expansion is double-quoted does not treat the '$*' as if |
| it were double-quoted. |
| |
| 33. Assignment statements preceding POSIX special builtins persist in |
| the shell environment after the builtin completes. |
| |
| 34. The 'command' builtin does not prevent builtins that take |
| assignment statements as arguments from expanding them as |
| assignment statements; when not in POSIX mode, assignment builtins |
| lose their assignment statement expansion properties when preceded |
| by 'command'. |
| |
| 35. The 'bg' builtin uses the required format to describe each job |
| placed in the background, which does not include an indication of |
| whether the job is the current or previous job. |
| |
| 36. The output of 'kill -l' prints all the signal names on a single |
| line, separated by spaces, without the 'SIG' prefix. |
| |
| 37. The 'kill' builtin does not accept signal names with a 'SIG' |
| prefix. |
| |
| 38. The 'export' and 'readonly' builtin commands display their output |
| in the format required by POSIX. |
| |
| 39. The 'trap' builtin displays signal names without the leading |
| 'SIG'. |
| |
| 40. The 'trap' builtin doesn't check the first argument for a possible |
| signal specification and revert the signal handling to the original |
| disposition if it is, unless that argument consists solely of |
| digits and is a valid signal number. If users want to reset the |
| handler for a given signal to the original disposition, they should |
| use '-' as the first argument. |
| |
| 41. 'trap -p' displays signals whose dispositions are set to SIG_DFL |
| and those that were ignored when the shell started. |
| |
| 42. The '.' and 'source' builtins do not search the current directory |
| for the filename argument if it is not found by searching 'PATH'. |
| |
| 43. Enabling POSIX mode has the effect of setting the |
| 'inherit_errexit' option, so subshells spawned to execute command |
| substitutions inherit the value of the '-e' option from the parent |
| shell. When the 'inherit_errexit' option is not enabled, Bash |
| clears the '-e' option in such subshells. |
| |
| 44. Enabling POSIX mode has the effect of setting the 'shift_verbose' |
| option, so numeric arguments to 'shift' that exceed the number of |
| positional parameters will result in an error message. |
| |
| 45. When the 'alias' builtin displays alias definitions, it does not |
| display them with a leading 'alias ' unless the '-p' option is |
| supplied. |
| |
| 46. When the 'set' builtin is invoked without options, it does not |
| display shell function names and definitions. |
| |
| 47. When the 'set' builtin is invoked without options, it displays |
| variable values without quotes, unless they contain shell |
| metacharacters, even if the result contains nonprinting characters. |
| |
| 48. When the 'cd' builtin is invoked in LOGICAL mode, and the pathname |
| constructed from '$PWD' and the directory name supplied as an |
| argument does not refer to an existing directory, 'cd' will fail |
| instead of falling back to PHYSICAL mode. |
| |
| 49. When the 'cd' builtin cannot change a directory because the length |
| of the pathname constructed from '$PWD' and the directory name |
| supplied as an argument exceeds PATH_MAX when all symbolic links |
| are expanded, 'cd' will fail instead of attempting to use only the |
| supplied directory name. |
| |
| 50. The 'pwd' builtin verifies that the value it prints is the same as |
| the current directory, even if it is not asked to check the file |
| system with the '-P' option. |
| |
| 51. When listing the history, the 'fc' builtin does not include an |
| indication of whether or not a history entry has been modified. |
| |
| 52. The default editor used by 'fc' is 'ed'. |
| |
| 53. The 'type' and 'command' builtins will not report a non-executable |
| file as having been found, though the shell will attempt to execute |
| such a file if it is the only so-named file found in '$PATH'. |
| |
| 54. The 'vi' editing mode will invoke the 'vi' editor directly when |
| the 'v' command is run, instead of checking '$VISUAL' and |
| '$EDITOR'. |
| |
| 55. When the 'xpg_echo' option is enabled, Bash does not attempt to |
| interpret any arguments to 'echo' as options. Each argument is |
| displayed, after escape characters are converted. |
| |
| 56. The 'ulimit' builtin uses a block size of 512 bytes for the '-c' |
| and '-f' options. |
| |
| 57. The arrival of 'SIGCHLD' when a trap is set on 'SIGCHLD' does not |
| interrupt the 'wait' builtin and cause it to return immediately. |
| The trap command is run once for each child that exits. |
| |
| 58. The 'read' builtin may be interrupted by a signal for which a trap |
| has been set. If Bash receives a trapped signal while executing |
| 'read', the trap handler executes and 'read' returns an exit status |
| greater than 128. |
| |
| 59. Bash removes an exited background process's status from the list |
| of such statuses after the 'wait' builtin is used to obtain it. |
| |
| There is other POSIX behavior that Bash does not implement by default |
| even when in POSIX mode. Specifically: |
| |
| 1. The 'fc' builtin checks '$EDITOR' as a program to edit history |
| entries if 'FCEDIT' is unset, rather than defaulting directly to |
| 'ed'. 'fc' uses 'ed' if 'EDITOR' is unset. |
| |
| 2. As noted above, Bash requires the 'xpg_echo' option to be enabled |
| for the 'echo' builtin to be fully conformant. |
| |
| Bash can be configured to be POSIX-conformant by default, by specifying |
| the '--enable-strict-posix-default' to 'configure' when building (*note |
| Optional Features::). |
| |