| Compatibility with previous versions |
| ==================================== |
| |
| This document details the incompatibilities between this version of bash, |
| bash-5.2, and the previous widely-available versions, bash-3.2 (which is |
| still the `standard' version for Mac OS X), 4.2/4.3 (which are still |
| standard on a few Linux distributions), and bash-4.4/bash-5.0/bash-5.1, |
| the current widely-available versions. These were discovered by users of |
| bash-2.x through 5.x, so this list is not comprehensive. Some of these |
| incompatibilities occur between the current version and versions 2.0 and |
| above. |
| |
| 1. Bash uses a new quoting syntax, $"...", to do locale-specific |
| string translation. Users who have relied on the (undocumented) |
| behavior of bash-1.14 will have to change their scripts. For |
| instance, if you are doing something like this to get the value of |
| a variable whose name is the value of a second variable: |
| |
| eval var2=$"$var1" |
| |
| you will have to change to a different syntax. |
| |
| This capability is directly supported by bash-2.0: |
| |
| var2=${!var1} |
| |
| This alternate syntax will work portably between bash-1.14 and bash-2.0: |
| |
| eval var2=\$${var1} |
| |
| 2. One of the bugs fixed in the YACC grammar tightens up the rules |
| concerning group commands ( {...} ). The `list' that composes the |
| body of the group command must be terminated by a newline or |
| semicolon. That's because the braces are reserved words, and are |
| recognized as such only when a reserved word is legal. This means |
| that while bash-1.14 accepted shell function definitions like this: |
| |
| foo() { : } |
| |
| bash-2.0 requires this: |
| |
| foo() { :; } |
| |
| This is also an issue for commands like this: |
| |
| mkdir dir || { echo 'could not mkdir' ; exit 1; } |
| |
| The syntax required by bash-2.0 is also accepted by bash-1.14. |
| |
| 3. The options to `bind' have changed to make them more consistent with |
| the rest of the bash builtins. If you are using `bind -d' to list |
| the readline key bindings in a form that can be re-read, use `bind -p' |
| instead. If you were using `bind -v' to list the key bindings, use |
| `bind -P' instead. |
| |
| 4. The `long' invocation options must now be prefixed by `--' instead |
| of `-'. (The old form is still accepted, for the time being.) |
| |
| 5. There was a bug in the version of readline distributed with bash-1.14 |
| that caused it to write badly-formatted key bindings when using |
| `bind -d'. The only key sequences that were affected are C-\ (which |
| should appear as \C-\\ in a key binding) and C-" (which should appear |
| as \C-\"). If these key sequences appear in your inputrc, as, for |
| example, |
| |
| "\C-\": self-insert |
| |
| they will need to be changed to something like the following: |
| |
| "\C-\\": self-insert |
| |
| 6. A number of people complained about having to use ESC to terminate an |
| incremental search, and asked for an alternate mechanism. Bash-2.03 |
| uses the value of the settable readline variable `isearch-terminators' |
| to decide which characters should terminate an incremental search. If |
| that variable has not been set, ESC and Control-J will terminate a |
| search. |
| |
| 7. Some variables have been removed: MAIL_WARNING, notify, history_control, |
| command_oriented_history, glob_dot_filenames, allow_null_glob_expansion, |
| nolinks, hostname_completion_file, noclobber, no_exit_on_failed_exec, and |
| cdable_vars. Most of them are now implemented with the new `shopt' |
| builtin; others were already implemented by `set'. Here is a list of |
| correspondences: |
| |
| MAIL_WARNING shopt mailwarn |
| notify set -o notify |
| history_control HISTCONTROL |
| command_oriented_history shopt cmdhist |
| glob_dot_filenames shopt dotglob |
| allow_null_glob_expansion shopt nullglob |
| nolinks set -o physical |
| hostname_completion_file HOSTFILE |
| noclobber set -o noclobber |
| no_exit_on_failed_exec shopt execfail |
| cdable_vars shopt cdable_vars |
| |
| 8. `ulimit' now sets both hard and soft limits and reports the soft limit |
| by default (when neither -H nor -S is specified). This is compatible |
| with versions of sh and ksh that implement `ulimit'. The bash-1.14 |
| behavior of, for example, |
| |
| ulimit -c 0 |
| |
| can be obtained with |
| |
| ulimit -S -c 0 |
| |
| It may be useful to define an alias: |
| |
| alias ulimit="ulimit -S" |
| |
| 9. Bash-2.01 uses a new quoting syntax, $'...' to do ANSI-C string |
| translation. Backslash-escaped characters in ... are expanded and |
| replaced as specified by the ANSI C standard. |
| |
| 10. The sourcing of startup files has changed somewhat. This is explained |
| more completely in the INVOCATION section of the manual page. |
| |
| A non-interactive shell not named `sh' and not in posix mode reads |
| and executes commands from the file named by $BASH_ENV. A |
| non-interactive shell started by `su' and not in posix mode will read |
| startup files. No other non-interactive shells read any startup files. |
| |
| An interactive shell started in posix mode reads and executes commands |
| from the file named by $ENV. |
| |
| 11. The <> redirection operator was changed to conform to the POSIX.2 spec. |
| In the absence of any file descriptor specification preceding the `<>', |
| file descriptor 0 is used. In bash-1.14, this was the behavior only |
| when in POSIX mode. The bash-1.14 behavior may be obtained with |
| |
| <>filename 1>&0 |
| |
| 12. The `alias' builtin now checks for invalid options and takes a `-p' |
| option to display output in POSIX mode. If you have old aliases beginning |
| with `-' or `+', you will have to add the `--' to the alias command |
| that declares them: |
| |
| alias -x='chmod a-x' --> alias -- -x='chmod a-x' |
| |
| 13. The behavior of range specificiers within bracket matching expressions |
| in the pattern matcher (e.g., [A-Z]) depends on the current locale, |
| specifically the value of the LC_COLLATE environment variable. Setting |
| this variable to C or POSIX will result in the traditional ASCII behavior |
| for range comparisons. If the locale is set to something else, e.g., |
| en_US (specified by the LANG or LC_ALL variables), collation order is |
| locale-dependent. For example, the en_US locale sorts the upper and |
| lower case letters like this: |
| |
| AaBb...Zz |
| |
| so a range specification like [A-Z] will match every letter except `z'. |
| Other locales collate like |
| |
| aAbBcC...zZ |
| |
| which means that [A-Z] matches every letter except `a'. |
| |
| The portable way to specify upper case letters is [:upper:] instead of |
| A-Z; lower case may be specified as [:lower:] instead of a-z. |
| |
| Look at the manual pages for setlocale(3), strcoll(3), and, if it is |
| present, locale(1). |
| |
| You can find your current locale information by running locale(1): |
| |
| caleb.ins.cwru.edu(2)$ locale |
| LANG=en_US |
| LC_CTYPE="en_US" |
| LC_NUMERIC="en_US" |
| LC_TIME="en_US" |
| LC_COLLATE="en_US" |
| LC_MONETARY="en_US" |
| LC_MESSAGES="en_US" |
| LC_ALL=en_US |
| |
| My advice is to put |
| |
| export LC_COLLATE=C |
| |
| into /etc/profile and inspect any shell scripts run from cron for |
| constructs like [A-Z]. This will prevent things like |
| |
| rm [A-Z]* |
| |
| from removing every file in the current directory except those beginning |
| with `z' and still allow individual users to change the collation order. |
| Users may put the above command into their own profiles as well, of course. |
| |
| 14. Bash versions up to 1.14.7 included an undocumented `-l' operator to |
| the `test/[' builtin. It was a unary operator that expanded to the |
| length of its string argument. This let you do things like |
| |
| test -l $variable -lt 20 |
| |
| for example. |
| |
| This was included for backwards compatibility with old versions of the |
| Bourne shell, which did not provide an easy way to obtain the length of |
| the value of a shell variable. |
| |
| This operator is not part of the POSIX standard, because one can (and |
| should) use ${#variable} to get the length of a variable's value. |
| Bash-2.x does not support it. |
| |
| 15. Bash no longer auto-exports the HOME, PATH, SHELL, TERM, HOSTNAME, |
| HOSTTYPE, MACHTYPE, or OSTYPE variables. If they appear in the initial |
| environment, the export attribute will be set, but if bash provides a |
| default value, they will remain local to the current shell. |
| |
| 16. Bash no longer initializes the FUNCNAME, GROUPS, or DIRSTACK variables |
| to have special behavior if they appear in the initial environment. |
| |
| 17. Bash no longer removes the export attribute from the SSH_CLIENT or |
| SSH2_CLIENT variables, and no longer attempts to discover whether or |
| not it has been invoked by sshd in order to run the startup files. |
| |
| 18. Bash no longer requires that the body of a function be a group command; |
| any compound command is accepted. |
| |
| 19. As of bash-3.0, the pattern substitution operators no longer perform |
| quote removal on the pattern before attempting the match. This is the |
| way the pattern removal functions behave, and is more consistent. |
| |
| 20. After bash-3.0 was released, I reimplemented tilde expansion, incorporating |
| it into the mainline word expansion code. This fixes the bug that caused |
| the results of tilde expansion to be re-expanded. There is one |
| incompatibility: a ${paramOPword} expansion within double quotes will not |
| perform tilde expansion on WORD. This is consistent with the other |
| expansions, and what POSIX specifies. |
| |
| 21. A number of variables have the integer attribute by default, so the += |
| assignment operator returns expected results: RANDOM, LINENO, MAILCHECK, |
| HISTCMD, OPTIND. |
| |
| 22. Bash-3.x is much stricter about $LINENO correctly reflecting the line |
| number in a script; assignments to LINENO have little effect. |
| |
| 23. By default, readline binds the terminal special characters to their |
| readline equivalents. As of bash-3.1/readline-5.1, this is optional and |
| controlled by the bind-tty-special-chars readline variable. |
| |
| 24. The \W prompt string expansion abbreviates $HOME as `~'. The previous |
| behavior is available with ${PWD##/*/}. |
| |
| 25. The arithmetic exponentiation operator is right-associative as of bash-3.1. |
| |
| 26. The rules concerning valid alias names are stricter, as per POSIX.2. |
| |
| 27. The Readline key binding functions now obey the convert-meta setting active |
| when the binding takes place, as the dispatch code does when characters |
| are read and processed. |
| |
| 28. The historical behavior of `trap' reverting signal disposition to the |
| original handling in the absence of a valid first argument is implemented |
| only if the first argument is a valid signal number. |
| |
| 29. In versions of bash after 3.1, the ${parameter//pattern/replacement} |
| expansion does not interpret `%' or `#' specially. Those anchors don't |
| have any real meaning when replacing every match. |
| |
| 30. Beginning with bash-3.1, the combination of posix mode and enabling the |
| `xpg_echo' option causes echo to ignore all options, not looking for `-n' |
| |
| 31. Beginning with bash-3.2, bash follows the Bourne-shell-style (and POSIX- |
| style) rules for parsing the contents of old-style backquoted command |
| substitutions. Previous versions of bash attempted to recursively parse |
| embedded quoted strings and shell constructs; bash-3.2 uses strict POSIX |
| rules to find the closing backquote and simply passes the contents of the |
| command substitution to a subshell for parsing and execution. |
| |
| 32. Beginning with bash-3.2, bash uses access(2) when executing primaries for |
| the test builtin and the [[ compound command, rather than looking at the |
| file permission bits obtained with stat(2). This obeys restrictions of |
| the file system (e.g., read-only or noexec mounts) not available via stat. |
| |
| 33. Bash-3.2 adopts the convention used by other string and pattern matching |
| operators for the `[[' compound command, and matches any quoted portion |
| of the right-hand-side argument to the =~ operator as a string rather |
| than a regular expression. |
| |
| 34. Bash-4.0 allows the behavior in the previous item to be modified using |
| the notion of a shell `compatibility level'. If the compat31 shopt |
| option is set, quoting the pattern has no special effect. |
| |
| 35. Bash-3.2 (patched) and Bash-4.0 fix a bug that leaves the shell in an |
| inconsistent internal state following an assignment error. One of the |
| changes means that compound commands or { ... } grouping commands are |
| aborted under some circumstances in which they previously were not. |
| This is what Posix specifies. |
| |
| 36. Bash-4.0 now allows process substitution constructs to pass unchanged |
| through brace expansion, so any expansion of the contents will have to be |
| separately specified, and each process substitution will have to be |
| separately entered. |
| |
| 37. Bash-4.0 now allows SIGCHLD to interrupt the wait builtin, as Posix |
| specifies, so the SIGCHLD trap is no longer always invoked once per |
| exiting child if you are using `wait' to wait for all children. As |
| of bash-4.2, this is the status quo only when in posix mode. |
| |
| 38. Since bash-4.0 now follows Posix rules for finding the closing delimiter |
| of a $() command substitution, it will not behave as previous versions |
| did, but will catch more syntax and parsing errors before spawning a |
| subshell to evaluate the command substitution. |
| |
| 39. The programmable completion code uses the same set of delimiting characters |
| as readline when breaking the command line into words, rather than the |
| set of shell metacharacters, so programmable completion and readline |
| should be more consistent. |
| |
| 40. When the read builtin times out, it attempts to assign any input read to |
| specified variables, which also causes variables to be set to the empty |
| string if there is not enough input. Previous versions discarded the |
| characters read. |
| |
| 41. Beginning with bash-4.0, when one of the commands in a pipeline is killed |
| by a SIGINT while executing a command list, the shell acts as if it |
| received the interrupt. This can be disabled by setting the compat31 or |
| compat32 shell options. |
| |
| 42. Bash-4.0 changes the handling of the set -e option so that the shell exits |
| if a pipeline fails (and not just if the last command in the failing |
| pipeline is a simple command). This is not as Posix specifies. There is |
| work underway to update this portion of the standard; the bash-4.0 |
| behavior attempts to capture the consensus at the time of release. |
| |
| 43. Bash-4.0 fixes a Posix mode bug that caused the . (source) builtin to |
| search the current directory for its filename argument, even if "." is |
| not in $PATH. Posix says that the shell shouldn't look in $PWD in this |
| case. |
| |
| 44. Bash-4.1 uses the current locale when comparing strings using the < and |
| > operators to the `[[' command. This can be reverted to the previous |
| behavior (ASCII collating and strcmp(3)) by setting one of the |
| `compatNN' shopt options, where NN is less than 41. |
| |
| 45. Bash-4.1 conforms to the current Posix specification for `set -u': |
| expansions of $@ and $* when there are no positional parameters do not |
| cause the shell to exit. |
| |
| 46. Bash-4.1 implements the current Posix specification for `set -e' and |
| exits when any command fails, not just a simple command or pipeline. |
| |
| 47. Command substitutions now remove the caller's trap strings when trap is |
| run to set a new trap in the subshell. Previous to bash-4.2, the old |
| trap strings persisted even though the actual signal handlers were reset. |
| |
| 48. When in Posix mode, a single quote is not treated specially in a |
| double-quoted ${...} expansion, unless the expansion operator is |
| # or % or the new `//', `^', or `,' expansions. In particular, it |
| does not define a new quoting context. This is from Posix interpretation |
| 221. |
| |
| 49. Posix mode shells no longer exit if a variable assignment error occurs |
| with an assignment preceding a command that is not a special builtin. |
| |
| 50. Bash-4.2 attempts to preserve what the user typed when performing word |
| completion, instead of, for instance, expanding shell variable |
| references to their value. |
| |
| 51. When in Posix mode, bash-4.2 exits if the filename supplied as an argument |
| to `.' is not found and the shell is not interactive. |
| |
| 52. When compiled for strict Posix compatibility, bash-4.3 does not enable |
| history expansion by default in interactive shells, since it results in |
| a non-conforming environment. |
| |
| 53. Bash-4.3 runs the replacement string in the pattern substitution word |
| expansion through quote removal. The code already treats quote |
| characters in the replacement string as special; if it treats them as |
| special, then quote removal should remove them. |
| |
| 54. Bash-4.4 no longer considers a reference to ${a[@]} or ${a[*]}, where `a' |
| is an array without any elements set, to be a reference to an unset |
| variable. This means that such a reference will not cause the shell to |
| exit when the `-u' option is enabled. |
| |
| 55. Bash-4.4 allows double quotes to quote the history expansion character (!) |
| when in Posix mode, since Posix specifies the effects of double quotes. |
| |
| 56. Bash-4.4 does not inherit $PS4 from the environment if running as root. |
| |
| 57. Bash-4.4 doesn't allow a `break' or `continue' in a function to affect |
| loop execution in the calling context. |
| |
| 58. Bash-4.4 no longer expands tildes in $PATH elements when in Posix mode. |
| |
| 59. Bash-4.4 does not attempt to perform a compound array assignment if an |
| argument to `declare' or a similar builtin expands to a word that looks |
| like a compound array assignment (e.g. declare w=$x where x='(foo)'). |
| |
| 60. Bash-5.0 only sets up BASH_ARGV and BASH_ARGC at startup if extended |
| debugging mode is active. The old behavior of unconditionally setting |
| BASH_ARGC and BASH_ARGV is available at compatibility levels less than |
| or equal to 44. |
| |
| 61. Bash-5.0 doesn't allow a `break' or `continue' in a subshell to attempt |
| to break or continue loop execution inherited from the calling context. |
| |
| 62. Bash-5.0 doesn't allow variable assignments preceding builtins like |
| export and readonly to modify variables with the same name in preceding |
| contexts (including the global context) unless the shell is in posix |
| mode, since export and readonly are special builtins. |
| |
| 63. Bash-5.1 changes the way posix-mode shells handle assignment statements |
| preceding shell function calls. Previous versions of POSIX specified that |
| such assignments would persist after the function returned; subsequent |
| versions of the standard removed that requirement (interpretation #654). |
| Bash-5.1 posix mode assignment statements preceding shell function calls |
| do not persist after the function returns. |
| |
| 64. Bash-5.1 reverts to the bash-4.4 treatment of pathname expansion of words |
| containing backslashes but no other special globbing characters. This comes |
| after a protracted discussion and a POSIX interpretation (#1234). |
| |
| 65. In bash-5.1, disabling posix mode attempts to restore the state of several |
| options that posix mode modifies to the state they had before enabling |
| posix mode. Previous versions restored these options to default values. |
| |
| 66. Bash-5.2 attempts to prevent double-expansion of array subscripts under |
| certain circumstances, especially arithmetic evaluation, by acting as if |
| the `assoc_expand_once' shell option were set. |
| |
| 67. The `unset' builtin in bash-5.2 treats array subscripts `@' and `*' |
| differently than previous versions, and differently depending on whether |
| the array is indexed or associative. |
| |
| |
| Shell Compatibility Level |
| ========================= |
| |
| Bash-4.0 introduced the concept of a `shell compatibility level', specified |
| as a set of options to the shopt builtin (compat31, compat32, compat40, |
| compat41, and so on). There is only one current compatibility level -- |
| each option is mutually exclusive. The compatibility level is intended to |
| allow users to select behavior from previous versions that is incompatible |
| with newer versions while they migrate scripts to use current features and |
| behavior. It's intended to be a temporary solution. |
| |
| This section does not mention behavior that is standard for a particular |
| version (e.g., setting compat32 means that quoting the rhs of the regexp |
| matching operator quotes special regexp characters in the word, which is |
| default behavior in bash-3.2 and above). |
| |
| If a user enables, say, compat32, it may affect the behavior of other |
| compatibility levels up to and including the current compatibility level. |
| The idea is that each compatibility level controls behavior that changed in |
| that version of bash, but that behavior may have been present in earlier |
| versions. For instance, the change to use locale-based comparisons with |
| the `[[' command came in bash-4.1, and earlier versions used ASCII-based |
| comparisons, so enabling compat32 will enable ASCII-based comparisons as |
| well. That granularity may not be sufficient for all uses, and as a result |
| users should employ compatibility levels carefully. Read the documentation |
| for a particular feature to find out the current behavior. |
| |
| Bash-4.3 introduced a new shell variable: BASH_COMPAT. The value assigned |
| to this variable (a decimal version number like 4.2, or an integer |
| corresponding to the compatNN option, like 42) determines the compatibility |
| level. |
| |
| Starting with bash-4.4, bash has begun deprecating older compatibility |
| levels. Eventually, the options will be removed in favor of the |
| BASH_COMPAT variable. |
| |
| Bash-5.0 is the final version for which there will be an individual shopt |
| option for the previous version. Users should use the BASH_COMPAT variable |
| on bash-5.0 and later versions. |
| |
| The following table describes the behavior changes controlled by each |
| compatibility level setting. The `compatNN' tag is used as shorthand for |
| setting the compatibility level to NN using one of the following |
| mechanisms. For versions prior to bash-5.0, the compatibility level may be |
| set using the corresponding compatNN shopt option. For bash-4.3 and later |
| versions, the BASH_COMPAT variable is preferred, and it is required for |
| bash-5.1 and later versions. |
| |
| compat31 |
| - the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current |
| locale when comparing strings; they use ASCII ordering |
| - quoting the rhs of the [[ command's regexp matching operator (=~) |
| has no special effect |
| |
| compat32 |
| - the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current |
| locale when comparing strings; they use ASCII ordering |
| - interrupting a command list such as "a ; b ; c" causes the execution |
| of the next command in the list (in bash-4.0 and later versions, |
| the shell acts as if it received the interrupt, so interrupting |
| one command in a list aborts the execution of the entire list) |
| |
| compat40 |
| - the < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider the current |
| locale when comparing strings; they use ASCII ordering. |
| Bash versions prior to bash-4.1 use ASCII collation and strcmp(3); |
| bash-4.1 and later use the current locale's collation sequence and |
| strcoll(3). |
| |
| compat41 |
| - in posix mode, `time' may be followed by options and still be |
| recognized as a reserved word (this is POSIX interpretation 267) |
| - in posix mode, the parser requires that an even number of single |
| quotes occur in the `word' portion of a double-quoted ${...} |
| parameter expansion and treats them specially, so that characters |
| within the single quotes are considered quoted (this is POSIX |
| interpretation 221) |
| |
| compat42 |
| - the replacement string in double-quoted pattern substitution is not |
| run through quote removal, as it is in versions after bash-4.2 |
| - in posix mode, single quotes are considered special when expanding |
| the `word' portion of a double-quoted ${...} parameter expansion |
| and can be used to quote a closing brace or other special character |
| (this is part of POSIX interpretation 221); in later versions, |
| single quotes are not special within double-quoted word expansions |
| |
| compat43 |
| - the shell does not print a warning message if an attempt is made to |
| use a quoted compound assignment as an argument to declare |
| (declare -a foo='(1 2)'). Later versions warn that this usage is |
| deprecated. |
| - word expansion errors are considered non-fatal errors that cause the |
| current command to fail, even in posix mode (the default behavior is |
| to make them fatal errors that cause the shell to exit) |
| - when executing a shell function, the loop state (while/until/etc.) |
| is not reset, so `break' or `continue' in that function will break |
| or continue loops in the calling context. Bash-4.4 and later reset |
| the loop state to prevent this |
| |
| compat44 |
| - the shell sets up the values used by BASH_ARGV and BASH_ARGC so |
| they can expand to the shell's positional parameters even if extended |
| debug mode is not enabled |
| - a subshell inherits loops from its parent context, so `break' |
| or `continue' will cause the subshell to exit. Bash-5.0 and later |
| reset the loop state to prevent the exit |
| - variable assignments preceding builtins like export and readonly |
| that set attributes continue to affect variables with the same |
| name in the calling environment even if the shell is not in posix |
| mode |
| |
| compat50 (set using BASH_COMPAT) |
| - Bash-5.1 changed the way $RANDOM is generated to introduce slightly |
| more randomness. If the shell compatibility level is set to 50 or |
| lower, it reverts to the method from bash-5.0 and previous versions, |
| so seeding the random number generator by assigning a value to |
| RANDOM will produce the same sequence as in bash-5.0 |
| - If the command hash table is empty, bash versions prior to bash-5.1 |
| printed an informational message to that effect even when writing |
| output in a format that can be reused as input (-l). Bash-5.1 |
| suppresses that message if -l is supplied |
| - Bash-5.1 and later use pipes for here-documents and here-strings if |
| they are smaller than the pipe capacity. If the shell compatibility |
| level is set to 50 or lower, it reverts to using temporary files. |
| |
| compat51 (set using BASH_COMPAT) |
| - The `unset' builtin will unset the array a given an argument like |
| `a[@]'. Bash-5.2 will unset an element with key `@' (associative |
| arrays) or remove all the elements without unsetting the array |
| (indexed arrays) |
| - arithmetic commands ( ((...)) ) and the expressions in an arithmetic |
| for statement can be expanded more than once |
| - expressions used as arguments to arithmetic operators in the [[ |
| conditional command can be expanded more than once |
| - indexed and associative array subscripts used as arguments to the |
| operators in the [[ conditional command (e.g., `[[ -v') can be |
| expanded more than once. Bash-5.2 behaves as if the |
| `assoc_expand_once' option were enabled. |
| - the expressions in substring parameter brace expansion can be |
| expanded more than once |
| - the expressions in the $(( ... )) word expansion can be expanded |
| more than once |
| - arithmetic expressions used as indexed array subscripts can be |
| expanded more than once; |
| - `test -v', when given an argument of A[@], where A is an existing |
| associative array, will return true if the array has any set |
| elements. Bash-5.2 will look for a key named `@'; |
| - the ${param[:]=value} word expansion will return VALUE, before any |
| variable-specific transformations have been performed (e.g., |
| converting to lowercase). Bash-5.2 will return the final value |
| assigned to the variable, as POSIX specifies; |
| - Parsing command substitutions will act as if extended glob is |
| enabled, so that parsing a command substitution containing an extglob |
| pattern (say, as part of a shell function) will not fail. This |
| assumes the intent is to enable extglob before the command is |
| executed and word expansions are performed. It will fail at word |
| expansion time if extglob hasn't been enabled by the time the |
| command is executed. |
| |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, |
| are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright |
| notice and this notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, |
| without any warranty. |