CSH(1) | General Commands Manual | CSH(1) |
csh
— a shell
(command interpreter) with C-like syntax
csh |
[-bcefimnstVvXx ] [argument
...] |
csh |
[-l ] |
csh
is a command language interpreter
incorporating a history mechanism (see
History substitutions), job
control facilities (see Jobs), interactive
file name and user name completion (see
File name completion), and a
C-like syntax. It is used both as an interactive login shell and a shell
script command processor.
If the first argument (argument 0) to the shell is a dash
(‘-’), then this is a login shell. A login shell also can be
specified by invoking the shell with the -l
flag as
the only argument.
The rest of the flag arguments are interpreted as follows:
-b
-c
-e
-f
HOME
is not set, fast startup is the default.-i
-l
-l
is the only flag specified).-m
-n
exit
will not work.-s
-t
\
’) may be used to escape the
newline at the end of this line and continue onto another line.-V
-v
-X
-x
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 commands to be
executed. The shell opens this file, and saves its name for possible
resubstitution by ‘$0’. Since many systems use either the
standard version 6 or version 7 shells whose shell scripts are not
compatible with this shell, the shell will execute such a
“standard” shell if the first character of a script is not a
hash mark (‘#
’); i.e., if the script
does not start with a comment. Remaining arguments initialize the variable
argv.
An instance of csh
begins by executing
commands from the file /etc/csh.cshrc and, if this
is a login shell, /etc/csh.login. It then executes
commands from .cshrc in the home directory of the
invoker, and, if this is a login shell, the file
.login in the same location. It is typical for users
on CRTs to put the command stty crt
in their
.login file, and to also invoke
tset(1) there.
In the normal case, the shell will begin reading commands from the terminal, prompting with ‘% .’ Processing of arguments and the use of the shell to process files containing command scripts will be described later.
The shell repeatedly performs the following actions: a line of command input is read and broken into “words”. This sequence of words is placed on the command history list and parsed. Finally each command in the current line is executed.
When a login shell terminates it executes commands from the files .logout in the user's home directory and /etc/csh.logout.
The shell splits input lines into words at blanks and tabs with
the following exceptions. The characters
‘&
’,
‘|
’,
‘;
’,
‘<
’,
‘>
’,
‘(
’, and
‘)
’ form separate words. If doubled in
‘&&
’,
‘||
’,
‘<<
’, or
‘>>
’, these pairs form single
words. These parser metacharacters may be made part of other words, or have
their special meaning prevented, by preceding them with a backslash
(‘\
’). A newline preceded by a
‘\
’ is equivalent to a blank.
Strings enclosed in matched pairs of quotations,
‘'
’,
‘`
’, or
‘"
’, form parts of a word;
metacharacters in these strings, including blanks and tabs, do not form
separate words. These quotations have semantics to be described later.
Within pairs of ‘'
’ or
‘"
’ characters, a newline
preceded by a ‘\
’ gives a true newline
character.
When the shell's input is not a terminal, the character
‘#
’ introduces a comment that
continues to the end of the input line. This special meaning is prevented
when preceded by ‘\
’ and in quotations
using ‘`
’,
‘'
’, and
‘"
’.
A simple command is a sequence of words, the first of which
specifies the command to be executed. A simple command or a sequence of
simple commands separated by ‘|
’
characters forms a pipeline. The output of each command in a pipeline is
connected to the input of the next. Sequences of pipelines may be separated
by ‘;
’, and are then executed
sequentially. A sequence of pipelines may be executed without immediately
waiting for it to terminate by following it with a
‘&
’.
Any of the above may be placed in
‘(
’
‘)
’ to form a simple command (that may
be a component of a pipeline, for example). It is also possible to separate
pipelines with ‘||
’ or
‘&&
’ showing, as in the C
language, that the second is to be executed only if the first fails or
succeeds, respectively. (See Expressions.)
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 that
looks like:
showing 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 ^Z
(control-Z), which sends a
SIGSTOP
signal to the current job. The shell will
then normally show that the job has been “Stopped”, and print
another prompt. You can then manipulate the state of this job, putting it in
the background
with the bg
command, or run some other commands and
eventually bring the job back into the
foreground
with the fg
command. A ^Z
takes effect immediately and is like an interrupt in that pending output and
unread input are discarded when it is typed. There is another special key
^Y
that does not generate a
SIGSTOP
signal until a program attempts to
read(2) it. This request can usefully be typed ahead when
you have prepared some commands for a job that you wish to stop after it has
read them.
A job being run in the background will stop 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 number 1 back into the
foreground. Similarly, saying %1 &
resumes job
number 1 in the background. Jobs can also be named by prefixes of the string
typed in to start them, if these prefixes are unambiguous; thus
%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
, which specifies 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 about jobs, the current job is marked with a
‘+
’ and the previous job with a
‘-
’. The abbreviation
‘%+
’ refers to the current job and
‘%-
’ refers to the previous job. For
close analogy with the syntax of the history
mechanism (described below), ‘%%
’ is
also a synonym for the current job.
The job control mechanism requires that the
stty(1) option new
be set. It is
an artifact from a
new implementation of
the tty driver that allows generation of interrupt characters from the
keyboard to tell jobs to stop. See stty(1) for details on
setting options in the new tty driver.
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 just 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
that 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 try to
exit again immediately, the shell will not warn you a second time, and the
suspended jobs will be terminated.
When the file name completion feature is enabled by setting the
shell variable filec (see
set
), csh
will interactively
complete file names and user names from unique prefixes when they are input
from the terminal followed by the escape character (the escape key, or
control-[). For example, if the current directory looks like
DSC.OLD bin cmd lib xmpl.c DSC.NEW chaosnet cmtest mail xmpl.o bench class dev mbox xmpl.out
and the input is
% vi ch<escape>
csh
will complete the prefix
“ch” to the only matching file name “chaosnet”,
changing the input line to
% vi chaosnet
However, given
% vi D<escape>
csh
will only expand the input to
% vi DSC.
and will sound the terminal bell to indicate that the expansion is
incomplete, since there are two file names matching the prefix
‘D
’.
If a partial file name is followed by the end-of-file character
(usually control-D), then, instead of completing the name,
csh
will list all file names matching the prefix.
For example, the input
% vi D<control-D>
causes all files beginning with
‘D
’ to be listed:
DSC.NEW DSC.OLD
while the input line remains unchanged.
The same system of escape and end-of-file can also be used to
expand partial user names, if the word to be completed (or listed) begins
with the tilde character (‘~
’). For
example, typing
cd ~ro<escape>
may produce the expansion
cd ~root
The use of the terminal bell to signal errors or multiple matches can be inhibited by setting the variable nobeep.
Normally, all files in the particular directory are candidates for name completion. Files with certain suffixes can be excluded from consideration by setting the variable fignore to the list of suffixes to be ignored. Thus, if fignore is set by the command
% set fignore = (.o
.out)
then typing
% vi x<escape>
would result in the completion to
% vi xmpl.c
ignoring the files "xmpl.o" and "xmpl.out". However, if the only completion possible requires not ignoring these suffixes, then they are not ignored. In addition, fignore does not affect the listing of file names by control-D. All files are listed regardless of their suffixes.
We now describe the various transformations the shell performs on the input in the order in which they occur.
History substitutions place words from previous command input as
portions of new commands, 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 typing and a high degree of
confidence. History substitutions begin with the character
‘!
’ and may begin
anywhere
in the input stream (with the proviso that they do not
nest). This ‘!
’ may be preceded by a
‘\
’ to prevent its special meaning;
for convenience, a ‘!
’ character 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.) Any input line that
contains history substitution is echoed on the terminal before it is
executed as it would have been typed without history substitution.
Commands input from the terminal that consist of one or more words are saved on the history list. The history substitutions reintroduce sequences of words from these saved commands into the input stream. The size of the history list is controlled by the history variable; the previous command is always retained, regardless of the value of the history variable. Commands are numbered sequentially from 1.
For definiteness, consider the following output from the
history
command:
09 write michael 10 ex write.c 11 cat oldwrite.c 12 diff *write.c
The commands are shown with their event numbers. It is not usually
necessary to use event numbers, but the current event number can be made
part of the prompt by placing a ‘!
’ in
the prompt string.
With the current event 13 we can refer to previous
events by event number ‘!11
’,
relatively as in ‘!-2
’ (referring to
the same event), by a prefix of a command word as in
‘!d
’ for event 12 or
‘!wri
’ for event 9, or by a string
contained in a word in the command as in
‘!?mic?
’ also referring to event 9.
These forms, without further change, simply reintroduce the words of the
specified events, each separated by a single blank. As a special case,
‘!!
’ refers to the previous command;
thus ‘!!
’ alone is a
redo.
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:
1
’0-y
’^-$
’, or nothing if
only 1 word in eventx-$
’x*
’ but omitting word
‘$
’The ‘:
’ separating the event
specification from the word designator can be omitted if the argument
selector begins with a ‘^
’,
‘$
’,
‘*
’,
‘-
’, or
‘%
’. After the optional word
designator, a sequence of modifiers can be placed, each preceded by a
‘:
’. The following modifiers are
defined:
.xxx
’ component,
leaving the root name..xxx
’
part.g&
’.g
’ to apply a substitution
globally.q
’, but break into words at
blanks, tabs, and newlines.Unless preceded by a ‘g
’ the
change is applied only to the first modifiable word. With substitutions, it
is an error for no word to be applicable.
The left-hand side of substitutions are not regular expressions in
the sense of the editors, but instead strings. Any character may be used as
the delimiter in place of ‘/
’; a
‘\
’ quotes the delimiter into the
l and r strings. The character
‘&
’ in the right-hand side is
replaced by the text from the left. A
‘\
’ also quotes
‘&
’. A
NULL
l
(‘//
’) uses the previous string either
from an l or from a contextual scan string
s in
‘!?s\?
’. The
trailing delimiter in the substitution may be omitted if a newline follows
immediately as may the trailing ‘?
’ in
a contextual scan.
A history reference may be given without an event specification;
e.g., ‘!$
’. Here, the reference is to
the previous command unless a previous history reference occurred on the
same line in which case this form repeats the previous reference. Thus
“!?foo?^ !$” gives the first and last arguments from the
command matching “?foo?”.
A special abbreviation of a history reference occurs when the
first non-blank character of an input line is a
‘^
’. This is equivalent to
“!:s^” providing a convenient shorthand for substitutions on
the text of the previous line. Thus ^lb^lib
fixes
the spelling of “lib” in the previous command. Finally, a
history substitution may be surrounded with
‘{
’ and
‘}
’ if necessary to insulate it from
the characters that follow. Thus, after ls -ld ~paul
we might do !{l}a
to do ls -ld
~paula
, while !la
would look for a command
starting with “la”.
The quotation of strings by
‘'
’ and
‘"
’ can be used to prevent all or
some of the remaining substitutions. Strings enclosed in
‘'
’ are prevented from any further
interpretation. Strings enclosed in
‘"
’ may be expanded as described
below.
In both cases the resulting text becomes (all or part
of) a single word; only in one special case (see
Command
Substitution below) does a
‘"
’ quoted string yield parts of
more than one word; ‘'
’ quoted strings
never do.
The shell maintains a list of aliases that can be established,
displayed and modified by the alias
and
unalias
commands. After a command line is scanned,
it is parsed into distinct commands and the first word of each command,
left-to-right, is checked to see if it has an alias. If it does, then the
text that is the alias for that command is reread with the history mechanism
available as though that command were the previous input line. The resulting
words replace the command and argument list. If no reference is made to the
history list, then the argument list is left unchanged.
Thus if the alias for “ls” is “ls -l”,
the command ls /usr
would map to ls
-l /usr
, the argument list here being undisturbed. Similarly, if the
alias for “lookup” was “grep !^ /etc/passwd”
then lookup bill
would map to grep
bill /etc/passwd
.
If an alias is found, the word transformation of the input text is performed and the aliasing process begins again on the reformed input line. Looping is prevented if the first word of the new text is the same as the old by flagging it to prevent further aliasing. Other loops are detected and cause an error.
Note that the mechanism allows aliases to introduce parser
metasyntax. Thus, we can alias print 'pr \!* | lpr'
to make a command that pr
's its arguments to the
line printer.
The shell maintains a set of variables, each of which has as value a list of zero or more words. Some of these 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.
The values of variables may be displayed and changed by using the
set
and unset
commands. Of
the variables referred to by the shell a number 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 that causes
command input to be echoed. The setting of this variable results from the
-v
command-line option.
Other operations treat variables numerically. The
@
command permits numeric calculations 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 additional words of multiword 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 double quotes
(`"'), where it
always occurs, and
within single quotes (`''), where it
never
occurs. Strings quoted by backticks (` `) are interpreted 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 variable 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 substitution 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
substitution.
The following metasequences are provided for introducing variable values into the shell input. Except as noted, it is an error to reference a variable that is not set.
:
’ modifiers and the other forms
given below are not available here).$
’ substitution and may consist of
a single number or two numbers separated by a
‘-
’. The first word of a variable's
value is numbered ‘1
’. If the first
number of a range is omitted it defaults to
‘1
’. If the last number of a range
is omitted it defaults to ‘$#name
’.
The selector ‘*
’ selects all words.
It is not an error for a range to be empty if the second argument is
omitted or in range.The modifiers ‘:e
’,
‘:h
’,
‘:t
’,
‘:r
’,
‘:q
’, and
‘:x
’ may be applied to the
substitutions above as may ‘:gh
’,
‘:gt
’, and
‘:gr
’. If braces
‘{
’
‘}
’ appear in the command form then
the modifiers must appear within the braces. The current implementation
allows only one ‘:
’ modifier on each
‘$
’ expansion.
The following substitutions may not be modified with
‘:
’ modifiers.
1
’ if the current input
filename is known, ‘0
’ if it is
not.The remaining substitutions, command and filename substitution, are applied selectively to the arguments of built-in commands. By selectively, we mean that portions of expressions which are not evaluated are not subjected to these expansions. For commands that 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 is shown by a command enclosed in
‘`
’. The output from such a command is
normally broken into separate words at blanks, tabs, and newlines, with null
words being discarded; this text then replaces the original string. Within
double quotes (`"'), only newlines force new words; blanks and tabs are
preserved.
In any case, the single final newline does not force a new word. Note that it is thus possible for a command substitution to yield only part of a word, even if the command outputs a complete line.
If a word contains any of the characters
‘*
’,
‘?
’,
‘[
’, or
‘{
’, or begins with the character
‘~
’, then that word is a candidate for
filename substitution, also known as “globbing”. This word is
then regarded as a pattern, and replaced with an alphabetically sorted list
of file names that match the pattern. In a list of words specifying filename
substitution it is an error for no pattern to match an existing file name,
but it is not required for each pattern to match. Only the metacharacters
‘*
’,
‘?
’, and
‘[
’ imply pattern matching, the
characters ‘~
’ and
‘{
’ being more akin to
abbreviations.
In matching filenames, the character
‘.
’ at the beginning of a filename or
immediately 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 (inclusive). Within
“[...]”, the name of a
character class
enclosed in ‘[:’ and ‘:]’ stands for the list of
all characters belonging to that class. Supported character classes:
alnum |
cntrl | lower | space |
alpha |
digit | upper | |
blank |
graph | punct | xdigit |
These match characters using the macros specified in ctype(3). A character class may not be used as an endpoint of a range.
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 variable
home. 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
character other than a letter or ‘/
’,
or does not appear at the beginning of a word, it is left undisturbed.
The metanotation “a{b,c,d}e” is a shorthand for
“abe ace ade”. Left to right order is preserved, with results
of matches being sorted separately at a low level to preserve this order.
This construct may be nested. Thus, “~source/s1/{oldls,ls}.c”
expands to “/usr/source/s1/oldls.c /usr/source/s1/ls.c”
without chance of error if the home directory for “source” is
“/usr/source”. Similarly “../{memo,*box}” might
expand to “../memo ../box ../mbox”. (Note that
“memo” was not sorted with the results of the match to
“*box”.) As a special case
‘{
’,
‘}
’, and
‘{}
’ are passed undisturbed.
The standard input and the standard output of a command may be redirected with the following syntax:
\
’,
‘"
’,
‘'
’ or
‘`
’ appears in
word, variable and command substitution is performed
on the intervening lines, allowing
‘\
’ to quote
‘$
’,
‘\
’ and
‘`
’. Commands that 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 that is given to the command as its standard input.If the 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. Here, the
‘!
’ forms can be used to suppress
this check.
The forms involving
‘&
’ route the standard error
output into the specified file as well as the standard output.
name is expanded in the same way as
‘<
’ input filenames are.
>
’ but places output at the end
of the file. If the variable noclobber is set, then
it is an error for the file not to exist unless one of the
‘!
’ forms is given. Otherwise
similar to ‘>
’.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;
instead 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 modified to be the empty file
/dev/null; instead the standard input remains as the
original standard 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
above).
The standard error output may be directed through a pipe with the
standard output. Simply use the form
‘|&
’ instead of just
‘|
’.
Several of the built-in commands (to be described later) take
expressions, in which the operators are similar to those of C, with the same
precedence, but with the
opposite
grouping: right to left. These expressions appear in the
@
, exit
,
if
, and while
commands. The
following operators are available:
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 pattern (containing, e.g., *'s, ?'s, and
instances of “[...]”) against which the left-hand operand is
matched. This reduces the need for use of the switch
statement in shell scripts when all that is really needed is pattern
matching.
Strings that begin with ‘0
’
are considered octal numbers. Null or missing arguments are considered
‘0
’. The results of all expressions
are strings, which represent decimal numbers. It is important to note that
no two components of an expression can appear in the same word; except when
adjacent to components of expressions that are syntactically significant to
the parser (‘&
’,
‘|
’,
‘<
’,
‘>
’,
‘(
’, and
‘)
’), they should be surrounded by
spaces.
Also available in expressions as primitive operands are command
executions enclosed in ‘{
’ and
‘}
’ and file enquiries of the form
-l
name where
l
is one of:
r read access w write access x execute access e existence o ownership z zero size f plain file d directory
The specified name is command and filename expanded and then
tested to see if it has the specified relationship to the real user. If the
file does not exist or is inaccessible then all enquiries return false,
i.e., ‘0
’. 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 an
expression and the variable status examined.
The shell contains several commands that can be used to regulate the flow of control in command files (shell scripts) and (in limited but useful ways) from terminal input. These commands all operate by forcing the shell to reread or skip in its input and, because of 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 goto's will succeed on non-seekable inputs.)
Built-in commands are executed within the shell. If a built-in command occurs as any component of a pipeline except the last then it is executed in a sub-shell.
alias
alias
namealias
name wordlistalloc
bg
bg %
job ...break
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
switch
, resuming after the
endsw
.
case
label:switch
statement as discussed below.
cd
cd
namechdir
chdir
name/
’,
‘./
’ or
‘../
’), then 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 directory.
continue
while
or foreach
. The rest of the commands on the
current line are executed.
default
:switch
statement. The
default should come after all case
labels.
dirs
echo
wordlistecho
-n
wordlist-n
option is specified.
else
end
endif
endsw
foreach
,
if
, switch
, and
while
statements below.
eval
arg ...eval
.
exec
commandexit
exit
(expr)status
variable (first form) or with the value of
the specified expr
(second form).
fg
fg %
job ...foreach
name (wordlist)end
end
are executed.
(Both foreach
and end
must
appear alone on separate lines.) The built-in command
continue
may be used to continue the loop
prematurely and the built-in command break
to
terminate it prematurely. When this command is read from the terminal, the
loop is read once prompting with ‘?
’
before any statements in the loop are executed. If you make a mistake
typing in a loop at the terminal you can rub it out.
glob
wordlistecho
but no
‘\
’ escapes are recognized and words
are delimited by NUL characters in the output. Useful for programs that
wish to use the shell to filename expand a list of words.
goto
wordlabel
’. The shell rewinds its input
as much as possible and searches for a line of the form
“label:”, possibly preceded by blanks or tabs. Execution
continues after the specified line.
hashstat
exec
´s). An exec
is
attempted for each component of the path where the hash
function indicates a possible hit, and in each component that does not
begin with a ‘/
’.
history
history
nhistory
-h
nhistory
-r
n-h
option causes the history list to be printed
without leading numbers. This format produces files suitable for sourcing
using the -h
option to
source
. The -r
option
reverses the order of printout to be most recent first instead of oldest
first.
if
(expr) commandif
command.
command must be a simple command, not a pipeline, a
command list, or a parenthesized command list. Input/output redirection
occurs even if expr is false, i.e., when command is
not executed (this is a bug).
if
(expr) then
else if
(expr2)
then
else
endif
else
are executed; otherwise if
expr2 is true then the commands up to the second
else
are executed, etc. Any number of
else-if
pairs are possible; only one
endif
is needed. The else
part is likewise optional. (The words else
and
endif
must appear at the beginning of input lines;
the if
must appear alone on its input line or
after an else
.)
jobs
jobs
-l
-l
option lists process
IDs in addition to the normal information.
kill %
jobkill
-s
signal_name]
pidkill
-sig
pid ...kill
-l
[exit_status]SIGTERM
(terminate) signal or the
specified signal to the specified jobs or processes. Signals are either
given by number or by names (as given in
⟨signal.h⟩, stripped of the prefix
“SIG”). The signal names are listed by “kill
-l”; if an exit_status is specified, only the
corresponding signal name will be written. There is no default; just
saying “kill” does not send a signal to the current job. If
the signal being sent is SIGTERM
(terminate) or
SIGHUP
(hangup), then the job or process will be
sent a SIGCONT
(continue) signal as well.
limit
limit
resourcelimit
resource maximum-uselimit
-h
limit
-h
resourcelimit
-h
resource maximum-use-h
flag is given,
the hard limits are used instead of the current limits. The hard limits
impose a ceiling on the values of the current limits. Only the superuser
may raise the hard limits, but a user may lower or raise the current
limits within the legal range.
Resources controllable currently include:
The maximum-use may be given as a
(floating point or integer) number followed by a scale factor. For all
limits other than cputime the default scale is
‘k
’ or “kilobytes”
(1024 bytes); a scale factor of
‘m
’ or “megabytes”
may also be used. For cputime the default scale is
“seconds”; a scale factor of
‘m
’ for minutes or
‘h
’ for hours, or a time of the
form “mm:ss” giving minutes and seconds also may be
used.
For both resource names and scale factors, unambiguous prefixes of the names suffice.
login
logout
nice
nice
+numbernice
commandnice
+number commandif
statements apply.
nohup
nohup
command&
’ are effectively
nohup
´ed.
notify
notify %
job ...onintr
onintr
-
onintr
labelonintr -
causes all interrupts to be ignored. The
final form causes the shell to execute a goto
label
when an interrupt is received or a child process terminates
because it was interrupted.
In any case, if the shell is running detached and interrupts
are being ignored, all forms of onintr
have no
meaning and interrupts continue to be ignored by the shell and all
invoked commands. Finally, onintr
statements are
ignored in the system startup files where interrupts are disabled
(/etc/csh.cshrc,
/etc/csh.login).
popd
popd
+npushd
pushd
namepushd
+npushd
exchanges the top two
elements of the directory stack. Given a name
argument, pushd
changes to the new directory (ala
cd
) and pushes the old current working directory
(as in cwd
) onto the directory stack. With a
numeric argument, pushd
rotates the
n´th argument of the directory stack around
to be the top element and changes to it. The members of the directory
stack are numbered from the top starting at 0.
rehash
path
while you are logged in. This should only be necessary if you add commands
to one of your own directories, or if a systems programmer changes the
contents of a system directory.
repeat
count commandif
statement above, is executed
count times. I/O redirections occur exactly once,
even if count is 0.
set
set
nameset
name=wordset
name[index]=wordset
name=(wordlist)These arguments may be repeated to set multiple values in a single set command. Note however, that variable expansion happens for all arguments before any setting occurs.
setenv
setenv
namesetenv
name valueUSER
,
TERM
, and PATH
are
automatically imported to and exported from the
csh
variables user,
term, and path; there is no
need to use setenv
for these.
shift
shift
variableargv
are shifted to the left,
discarding argv
[1]. It is an error for
argv
not to be set or to have less than one word
as value. The second form performs the same function on the specified
variable.
source
namesource
-h
namesource
commands may be nested; if they are nested
too deeply the shell may run out of file descriptors. An error in a
source
at any level terminates all nested
source
commands. Normally input during
source
commands is not placed on the history list;
the -h
option causes the commands to be placed on
the history list without being executed.
stop
stop %
job ...suspend
^Z
. This is most often used to stop
shells started by su(1).
switch
(string)case
str1: breaksw
default
: breaksw
endsw
*
’,
‘?
’ and “[...]” may be
used in the case labels, which are variable expanded. If none of the
labels match before the “default” label is found, then the
execution begins after the default label. Each case label and the default
label must appear at the beginning of a line. The command
breaksw
causes execution to continue after the
endsw
. Otherwise control may fall through case
labels and the default label as in C. If no label matches and there is no
default, execution continues after the endsw
.
time
time
commandtime
variable is printed. If necessary, an extra shell is created to print the
time statistic when the command completes.
umask
umask
valueunalias
patternunalias *
. It is not an
error for nothing to be unalias
ed.
unhash
unlimit
unlimit
resourceunlimit
-h
unlimit
-h
resource-h
is given, the corresponding hard limits are
removed. Only the superuser may do this.
unset
patternunset *
; this has
noticeably distasteful side-effects. It is not an error for nothing to be
unset
.
unsetenv
patternsetenv
command above and
printenv(1).
wait
which
commandwhile
(expr)end
while
and the matching
end
are evaluated. break
and continue
may be used to terminate or continue
the loop prematurely. (The while
and
end
must appear alone on their input lines.)
Prompting occurs here the first time through the loop as for the
foreach
statement if the input is a terminal.
%
job%
job
&
@
@
name= expr@
name[index]= expr<
’,
‘>
’,
‘&
’ or
‘|
’ then at least this part of the
expression must be placed within ‘(
’
‘)
’. The third form assigns the
value of expr to the index'th
argument of name. Both name
and its index'th component must already exist.
The operators ‘*=
’,
‘+=
’, etc. are available as in C.
The space separating the name from the assignment operator is optional.
Spaces are, however, mandatory in separating components of
expr, which would otherwise be single words.
Special postfix ‘++
’ and
‘--
’ operators increment and
decrement name respectively; i.e., “@
i++”.
The following variables have special meaning to the shell. Of these, argv, cwd, home, path, prompt, shell and status are always set by the shell. Except for cwd and status, this setting occurs only at initialization; these variables will not then be modified unless done explicitly by the user.
The shell copies the environment variable
USER
into the variable user,
TERM
into term, and
HOME
into home, and copies
these back into the environment whenever the normal shell variables are
reset. The environment variable PATH
is likewise
handled; it is not necessary to worry about its setting other than in the
file .cshrc as inferior csh
processes will import the definition of path from the
environment, and re-export it if you then change it.
argv
cdpath
chdir
commands.cwd
echo
-x
command-line option is given.
Causes each command and its arguments to be echoed just before it is
executed. For non-built-in commands all expansions occur before echoing.
Built-in commands are echoed before command and filename substitution,
since these substitutions are then done selectively.filec
histchars
!
’. The second character of its
value replaces the character ‘^
’ in
quick substitutions.histfile
history
home
ignoreeof
mail
If the first word of the value of mail is numeric it specifies a different mail checking interval, in seconds, than the default, which is 10 minutes.
If multiple mail files are specified, then the shell says “New mail in name” when there is mail in the file name.
noclobber
>>
’
redirections refer to existing files.noglob
nonomatch
notify
path
-c
nor the -t
option will
normally hash the contents of the directories in the
path variable after reading
.cshrc, and each time the path
variable is reset. If new commands are added to these directories while
the shell is active, it may be necessary to do a
rehash
or the commands may not be found.prompt
!
’ appears in
the string it will be replaced by the current event number unless a
preceding ‘\
’ is given. Default is
“%”, or “#” for the superuser.savehist
shell
status
time
verbose
-v
command-line option, causes the
words of each command to be printed after history substitution.When a command to be executed is found to not be a built-in
command the shell attempts to execute the command via
execve(2). Each word in the variable
path names a directory from which the shell will
attempt to execute the command. If it is given neither a
-c
nor a -t
option, the
shell will hash the names in these directories into an internal table so
that it will only try an exec
in a directory if
there is a possibility that the command resides there. This shortcut greatly
speeds command location when many directories are present in the search
path. If this mechanism has been turned off (via
unhash
), or if the shell was given a
-c
or -t
argument, and in
any case for each directory component of path that
does not begin with a ‘/
’, the shell
concatenates with the given command name to form a path name of a file which
it then attempts to execute.
Parenthesized commands are always executed in a sub-shell. Thus
(cd; pwd); pwd
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
chdir
from affecting the current shell.
If the file has execute permissions but is not an executable binary to the system, then it is assumed to be a file containing shell commands and a new shell is spawned to read it.
If there is an alias for shell
then the
words of the alias will be prepended to the argument list to form the shell
command. The first word of the alias should be the full path name of the
shell (e.g., “$shell”). Note that this is a special, late
occurring, case of alias
substitution, and only
allows words to be prepended to the argument list without change.
The shell normally ignores SIGQUIT
signals. Jobs running detached (either by &
or
the bg
or %... &
commands) are immune to signals generated from the keyboard, including
hangups. Other signals have the values which the shell inherited from its
parent. The shell's handling of interrupts and terminate signals in shell
scripts can be controlled by onintr
. Login shells
catch the SIGTERM
(terminate) signal; otherwise this
signal is passed on to children from the state in the shell's parent.
Interrupts are not allowed when a login shell is reading the file
.logout.
Word lengths - Words can be no longer than 1024 characters. The
number of arguments to a command that involves filename expansion is limited
to 1/6th the number of characters allowed in an argument list. Command
substitutions may substitute no more characters than are allowed in an
argument list. To detect looping, the shell restricts the number of
alias
substitutions on a single line to 20.
#
’<<
’sh(1), access(2), execve(2), fork(2), pipe(2), setrlimit(2), umask(2), wait(2), killpg(3), sigvec(3), tty(4), a.out(5), environ(7), script(7)
csh
appeared in
3BSD. It was a first implementation of a command
language interpreter incorporating a history mechanism (see
History substitutions), job
control facilities (see Jobs), interactive
file name and user name completion (see
File name completion), and a
C-like syntax. There are now many shells that also have these mechanisms,
plus a few more (and maybe some bugs too), which are available through the
usenet.
William Joy. Job control and directory stack features first implemented by J.E. Kulp of IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria, with different syntax than that used now. File name completion code written by Ken Greer, HP Labs. Eight-bit implementation Christos S. Zoulas, Cornell University.
When a command is restarted from a stop, the shell prints the directory it started in if this is different from the current directory; this can be misleading (i.e., wrong) as the job may have changed directories internally.
Shell built-in functions are not stoppable/restartable. Command
sequences of the form “a ; b ; c” are also not handled
gracefully when stopping is attempted. If you suspend
‘b
’, the shell will immediately
execute ‘c
’. This is especially
noticeable if this expansion results from an alias. It suffices to place the
sequence of commands in ()'s to force it to a sub-shell; i.e., “(a ;
b ; c)”.
Control over tty output after processes are started is primitive; perhaps this will inspire someone to work on a good virtual terminal interface. In a virtual terminal interface much more interesting things could be done with output control.
Alias substitution is most often used to clumsily simulate shell procedures; shell procedures should be provided instead of aliases.
Commands within loops, prompted for by
‘?
’, are not placed on the
history
list. Control structure should be parsed
instead of being recognized as built-in commands. This would allow control
commands to be placed anywhere, to be combined with
‘|
’, and to be used with
‘&
’ and
‘;
’ metasyntax.
It should be possible to use the
‘:
’ modifiers on the output of command
substitutions.
The way the filec facility is implemented is ugly and expensive.
May 2, 2011 | Debian |