Questions tagged [bash]

This tag is for questions about scripts written for the Bash command shell. For shell scripts with syntax or other errors, please check them at https://shellcheck.net before posting them here. Questions about the interactive use of Bash are more likely to be on-topic on Unix & Linux Stack Exchange or Super User than on Stack Overflow.

About Bash

There are a variety of interpreters that receive commands either interactively or as a sequence of commands from a file. The Bourne-again shell (Bash) is one such interpreter. Bash implements the standard Bourne Shell (sh), and offers numerous additions.

From the Free Software Foundation's Bash page:

Bash is an sh-compatible shell that incorporates useful features from the KornShell (ksh) and C shell (csh). It is intended to conform to the IEEE POSIX P1003.2/ISO 9945.2 Shell and Tools standard. It offers functional improvements over sh for both programming and interactive use. In addition, most sh scripts can be run by Bash without modification.

Read the Bash manual for technical details.

Bash was written by Brian Fox and first released in 1989. It is the default shell in many Linux distributions; it is available on most modern operating systems, and has been ported to Windows 10.

A note regarding versions

As of September 2022, the most recent version of bash is 5.2, although you may be using an older version depending on your operating system and which updates to bash have been installed. Most Linux installations should be using something in the 4.x family. macOS (formerly Mac OS X) only provides version 3.2 due to licensing issues.

Be sure to note in your question what version of bash you are using. This will alert potential answerers to what features are available to you, as well as which bugs may need to be worked around.

You can determine which version of bash you are using by running bash --version or checking the value of the BASH_VERSION shell variable.

Without an explicit version, an answerer may well assume you are using at least version 4.2 (it's been available for over 10 years). Questions tagged imply version 3.2 unless otherwise stated.

A Brief Release History

Based on downloads available from http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/bash/

Version Release Date
3.2 2006-10-11
4.0 2009-02-20
4.1 2009-12-31
4.2 2011-02-13
4.3 2014-02-26
4.4 2016-09-15
5.0 2019-01-07
5.1 2020-12-06
5.2 2022-09-26

Additionally, all versions for bash from 2.0 and later received an important patch-level release to address the Shellshock vulnerability in September 2014.

Before asking about problematic code

To help the kind people who assist you, to ensure that future readers can benefit from your question, and to help ensure your question is voted up as useful for that lovely karma, please make your question as simple and universal as possible:

  1. Check whether your script or data has DOS style end-of-line characters

    • Use cat -v yourfile or echo "$yourvariable" | cat -v .

      DOS carriage returns will show up as ^M after each line.

      If you find them, delete them using dos2unix (a.k.a. fromdos) or tr -d '\r'

  2. Make sure you run the script with bash, not sh

    • The first line in the script must be #!/bin/bash or #!/usr/bin/env bash.

      It must not be #!/bin/sh even if your system's /bin/sh is a symlink to /bin/bash

    • Run the script with ./yourscript or bash yourscript.

      Do not run it with sh yourscript.

      This applies even when sh is a symlink to bash.

  3. Find a small, self-contained example.

    • Don't include sections and commands unrelated to your problem.
    • Avoid complex commands that just serve to produce a value (include the value directly).
    • Avoid relying on external files. Create the files on the fly, include the data directly, or post a small example of a file in your question.
  4. Test your example. Make sure it runs and still shows the problem. Do not brush this off.

    • Reformatting for clarity often sidesteps pitfalls related to spacing and naming.
    • Refactoring for simplicity often sidesteps pitfalls related to subshells.
    • Mocking out files and data often sidesteps problems related to special characters.
    • Hours spent trying multiple things often leads to posting code from one version and errors from another.
  5. Check the example for common problems

    • Run your example through shellcheck or the online ShellCheck service to automatically check for common mistakes.
    • Browse Bash pitfalls and Bash beginner's mistakes as well as the Popular Questions section below for checklists of common issues.
    • Check your data for special characters, using cat -v yourfile or cat -v <<< "$yourvar". Be especially careful with carriage returns (shown as ^M).
  6. Please avoid tagging questions that are solely about external commands. The bash tag should be reserved for Bash-related problems, not any CLI problem you might have.

How to turn a bad script into a good question

For example, let's say you have a script for alerting you when a server is idle, but it keeps alerting even when the machine is not idle:

# Avoid code like this when asking about a problem
# It has irrelevant code and external dependencies, and is hard to read and run

while true
do
  load=$(wget -O - "http://$1/load.php" | grep "^load:" | cut -d: -f 2)
  if [[ $load=="0" ]]
  then
    mailx -s "System is idle" user@example.com <<< "The server is idle"
    break
  else
    echo "Waiting..."
    sleep 60
  fi
done
  1. The problem still occurs without the loop: Remove the loop from your question.
  2. The problem still occurs if you skip asking the server: Hard code the response (e.g. load=42)
  3. The problem still occurs without emailing: Use echo "Why does this run?"
  4. The problem still occurs when removing the else branch. Shorten it

We're now left with this small, self-contained example:

# Prefer code like this when asking about a problem
# It's small, simple and self contained, making it easy to read and run.

load=42
if [[ $load=="0" ]]
then
  echo "Why does this run?"
fi

Thanks for making your question simple and useful! Enjoy your upvotes!

(However, note that this example is simple to compare against the relevant entry in Bash pitfalls and the error is automatically caught by shellcheck, so now you don't actually need to ask!)

Popular Questions

Some frequently asked Bash questions include the following.

Basic Syntax and Common Newbie Problems

Some fundamentals of Bash are surprising even to veterans from other programming languages.

How Do I ...?

Why Does ...?

Common Tasks

These questions are not really specific to Bash, but frequent enough in this tag that they deserve to be included here.

Meta

Books and Resources

Additional reading materials include:

Tools

  • shellcheck - a static analysis tool that detects common mistakes
  • on-line ShellCheck, a web server providing shellcheck (useful if you've not yet installed the program)
  • https://explainshell.com/ can pick apart many command lines and explain what the elements mean (notice that you can sometimes click on a result to have it picked apart further)

Chat

The Stack Overflow bash chat is useful for coordinating work within this tag, and perhaps occasionally for getting quick help (though no guarantees can be made; attendance is spotty).

154003 questions
84
votes
6 answers

Mutable list or array structure in Bash? How can I easily append to it?

I'm trying to collect string values in a bash script. What's the simplest way that I can append string values to a list or array structure such that I can echo them out at the end?
Joe
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84
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11 answers

LINES and COLUMNS environmental variables lost in a script

Consider the following: me@mine:~$ cat a.sh #!/bin/bash echo "Lines: " $LINES echo "Columns: " $COLUMNS me@mine:~$ ./a.sh Lines: Columns: me@mine:~$ echo "Lines: " $LINES Lines: 52 me@mine:~$ echo "Columns: " $COLUMNS Columns: 157 me@mine:~$…
Davide
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84
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10 answers

How can I list the files in a zip archive without decompressing it?

How can I get the equivalent of an ls of a .zip file (not gzip), without decompressing it, from the command shell? That is, how can I list the different files compressed within my .zip archive?
einpoklum
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84
votes
5 answers

How do you call a function defined in .bashrc from the shell?

In my .bashrc, I have a function called hello: function hello() { echo "Hello, $1!" } I want to be able to invoke hello() from the shell as follows: $ hello Lloyd And get the output: > Hello, Lloyd! What's the trick? (The real function I have…
les2
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84
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11 answers

Shell script to capture Process ID and kill it if exist

I tried this code and it is not working #!/bin/sh #Find the Process ID for syncapp running instance PID=`ps -ef | grep syncapp 'awk {print $2}'` if [[ -z "$PID" ]] then Kill -9 PID fi It is showing a error near awk. Any suggestions please.
user1597811
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84
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18 answers

Convert seconds to hours, minutes, seconds

How can I convert seconds to hours, minutes and seconds? show_time() { ????? } show_time 36 # 00:00:36 show_time 1036 # 00:17:26 show_time 91925 # 25:32:05
Charlie
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84
votes
4 answers

Difference between 'if -e' and 'if -f'

There are two switches for the if condition which check for a file: -e and -f. What is the difference between those two?
Ahatius
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84
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10 answers

Open an .html file with default browser using Bash on Mac

So, this is what I need : Let's say I have an index.html file. How do I tell the terminal to open it using the default browser? (Using AppleScript, BASH,...?)
DorBB
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83
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14 answers

How do I get bc(1) to print the leading zero?

I do something like the following in a Makefile: echo "0.1 + 0.1" | bc (in the real file the numbers are dynamic, of course) It prints .2 but I want it to print 0.2. I would like to do this without resorting to sed but I can't seem to find how to…
rwos
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83
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5 answers

Parallel wget in Bash

I am getting a bunch of relatively small pages from a website and was wondering if I could somehow do it in parallel in Bash. Currently my code looks like this, but it takes a while to execute (I think what is slowing me down is the latency in the…
Jonathon Vandezande
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83
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7 answers

CommandNotFoundError: Your shell has not been properly configured to use 'conda activate'

I'm trying to create a virtual environment using conda on Google Colaboratory. However, I can't activate with the following error. CommandNotFoundError: Your shell has not been properly configured to use 'conda activate'. To initialize your…
Leo.H
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83
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14 answers

How to Fix Permissions on Home-brew on MacOS High Sierra

When I tried to install python onto homebrew it downloaded it and then an error message popped up at the end that stopped it from completing. When I try to do it again it asks me to do: $ brew link python After entering that the same error message…
Jonathan
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83
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3 answers

What does the --ntasks or -n tasks does in SLURM?

I was using SLURM to use some computing cluster and it had the -ntasks or -n. I have obviously read the documentation for it (http://slurm.schedmd.com/sbatch.html): sbatch does not launch tasks, it requests an allocation of resources and submits…
Charlie Parker
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83
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4 answers

sed plus sign doesn't work

I'm trying to replace /./ or /././ or /./././ to / only in bash script. I've managed to create regex for sed but it doesn't work. variable="something/./././" variable=$(echo $variable | sed "s/\/(\.\/)+/\//g") echo $variable # this should output…
J33nn
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83
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4 answers

How to ssh from within a bash script?

I am trying to create an ssh connection and do some things on the remote server from within the script. However the terminal prompts me for a password, then opens the connection in the terminal window instead of the script. The commands don't get…
Andrew
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