3 @setfilename coreutils.info
4 @settitle GNU Coreutils
5 @documentencoding UTF-8
11 @include constants.texi
13 @c Define new indices.
17 @c Put everything in one index (arbitrarily chosen to be the concept index).
27 * Coreutils: (coreutils). Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities.
28 * Common options: (coreutils)Common options.
29 * File permissions: (coreutils)File permissions. Access modes.
30 * Date input formats: (coreutils)Date input formats.
33 @c FIXME: the following need documentation
34 @c * [: (coreutils)[ invocation. File/string tests.
35 @c * pinky: (coreutils)pinky invocation. FIXME.
37 @dircategory Individual utilities
39 * arch: (coreutils)arch invocation. Print machine hardware name.
40 * base32: (coreutils)base32 invocation. Base32 encode/decode data.
41 * base64: (coreutils)base64 invocation. Base64 encode/decode data.
42 * basename: (coreutils)basename invocation. Strip directory and suffix.
43 * cat: (coreutils)cat invocation. Concatenate and write files.
44 * chcon: (coreutils)chcon invocation. Change SELinux CTX of files.
45 * chgrp: (coreutils)chgrp invocation. Change file groups.
46 * chmod: (coreutils)chmod invocation. Change access permissions.
47 * chown: (coreutils)chown invocation. Change file owners and groups.
48 * chroot: (coreutils)chroot invocation. Specify the root directory.
49 * cksum: (coreutils)cksum invocation. Print POSIX CRC checksum.
50 * comm: (coreutils)comm invocation. Compare sorted files by line.
51 * cp: (coreutils)cp invocation. Copy files.
52 * csplit: (coreutils)csplit invocation. Split by context.
53 * cut: (coreutils)cut invocation. Print selected parts of lines.
54 * date: (coreutils)date invocation. Print/set system date and time.
55 * dd: (coreutils)dd invocation. Copy and convert a file.
56 * df: (coreutils)df invocation. Report file system disk usage.
57 * dir: (coreutils)dir invocation. List directories briefly.
58 * dircolors: (coreutils)dircolors invocation. Color setup for ls.
59 * dirname: (coreutils)dirname invocation. Strip last file name component.
60 * du: (coreutils)du invocation. Report on disk usage.
61 * echo: (coreutils)echo invocation. Print a line of text.
62 * env: (coreutils)env invocation. Modify the environment.
63 * expand: (coreutils)expand invocation. Convert tabs to spaces.
64 * expr: (coreutils)expr invocation. Evaluate expressions.
65 * factor: (coreutils)factor invocation. Print prime factors
66 * false: (coreutils)false invocation. Do nothing, unsuccessfully.
67 * fmt: (coreutils)fmt invocation. Reformat paragraph text.
68 * fold: (coreutils)fold invocation. Wrap long input lines.
69 * groups: (coreutils)groups invocation. Print group names a user is in.
70 * head: (coreutils)head invocation. Output the first part of files.
71 * hostid: (coreutils)hostid invocation. Print numeric host identifier.
72 * hostname: (coreutils)hostname invocation. Print or set system name.
73 * id: (coreutils)id invocation. Print user identity.
74 * install: (coreutils)install invocation. Copy files and set attributes.
75 * join: (coreutils)join invocation. Join lines on a common field.
76 * kill: (coreutils)kill invocation. Send a signal to processes.
77 * link: (coreutils)link invocation. Make hard links between files.
78 * ln: (coreutils)ln invocation. Make links between files.
79 * logname: (coreutils)logname invocation. Print current login name.
80 * ls: (coreutils)ls invocation. List directory contents.
81 * md5sum: (coreutils)md5sum invocation. Print or check MD5 digests.
82 * mkdir: (coreutils)mkdir invocation. Create directories.
83 * mkfifo: (coreutils)mkfifo invocation. Create FIFOs (named pipes).
84 * mknod: (coreutils)mknod invocation. Create special files.
85 * mktemp: (coreutils)mktemp invocation. Create temporary files.
86 * mv: (coreutils)mv invocation. Rename files.
87 * nice: (coreutils)nice invocation. Modify niceness.
88 * nl: (coreutils)nl invocation. Number lines and write files.
89 * nohup: (coreutils)nohup invocation. Immunize to hangups.
90 * nproc: (coreutils)nproc invocation. Print the number of processors.
91 * numfmt: (coreutils)numfmt invocation. Reformat numbers.
92 * od: (coreutils)od invocation. Dump files in octal, etc.
93 * paste: (coreutils)paste invocation. Merge lines of files.
94 * pathchk: (coreutils)pathchk invocation. Check file name portability.
95 * pr: (coreutils)pr invocation. Paginate or columnate files.
96 * printenv: (coreutils)printenv invocation. Print environment variables.
97 * printf: (coreutils)printf invocation. Format and print data.
98 * ptx: (coreutils)ptx invocation. Produce permuted indexes.
99 * pwd: (coreutils)pwd invocation. Print working directory.
100 * readlink: (coreutils)readlink invocation. Print referent of a symlink.
101 * realpath: (coreutils)realpath invocation. Print resolved file names.
102 * rm: (coreutils)rm invocation. Remove files.
103 * rmdir: (coreutils)rmdir invocation. Remove empty directories.
104 * runcon: (coreutils)runcon invocation. Run in specified SELinux CTX.
105 * seq: (coreutils)seq invocation. Print numeric sequences
106 * sha1sum: (coreutils)sha1sum invocation. Print or check SHA-1 digests.
107 * sha2: (coreutils)sha2 utilities. Print or check SHA-2 digests.
108 * shred: (coreutils)shred invocation. Remove files more securely.
109 * shuf: (coreutils)shuf invocation. Shuffling text files.
110 * sleep: (coreutils)sleep invocation. Delay for a specified time.
111 * sort: (coreutils)sort invocation. Sort text files.
112 * split: (coreutils)split invocation. Split into pieces.
113 * stat: (coreutils)stat invocation. Report file(system) status.
114 * stdbuf: (coreutils)stdbuf invocation. Modify stdio buffering.
115 * stty: (coreutils)stty invocation. Print/change terminal settings.
116 * sum: (coreutils)sum invocation. Print traditional checksum.
117 * sync: (coreutils)sync invocation. Synchronize memory to disk.
118 * tac: (coreutils)tac invocation. Reverse files.
119 * tail: (coreutils)tail invocation. Output the last part of files.
120 * tee: (coreutils)tee invocation. Redirect to multiple files.
121 * test: (coreutils)test invocation. File/string tests.
122 * timeout: (coreutils)timeout invocation. Run with time limit.
123 * touch: (coreutils)touch invocation. Change file timestamps.
124 * tr: (coreutils)tr invocation. Translate characters.
125 * true: (coreutils)true invocation. Do nothing, successfully.
126 * truncate: (coreutils)truncate invocation. Shrink/extend size of a file.
127 * tsort: (coreutils)tsort invocation. Topological sort.
128 * tty: (coreutils)tty invocation. Print terminal name.
129 * uname: (coreutils)uname invocation. Print system information.
130 * unexpand: (coreutils)unexpand invocation. Convert spaces to tabs.
131 * uniq: (coreutils)uniq invocation. Uniquify files.
132 * unlink: (coreutils)unlink invocation. Removal via unlink(2).
133 * uptime: (coreutils)uptime invocation. Print uptime and load.
134 * users: (coreutils)users invocation. Print current user names.
135 * vdir: (coreutils)vdir invocation. List directories verbosely.
136 * wc: (coreutils)wc invocation. Line, word, and byte counts.
137 * who: (coreutils)who invocation. Print who is logged in.
138 * whoami: (coreutils)whoami invocation. Print effective user ID.
139 * yes: (coreutils)yes invocation. Print a string indefinitely.
143 This manual documents version @value{VERSION} of the GNU core
144 utilities, including the standard programs for text and file manipulation.
146 Copyright @copyright{} 1994-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
149 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
150 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
151 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
152 Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
153 Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
154 Free Documentation License''.
159 @title GNU @code{Coreutils}
160 @subtitle Core GNU utilities
161 @subtitle for version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}
162 @author David MacKenzie et al.
165 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
178 @cindex core utilities
179 @cindex text utilities
180 @cindex shell utilities
181 @cindex file utilities
184 * Introduction:: Caveats, overview, and authors
185 * Common options:: Common options
186 * Output of entire files:: cat tac nl od base32 base64
187 * Formatting file contents:: fmt pr fold
188 * Output of parts of files:: head tail split csplit
189 * Summarizing files:: wc sum cksum md5sum sha1sum sha2
190 * Operating on sorted files:: sort shuf uniq comm ptx tsort
191 * Operating on fields:: cut paste join
192 * Operating on characters:: tr expand unexpand
193 * Directory listing:: ls dir vdir dircolors
194 * Basic operations:: cp dd install mv rm shred
195 * Special file types:: mkdir rmdir unlink mkfifo mknod ln link readlink
196 * Changing file attributes:: chgrp chmod chown touch
197 * Disk usage:: df du stat sync truncate
198 * Printing text:: echo printf yes
199 * Conditions:: false true test expr
201 * File name manipulation:: dirname basename pathchk mktemp realpath
202 * Working context:: pwd stty printenv tty
203 * User information:: id logname whoami groups users who
204 * System context:: date arch nproc uname hostname hostid uptime
205 * SELinux context:: chcon runcon
206 * Modified command invocation:: chroot env nice nohup stdbuf timeout
207 * Process control:: kill
209 * Numeric operations:: factor numfmt seq
210 * File permissions:: Access modes
211 * Date input formats:: Specifying date strings
212 * Opening the software toolbox:: The software tools philosophy
213 * GNU Free Documentation License:: Copying and sharing this manual
214 * Concept index:: General index
217 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
221 * Exit status:: Indicating program success or failure
222 * Backup options:: Backup options
223 * Block size:: Block size
224 * Floating point:: Floating point number representation
225 * Signal specifications:: Specifying signals
226 * Disambiguating names and IDs:: chgrp, chown, chroot, id: user and group syntax
227 * Random sources:: Sources of random data
228 * Target directory:: Target directory
229 * Trailing slashes:: Trailing slashes
230 * Traversing symlinks:: Traversing symlinks to directories
231 * Treating / specially:: Treating / specially
232 * Standards conformance:: Standards conformance
233 * Multi-call invocation:: Multi-call program invocation
235 Output of entire files
237 * cat invocation:: Concatenate and write files
238 * tac invocation:: Concatenate and write files in reverse
239 * nl invocation:: Number lines and write files
240 * od invocation:: Write files in octal or other formats
241 * base32 invocation:: Transform data into printable data
242 * base64 invocation:: Transform data into printable data
244 Formatting file contents
246 * fmt invocation:: Reformat paragraph text
247 * pr invocation:: Paginate or columnate files for printing
248 * fold invocation:: Wrap input lines to fit in specified width
250 Output of parts of files
252 * head invocation:: Output the first part of files
253 * tail invocation:: Output the last part of files
254 * split invocation:: Split a file into fixed-size pieces
255 * csplit invocation:: Split a file into context-determined pieces
259 * wc invocation:: Print newline, word, and byte counts
260 * sum invocation:: Print checksum and block counts
261 * cksum invocation:: Print CRC checksum and byte counts
262 * md5sum invocation:: Print or check MD5 digests
263 * sha1sum invocation:: Print or check SHA-1 digests
264 * sha2 utilities:: Print or check SHA-2 digests
266 Operating on sorted files
268 * sort invocation:: Sort text files
269 * shuf invocation:: Shuffle text files
270 * uniq invocation:: Uniquify files
271 * comm invocation:: Compare two sorted files line by line
272 * ptx invocation:: Produce a permuted index of file contents
273 * tsort invocation:: Topological sort
275 @command{ptx}: Produce permuted indexes
277 * General options in ptx:: Options which affect general program behavior
278 * Charset selection in ptx:: Underlying character set considerations
279 * Input processing in ptx:: Input fields, contexts, and keyword selection
280 * Output formatting in ptx:: Types of output format, and sizing the fields
281 * Compatibility in ptx:: The GNU extensions to @command{ptx}
285 * cut invocation:: Print selected parts of lines
286 * paste invocation:: Merge lines of files
287 * join invocation:: Join lines on a common field
289 Operating on characters
291 * tr invocation:: Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters
292 * expand invocation:: Convert tabs to spaces
293 * unexpand invocation:: Convert spaces to tabs
295 @command{tr}: Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters
297 * Character sets:: Specifying sets of characters
298 * Translating:: Changing one set of characters to another
299 * Squeezing and deleting:: Removing characters
303 * ls invocation:: List directory contents
304 * dir invocation:: Briefly list directory contents
305 * vdir invocation:: Verbosely list directory contents
306 * dircolors invocation:: Color setup for @command{ls}
308 @command{ls}: List directory contents
310 * Which files are listed:: Which files are listed
311 * What information is listed:: What information is listed
312 * Sorting the output:: Sorting the output
313 * Details about version sort:: More details about version sort
314 * General output formatting:: General output formatting
315 * Formatting the file names:: Formatting the file names
319 * cp invocation:: Copy files and directories
320 * dd invocation:: Convert and copy a file
321 * install invocation:: Copy files and set attributes
322 * mv invocation:: Move (rename) files
323 * rm invocation:: Remove files or directories
324 * shred invocation:: Remove files more securely
328 * link invocation:: Make a hard link via the link syscall
329 * ln invocation:: Make links between files
330 * mkdir invocation:: Make directories
331 * mkfifo invocation:: Make FIFOs (named pipes)
332 * mknod invocation:: Make block or character special files
333 * readlink invocation:: Print value of a symlink or canonical file name
334 * rmdir invocation:: Remove empty directories
335 * unlink invocation:: Remove files via unlink syscall
337 Changing file attributes
339 * chown invocation:: Change file owner and group
340 * chgrp invocation:: Change group ownership
341 * chmod invocation:: Change access permissions
342 * touch invocation:: Change file timestamps
346 * df invocation:: Report file system disk space usage
347 * du invocation:: Estimate file space usage
348 * stat invocation:: Report file or file system status
349 * sync invocation:: Synchronize cached writes to persistent storage
350 * truncate invocation:: Shrink or extend the size of a file
354 * echo invocation:: Print a line of text
355 * printf invocation:: Format and print data
356 * yes invocation:: Print a string until interrupted
360 * false invocation:: Do nothing, unsuccessfully
361 * true invocation:: Do nothing, successfully
362 * test invocation:: Check file types and compare values
363 * expr invocation:: Evaluate expressions
365 @command{test}: Check file types and compare values
367 * File type tests:: File type tests
368 * Access permission tests:: Access permission tests
369 * File characteristic tests:: File characteristic tests
370 * String tests:: String tests
371 * Numeric tests:: Numeric tests
373 @command{expr}: Evaluate expression
375 * String expressions:: + : match substr index length
376 * Numeric expressions:: + - * / %
377 * Relations for expr:: | & < <= = == != >= >
378 * Examples of expr:: Examples of using @command{expr}
382 * tee invocation:: Redirect output to multiple files or processes
384 File name manipulation
386 * basename invocation:: Strip directory and suffix from a file name
387 * dirname invocation:: Strip last file name component
388 * pathchk invocation:: Check file name validity and portability
389 * mktemp invocation:: Create temporary file or directory
390 * realpath invocation:: Print resolved file names
394 * pwd invocation:: Print working directory
395 * stty invocation:: Print or change terminal characteristics
396 * printenv invocation:: Print all or some environment variables
397 * tty invocation:: Print file name of terminal on standard input
399 @command{stty}: Print or change terminal characteristics
401 * Control:: Control settings
402 * Input:: Input settings
403 * Output:: Output settings
404 * Local:: Local settings
405 * Combination:: Combination settings
406 * Characters:: Special characters
407 * Special:: Special settings
411 * id invocation:: Print user identity
412 * logname invocation:: Print current login name
413 * whoami invocation:: Print effective user ID
414 * groups invocation:: Print group names a user is in
415 * users invocation:: Print login names of users currently logged in
416 * who invocation:: Print who is currently logged in
420 * arch invocation:: Print machine hardware name
421 * date invocation:: Print or set system date and time
422 * nproc invocation:: Print the number of processors
423 * uname invocation:: Print system information
424 * hostname invocation:: Print or set system name
425 * hostid invocation:: Print numeric host identifier
426 * uptime invocation:: Print system uptime and load
428 @command{date}: Print or set system date and time
430 * Time conversion specifiers:: %[HIklMNpPrRsSTXzZ]
431 * Date conversion specifiers:: %[aAbBcCdDeFgGhjmuUVwWxyY]
432 * Literal conversion specifiers:: %[%nt]
433 * Padding and other flags:: Pad with zeros, spaces, etc.
434 * Setting the time:: Changing the system clock
435 * Options for date:: Instead of the current time
436 * Date input formats:: Specifying date strings
437 * Examples of date:: Examples
441 * chcon invocation:: Change SELinux context of file
442 * runcon invocation:: Run a command in specified SELinux context
444 Modified command invocation
446 * chroot invocation:: Run a command with a different root directory
447 * env invocation:: Run a command in a modified environment
448 * nice invocation:: Run a command with modified niceness
449 * nohup invocation:: Run a command immune to hangups
450 * stdbuf invocation:: Run a command with modified I/O buffering
451 * timeout invocation:: Run a command with a time limit
455 * kill invocation:: Sending a signal to processes.
459 * sleep invocation:: Delay for a specified time
463 * factor invocation:: Print prime factors
464 * numfmt invocation:: Reformat numbers
465 * seq invocation:: Print numeric sequences
469 * Mode Structure:: Structure of file mode bits
470 * Symbolic Modes:: Mnemonic representation of file mode bits
471 * Numeric Modes:: File mode bits as octal numbers
472 * Directory Setuid and Setgid:: Set-user-ID and set-group-ID on directories
476 * General date syntax:: Common rules
477 * Calendar date items:: 19 Dec 1994
478 * Time of day items:: 9:20pm
479 * Time zone items:: EST, PDT, UTC, @dots{}
480 * Combined date and time of day items:: 1972-09-24T20:02:00,000000-0500
481 * Day of week items:: Monday and others
482 * Relative items in date strings:: next tuesday, 2 years ago
483 * Pure numbers in date strings:: 19931219, 1440
484 * Seconds since the Epoch:: @@1078100502
485 * Specifying time zone rules:: TZ="America/New_York", TZ="UTC0"
486 * Authors of parse_datetime:: Bellovin, Eggert, Salz, Berets, et al.
488 Opening the software toolbox
490 * Toolbox introduction:: Toolbox introduction
491 * I/O redirection:: I/O redirection
492 * The who command:: The @command{who} command
493 * The cut command:: The @command{cut} command
494 * The sort command:: The @command{sort} command
495 * The uniq command:: The @command{uniq} command
496 * Putting the tools together:: Putting the tools together
500 * GNU Free Documentation License:: Copying and sharing this manual
507 @chapter Introduction
509 This manual is a work in progress: many sections make no attempt to explain
510 basic concepts in a way suitable for novices. Thus, if you are interested,
511 please get involved in improving this manual. The entire GNU community
515 The GNU utilities documented here are mostly compatible with the
517 @cindex bugs, reporting
519 Please report bugs to @email{bug-coreutils@@gnu.org}.
520 Include the version number, machine architecture, input files, and
521 any other information needed to reproduce the bug: your input, what you
522 expected, what you got, and why it is wrong.
524 If you have a problem with @command{sort}, try running @samp{sort
525 --debug}, as it can can often help find and fix problems without
526 having to wait for an answer to a bug report. If the debug output
527 does not suffice to fix the problem on your own, please compress and
528 attach it to the rest of your bug report.
530 Although diffs are welcome,
531 please include a description of the problem as well, since this is
532 sometimes difficult to infer. @xref{Bugs, , , gcc, Using and Porting GNU CC}.
538 @cindex MacKenzie, D.
541 This manual was originally derived from the Unix man pages in the
542 distributions, which were written by David MacKenzie and updated by Jim
543 Meyering. What you are reading now is the authoritative documentation
544 for these utilities; the man pages are no longer being maintained. The
545 original @command{fmt} man page was written by Ross Paterson. Fran@,{c}ois
546 Pinard did the initial conversion to Texinfo format. Karl Berry did the
547 indexing, some reorganization, and editing of the results. Brian
548 Youmans of the Free Software Foundation office staff combined the
549 manuals for textutils, fileutils, and sh-utils to produce the present
550 omnibus manual. Richard Stallman contributed his usual invaluable
551 insights to the overall process.
554 @chapter Common options
558 @itemx --backup[=@var{method}]
561 @vindex VERSION_CONTROL
562 @cindex backups, making
563 @xref{Backup options}.
564 Make a backup of each file that would otherwise be overwritten or removed.
567 @macro optBackupSuffix
568 @item -S @var{suffix}
569 @itemx --suffix=@var{suffix}
572 Append @var{suffix} to each backup file made with @option{-b}.
573 @xref{Backup options}.
576 @macro optTargetDirectory
577 @item -t @var{directory}
578 @itemx --target-directory=@var{directory}
580 @opindex --target-directory
581 @cindex target directory
582 @cindex destination directory
583 Specify the destination @var{directory}.
584 @xref{Target directory}.
587 @macro optNoTargetDirectory
589 @itemx --no-target-directory
591 @opindex --no-target-directory
592 @cindex target directory
593 @cindex destination directory
594 Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a directory or a
595 symbolic link to a directory. @xref{Target directory}.
599 @cindex output NUL-byte-terminated lines
600 Output a zero byte (ASCII NUL) at the end of each line,
601 rather than a newline. This option enables other programs to parse the
602 output even when that output would contain data with embedded newlines.
621 @macro optZeroTerminated
623 @itemx --zero-terminated
625 @opindex --zero-terminated
626 @cindex process zero-terminated items
627 Delimit items with a zero byte rather than a newline (ASCII LF).
628 I.e., treat input as items separated by ASCII NUL
629 and terminate output items with ASCII NUL.
630 This option can be useful in conjunction with @samp{perl -0} or
631 @samp{find -print0} and @samp{xargs -0} which do the same in order to
632 reliably handle arbitrary file names (even those containing blanks
633 or other special characters).
640 Append an SI-style abbreviation to each size, such as @samp{M} for
641 megabytes. Powers of 1000 are used, not 1024; @samp{M} stands for
642 1,000,000 bytes. This option is equivalent to
643 @option{--block-size=si}. Use the @option{-h} or
644 @option{--human-readable} option if
645 you prefer powers of 1024.
648 @macro optHumanReadable
650 @itemx --human-readable
652 @opindex --human-readable
653 @cindex human-readable output
654 Append a size letter to each size, such as @samp{M} for mebibytes.
655 Powers of 1024 are used, not 1000; @samp{M} stands for 1,048,576 bytes.
656 This option is equivalent to @option{--block-size=human-readable}.
657 Use the @option{--si} option if you prefer powers of 1000.
660 @macro optStripTrailingSlashes
661 @item --strip-trailing-slashes
662 @opindex --strip-trailing-slashes
663 @cindex stripping trailing slashes
664 Remove any trailing slashes from each @var{source} argument.
665 @xref{Trailing slashes}.
668 @macro mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{cmd}
669 @cindex conflicts with shell built-ins
670 @cindex built-in shell commands, conflicts with
671 Due to shell aliases and built-in @command{\cmd\} functions, using an
672 unadorned @command{\cmd\} interactively or in a script may get you
673 different functionality than that described here. Invoke it via
674 @command{env} (i.e., @code{env \cmd\ @dots{}}) to avoid interference
679 @macro multiplierSuffixes{varName}
680 @var{\varName\} may be, or may be an integer optionally followed by,
681 one of the following multiplicative suffixes:
683 @samp{b} => 512 ("blocks")
684 @samp{KB} => 1000 (KiloBytes)
685 @samp{K} => 1024 (KibiBytes)
686 @samp{MB} => 1000*1000 (MegaBytes)
687 @samp{M} => 1024*1024 (MebiBytes)
688 @samp{GB} => 1000*1000*1000 (GigaBytes)
689 @samp{G} => 1024*1024*1024 (GibiBytes)
691 and so on for @samp{T}, @samp{P}, @samp{E}, @samp{Z}, and @samp{Y}.
694 @c FIXME: same as above, but no ``blocks'' line.
695 @macro multiplierSuffixesNoBlocks{varName}
696 @var{\varName\} may be, or may be an integer optionally followed by,
697 one of the following multiplicative suffixes:
699 @samp{KB} => 1000 (KiloBytes)
700 @samp{K} => 1024 (KibiBytes)
701 @samp{MB} => 1000*1000 (MegaBytes)
702 @samp{M} => 1024*1024 (MebiBytes)
703 @samp{GB} => 1000*1000*1000 (GigaBytes)
704 @samp{G} => 1024*1024*1024 (GibiBytes)
706 and so on for @samp{T}, @samp{P}, @samp{E}, @samp{Z}, and @samp{Y}.
709 @cindex common options
711 Certain options are available in all of these programs. Rather than
712 writing identical descriptions for each of the programs, they are
713 described here. (In fact, every GNU program accepts (or should accept)
716 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
717 Normally options and operands can appear in any order, and programs act
718 as if all the options appear before any operands. For example,
719 @samp{sort -r passwd -t :} acts like @samp{sort -r -t : passwd}, since
720 @samp{:} is an option-argument of @option{-t}. However, if the
721 @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} environment variable is set, options must appear
722 before operands, unless otherwise specified for a particular command.
724 A few programs can usefully have trailing operands with leading
725 @samp{-}. With such a program, options must precede operands even if
726 @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is not set, and this fact is noted in the
727 program description. For example, the @command{env} command's options
728 must appear before its operands, since in some cases the operands
729 specify a command that itself contains options.
731 Most programs that accept long options recognize unambiguous
732 abbreviations of those options. For example, @samp{rmdir
733 --ignore-fail-on-non-empty} can be invoked as @samp{rmdir
734 --ignore-fail} or even @samp{rmdir --i}. Ambiguous options, such as
735 @samp{ls --h}, are identified as such.
737 Some of these programs recognize the @option{--help} and @option{--version}
738 options only when one of them is the sole command line argument. For
739 these programs, abbreviations of the long options are not always recognized.
746 Print a usage message listing all available options, then exit successfully.
750 @cindex version number, finding
751 Print the version number, then exit successfully.
755 @cindex option delimiter
756 Delimit the option list. Later arguments, if any, are treated as
757 operands even if they begin with @samp{-}. For example, @samp{sort --
758 -r} reads from the file named @file{-r}.
762 @cindex standard input
763 @cindex standard output
764 A single @samp{-} operand is not really an option, though it looks like one. It
765 stands for a file operand, and some tools treat it as standard input, or as
766 standard output if that is clear from the context. For example, @samp{sort -}
767 reads from standard input, and is equivalent to plain @samp{sort}. Unless
768 otherwise specified, a @samp{-} can appear as any operand that requires a file
772 * Exit status:: Indicating program success or failure.
773 * Backup options:: -b -S, in some programs.
774 * Block size:: BLOCK_SIZE and --block-size, in some programs.
775 * Floating point:: Floating point number representation.
776 * Signal specifications:: Specifying signals using the --signal option.
777 * Disambiguating names and IDs:: chgrp, chown, chroot, id: user and group syntax
778 * Random sources:: --random-source, in some programs.
779 * Target directory:: Specifying a target directory, in some programs.
780 * Trailing slashes:: --strip-trailing-slashes, in some programs.
781 * Traversing symlinks:: -H, -L, or -P, in some programs.
782 * Treating / specially:: --preserve-root and --no-preserve-root.
783 * Special built-in utilities:: @command{break}, @command{:}, @dots{}
784 * Standards conformance:: Conformance to the POSIX standard.
785 * Multi-call invocation:: Multi-call program invocation.
793 An exit status of zero indicates success,
794 and a nonzero value indicates failure.
797 Nearly every command invocation yields an integral @dfn{exit status}
798 that can be used to change how other commands work.
799 For the vast majority of commands, an exit status of zero indicates
800 success. Failure is indicated by a nonzero value---typically
801 @samp{1}, though it may differ on unusual platforms as POSIX
802 requires only that it be nonzero.
804 However, some of the programs documented here do produce
805 other exit status values and a few associate different
806 meanings with the values @samp{0} and @samp{1}.
807 Here are some of the exceptions:
808 @command{chroot}, @command{env}, @command{expr}, @command{nice},
809 @command{nohup}, @command{numfmt}, @command{printenv}, @command{sort},
810 @command{stdbuf}, @command{test}, @command{timeout}, @command{tty}.
814 @section Backup options
816 @cindex backup options
818 Some GNU programs (at least @command{cp}, @command{install},
819 @command{ln}, and @command{mv}) optionally make backups of files
820 before writing new versions.
821 These options control the details of these backups. The options are also
822 briefly mentioned in the descriptions of the particular programs.
827 @itemx --backup[=@var{method}]
830 @vindex VERSION_CONTROL
831 @cindex backups, making
832 Make a backup of each file that would otherwise be overwritten or removed.
833 Without this option, the original versions are destroyed.
834 Use @var{method} to determine the type of backups to make.
835 When this option is used but @var{method} is not specified,
836 then the value of the @env{VERSION_CONTROL}
837 environment variable is used. And if @env{VERSION_CONTROL} is not set,
838 the default backup type is @samp{existing}.
840 Note that the short form of this option, @option{-b} does not accept any
841 argument. Using @option{-b} is equivalent to using @option{--backup=existing}.
843 @vindex version-control @r{Emacs variable}
844 This option corresponds to the Emacs variable @samp{version-control};
845 the values for @var{method} are the same as those used in Emacs.
846 This option also accepts more descriptive names.
847 The valid @var{method}s are (unique abbreviations are accepted):
852 @opindex none @r{backup method}
857 @opindex numbered @r{backup method}
858 Always make numbered backups.
862 @opindex existing @r{backup method}
863 Make numbered backups of files that already have them, simple backups
868 @opindex simple @r{backup method}
869 Always make simple backups. Please note @samp{never} is not to be
870 confused with @samp{none}.
874 @item -S @var{suffix}
875 @itemx --suffix=@var{suffix}
878 @cindex backup suffix
879 @vindex SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
880 Append @var{suffix} to each backup file made with @option{-b}. If this
881 option is not specified, the value of the @env{SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX}
882 environment variable is used. And if @env{SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX} is not
883 set, the default is @samp{~}, just as in Emacs.
892 Some GNU programs (at least @command{df}, @command{du}, and
893 @command{ls}) display sizes in ``blocks''. You can adjust the block size
894 and method of display to make sizes easier to read. The block size
895 used for display is independent of any file system block size.
896 Fractional block counts are rounded up to the nearest integer.
898 @opindex --block-size=@var{size}
901 @vindex DF_BLOCK_SIZE
902 @vindex DU_BLOCK_SIZE
903 @vindex LS_BLOCK_SIZE
904 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT@r{, and block size}
906 The default block size is chosen by examining the following environment
907 variables in turn; the first one that is set determines the block size.
912 This specifies the default block size for the @command{df} command.
913 Similarly, @env{DU_BLOCK_SIZE} specifies the default for @command{du} and
914 @env{LS_BLOCK_SIZE} for @command{ls}.
917 This specifies the default block size for all three commands, if the
918 above command-specific environment variables are not set.
921 This specifies the default block size for all values that are normally
922 printed as blocks, if neither @env{BLOCK_SIZE} nor the above
923 command-specific environment variables are set. Unlike the other
924 environment variables, @env{BLOCKSIZE} does not affect values that are
925 normally printed as byte counts, e.g., the file sizes contained in
928 @item POSIXLY_CORRECT
929 If neither @env{@var{command}_BLOCK_SIZE}, nor @env{BLOCK_SIZE}, nor
930 @env{BLOCKSIZE} is set, but this variable is set, the block size
935 If none of the above environment variables are set, the block size
936 currently defaults to 1024 bytes in most contexts, but this number may
937 change in the future. For @command{ls} file sizes, the block size
940 @cindex human-readable output
943 A block size specification can be a positive integer specifying the number
944 of bytes per block, or it can be @code{human-readable} or @code{si} to
945 select a human-readable format. Integers may be followed by suffixes
946 that are upward compatible with the
947 @uref{http://www.bipm.org/en/publications/si-brochure/chapter3.html,
949 for decimal multiples and with the
950 @uref{http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html, ISO/IEC 80000-13
951 (formerly IEC 60027-2) prefixes} for binary multiples.
953 With human-readable formats, output sizes are followed by a size letter
954 such as @samp{M} for megabytes. @code{BLOCK_SIZE=human-readable} uses
955 powers of 1024; @samp{M} stands for 1,048,576 bytes.
956 @code{BLOCK_SIZE=si} is similar, but uses powers of 1000 and appends
957 @samp{B}; @samp{MB} stands for 1,000,000 bytes.
960 A block size specification preceded by @samp{'} causes output sizes to
961 be displayed with thousands separators. The @env{LC_NUMERIC} locale
962 specifies the thousands separator and grouping. For example, in an
963 American English locale, @samp{--block-size="'1kB"} would cause a size
964 of 1234000 bytes to be displayed as @samp{1,234}. In the default C
965 locale, there is no thousands separator so a leading @samp{'} has no
968 An integer block size can be followed by a suffix to specify a
969 multiple of that size. A bare size letter,
970 or one followed by @samp{iB}, specifies
971 a multiple using powers of 1024. A size letter followed by @samp{B}
972 specifies powers of 1000 instead. For example, @samp{1M} and
973 @samp{1MiB} are equivalent to @samp{1048576}, whereas @samp{1MB} is
974 equivalent to @samp{1000000}.
976 A plain suffix without a preceding integer acts as if @samp{1} were
977 prepended, except that it causes a size indication to be appended to
978 the output. For example, @samp{--block-size="kB"} displays 3000 as
981 The following suffixes are defined. Large sizes like @code{1Y}
982 may be rejected by your computer due to limitations of its arithmetic.
986 @cindex kilobyte, definition of
987 kilobyte: @math{10^3 = 1000}.
991 @cindex kibibyte, definition of
992 kibibyte: @math{2^{10} = 1024}. @samp{K} is special: the SI prefix is
993 @samp{k} and the ISO/IEC 80000-13 prefix is @samp{Ki}, but tradition and
994 POSIX use @samp{k} to mean @samp{KiB}.
996 @cindex megabyte, definition of
997 megabyte: @math{10^6 = 1,000,000}.
1000 @cindex mebibyte, definition of
1001 mebibyte: @math{2^{20} = 1,048,576}.
1003 @cindex gigabyte, definition of
1004 gigabyte: @math{10^9 = 1,000,000,000}.
1007 @cindex gibibyte, definition of
1008 gibibyte: @math{2^{30} = 1,073,741,824}.
1010 @cindex terabyte, definition of
1011 terabyte: @math{10^{12} = 1,000,000,000,000}.
1014 @cindex tebibyte, definition of
1015 tebibyte: @math{2^{40} = 1,099,511,627,776}.
1017 @cindex petabyte, definition of
1018 petabyte: @math{10^{15} = 1,000,000,000,000,000}.
1021 @cindex pebibyte, definition of
1022 pebibyte: @math{2^{50} = 1,125,899,906,842,624}.
1024 @cindex exabyte, definition of
1025 exabyte: @math{10^{18} = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000}.
1028 @cindex exbibyte, definition of
1029 exbibyte: @math{2^{60} = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976}.
1031 @cindex zettabyte, definition of
1032 zettabyte: @math{10^{21} = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000}
1035 @math{2^{70} = 1,180,591,620,717,411,303,424}.
1037 @cindex yottabyte, definition of
1038 yottabyte: @math{10^{24} = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000}.
1041 @math{2^{80} = 1,208,925,819,614,629,174,706,176}.
1046 @opindex --block-size
1047 @opindex --human-readable
1050 Block size defaults can be overridden by an explicit
1051 @option{--block-size=@var{size}} option. The @option{-k}
1052 option is equivalent to @option{--block-size=1K}, which
1053 is the default unless the @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} environment variable is
1054 set. The @option{-h} or @option{--human-readable} option is equivalent to
1055 @option{--block-size=human-readable}. The @option{--si} option is
1056 equivalent to @option{--block-size=si}. Note for @command{ls}
1057 the @option{-k} option does not control the display of the
1058 apparent file sizes, whereas the @option{--block-size} option does.
1060 @node Floating point
1061 @section Floating point numbers
1062 @cindex floating point
1063 @cindex IEEE floating point
1065 Commands that accept or produce floating point numbers employ the
1066 floating point representation of the underlying system, and suffer
1067 from rounding error, overflow, and similar floating-point issues.
1068 Almost all modern systems use IEEE-754 floating point, and it is
1069 typically portable to assume IEEE-754 behavior these days. IEEE-754
1070 has positive and negative infinity, distinguishes positive from
1071 negative zero, and uses special values called NaNs to represent
1072 invalid computations such as dividing zero by itself. For more
1073 information, please see David Goldberg's paper
1074 @uref{http://@/www.validlab.com/@/goldberg/@/paper.pdf, What Every
1075 Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic}.
1078 Commands that accept floating point numbers as options, operands or
1079 input use the standard C functions @code{strtod} and @code{strtold} to
1080 convert from text to floating point numbers. These floating point
1081 numbers therefore can use scientific notation like @code{1.0e-34} and
1082 @code{-10e100}. Commands that parse floating point also understand
1083 case-insensitive @code{inf}, @code{infinity}, and @code{NaN}, although
1084 whether such values are useful depends on the command in question.
1085 Modern C implementations also accept hexadecimal floating point
1086 numbers such as @code{-0x.ep-3}, which stands for @minus{}14/16 times
1087 @math{2^-3}, which equals @minus{}0.109375. The @env{LC_NUMERIC}
1088 locale determines the decimal-point character. @xref{Parsing of
1089 Floats,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
1091 @node Signal specifications
1092 @section Signal specifications
1093 @cindex signals, specifying
1095 A @var{signal} may be a signal name like @samp{HUP}, or a signal
1096 number like @samp{1}, or an exit status of a process terminated by the
1097 signal. A signal name can be given in canonical form or prefixed by
1098 @samp{SIG}@. The case of the letters is ignored. The following signal names
1099 and numbers are supported on all POSIX compliant systems:
1105 2. Terminal interrupt.
1111 9. Kill (cannot be caught or ignored).
1119 Other supported signal names have system-dependent corresponding
1120 numbers. All systems conforming to POSIX 1003.1-2001 also
1121 support the following signals:
1125 Access to an undefined portion of a memory object.
1127 Child process terminated, stopped, or continued.
1129 Continue executing, if stopped.
1131 Erroneous arithmetic operation.
1133 Illegal Instruction.
1135 Write on a pipe with no one to read it.
1137 Invalid memory reference.
1139 Stop executing (cannot be caught or ignored).
1143 Background process attempting read.
1145 Background process attempting write.
1147 High bandwidth data is available at a socket.
1149 User-defined signal 1.
1151 User-defined signal 2.
1155 POSIX 1003.1-2001 systems that support the XSI extension
1156 also support the following signals:
1162 Profiling timer expired.
1166 Trace/breakpoint trap.
1168 Virtual timer expired.
1170 CPU time limit exceeded.
1172 File size limit exceeded.
1176 POSIX 1003.1-2001 systems that support the XRT extension
1177 also support at least eight real-time signals called @samp{RTMIN},
1178 @samp{RTMIN+1}, @dots{}, @samp{RTMAX-1}, @samp{RTMAX}.
1180 @node Disambiguating names and IDs
1181 @section chown, chgrp, chroot, id: Disambiguating user names and IDs
1182 @cindex user names, disambiguating
1183 @cindex user IDs, disambiguating
1184 @cindex group names, disambiguating
1185 @cindex group IDs, disambiguating
1186 @cindex disambiguating group names and IDs
1188 Since the @var{user} and @var{group} arguments to these commands
1189 may be specified as names or numeric IDs, there is an
1191 What if a user or group @emph{name} is a string of digits?
1192 @footnote{Using a number as a user name is common in some environments.}
1193 Should the command interpret it as a user name or as an ID@?
1194 POSIX requires that these commands
1195 first attempt to resolve the specified string as a name, and
1196 only once that fails, then try to interpret it as an ID@.
1197 This is troublesome when you want to specify a numeric ID, say 42,
1198 and it must work even in a pathological situation where
1199 @samp{42} is a user name that maps to some other user ID, say 1000.
1200 Simply invoking @code{chown 42 F}, will set @file{F}s owner ID to
1201 1000---not what you intended.
1203 GNU @command{chown}, @command{chgrp}, @command{chroot}, and @command{id}
1204 provide a way to work around this, that at the same time may result in a
1205 significant performance improvement by eliminating a database look-up.
1206 Simply precede each numeric user ID and/or group ID with a @samp{+},
1207 in order to force its interpretation as an integer:
1211 chgrp +$numeric_group_id another-file
1215 The name look-up process is skipped for each @samp{+}-prefixed string,
1216 because a string containing @samp{+} is never a valid user or group name.
1217 This syntax is accepted on most common Unix systems, but not on Solaris 10.
1219 @node Random sources
1220 @section Sources of random data
1222 @cindex random sources
1224 The @command{shuf}, @command{shred}, and @command{sort} commands
1225 sometimes need random data to do their work. For example, @samp{sort
1226 -R} must choose a hash function at random, and it needs random data to
1227 make this selection.
1229 By default these commands use an internal pseudo-random generator
1230 initialized by a small amount of entropy, but can be directed to use
1231 an external source with the @option{--random-source=@var{file}} option.
1232 An error is reported if @var{file} does not contain enough bytes.
1234 For example, the device file @file{/dev/urandom} could be used as the
1235 source of random data. Typically, this device gathers environmental
1236 noise from device drivers and other sources into an entropy pool, and
1237 uses the pool to generate random bits. If the pool is short of data,
1238 the device reuses the internal pool to produce more bits, using a
1239 cryptographically secure pseudo-random number generator. But be aware
1240 that this device is not designed for bulk random data generation
1241 and is relatively slow.
1243 @file{/dev/urandom} suffices for most practical uses, but applications
1244 requiring high-value or long-term protection of private data may
1245 require an alternate data source like @file{/dev/random} or
1246 @file{/dev/arandom}. The set of available sources depends on your
1249 To reproduce the results of an earlier invocation of a command, you
1250 can save some random data into a file and then use that file as the
1251 random source in earlier and later invocations of the command.
1253 Rather than depending on a file, one can generate a reproducible
1254 arbitrary amount of pseudo-random data given a seed value, using
1261 openssl enc -aes-256-ctr -pass pass:"$seed" -nosalt \
1262 </dev/zero 2>/dev/null
1265 shuf -i1-100 --random-source=<(get_seeded_random 42)
1268 @node Target directory
1269 @section Target directory
1271 @cindex target directory
1273 The @command{cp}, @command{install}, @command{ln}, and @command{mv}
1274 commands normally treat the last operand specially when it is a
1275 directory or a symbolic link to a directory. For example, @samp{cp
1276 source dest} is equivalent to @samp{cp source dest/source} if
1277 @file{dest} is a directory. Sometimes this behavior is not exactly
1278 what is wanted, so these commands support the following options to
1279 allow more fine-grained control:
1284 @itemx --no-target-directory
1285 @opindex --no-target-directory
1286 @cindex target directory
1287 @cindex destination directory
1288 Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a directory or a
1289 symbolic link to a directory. This can help avoid race conditions in
1290 programs that operate in a shared area. For example, when the command
1291 @samp{mv /tmp/source /tmp/dest} succeeds, there is no guarantee that
1292 @file{/tmp/source} was renamed to @file{/tmp/dest}: it could have been
1293 renamed to @file{/tmp/dest/source} instead, if some other process
1294 created @file{/tmp/dest} as a directory. However, if @file{mv
1295 -T /tmp/source /tmp/dest} succeeds, there is no
1296 question that @file{/tmp/source} was renamed to @file{/tmp/dest}.
1298 In the opposite situation, where you want the last operand to be
1299 treated as a directory and want a diagnostic otherwise, you can use
1300 the @option{--target-directory} (@option{-t}) option.
1302 @item -t @var{directory}
1303 @itemx --target-directory=@var{directory}
1304 @opindex --target-directory
1305 @cindex target directory
1306 @cindex destination directory
1307 Use @var{directory} as the directory component of each destination
1310 The interface for most programs is that after processing options and a
1311 finite (possibly zero) number of fixed-position arguments, the remaining
1312 argument list is either expected to be empty, or is a list of items
1313 (usually files) that will all be handled identically. The @command{xargs}
1314 program is designed to work well with this convention.
1316 The commands in the @command{mv}-family are unusual in that they take
1317 a variable number of arguments with a special case at the @emph{end}
1318 (namely, the target directory). This makes it nontrivial to perform some
1319 operations, e.g., ``move all files from here to ../d/'', because
1320 @code{mv * ../d/} might exhaust the argument space, and @code{ls | xargs ...}
1321 doesn't have a clean way to specify an extra final argument for each
1322 invocation of the subject command. (It can be done by going through a
1323 shell command, but that requires more human labor and brain power than
1326 The @option{--target-directory} (@option{-t}) option allows the @command{cp},
1327 @command{install}, @command{ln}, and @command{mv} programs to be used
1328 conveniently with @command{xargs}. For example, you can move the files
1329 from the current directory to a sibling directory, @code{d} like this:
1332 ls | xargs mv -t ../d --
1335 However, this doesn't move files whose names begin with @samp{.}.
1336 If you use the GNU @command{find} program, you can move those
1337 files too, with this command:
1340 find . -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 \
1344 But both of the above approaches fail if there are no files in the
1345 current directory, or if any file has a name containing a blank or
1346 some other special characters.
1347 The following example removes those limitations and requires both
1348 GNU @command{find} and GNU @command{xargs}:
1351 find . -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -print0 \
1352 | xargs --null --no-run-if-empty \
1359 The @option{--target-directory} (@option{-t}) and
1360 @option{--no-target-directory} (@option{-T})
1361 options cannot be combined.
1363 @node Trailing slashes
1364 @section Trailing slashes
1366 @cindex trailing slashes
1368 Some GNU programs (at least @command{cp} and @command{mv}) allow you to
1369 remove any trailing slashes from each @var{source} argument before
1370 operating on it. The @option{--strip-trailing-slashes} option enables
1373 This is useful when a @var{source} argument may have a trailing slash and
1374 @c FIXME: mv's behavior in this case is system-dependent
1375 specify a symbolic link to a directory. This scenario is in fact rather
1376 common because some shells can automatically append a trailing slash when
1377 performing file name completion on such symbolic links. Without this
1378 option, @command{mv}, for example, (via the system's rename function) must
1379 interpret a trailing slash as a request to dereference the symbolic link
1380 and so must rename the indirectly referenced @emph{directory} and not
1381 the symbolic link. Although it may seem surprising that such behavior
1382 be the default, it is required by POSIX and is consistent with
1383 other parts of that standard.
1385 @node Traversing symlinks
1386 @section Traversing symlinks
1388 @cindex symbolic link to directory, controlling traversal of
1390 The following options modify how @command{chown} and @command{chgrp}
1391 @c FIXME: note that 'du' has these options, too, but they have slightly
1392 @c different meaning.
1393 traverse a hierarchy when the @option{--recursive} (@option{-R})
1394 option is also specified.
1395 If more than one of the following options is specified, only the final
1397 These options specify whether processing a symbolic link to a directory
1398 entails operating on just the symbolic link or on all files in the
1399 hierarchy rooted at that directory.
1401 These options are independent of @option{--dereference} and
1402 @option{--no-dereference} (@option{-h}), which control whether to modify
1403 a symlink or its referent.
1410 @cindex symbolic link to directory, traverse if on the command line
1411 If @option{--recursive} (@option{-R}) is specified and
1412 a command line argument is a symbolic link to a directory, traverse it.
1419 @cindex symbolic link to directory, traverse each that is encountered
1420 In a recursive traversal, traverse every symbolic link to a directory
1421 that is encountered.
1428 @cindex symbolic link to directory, never traverse
1429 Do not traverse any symbolic links.
1430 This is the default if none of @option{-H}, @option{-L},
1431 or @option{-P} is specified.
1438 @node Treating / specially
1439 @section Treating @file{/} specially
1441 Certain commands can operate destructively on entire hierarchies.
1442 For example, if a user with appropriate privileges mistakenly runs
1443 @samp{rm -rf / tmp/junk}, that may remove
1444 all files on the entire system. Since there are so few
1445 legitimate uses for such a command,
1446 GNU @command{rm} normally declines to operate on any directory
1447 that resolves to @file{/}. If you really want to try to remove all
1448 the files on your system, you can use the @option{--no-preserve-root}
1449 option, but the default behavior, specified by the
1450 @option{--preserve-root} option, is safer for most purposes.
1452 The commands @command{chgrp}, @command{chmod} and @command{chown}
1453 can also operate destructively on entire hierarchies, so they too
1454 support these options. Although, unlike @command{rm}, they don't
1455 actually unlink files, these commands are arguably more dangerous
1456 when operating recursively on @file{/}, since they often work much
1457 more quickly, and hence damage more files before an alert user can
1458 interrupt them. Tradition and POSIX require these commands
1459 to operate recursively on @file{/}, so they default to
1460 @option{--no-preserve-root}, but using the @option{--preserve-root}
1461 option makes them safer for most purposes. For convenience you can
1462 specify @option{--preserve-root} in an alias or in a shell function.
1464 Note that the @option{--preserve-root} option also ensures
1465 that @command{chgrp} and @command{chown} do not modify @file{/}
1466 even when dereferencing a symlink pointing to @file{/}.
1468 @node Special built-in utilities
1469 @section Special built-in utilities
1471 Some programs like @command{nice} can invoke other programs; for
1472 example, the command @samp{nice cat file} invokes the program
1473 @command{cat} by executing the command @samp{cat file}. However,
1474 @dfn{special built-in utilities} like @command{exit} cannot be invoked
1475 this way. For example, the command @samp{nice exit} does not have a
1476 well-defined behavior: it may generate an error message instead of
1479 Here is a list of the special built-in utilities that are standardized
1480 by POSIX 1003.1-2004.
1483 @t{.@: : break continue eval exec exit export readonly
1484 return set shift times trap unset}
1487 For example, because @samp{.}, @samp{:}, and @samp{exec} are special,
1488 the commands @samp{nice . foo.sh}, @samp{nice :}, and @samp{nice exec
1489 pwd} do not work as you might expect.
1491 Many shells extend this list. For example, Bash has several extra
1492 special built-in utilities like @command{history}, and
1493 @command{suspend}, and with Bash the command @samp{nice suspend}
1494 generates an error message instead of suspending.
1496 @node Standards conformance
1497 @section Standards conformance
1499 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
1500 In a few cases, the GNU utilities' default behavior is
1501 incompatible with the POSIX standard. To suppress these
1502 incompatibilities, define the @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} environment
1503 variable. Unless you are checking for POSIX conformance, you
1504 probably do not need to define @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT}.
1506 Newer versions of POSIX are occasionally incompatible with older
1507 versions. For example, older versions of POSIX required the
1508 command @samp{sort +1} to sort based on the second and succeeding
1509 fields in each input line, but starting with POSIX 1003.1-2001
1510 the same command is required to sort the file named @file{+1}, and you
1511 must instead use the command @samp{sort -k 2} to get the field-based
1514 @vindex _POSIX2_VERSION
1515 The GNU utilities normally conform to the version of POSIX
1516 that is standard for your system. To cause them to conform to a
1517 different version of POSIX, define the @env{_POSIX2_VERSION}
1518 environment variable to a value of the form @var{yyyymm} specifying
1519 the year and month the standard was adopted. Three values are currently
1520 supported for @env{_POSIX2_VERSION}: @samp{199209} stands for
1521 POSIX 1003.2-1992, @samp{200112} stands for POSIX
1522 1003.1-2001, and @samp{200809} stands for POSIX 1003.1-2008.
1523 For example, if you have a newer system but are running software
1524 that assumes an older version of POSIX and uses @samp{sort +1}
1525 or @samp{tail +10}, you can work around any compatibility problems by setting
1526 @samp{_POSIX2_VERSION=199209} in your environment.
1528 @c This node is named "Multi-call invocation", not the usual
1529 @c "coreutils invocation", so that shell commands like
1530 @c 'info coreutils "touch invocation"' work as expected.
1531 @node Multi-call invocation
1532 @section @command{coreutils}: Multi-call program
1536 @cindex calling combined multi-call program
1538 The @command{coreutils} command invokes an individual utility, either
1539 implicitly selected by the last component of the name used to invoke
1540 @command{coreutils}, or explicitly with the
1541 @option{--coreutils-prog} option. Synopsis:
1544 coreutils @option{--coreutils-prog=PROGRAM} @dots{}
1547 The @command{coreutils} command is not installed by default, so
1548 portable scripts should not rely on its existence.
1550 @node Output of entire files
1551 @chapter Output of entire files
1553 @cindex output of entire files
1554 @cindex entire files, output of
1556 These commands read and write entire files, possibly transforming them
1560 * cat invocation:: Concatenate and write files.
1561 * tac invocation:: Concatenate and write files in reverse.
1562 * nl invocation:: Number lines and write files.
1563 * od invocation:: Write files in octal or other formats.
1564 * base32 invocation:: Transform data into printable data.
1565 * base64 invocation:: Transform data into printable data.
1568 @node cat invocation
1569 @section @command{cat}: Concatenate and write files
1572 @cindex concatenate and write files
1573 @cindex copying files
1575 @command{cat} copies each @var{file} (@samp{-} means standard input), or
1576 standard input if none are given, to standard output. Synopsis:
1579 cat [@var{option}] [@var{file}]@dots{}
1582 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
1590 Equivalent to @option{-vET}.
1593 @itemx --number-nonblank
1595 @opindex --number-nonblank
1596 Number all nonempty output lines, starting with 1.
1600 Equivalent to @option{-vE}.
1605 @opindex --show-ends
1606 Display a @samp{$} after the end of each line.
1612 Number all output lines, starting with 1. This option is ignored
1613 if @option{-b} is in effect.
1616 @itemx --squeeze-blank
1618 @opindex --squeeze-blank
1619 @cindex squeezing empty lines
1620 @cindex squeezing blank lines
1621 Suppress repeated adjacent blank lines; output just one empty line
1626 Equivalent to @option{-vT}.
1631 @opindex --show-tabs
1632 Display TAB characters as @samp{^I}.
1636 Ignored; for POSIX compatibility.
1639 @itemx --show-nonprinting
1641 @opindex --show-nonprinting
1642 Display control characters except for LFD and TAB using
1643 @samp{^} notation and precede characters that have the high bit set with
1648 On systems like MS-DOS that distinguish between text and binary files,
1649 @command{cat} normally reads and writes in binary mode. However,
1650 @command{cat} reads in text mode if one of the options
1651 @option{-bensAE} is used or if @command{cat} is reading from standard
1652 input and standard input is a terminal. Similarly, @command{cat}
1653 writes in text mode if one of the options @option{-bensAE} is used or
1654 if standard output is a terminal.
1661 # Output f's contents, then standard input, then g's contents.
1664 # Copy standard input to standard output.
1669 @node tac invocation
1670 @section @command{tac}: Concatenate and write files in reverse
1673 @cindex reversing files
1675 @command{tac} copies each @var{file} (@samp{-} means standard input), or
1676 standard input if none are given, to standard output, reversing the
1677 records (lines by default) in each separately. Synopsis:
1680 tac [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
1683 @dfn{Records} are separated by instances of a string (newline by
1684 default). By default, this separator string is attached to the end of
1685 the record that it follows in the file.
1687 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
1695 The separator is attached to the beginning of the record that it
1696 precedes in the file.
1702 Treat the separator string as a regular expression.
1704 @item -s @var{separator}
1705 @itemx --separator=@var{separator}
1707 @opindex --separator
1708 Use @var{separator} as the record separator, instead of newline.
1709 Note an empty @var{separator} is treated as a zero byte.
1710 I.e., input and output items are delimited with ASCII NUL.
1714 On systems like MS-DOS that distinguish between text and binary files,
1715 @command{tac} reads and writes in binary mode.
1722 # Reverse a file character by character.
1728 @section @command{nl}: Number lines and write files
1731 @cindex numbering lines
1732 @cindex line numbering
1734 @command{nl} writes each @var{file} (@samp{-} means standard input), or
1735 standard input if none are given, to standard output, with line numbers
1736 added to some or all of the lines. Synopsis:
1739 nl [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
1742 @cindex logical pages, numbering on
1743 @command{nl} decomposes its input into (logical) pages; by default, the
1744 line number is reset to 1 at the top of each logical page. @command{nl}
1745 treats all of the input files as a single document; it does not reset
1746 line numbers or logical pages between files.
1748 @cindex headers, numbering
1749 @cindex body, numbering
1750 @cindex footers, numbering
1751 A logical page consists of three sections: header, body, and footer.
1752 Any of the sections can be empty. Each can be numbered in a different
1753 style from the others.
1755 The beginnings of the sections of logical pages are indicated in the
1756 input file by a line containing exactly one of these delimiter strings:
1767 The two characters from which these strings are made can be changed from
1768 @samp{\} and @samp{:} via options (see below), but the pattern and
1769 length of each string cannot be changed.
1771 A section delimiter is replaced by an empty line on output. Any text
1772 that comes before the first section delimiter string in the input file
1773 is considered to be part of a body section, so @command{nl} treats a
1774 file that contains no section delimiters as a single body section.
1776 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
1780 @item -b @var{style}
1781 @itemx --body-numbering=@var{style}
1783 @opindex --body-numbering
1784 Select the numbering style for lines in the body section of each
1785 logical page. When a line is not numbered, the current line number
1786 is not incremented, but the line number separator character is still
1787 prepended to the line. The styles are:
1793 number only nonempty lines (default for body),
1795 do not number lines (default for header and footer),
1797 number only lines that contain a match for the basic regular
1798 expression @var{bre}.
1799 @xref{Regular Expressions, , Regular Expressions, grep, The GNU Grep Manual}.
1803 @itemx --section-delimiter=@var{cd}
1805 @opindex --section-delimiter
1806 @cindex section delimiters of pages
1807 Set the section delimiter characters to @var{cd}; default is
1808 @samp{\:}. If only @var{c} is given, the second remains @samp{:}.
1809 (Remember to protect @samp{\} or other metacharacters from shell
1810 expansion with quotes or extra backslashes.)
1812 @item -f @var{style}
1813 @itemx --footer-numbering=@var{style}
1815 @opindex --footer-numbering
1816 Analogous to @option{--body-numbering}.
1818 @item -h @var{style}
1819 @itemx --header-numbering=@var{style}
1821 @opindex --header-numbering
1822 Analogous to @option{--body-numbering}.
1824 @item -i @var{number}
1825 @itemx --line-increment=@var{number}
1827 @opindex --line-increment
1828 Increment line numbers by @var{number} (default 1).
1830 @item -l @var{number}
1831 @itemx --join-blank-lines=@var{number}
1833 @opindex --join-blank-lines
1834 @cindex empty lines, numbering
1835 @cindex blank lines, numbering
1836 Consider @var{number} (default 1) consecutive empty lines to be one
1837 logical line for numbering, and only number the last one. Where fewer
1838 than @var{number} consecutive empty lines occur, do not number them.
1839 An empty line is one that contains no characters, not even spaces
1842 @item -n @var{format}
1843 @itemx --number-format=@var{format}
1845 @opindex --number-format
1846 Select the line numbering format (default is @code{rn}):
1850 @opindex ln @r{format for @command{nl}}
1851 left justified, no leading zeros;
1853 @opindex rn @r{format for @command{nl}}
1854 right justified, no leading zeros;
1856 @opindex rz @r{format for @command{nl}}
1857 right justified, leading zeros.
1861 @itemx --no-renumber
1863 @opindex --no-renumber
1864 Do not reset the line number at the start of a logical page.
1866 @item -s @var{string}
1867 @itemx --number-separator=@var{string}
1869 @opindex --number-separator
1870 Separate the line number from the text line in the output with
1871 @var{string} (default is the TAB character).
1873 @item -v @var{number}
1874 @itemx --starting-line-number=@var{number}
1876 @opindex --starting-line-number
1877 Set the initial line number on each logical page to @var{number} (default 1).
1879 @item -w @var{number}
1880 @itemx --number-width=@var{number}
1882 @opindex --number-width
1883 Use @var{number} characters for line numbers (default 6).
1891 @section @command{od}: Write files in octal or other formats
1894 @cindex octal dump of files
1895 @cindex hex dump of files
1896 @cindex ASCII dump of files
1897 @cindex file contents, dumping unambiguously
1899 @command{od} writes an unambiguous representation of each @var{file}
1900 (@samp{-} means standard input), or standard input if none are given.
1904 od [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
1905 od [-abcdfilosx]@dots{} [@var{file}] [[+]@var{offset}[.][b]]
1906 od [@var{option}]@dots{} --traditional [@var{file}]@c
1907 [[+]@var{offset}[.][b] [[+]@var{label}[.][b]]]
1910 Each line of output consists of the offset in the input, followed by
1911 groups of data from the file. By default, @command{od} prints the offset in
1912 octal, and each group of file data is a C @code{short int}'s worth of input
1913 printed as a single octal number.
1915 If @var{offset} is given, it specifies how many input bytes to skip
1916 before formatting and writing. By default, it is interpreted as an
1917 octal number, but the optional trailing decimal point causes it to be
1918 interpreted as decimal. If no decimal is specified and the offset
1919 begins with @samp{0x} or @samp{0X} it is interpreted as a hexadecimal
1920 number. If there is a trailing @samp{b}, the number of bytes skipped
1921 will be @var{offset} multiplied by 512.
1923 If a command is of both the first and second forms, the second form is
1924 assumed if the last operand begins with @samp{+} or (if there are two
1925 operands) a digit. For example, in @samp{od foo 10} and @samp{od +10}
1926 the @samp{10} is an offset, whereas in @samp{od 10} the @samp{10} is a
1929 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
1933 @item -A @var{radix}
1934 @itemx --address-radix=@var{radix}
1936 @opindex --address-radix
1937 @cindex radix for file offsets
1938 @cindex file offset radix
1939 Select the base in which file offsets are printed. @var{radix} can
1940 be one of the following:
1950 none (do not print offsets).
1953 The default is octal.
1955 @item --endian=@var{order}
1957 @cindex byte-swapping
1959 Reorder input bytes, to handle inputs with differing byte orders,
1960 or to provide consistent output independent of the endian convention
1961 of the current system. Swapping is performed according to the
1962 specified @option{--type} size and endian @var{order}, which can be
1963 @samp{little} or @samp{big}.
1965 @item -j @var{bytes}
1966 @itemx --skip-bytes=@var{bytes}
1968 @opindex --skip-bytes
1969 Skip @var{bytes} input bytes before formatting and writing. If
1970 @var{bytes} begins with @samp{0x} or @samp{0X}, it is interpreted in
1971 hexadecimal; otherwise, if it begins with @samp{0}, in octal; otherwise,
1973 @multiplierSuffixes{bytes}
1975 @item -N @var{bytes}
1976 @itemx --read-bytes=@var{bytes}
1978 @opindex --read-bytes
1979 Output at most @var{bytes} bytes of the input. Prefixes and suffixes on
1980 @code{bytes} are interpreted as for the @option{-j} option.
1982 @item -S @var{bytes}
1983 @itemx --strings[=@var{bytes}]
1986 @cindex string constants, outputting
1987 Instead of the normal output, output only @dfn{string constants}: at
1988 least @var{bytes} consecutive ASCII graphic characters,
1989 followed by a zero byte (ASCII NUL).
1990 Prefixes and suffixes on @var{bytes} are interpreted as for the
1993 If @var{bytes} is omitted with @option{--strings}, the default is 3.
1996 @itemx --format=@var{type}
1999 Select the format in which to output the file data. @var{type} is a
2000 string of one or more of the below type indicator characters. If you
2001 include more than one type indicator character in a single @var{type}
2002 string, or use this option more than once, @command{od} writes one copy
2003 of each output line using each of the data types that you specified,
2004 in the order that you specified.
2006 Adding a trailing ``z'' to any type specification appends a display
2007 of the single byte character representation of the printable characters
2008 to the output line generated by the type specification.
2012 named character, ignoring high-order bit
2014 printable single byte character, C backslash escape
2015 or a 3 digit octal sequence
2019 floating point (@pxref{Floating point})
2028 The type @code{a} outputs things like @samp{sp} for space, @samp{nl} for
2029 newline, and @samp{nul} for a zero byte. Only the least significant
2030 seven bits of each byte is used; the high-order bit is ignored.
2031 Type @code{c} outputs
2032 @samp{ }, @samp{\n}, and @code{\0}, respectively.
2035 Except for types @samp{a} and @samp{c}, you can specify the number
2036 of bytes to use in interpreting each number in the given data type
2037 by following the type indicator character with a decimal integer.
2038 Alternately, you can specify the size of one of the C compiler's
2039 built-in data types by following the type indicator character with
2040 one of the following characters. For integers (@samp{d}, @samp{o},
2041 @samp{u}, @samp{x}):
2054 For floating point (@code{f}):
2066 @itemx --output-duplicates
2068 @opindex --output-duplicates
2069 Output consecutive lines that are identical. By default, when two or
2070 more consecutive output lines would be identical, @command{od} outputs only
2071 the first line, and puts just an asterisk on the following line to
2072 indicate the elision.
2075 @itemx --width[=@var{n}]
2078 Dump @code{n} input bytes per output line. This must be a multiple of
2079 the least common multiple of the sizes associated with the specified
2082 If this option is not given at all, the default is 16. If @var{n} is
2083 omitted, the default is 32.
2087 The next several options are shorthands for format specifications.
2088 GNU @command{od} accepts any combination of shorthands and format
2089 specification options. These options accumulate.
2095 Output as named characters. Equivalent to @samp{-t a}.
2099 Output as octal bytes. Equivalent to @samp{-t o1}.
2103 Output as printable single byte characters, C backslash escapes
2104 or 3 digit octal sequences. Equivalent to @samp{-t c}.
2108 Output as unsigned decimal two-byte units. Equivalent to @samp{-t u2}.
2112 Output as floats. Equivalent to @samp{-t fF}.
2116 Output as decimal ints. Equivalent to @samp{-t dI}.
2120 Output as decimal long ints. Equivalent to @samp{-t dL}.
2124 Output as octal two-byte units. Equivalent to @option{-t o2}.
2128 Output as decimal two-byte units. Equivalent to @option{-t d2}.
2132 Output as hexadecimal two-byte units. Equivalent to @samp{-t x2}.
2135 @opindex --traditional
2136 Recognize the non-option label argument that traditional @command{od}
2137 accepted. The following syntax:
2140 od --traditional [@var{file}] [[+]@var{offset}[.][b] [[+]@var{label}[.][b]]]
2144 can be used to specify at most one file and optional arguments
2145 specifying an offset and a pseudo-start address, @var{label}.
2146 The @var{label} argument is interpreted
2147 just like @var{offset}, but it specifies an initial pseudo-address. The
2148 pseudo-addresses are displayed in parentheses following any normal
2156 @node base32 invocation
2157 @section @command{base32}: Transform data into printable data
2160 @cindex base32 encoding
2162 @command{base32} transforms data read from a file, or standard input,
2163 into (or from) base32 encoded form. The base32 encoded form uses
2164 printable ASCII characters to represent binary data.
2165 The usage and options of this command are precisely the
2166 same as for @command{base64}. @xref{base64 invocation}.
2169 @node base64 invocation
2170 @section @command{base64}: Transform data into printable data
2173 @cindex base64 encoding
2175 @command{base64} transforms data read from a file, or standard input,
2176 into (or from) base64 encoded form. The base64 encoded form uses
2177 printable ASCII characters to represent binary data.
2181 base64 [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]
2182 base64 --decode [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]
2185 The base64 encoding expands data to roughly 133% of the original.
2186 The base32 encoding expands data to roughly 160% of the original.
2187 The format conforms to
2188 @uref{ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4648.txt, RFC 4648}.
2190 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
2195 @itemx --wrap=@var{cols}
2199 @cindex column to wrap data after
2200 During encoding, wrap lines after @var{cols} characters. This must be
2203 The default is to wrap after 76 characters. Use the value 0 to
2204 disable line wrapping altogether.
2210 @cindex Decode base64 data
2211 @cindex Base64 decoding
2212 Change the mode of operation, from the default of encoding data, to
2213 decoding data. Input is expected to be base64 encoded data, and the
2214 output will be the original data.
2217 @itemx --ignore-garbage
2219 @opindex --ignore-garbage
2220 @cindex Ignore garbage in base64 stream
2221 When decoding, newlines are always accepted.
2222 During decoding, ignore unrecognized bytes,
2223 to permit distorted data to be decoded.
2230 @node Formatting file contents
2231 @chapter Formatting file contents
2233 @cindex formatting file contents
2235 These commands reformat the contents of files.
2238 * fmt invocation:: Reformat paragraph text.
2239 * pr invocation:: Paginate or columnate files for printing.
2240 * fold invocation:: Wrap input lines to fit in specified width.
2244 @node fmt invocation
2245 @section @command{fmt}: Reformat paragraph text
2248 @cindex reformatting paragraph text
2249 @cindex paragraphs, reformatting
2250 @cindex text, reformatting
2252 @command{fmt} fills and joins lines to produce output lines of (at most)
2253 a given number of characters (75 by default). Synopsis:
2256 fmt [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
2259 @command{fmt} reads from the specified @var{file} arguments (or standard
2260 input if none are given), and writes to standard output.
2262 By default, blank lines, spaces between words, and indentation are
2263 preserved in the output; successive input lines with different
2264 indentation are not joined; tabs are expanded on input and introduced on
2267 @cindex line-breaking
2268 @cindex sentences and line-breaking
2269 @cindex Knuth, Donald E.
2270 @cindex Plass, Michael F.
2271 @command{fmt} prefers breaking lines at the end of a sentence, and tries to
2272 avoid line breaks after the first word of a sentence or before the last
2273 word of a sentence. A @dfn{sentence break} is defined as either the end
2274 of a paragraph or a word ending in any of @samp{.?!}, followed by two
2275 spaces or end of line, ignoring any intervening parentheses or quotes.
2276 Like @TeX{}, @command{fmt} reads entire ``paragraphs'' before choosing line
2277 breaks; the algorithm is a variant of that given by Donald E. Knuth
2278 and Michael F. Plass in ``Breaking Paragraphs Into Lines'',
2279 @cite{Software---Practice & Experience} @b{11}, 11 (November 1981),
2282 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
2287 @itemx --crown-margin
2289 @opindex --crown-margin
2290 @cindex crown margin
2291 @dfn{Crown margin} mode: preserve the indentation of the first two
2292 lines within a paragraph, and align the left margin of each subsequent
2293 line with that of the second line.
2296 @itemx --tagged-paragraph
2298 @opindex --tagged-paragraph
2299 @cindex tagged paragraphs
2300 @dfn{Tagged paragraph} mode: like crown margin mode, except that if
2301 indentation of the first line of a paragraph is the same as the
2302 indentation of the second, the first line is treated as a one-line
2308 @opindex --split-only
2309 Split lines only. Do not join short lines to form longer ones. This
2310 prevents sample lines of code, and other such ``formatted'' text from
2311 being unduly combined.
2314 @itemx --uniform-spacing
2316 @opindex --uniform-spacing
2317 Uniform spacing. Reduce spacing between words to one space, and spacing
2318 between sentences to two spaces.
2321 @itemx -w @var{width}
2322 @itemx --width=@var{width}
2323 @opindex -@var{width}
2326 Fill output lines up to @var{width} characters (default 75 or @var{goal}
2327 plus 10, if @var{goal} is provided).
2330 @itemx --goal=@var{goal}
2333 @command{fmt} initially tries to make lines @var{goal} characters wide.
2334 By default, this is 7% shorter than @var{width}.
2336 @item -p @var{prefix}
2337 @itemx --prefix=@var{prefix}
2338 Only lines beginning with @var{prefix} (possibly preceded by whitespace)
2339 are subject to formatting. The prefix and any preceding whitespace are
2340 stripped for the formatting and then re-attached to each formatted output
2341 line. One use is to format certain kinds of program comments, while
2342 leaving the code unchanged.
2349 @section @command{pr}: Paginate or columnate files for printing
2352 @cindex printing, preparing files for
2353 @cindex multicolumn output, generating
2354 @cindex merging files in parallel
2356 @command{pr} writes each @var{file} (@samp{-} means standard input), or
2357 standard input if none are given, to standard output, paginating and
2358 optionally outputting in multicolumn format; optionally merges all
2359 @var{file}s, printing all in parallel, one per column. Synopsis:
2362 pr [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
2366 By default, a 5-line header is printed at each page: two blank lines;
2367 a line with the date, the file name, and the page count; and two more
2368 blank lines. A footer of five blank lines is also printed.
2369 The default @var{page_length} is 66
2370 lines. The default number of text lines is therefore 56.
2371 The text line of the header takes the form
2372 @samp{@var{date} @var{string} @var{page}}, with spaces inserted around
2373 @var{string} so that the line takes up the full @var{page_width}. Here,
2374 @var{date} is the date (see the @option{-D} or @option{--date-format}
2375 option for details), @var{string} is the centered header string, and
2376 @var{page} identifies the page number. The @env{LC_MESSAGES} locale
2377 category affects the spelling of @var{page}; in the default C locale, it
2378 is @samp{Page @var{number}} where @var{number} is the decimal page
2381 Form feeds in the input cause page breaks in the output. Multiple form
2382 feeds produce empty pages.
2384 Columns are of equal width, separated by an optional string (default
2385 is @samp{space}). For multicolumn output, lines will always be truncated to
2386 @var{page_width} (default 72), unless you use the @option{-J} option.
2388 column output no line truncation occurs by default. Use @option{-W} option to
2389 truncate lines in that case.
2391 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
2395 @item +@var{first_page}[:@var{last_page}]
2396 @itemx --pages=@var{first_page}[:@var{last_page}]
2397 @c The two following @opindex lines evoke warnings because they contain ':'
2398 @c The 'info' spec does not permit that. If we use those lines, we end
2399 @c up with truncated index entries that don't work.
2400 @c @opindex +@var{first_page}[:@var{last_page}]
2401 @c @opindex --pages=@var{first_page}[:@var{last_page}]
2402 @opindex +@var{page_range}
2403 @opindex --pages=@var{page_range}
2404 Begin printing with page @var{first_page} and stop with @var{last_page}.
2405 Missing @samp{:@var{last_page}} implies end of file. While estimating
2406 the number of skipped pages each form feed in the input file results
2407 in a new page. Page counting with and without @samp{+@var{first_page}}
2408 is identical. By default, counting starts with the first page of input
2409 file (not first page printed). Line numbering may be altered by @option{-N}
2413 @itemx --columns=@var{column}
2414 @opindex -@var{column}
2416 @cindex down columns
2417 With each single @var{file}, produce @var{column} columns of output
2418 (default is 1) and print columns down, unless @option{-a} is used. The
2419 column width is automatically decreased as @var{column} increases; unless
2420 you use the @option{-W/-w} option to increase @var{page_width} as well.
2421 This option might well cause some lines to be truncated. The number of
2422 lines in the columns on each page are balanced. The options @option{-e}
2423 and @option{-i} are on for multiple text-column output. Together with
2424 @option{-J} option column alignment and line truncation is turned off.
2425 Lines of full length are joined in a free field format and @option{-S}
2426 option may set field separators. @option{-@var{column}} may not be used
2427 with @option{-m} option.
2433 @cindex across columns
2434 With each single @var{file}, print columns across rather than down. The
2435 @option{-@var{column}} option must be given with @var{column} greater than one.
2436 If a line is too long to fit in a column, it is truncated.
2439 @itemx --show-control-chars
2441 @opindex --show-control-chars
2442 Print control characters using hat notation (e.g., @samp{^G}); print
2443 other nonprinting characters in octal backslash notation. By default,
2444 nonprinting characters are not changed.
2447 @itemx --double-space
2449 @opindex --double-space
2450 @cindex double spacing
2451 Double space the output.
2453 @item -D @var{format}
2454 @itemx --date-format=@var{format}
2455 @cindex time formats
2456 @cindex formatting times
2457 Format header dates using @var{format}, using the same conventions as
2458 for the command @samp{date +@var{format}}. @xref{date invocation}.
2459 Except for directives, which start with
2460 @samp{%}, characters in @var{format} are printed unchanged. You can use
2461 this option to specify an arbitrary string in place of the header date,
2462 e.g., @option{--date-format="Monday morning"}.
2464 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
2466 The default date format is @samp{%Y-%m-%d %H:%M} (for example,
2467 @samp{2001-12-04 23:59});
2468 but if the @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} environment variable is set
2469 and the @env{LC_TIME} locale category specifies the POSIX
2470 locale, the default is @samp{%b %e %H:%M %Y} (for example,
2471 @samp{Dec@ @ 4 23:59 2001}.
2474 Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified by
2475 the @env{TZ} environment variable, or by the system default rules if
2476 @env{TZ} is not set. @xref{TZ Variable,, Specifying the Time Zone
2477 with @env{TZ}, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
2479 @item -e[@var{in-tabchar}[@var{in-tabwidth}]]
2480 @itemx --expand-tabs[=@var{in-tabchar}[@var{in-tabwidth}]]
2482 @opindex --expand-tabs
2484 Expand @var{tab}s to spaces on input. Optional argument @var{in-tabchar} is
2485 the input tab character (default is the TAB character). Second optional
2486 argument @var{in-tabwidth} is the input tab character's width (default
2494 @opindex --form-feed
2495 Use a form feed instead of newlines to separate output pages. This does
2496 not alter the default page length of 66 lines.
2498 @item -h @var{header}
2499 @itemx --header=@var{header}
2502 Replace the file name in the header with the centered string @var{header}.
2503 When using the shell, @var{header} should be quoted and should be
2504 separated from @option{-h} by a space.
2506 @item -i[@var{out-tabchar}[@var{out-tabwidth}]]
2507 @itemx --output-tabs[=@var{out-tabchar}[@var{out-tabwidth}]]
2509 @opindex --output-tabs
2511 Replace spaces with @var{tab}s on output. Optional argument @var{out-tabchar}
2512 is the output tab character (default is the TAB character). Second optional
2513 argument @var{out-tabwidth} is the output tab character's width (default
2519 @opindex --join-lines
2520 Merge lines of full length. Used together with the column options
2521 @option{-@var{column}}, @option{-a -@var{column}} or @option{-m}. Turns off
2522 @option{-W/-w} line truncation;
2523 no column alignment used; may be used with
2524 @option{--sep-string[=@var{string}]}. @option{-J} has been introduced
2525 (together with @option{-W} and @option{--sep-string})
2526 to disentangle the old (POSIX-compliant) options @option{-w} and
2527 @option{-s} along with the three column options.
2530 @item -l @var{page_length}
2531 @itemx --length=@var{page_length}
2534 Set the page length to @var{page_length} (default 66) lines, including
2535 the lines of the header [and the footer]. If @var{page_length} is less
2536 than or equal to 10, the header and footer are omitted, as if the
2537 @option{-t} option had been given.
2543 Merge and print all @var{file}s in parallel, one in each column. If a
2544 line is too long to fit in a column, it is truncated, unless the @option{-J}
2545 option is used. @option{--sep-string[=@var{string}]} may be used.
2547 some @var{file}s (form feeds set) produce empty columns, still marked
2548 by @var{string}. The result is a continuous line numbering and column
2549 marking throughout the whole merged file. Completely empty merged pages
2550 show no separators or line numbers. The default header becomes
2551 @samp{@var{date} @var{page}} with spaces inserted in the middle; this
2552 may be used with the @option{-h} or @option{--header} option to fill up
2553 the middle blank part.
2555 @item -n[@var{number-separator}[@var{digits}]]
2556 @itemx --number-lines[=@var{number-separator}[@var{digits}]]
2558 @opindex --number-lines
2559 Provide @var{digits} digit line numbering (default for @var{digits} is
2560 5). With multicolumn output the number occupies the first @var{digits}
2561 column positions of each text column or only each line of @option{-m}
2562 output. With single column output the number precedes each line just as
2563 @option{-m} does. Default counting of the line numbers starts with the
2564 first line of the input file (not the first line printed, compare the
2565 @option{--page} option and @option{-N} option).
2566 Optional argument @var{number-separator} is the character appended to
2567 the line number to separate it from the text followed. The default
2568 separator is the TAB character. In a strict sense a TAB is always
2569 printed with single column output only. The TAB width varies
2570 with the TAB position, e.g., with the left @var{margin} specified
2571 by @option{-o} option. With multicolumn output priority is given to
2572 @samp{equal width of output columns} (a POSIX specification).
2573 The TAB width is fixed to the value of the first column and does
2574 not change with different values of left @var{margin}. That means a
2575 fixed number of spaces is always printed in the place of the
2576 @var{number-separator} TAB@. The tabification depends upon the output
2579 @item -N @var{line_number}
2580 @itemx --first-line-number=@var{line_number}
2582 @opindex --first-line-number
2583 Start line counting with the number @var{line_number} at first line of
2584 first page printed (in most cases not the first line of the input file).
2586 @item -o @var{margin}
2587 @itemx --indent=@var{margin}
2590 @cindex indenting lines
2592 Indent each line with a margin @var{margin} spaces wide (default is zero).
2593 The total page width is the size of the margin plus the @var{page_width}
2594 set with the @option{-W/-w} option. A limited overflow may occur with
2595 numbered single column output (compare @option{-n} option).
2598 @itemx --no-file-warnings
2600 @opindex --no-file-warnings
2601 Do not print a warning message when an argument @var{file} cannot be
2602 opened. (The exit status will still be nonzero, however.)
2604 @item -s[@var{char}]
2605 @itemx --separator[=@var{char}]
2607 @opindex --separator
2608 Separate columns by a single character @var{char}. The default for
2609 @var{char} is the TAB character without @option{-w} and @samp{no
2610 character} with @option{-w}. Without @option{-s} the default separator
2611 @samp{space} is set. @option{-s[char]} turns off line truncation of all
2612 three column options (@option{-COLUMN}|@option{-a -COLUMN}|@option{-m}) unless
2613 @option{-w} is set. This is a POSIX-compliant formulation.
2616 @item -S[@var{string}]
2617 @itemx --sep-string[=@var{string}]
2619 @opindex --sep-string
2620 Use @var{string} to separate output columns. The @option{-S} option doesn't
2621 affect the @option{-W/-w} option, unlike the @option{-s} option which does. It
2622 does not affect line truncation or column alignment.
2623 Without @option{-S}, and with @option{-J}, @command{pr} uses the default output
2625 Without @option{-S} or @option{-J}, @command{pr} uses a @samp{space}
2626 (same as @option{-S"@w{ }"}).
2627 If no @samp{@var{string}} argument is specified, @samp{""} is assumed.
2630 @itemx --omit-header
2632 @opindex --omit-header
2633 Do not print the usual header [and footer] on each page, and do not fill
2634 out the bottom of pages (with blank lines or a form feed). No page
2635 structure is produced, but form feeds set in the input files are retained.
2636 The predefined pagination is not changed. @option{-t} or @option{-T} may be
2637 useful together with other options; e.g.: @option{-t -e4}, expand TAB characters
2638 in the input file to 4 spaces but don't make any other changes. Use of
2639 @option{-t} overrides @option{-h}.
2642 @itemx --omit-pagination
2644 @opindex --omit-pagination
2645 Do not print header [and footer]. In addition eliminate all form feeds
2646 set in the input files.
2649 @itemx --show-nonprinting
2651 @opindex --show-nonprinting
2652 Print nonprinting characters in octal backslash notation.
2654 @item -w @var{page_width}
2655 @itemx --width=@var{page_width}
2658 Set page width to @var{page_width} characters for multiple text-column
2659 output only (default for @var{page_width} is 72). The specified
2660 @var{page_width} is rounded down so that columns have equal width.
2661 @option{-s[CHAR]} turns off the default page width and any line truncation
2662 and column alignment.
2663 Lines of full length are merged, regardless of the column options
2664 set. No @var{page_width} setting is possible with single column output.
2665 A POSIX-compliant formulation.
2667 @item -W @var{page_width}
2668 @itemx --page_width=@var{page_width}
2670 @opindex --page_width
2671 Set the page width to @var{page_width} characters, honored with and
2672 without a column option. With a column option, the specified @var{page_width}
2673 is rounded down so that columns have equal width. Text lines are truncated,
2674 unless @option{-J} is used. Together with one of the three column options
2675 (@option{-@var{column}}, @option{-a -@var{column}} or @option{-m}) column
2676 alignment is always used. The separator options @option{-S} or @option{-s}
2677 don't disable the @option{-W} option. Default is 72 characters. Without
2678 @option{-W @var{page_width}} and without any of the column options NO line
2679 truncation is used (defined to keep downward compatibility and to meet
2680 most frequent tasks). That's equivalent to @option{-W 72 -J}@. The header
2681 line is never truncated.
2688 @node fold invocation
2689 @section @command{fold}: Wrap input lines to fit in specified width
2692 @cindex wrapping long input lines
2693 @cindex folding long input lines
2695 @command{fold} writes each @var{file} (@option{-} means standard input), or
2696 standard input if none are given, to standard output, breaking long
2700 fold [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
2703 By default, @command{fold} breaks lines wider than 80 columns. The output
2704 is split into as many lines as necessary.
2706 @cindex screen columns
2707 @command{fold} counts screen columns by default; thus, a tab may count more
2708 than one column, backspace decreases the column count, and carriage
2709 return sets the column to zero.
2711 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
2719 Count bytes rather than columns, so that tabs, backspaces, and carriage
2720 returns are each counted as taking up one column, just like other
2727 Break at word boundaries: the line is broken after the last blank before
2728 the maximum line length. If the line contains no such blanks, the line
2729 is broken at the maximum line length as usual.
2731 @item -w @var{width}
2732 @itemx --width=@var{width}
2735 Use a maximum line length of @var{width} columns instead of 80.
2737 For compatibility @command{fold} supports an obsolete option syntax
2738 @option{-@var{width}}. New scripts should use @option{-w @var{width}}
2746 @node Output of parts of files
2747 @chapter Output of parts of files
2749 @cindex output of parts of files
2750 @cindex parts of files, output of
2752 These commands output pieces of the input.
2755 * head invocation:: Output the first part of files.
2756 * tail invocation:: Output the last part of files.
2757 * split invocation:: Split a file into pieces.
2758 * csplit invocation:: Split a file into context-determined pieces.
2761 @node head invocation
2762 @section @command{head}: Output the first part of files
2765 @cindex initial part of files, outputting
2766 @cindex first part of files, outputting
2768 @command{head} prints the first part (10 lines by default) of each
2769 @var{file}; it reads from standard input if no files are given or
2770 when given a @var{file} of @option{-}. Synopsis:
2773 head [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
2776 If more than one @var{file} is specified, @command{head} prints a
2777 one-line header consisting of:
2780 ==> @var{file name} <==
2784 before the output for each @var{file}.
2786 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
2790 @item -c [-]@var{num}
2791 @itemx --bytes=[-]@var{num}
2794 Print the first @var{num} bytes, instead of initial lines.
2795 However, if @var{num} is prefixed with a @samp{-},
2796 print all but the last @var{num} bytes of each file.
2797 @multiplierSuffixes{num}
2799 @item -n [-]@var{num}
2800 @itemx --lines=[-]@var{num}
2803 Output the first @var{num} lines.
2804 However, if @var{num} is prefixed with a @samp{-},
2805 print all but the last @var{num} lines of each file.
2806 Size multiplier suffixes are the same as with the @option{-c} option.
2814 Never print file name headers.
2820 Always print file name headers.
2826 For compatibility @command{head} also supports an obsolete option syntax
2827 @option{-[@var{num}][bkm][cqv]}, which is recognized only if it is
2828 specified first. @var{num} is a decimal number optionally followed
2829 by a size letter (@samp{b}, @samp{k}, @samp{m}) as in @option{-c}, or
2830 @samp{l} to mean count by lines, or other option letters (@samp{cqv}).
2831 Scripts intended for standard hosts should use @option{-c @var{num}}
2832 or @option{-n @var{num}} instead. If your script must also run on
2833 hosts that support only the obsolete syntax, it is usually simpler to
2834 avoid @command{head}, e.g., by using @samp{sed 5q} instead of
2840 @node tail invocation
2841 @section @command{tail}: Output the last part of files
2844 @cindex last part of files, outputting
2846 @command{tail} prints the last part (10 lines by default) of each
2847 @var{file}; it reads from standard input if no files are given or
2848 when given a @var{file} of @samp{-}. Synopsis:
2851 tail [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
2854 If more than one @var{file} is specified, @command{tail} prints a
2855 one-line header before the output for each @var{file}, consisting of:
2858 ==> @var{file name} <==
2861 For further processing of tail output, it can be useful to convert the
2862 file headers to line prefixes, which can be done like:
2867 /^==> .* <==$/ @{prefix=substr($0,5,length-8)":"; next@}
2872 @cindex BSD @command{tail}
2873 GNU @command{tail} can output any amount of data (some other versions of
2874 @command{tail} cannot). It also has no @option{-r} option (print in
2875 reverse), since reversing a file is really a different job from printing
2876 the end of a file; BSD @command{tail} (which is the one with @option{-r}) can
2877 only reverse files that are at most as large as its buffer, which is
2878 typically 32 KiB@. A more reliable and versatile way to reverse files is
2879 the GNU @command{tac} command.
2881 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
2885 @item -c [+]@var{num}
2886 @itemx --bytes=[+]@var{num}
2889 Output the last @var{num} bytes, instead of final lines.
2890 However, if @var{num} is prefixed with a @samp{+}, start printing with
2891 byte @var{num} from the start of each file, instead of from the end.
2892 @multiplierSuffixes{num}
2895 @itemx --follow[=@var{how}]
2898 @cindex growing files
2899 @vindex name @r{follow option}
2900 @vindex descriptor @r{follow option}
2901 Loop forever trying to read more characters at the end of the file,
2902 presumably because the file is growing.
2903 If more than one file is given, @command{tail} prints a header whenever it
2904 gets output from a different file, to indicate which file that output is
2907 There are two ways to specify how you'd like to track files with this option,
2908 but that difference is noticeable only when a followed file is removed or
2910 If you'd like to continue to track the end of a growing file even after
2911 it has been unlinked, use @option{--follow=descriptor}. This is the default
2912 behavior, but it is not useful if you're tracking a log file that may be
2913 rotated (removed or renamed, then reopened). In that case, use
2914 @option{--follow=name} to track the named file, perhaps by reopening it
2915 periodically to see if it has been removed and recreated by some other program.
2916 Note that the inotify-based implementation handles this case without
2917 the need for any periodic reopening.
2919 No matter which method you use, if the tracked file is determined to have
2920 shrunk, @command{tail} prints a message saying the file has been truncated
2921 and resumes tracking the end of the file from the newly-determined endpoint.
2923 When a file is removed, @command{tail}'s behavior depends on whether it is
2924 following the name or the descriptor. When following by name, tail can
2925 detect that a file has been removed and gives a message to that effect,
2926 and if @option{--retry} has been specified it will continue checking
2927 periodically to see if the file reappears.
2928 When following a descriptor, tail does not detect that the file has
2929 been unlinked or renamed and issues no message; even though the file
2930 may no longer be accessible via its original name, it may still be
2933 The option values @samp{descriptor} and @samp{name} may be specified only
2934 with the long form of the option, not with @option{-f}.
2936 The @option{-f} option is ignored if
2937 no @var{file} operand is specified and standard input is a FIFO or a pipe.
2938 Likewise, the @option{-f} option has no effect for any
2939 operand specified as @samp{-}, when standard input is a FIFO or a pipe.
2941 With kernel inotify support, output is triggered by file changes
2942 and is generally very prompt.
2943 Otherwise, @command{tail} sleeps for one second between checks---
2944 use @option{--sleep-interval=@var{n}} to change that default---which can
2945 make the output appear slightly less responsive or bursty.
2946 When using tail without inotify support, you can make it more responsive
2947 by using a sub-second sleep interval, e.g., via an alias like this:
2950 alias tail='tail -s.1'
2955 This option is the same as @option{--follow=name --retry}. That is, tail
2956 will attempt to reopen a file when it is removed. Should this fail, tail
2957 will keep trying until it becomes accessible again.
2959 @item --max-unchanged-stats=@var{n}
2960 @opindex --max-unchanged-stats
2961 When tailing a file by name, if there have been @var{n} (default
2962 n=@value{DEFAULT_MAX_N_UNCHANGED_STATS_BETWEEN_OPENS}) consecutive
2963 iterations for which the file has not changed, then
2964 @code{open}/@code{fstat} the file to determine if that file name is
2965 still associated with the same device/inode-number pair as before.
2966 When following a log file that is rotated, this is approximately the
2967 number of seconds between when tail prints the last pre-rotation lines
2968 and when it prints the lines that have accumulated in the new log file.
2969 This option is meaningful only when polling (i.e., without inotify)
2970 and when following by name.
2972 @item -n [+]@var{num}
2973 @itemx --lines=[+]@var{}
2976 Output the last @var{num} lines.
2977 However, if @var{num} is prefixed with a @samp{+}, start printing with
2978 line @var{num} from the start of each file, instead of from the end.
2979 Size multiplier suffixes are the same as with the @option{-c} option.
2981 @item --pid=@var{pid}
2983 When following by name or by descriptor, you may specify the process ID,
2984 @var{pid}, of the sole writer of all @var{file} arguments. Then, shortly
2985 after that process terminates, tail will also terminate. This will
2986 work properly only if the writer and the tailing process are running on
2987 the same machine. For example, to save the output of a build in a file
2988 and to watch the file grow, if you invoke @command{make} and @command{tail}
2989 like this then the tail process will stop when your build completes.
2990 Without this option, you would have had to kill the @code{tail -f}
2994 $ make >& makerr & tail --pid=$! -f makerr
2997 If you specify a @var{pid} that is not in use or that does not correspond
2998 to the process that is writing to the tailed files, then @command{tail}
2999 may terminate long before any @var{file}s stop growing or it may not
3000 terminate until long after the real writer has terminated.
3001 Note that @option{--pid} cannot be supported on some systems; @command{tail}
3002 will print a warning if this is the case.
3010 Never print file name headers.
3014 Indefinitely try to open the specified file.
3015 This option is useful mainly when following (and otherwise issues a warning).
3017 When following by file descriptor (i.e., with @option{--follow=descriptor}),
3018 this option only affects the initial open of the file, as after a successful
3019 open, @command{tail} will start following the file descriptor.
3021 When following by name (i.e., with @option{--follow=name}), @command{tail}
3022 infinitely retries to re-open the given files until killed.
3024 Without this option, when @command{tail} encounters a file that doesn't
3025 exist or is otherwise inaccessible, it reports that fact and
3026 never checks it again.
3028 @item -s @var{number}
3029 @itemx --sleep-interval=@var{number}
3031 @opindex --sleep-interval
3032 Change the number of seconds to wait between iterations (the default is 1.0).
3033 During one iteration, every specified file is checked to see if it has
3035 Historical implementations of @command{tail} have required that
3036 @var{number} be an integer. However, GNU @command{tail} accepts
3037 an arbitrary floating point number. @xref{Floating point}.
3038 When @command{tail} uses inotify, this polling-related option
3039 is usually ignored. However, if you also specify @option{--pid=@var{p}},
3040 @command{tail} checks whether process @var{p} is alive at least
3041 every @var{number} seconds.
3047 Always print file name headers.
3053 For compatibility @command{tail} also supports an obsolete usage
3054 @samp{tail -[@var{num}][bcl][f] [@var{file}]}, which is recognized
3055 only if it does not conflict with the usage described
3056 above. This obsolete form uses exactly one option and at most one
3057 file. In the option, @var{num} is an optional decimal number optionally
3058 followed by a size letter (@samp{b}, @samp{c}, @samp{l}) to mean count
3059 by 512-byte blocks, bytes, or lines, optionally followed by @samp{f}
3060 which has the same meaning as @option{-f}.
3062 @vindex _POSIX2_VERSION
3063 On older systems, the leading @samp{-} can be replaced by @samp{+} in
3064 the obsolete option syntax with the same meaning as in counts, and
3065 obsolete usage overrides normal usage when the two conflict.
3066 This obsolete behavior can be enabled or disabled with the
3067 @env{_POSIX2_VERSION} environment variable (@pxref{Standards
3070 Scripts intended for use on standard hosts should avoid obsolete
3071 syntax and should use @option{-c @var{num}[b]}, @option{-n
3072 @var{num}}, and/or @option{-f} instead. If your script must also
3073 run on hosts that support only the obsolete syntax, you can often
3074 rewrite it to avoid problematic usages, e.g., by using @samp{sed -n
3075 '$p'} rather than @samp{tail -1}. If that's not possible, the script
3076 can use a test like @samp{if tail -c +1 </dev/null >/dev/null 2>&1;
3077 then @dots{}} to decide which syntax to use.
3079 Even if your script assumes the standard behavior, you should still
3080 beware usages whose behaviors differ depending on the POSIX
3081 version. For example, avoid @samp{tail - main.c}, since it might be
3082 interpreted as either @samp{tail main.c} or as @samp{tail -- -
3083 main.c}; avoid @samp{tail -c 4}, since it might mean either @samp{tail
3084 -c4} or @samp{tail -c 10 4}; and avoid @samp{tail +4}, since it might
3085 mean either @samp{tail ./+4} or @samp{tail -n +4}.
3090 @node split invocation
3091 @section @command{split}: Split a file into pieces.
3094 @cindex splitting a file into pieces
3095 @cindex pieces, splitting a file into
3097 @command{split} creates output files containing consecutive or interleaved
3098 sections of @var{input} (standard input if none is given or @var{input}
3099 is @samp{-}). Synopsis:
3102 split [@var{option}] [@var{input} [@var{prefix}]]
3105 By default, @command{split} puts 1000 lines of @var{input} (or whatever is
3106 left over for the last section), into each output file.
3108 @cindex output file name prefix
3109 The output files' names consist of @var{prefix} (@samp{x} by default)
3110 followed by a group of characters (@samp{aa}, @samp{ab}, @dots{} by
3111 default), such that concatenating the output files in traditional
3112 sorted order by file name produces the original input file (except
3113 @option{-nr/@var{n}}). By default split will initially create files
3114 with two generated suffix characters, and will increase this width by two
3115 when the next most significant position reaches the last character.
3116 (@samp{yz}, @samp{zaaa}, @samp{zaab}, @dots{}). In this way an arbitrary
3117 number of output files are supported, which sort as described above,
3118 even in the presence of an @option{--additional-suffix} option.
3119 If the @option{-a} option is specified and the output file names are
3120 exhausted, @command{split} reports an error without deleting the
3121 output files that it did create.
3123 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
3127 @item -l @var{lines}
3128 @itemx --lines=@var{lines}
3131 Put @var{lines} lines of @var{input} into each output file.
3132 If @option{--separator} is specified, then @var{lines} determines
3133 the number of records.
3135 For compatibility @command{split} also supports an obsolete
3136 option syntax @option{-@var{lines}}. New scripts should use
3137 @option{-l @var{lines}} instead.
3140 @itemx --bytes=@var{size}
3143 Put @var{size} bytes of @var{input} into each output file.
3144 @multiplierSuffixes{size}
3147 @itemx --line-bytes=@var{size}
3149 @opindex --line-bytes
3150 Put into each output file as many complete lines of @var{input} as
3151 possible without exceeding @var{size} bytes. Individual lines or records
3152 longer than @var{size} bytes are broken into multiple files.
3153 @var{size} has the same format as for the @option{--bytes} option.
3154 If @option{--separator} is specified, then @var{lines} determines
3155 the number of records.
3157 @item --filter=@var{command}
3159 With this option, rather than simply writing to each output file,
3160 write through a pipe to the specified shell @var{command} for each output file.
3161 @var{command} should use the $FILE environment variable, which is set
3162 to a different output file name for each invocation of the command.
3163 For example, imagine that you have a 1TiB compressed file
3164 that, if uncompressed, would be too large to reside on disk,
3165 yet you must split it into individually-compressed pieces
3166 of a more manageable size.
3167 To do that, you might run this command:
3170 xz -dc BIG.xz | split -b200G --filter='xz > $FILE.xz' - big-
3173 Assuming a 10:1 compression ratio, that would create about fifty 20GiB files
3174 with names @file{big-aa.xz}, @file{big-ab.xz}, @file{big-ac.xz}, etc.
3176 @item -n @var{chunks}
3177 @itemx --number=@var{chunks}
3181 Split @var{input} to @var{chunks} output files where @var{chunks} may be:
3184 @var{n} generate @var{n} files based on current size of @var{input}
3185 @var{k}/@var{n} only output @var{k}th of @var{n} to stdout
3186 l/@var{n} generate @var{n} files without splitting lines or records
3187 l/@var{k}/@var{n} likewise but only output @var{k}th of @var{n} to stdout
3188 r/@var{n} like @samp{l} but use round robin distribution
3189 r/@var{k}/@var{n} likewise but only output @var{k}th of @var{n} to stdout
3192 Any excess bytes remaining after dividing the @var{input}
3193 into @var{n} chunks, are assigned to the last chunk.
3194 Any excess bytes appearing after the initial calculation are discarded
3195 (except when using @samp{r} mode).
3197 All @var{n} files are created even if there are fewer than @var{n} lines,
3198 or the @var{input} is truncated.
3200 For @samp{l} mode, chunks are approximately @var{input} size / @var{n}.
3201 The @var{input} is partitioned into @var{n} equal sized portions, with
3202 the last assigned any excess. If a line @emph{starts} within a partition
3203 it is written completely to the corresponding file. Since lines or records
3204 are not split even if they overlap a partition, the files written
3205 can be larger or smaller than the partition size, and even empty
3206 if a line/record is so long as to completely overlap the partition.
3208 For @samp{r} mode, the size of @var{input} is irrelevant,
3209 and so can be a pipe for example.
3211 @item -a @var{length}
3212 @itemx --suffix-length=@var{length}
3214 @opindex --suffix-length
3215 Use suffixes of length @var{length}. If a @var{length} of 0 is specified,
3216 this is the same as if (any previous) @option{-a} was not specified, and
3217 thus enables the default behavior, which starts the suffix length at 2,
3218 and unless @option{-n} or @option{--numeric-suffixes=@var{from}} is
3219 specified, will auto increase the length by 2 as required.
3222 @itemx --numeric-suffixes[=@var{from}]
3224 @opindex --numeric-suffixes
3225 Use digits in suffixes rather than lower-case letters. The numerical
3226 suffix counts from @var{from} if specified, 0 otherwise.
3228 @var{from} is supported with the long form option, and is used to either set the
3229 initial suffix for a single run, or to set the suffix offset for independently
3230 split inputs, and consequently the auto suffix length expansion described above
3231 is disabled. Therefore you may also want to use option @option{-a} to allow
3232 suffixes beyond @samp{99}. Note if option @option{--number} is specified and
3233 the number of files is less than @var{from}, a single run is assumed and the
3234 minimum suffix length required is automatically determined.
3236 @item --additional-suffix=@var{suffix}
3237 @opindex --additional-suffix
3238 Append an additional @var{suffix} to output file names. @var{suffix}
3239 must not contain slash.
3242 @itemx --elide-empty-files
3244 @opindex --elide-empty-files
3245 Suppress the generation of zero-length output files. This can happen
3246 with the @option{--number} option if a file is (truncated to be) shorter
3247 than the number requested, or if a line is so long as to completely
3248 span a chunk. The output file sequence numbers, always run consecutively
3249 even when this option is specified.
3251 @item -t @var{separator}
3252 @itemx --separator=@var{separator}
3254 @opindex --separator
3255 @cindex line separator character
3256 @cindex record separator character
3257 Use character @var{separator} as the record separator instead of the default
3258 newline character (ASCII LF).
3259 To specify ASCII NUL as the separator, use the two-character string @samp{\0},
3260 e.g., @samp{split -t '\0'}.
3265 @opindex --unbuffered
3266 Immediately copy input to output in @option{--number r/@dots{}} mode,
3267 which is a much slower mode of operation.
3271 Write a diagnostic just before each output file is opened.
3277 Here are a few examples to illustrate how the
3278 @option{--number} (@option{-n}) option works:
3280 Notice how, by default, one line may be split onto two or more:
3283 $ seq -w 6 10 > k; split -n3 k; head xa?
3296 Use the "l/" modifier to suppress that:
3299 $ seq -w 6 10 > k; split -nl/3 k; head xa?
3312 Use the "r/" modifier to distribute lines in a round-robin fashion:
3315 $ seq -w 6 10 > k; split -nr/3 k; head xa?
3328 You can also extract just the Kth chunk.
3329 This extracts and prints just the 7th "chunk" of 33:
3332 $ seq 100 > k; split -nl/7/33 k
3339 @node csplit invocation
3340 @section @command{csplit}: Split a file into context-determined pieces
3343 @cindex context splitting
3344 @cindex splitting a file into pieces by context
3346 @command{csplit} creates zero or more output files containing sections of
3347 @var{input} (standard input if @var{input} is @samp{-}). Synopsis:
3350 csplit [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{input} @var{pattern}@dots{}
3353 The contents of the output files are determined by the @var{pattern}
3354 arguments, as detailed below. An error occurs if a @var{pattern}
3355 argument refers to a nonexistent line of the input file (e.g., if no
3356 remaining line matches a given regular expression). After every
3357 @var{pattern} has been matched, any remaining input is copied into one
3360 By default, @command{csplit} prints the number of bytes written to each
3361 output file after it has been created.
3363 The types of pattern arguments are:
3368 Create an output file containing the input up to but not including line
3369 @var{n} (a positive integer). If followed by a repeat count, also
3370 create an output file containing the next @var{n} lines of the input
3371 file once for each repeat.
3373 @item /@var{regexp}/[@var{offset}]
3374 Create an output file containing the current line up to (but not
3375 including) the next line of the input file that contains a match for
3376 @var{regexp}. The optional @var{offset} is an integer.
3377 If it is given, the input up to (but not including) the
3378 matching line plus or minus @var{offset} is put into the output file,
3379 and the line after that begins the next section of input.
3381 @item %@var{regexp}%[@var{offset}]
3382 Like the previous type, except that it does not create an output
3383 file, so that section of the input file is effectively ignored.
3385 @item @{@var{repeat-count}@}
3386 Repeat the previous pattern @var{repeat-count} additional
3387 times. The @var{repeat-count} can either be a positive integer or an
3388 asterisk, meaning repeat as many times as necessary until the input is
3393 The output files' names consist of a prefix (@samp{xx} by default)
3394 followed by a suffix. By default, the suffix is an ascending sequence
3395 of two-digit decimal numbers from @samp{00} to @samp{99}. In any case,
3396 concatenating the output files in sorted order by file name produces the
3397 original input file.
3399 By default, if @command{csplit} encounters an error or receives a hangup,
3400 interrupt, quit, or terminate signal, it removes any output files
3401 that it has created so far before it exits.
3403 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
3407 @item -f @var{prefix}
3408 @itemx --prefix=@var{prefix}
3411 @cindex output file name prefix
3412 Use @var{prefix} as the output file name prefix.
3414 @item -b @var{format}
3415 @itemx --suffix-format=@var{format}
3417 @opindex --suffix-format
3418 @cindex output file name suffix
3419 Use @var{format} as the output file name suffix. When this option is
3420 specified, the suffix string must include exactly one
3421 @code{printf(3)}-style conversion specification, possibly including
3422 format specification flags, a field width, a precision specifications,
3423 or all of these kinds of modifiers. The format letter must convert a
3424 binary unsigned integer argument to readable form. The format letters
3425 @samp{d} and @samp{i} are aliases for @samp{u}, and the
3426 @samp{u}, @samp{o}, @samp{x}, and @samp{X} conversions are allowed. The
3427 entire @var{format} is given (with the current output file number) to
3428 @code{sprintf(3)} to form the file name suffixes for each of the
3429 individual output files in turn. If this option is used, the
3430 @option{--digits} option is ignored.
3432 @item -n @var{digits}
3433 @itemx --digits=@var{digits}
3436 Use output file names containing numbers that are @var{digits} digits
3437 long instead of the default 2.
3442 @opindex --keep-files
3443 Do not remove output files when errors are encountered.
3445 @item --suppress-matched
3446 @opindex --suppress-matched
3447 Do not output lines matching the specified @var{pattern}.
3448 I.e., suppress the boundary line from the start of the second
3449 and subsequent splits.
3452 @itemx --elide-empty-files
3454 @opindex --elide-empty-files
3455 Suppress the generation of zero-length output files. (In cases where
3456 the section delimiters of the input file are supposed to mark the first
3457 lines of each of the sections, the first output file will generally be a
3458 zero-length file unless you use this option.) The output file sequence
3459 numbers always run consecutively starting from 0, even when this option
3470 Do not print counts of output file sizes.
3476 Here is an example of its usage.
3477 First, create an empty directory for the exercise,
3484 Now, split the sequence of 1..14 on lines that end with 0 or 5:
3487 $ seq 14 | csplit - '/[05]$/' '@{*@}'
3493 Each number printed above is the size of an output
3494 file that csplit has just created.
3495 List the names of those output files:
3502 Use @command{head} to show their contents:
3527 Example of splitting input by empty lines:
3530 $ csplit --suppress-matched @var{input.txt} '/^$/' '@{*@}'
3534 @c TODO: "uniq" already supports "--group".
3535 @c when it gets the "--key" option, uncomment this example.
3537 @c Example of splitting input file, based on the value of column 2:
3540 @c $ cat @var{input.txt} |
3542 @c uniq --group -k2,2 |
3543 @c csplit -m '/^$/' '@{*@}'
3546 @node Summarizing files
3547 @chapter Summarizing files
3549 @cindex summarizing files
3551 These commands generate just a few numbers representing entire
3555 * wc invocation:: Print newline, word, and byte counts.
3556 * sum invocation:: Print checksum and block counts.
3557 * cksum invocation:: Print CRC checksum and byte counts.
3558 * md5sum invocation:: Print or check MD5 digests.
3559 * sha1sum invocation:: Print or check SHA-1 digests.
3560 * sha2 utilities:: Print or check SHA-2 digests.
3565 @section @command{wc}: Print newline, word, and byte counts
3569 @cindex character count
3573 @command{wc} counts the number of bytes, characters, whitespace-separated
3574 words, and newlines in each given @var{file}, or standard input if none
3575 are given or for a @var{file} of @samp{-}. Synopsis:
3578 wc [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
3581 @cindex total counts
3582 @command{wc} prints one line of counts for each file, and if the file was
3583 given as an argument, it prints the file name following the counts. If
3584 more than one @var{file} is given, @command{wc} prints a final line
3585 containing the cumulative counts, with the file name @file{total}. The
3586 counts are printed in this order: newlines, words, characters, bytes,
3587 maximum line length.
3588 Each count is printed right-justified in a field with at least one
3589 space between fields so that the numbers and file names normally line
3590 up nicely in columns. The width of the count fields varies depending
3591 on the inputs, so you should not depend on a particular field width.
3592 However, as a GNU extension, if only one count is printed,
3593 it is guaranteed to be printed without leading spaces.
3595 By default, @command{wc} prints three counts: the newline, words, and byte
3596 counts. Options can specify that only certain counts be printed.
3597 Options do not undo others previously given, so
3604 prints both the byte counts and the word counts.
3606 With the @option{--max-line-length} option, @command{wc} prints the length
3607 of the longest line per file, and if there is more than one file it
3608 prints the maximum (not the sum) of those lengths. The line lengths here
3609 are measured in screen columns, according to the current locale and
3610 assuming tab positions in every 8th column.
3612 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
3620 Print only the byte counts.
3626 Print only the character counts.
3632 Print only the word counts.
3638 Print only the newline counts.
3641 @itemx --max-line-length
3643 @opindex --max-line-length
3644 Print only the maximum display widths.
3645 Tabs are set at every 8th column.
3646 Display widths of wide characters are considered.
3647 Non-printable characters are given 0 width.
3649 @macro filesZeroFromOption{cmd,withTotalOption,subListOutput}
3650 @item --files0-from=@var{file}
3651 @opindex --files0-from=@var{file}
3652 @c This is commented out to avoid a texi2dvi failure.
3653 @c texi2dvi (GNU Texinfo 4.11) 1.104
3654 @c @cindex including files from @command{\cmd\}
3655 Disallow processing files named on the command line, and instead process
3656 those named in file @var{file}; each name being terminated by a zero byte
3658 This is useful \withTotalOption\
3659 when the list of file names is so long that it may exceed a command line
3661 In such cases, running @command{\cmd\} via @command{xargs} is undesirable
3662 because it splits the list into pieces and makes @command{\cmd\} print
3663 \subListOutput\ for each sublist rather than for the entire list.
3664 One way to produce a list of ASCII NUL terminated file
3666 @command{find}, using its @option{-print0} predicate.
3667 If @var{file} is @samp{-} then the ASCII NUL terminated
3668 file names are read from standard input.
3670 @filesZeroFromOption{wc,,a total}
3672 For example, to find the length of the longest line in any @file{.c} or
3673 @file{.h} file in the current hierarchy, do this:
3676 find . -name '*.[ch]' -print0 |
3677 wc -L --files0-from=- | tail -n1
3685 @node sum invocation
3686 @section @command{sum}: Print checksum and block counts
3689 @cindex 16-bit checksum
3690 @cindex checksum, 16-bit
3692 @command{sum} computes a 16-bit checksum for each given @var{file}, or
3693 standard input if none are given or for a @var{file} of @samp{-}. Synopsis:
3696 sum [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
3699 @command{sum} prints the checksum for each @var{file} followed by the
3700 number of blocks in the file (rounded up). If more than one @var{file}
3701 is given, file names are also printed (by default). (With the
3702 @option{--sysv} option, corresponding file names are printed when there is
3703 at least one file argument.)
3705 By default, GNU @command{sum} computes checksums using an algorithm
3706 compatible with BSD @command{sum} and prints file sizes in units of
3709 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
3715 @cindex BSD @command{sum}
3716 Use the default (BSD compatible) algorithm. This option is included for
3717 compatibility with the System V @command{sum}. Unless @option{-s} was also
3718 given, it has no effect.
3724 @cindex System V @command{sum}
3725 Compute checksums using an algorithm compatible with System V
3726 @command{sum}'s default, and print file sizes in units of 512-byte blocks.
3730 @command{sum} is provided for compatibility; the @command{cksum} program (see
3731 next section) is preferable in new applications.
3736 @node cksum invocation
3737 @section @command{cksum}: Print CRC checksum and byte counts
3740 @cindex cyclic redundancy check
3741 @cindex CRC checksum
3743 @command{cksum} computes a cyclic redundancy check (CRC) checksum for each
3744 given @var{file}, or standard input if none are given or for a
3745 @var{file} of @samp{-}. Synopsis:
3748 cksum [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
3751 @command{cksum} prints the CRC checksum for each file along with the number
3752 of bytes in the file, and the file name unless no arguments were given.
3754 @command{cksum} is typically used to ensure that files
3755 transferred by unreliable means (e.g., netnews) have not been corrupted,
3756 by comparing the @command{cksum} output for the received files with the
3757 @command{cksum} output for the original files (typically given in the
3760 The CRC algorithm is specified by the POSIX standard. It is not
3761 compatible with the BSD or System V @command{sum} algorithms (see the
3762 previous section); it is more robust.
3764 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
3770 @node md5sum invocation
3771 @section @command{md5sum}: Print or check MD5 digests
3775 @cindex 128-bit checksum
3776 @cindex checksum, 128-bit
3777 @cindex fingerprint, 128-bit
3778 @cindex message-digest, 128-bit
3780 @command{md5sum} computes a 128-bit checksum (or @dfn{fingerprint} or
3781 @dfn{message-digest}) for each specified @var{file}.
3783 Note: The MD5 digest is more reliable than a simple CRC (provided by
3784 the @command{cksum} command) for detecting accidental file corruption,
3785 as the chances of accidentally having two files with identical MD5
3786 are vanishingly small. However, it should not be considered secure
3787 against malicious tampering: although finding a file with a given MD5
3788 fingerprint is considered infeasible at the moment, it is known how
3789 to modify certain files, including digital certificates, so that they
3790 appear valid when signed with an MD5 digest.
3791 For more secure hashes, consider using SHA-2. @xref{sha2 utilities}.
3793 If a @var{file} is specified as @samp{-} or if no files are given
3794 @command{md5sum} computes the checksum for the standard input.
3795 @command{md5sum} can also determine whether a file and checksum are
3796 consistent. Synopsis:
3799 md5sum [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
3802 For each @var{file}, @samp{md5sum} outputs by default, the MD5 checksum,
3803 a space, a flag indicating binary or text input mode, and the file name.
3804 Binary mode is indicated with @samp{*}, text mode with @samp{ } (space).
3805 Binary mode is the default on systems where it's significant,
3806 otherwise text mode is the default.
3807 If @var{file} contains a backslash or newline, the
3808 line is started with a backslash, and each problematic character in
3809 the file name is escaped with a backslash, making the output
3810 unambiguous even in the presence of arbitrary file names.
3811 If @var{file} is omitted or specified as @samp{-}, standard input is read.
3813 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
3821 @cindex binary input files
3822 Treat each input file as binary, by reading it in binary mode and
3823 outputting a @samp{*} flag. This is the inverse of @option{--text}.
3824 On systems like GNU that do not distinguish between binary
3825 and text files, this option merely flags each input mode as binary:
3826 the MD5 checksum is unaffected. This option is the default on systems
3827 like MS-DOS that distinguish between binary and text files, except
3828 for reading standard input when standard input is a terminal.
3832 Read file names and checksum information (not data) from each
3833 @var{file} (or from stdin if no @var{file} was specified) and report
3834 whether the checksums match the contents of the named files.
3835 The input to this mode of @command{md5sum} is usually the output of
3836 a prior, checksum-generating run of @samp{md5sum}.
3837 Three input formats are supported. Either the default output
3838 format described above, the @option{--tag} output format,
3839 or the BSD reversed mode format which is similar to the default mode,
3840 but doesn't use a character to distinguish binary and text modes.
3842 For each such line, @command{md5sum} reads the named file and computes its
3843 MD5 checksum. Then, if the computed message digest does not match the
3844 one on the line with the file name, the file is noted as having
3845 failed the test. Otherwise, the file passes the test.
3846 By default, for each valid line, one line is written to standard
3847 output indicating whether the named file passed the test.
3848 After all checks have been performed, if there were any failures,
3849 a warning is issued to standard error.
3850 Use the @option{--status} option to inhibit that output.
3851 If any listed file cannot be opened or read, if any valid line has
3852 an MD5 checksum inconsistent with the associated file, or if no valid
3853 line is found, @command{md5sum} exits with nonzero status. Otherwise,
3854 it exits successfully.
3856 @item --ignore-missing
3857 @opindex --ignore-missing
3858 @cindex verifying MD5 checksums
3859 This option is useful only when verifying checksums.
3860 When verifying checksums, don't fail or report any status
3861 for missing files. This is useful when verifying a subset
3862 of downloaded files given a larger list of checksums.
3866 @cindex verifying MD5 checksums
3867 This option is useful only when verifying checksums.
3868 When verifying checksums, don't generate an 'OK' message per successfully
3869 checked file. Files that fail the verification are reported in the
3870 default one-line-per-file format. If there is any checksum mismatch,
3871 print a warning summarizing the failures to standard error.
3875 @cindex verifying MD5 checksums
3876 This option is useful only when verifying checksums.
3877 When verifying checksums, don't generate the default one-line-per-file
3878 diagnostic and don't output the warning summarizing any failures.
3879 Failures to open or read a file still evoke individual diagnostics to
3881 If all listed files are readable and are consistent with the associated
3882 MD5 checksums, exit successfully. Otherwise exit with a status code
3883 indicating there was a failure.
3888 Output BSD style checksums, which indicate the checksum algorithm used.
3889 As a GNU extension, file names with problematic characters
3890 are escaped as described above, with the same escaping indicator of @samp{\}
3891 at the start of the line, being used.
3892 The @option{--tag} option implies binary mode, and is disallowed with
3893 @option{--text} mode as supporting that would unnecessarily complicate
3894 the output format, while providing little benefit.
3900 @cindex text input files
3901 Treat each input file as text, by reading it in text mode and
3902 outputting a @samp{ } flag. This is the inverse of @option{--binary}.
3903 This option is the default on systems like GNU that do not
3904 distinguish between binary and text files. On other systems, it is
3905 the default for reading standard input when standard input is a
3906 terminal. This mode is never defaulted to if @option{--tag} is used.
3912 @cindex verifying MD5 checksums
3913 When verifying checksums, warn about improperly formatted MD5 checksum lines.
3914 This option is useful only if all but a few lines in the checked input
3919 @cindex verifying MD5 checksums
3920 When verifying checksums,
3921 if one or more input line is invalid,
3922 exit nonzero after all warnings have been issued.
3929 @node sha1sum invocation
3930 @section @command{sha1sum}: Print or check SHA-1 digests
3934 @cindex 160-bit checksum
3935 @cindex checksum, 160-bit
3936 @cindex fingerprint, 160-bit
3937 @cindex message-digest, 160-bit
3939 @command{sha1sum} computes a 160-bit checksum for each specified
3940 @var{file}. The usage and options of this command are precisely the
3941 same as for @command{md5sum}. @xref{md5sum invocation}.
3943 Note: The SHA-1 digest is more secure than MD5, and no collisions of
3944 it are known (different files having the same fingerprint). However,
3945 it is known that they can be produced with considerable, but not
3946 unreasonable, resources. For this reason, it is generally considered
3947 that SHA-1 should be gradually phased out in favor of the more secure
3948 SHA-2 hash algorithms. @xref{sha2 utilities}.
3951 @node sha2 utilities
3952 @section sha2 utilities: Print or check SHA-2 digests
3959 @cindex 224-bit checksum
3960 @cindex 256-bit checksum
3961 @cindex 384-bit checksum
3962 @cindex 512-bit checksum
3963 @cindex checksum, 224-bit
3964 @cindex checksum, 256-bit
3965 @cindex checksum, 384-bit
3966 @cindex checksum, 512-bit
3967 @cindex fingerprint, 224-bit
3968 @cindex fingerprint, 256-bit
3969 @cindex fingerprint, 384-bit
3970 @cindex fingerprint, 512-bit
3971 @cindex message-digest, 224-bit
3972 @cindex message-digest, 256-bit
3973 @cindex message-digest, 384-bit
3974 @cindex message-digest, 512-bit
3976 The commands @command{sha224sum}, @command{sha256sum},
3977 @command{sha384sum} and @command{sha512sum} compute checksums of
3978 various lengths (respectively 224, 256, 384 and 512 bits),
3979 collectively known as the SHA-2 hashes. The usage and options of
3980 these commands are precisely the same as for @command{md5sum}
3981 and @command{sha1sum}.
3982 @xref{md5sum invocation}.
3985 @node Operating on sorted files
3986 @chapter Operating on sorted files
3988 @cindex operating on sorted files
3989 @cindex sorted files, operations on
3991 These commands work with (or produce) sorted files.
3994 * sort invocation:: Sort text files.
3995 * shuf invocation:: Shuffle text files.
3996 * uniq invocation:: Uniquify files.
3997 * comm invocation:: Compare two sorted files line by line.
3998 * ptx invocation:: Produce a permuted index of file contents.
3999 * tsort invocation:: Topological sort.
4003 @node sort invocation
4004 @section @command{sort}: Sort text files
4007 @cindex sorting files
4009 @command{sort} sorts, merges, or compares all the lines from the given
4010 files, or standard input if none are given or for a @var{file} of
4011 @samp{-}. By default, @command{sort} writes the results to standard
4015 sort [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
4018 @cindex sort stability
4019 @cindex sort's last-resort comparison
4020 Many options affect how @command{sort} compares lines; if the results
4021 are unexpected, try the @option{--debug} option to see what happened.
4022 A pair of lines is compared as follows:
4023 @command{sort} compares each pair of fields, in the
4024 order specified on the command line, according to the associated
4025 ordering options, until a difference is found or no fields are left.
4026 If no key fields are specified, @command{sort} uses a default key of
4027 the entire line. Finally, as a last resort when all keys compare
4028 equal, @command{sort} compares entire lines as if no ordering options
4029 other than @option{--reverse} (@option{-r}) were specified. The
4030 @option{--stable} (@option{-s}) option disables this @dfn{last-resort
4031 comparison} so that lines in which all fields compare equal are left
4032 in their original relative order. The @option{--unique}
4033 (@option{-u}) option also disables the last-resort comparison.
4037 Unless otherwise specified, all comparisons use the character collating
4038 sequence specified by the @env{LC_COLLATE} locale.@footnote{If you
4039 use a non-POSIX locale (e.g., by setting @env{LC_ALL}
4040 to @samp{en_US}), then @command{sort} may produce output that is sorted
4041 differently than you're accustomed to. In that case, set the @env{LC_ALL}
4042 environment variable to @samp{C}@. Note that setting only @env{LC_COLLATE}
4043 has two problems. First, it is ineffective if @env{LC_ALL} is also set.
4044 Second, it has undefined behavior if @env{LC_CTYPE} (or @env{LANG}, if
4045 @env{LC_CTYPE} is unset) is set to an incompatible value. For example,
4046 you get undefined behavior if @env{LC_CTYPE} is @code{ja_JP.PCK} but
4047 @env{LC_COLLATE} is @code{en_US.UTF-8}.}
4048 A line's trailing newline is not part of the line for comparison
4049 purposes. If the final byte of an input file is not a newline, GNU
4050 @command{sort} silently supplies one. GNU @command{sort} (as
4051 specified for all GNU utilities) has no limit on input line length or
4052 restrictions on bytes allowed within lines.
4054 @command{sort} has three modes of operation: sort (the default), merge,
4055 and check for sortedness. The following options change the operation
4062 @itemx --check=diagnose-first
4065 @cindex checking for sortedness
4066 Check whether the given file is already sorted: if it is not all
4067 sorted, print a diagnostic containing the first out-of-order line and
4068 exit with a status of 1.
4069 Otherwise, exit successfully.
4070 At most one input file can be given.
4073 @itemx --check=quiet
4074 @itemx --check=silent
4077 @cindex checking for sortedness
4078 Exit successfully if the given file is already sorted, and
4079 exit with status 1 otherwise.
4080 At most one input file can be given.
4081 This is like @option{-c}, except it does not print a diagnostic.
4087 @cindex merging sorted files
4088 Merge the given files by sorting them as a group. Each input file must
4089 always be individually sorted. It always works to sort instead of
4090 merge; merging is provided because it is faster, in the case where it
4095 @cindex exit status of @command{sort}
4099 0 if no error occurred
4100 1 if invoked with @option{-c} or @option{-C} and the input is not sorted
4101 2 if an error occurred
4105 If the environment variable @env{TMPDIR} is set, @command{sort} uses its
4106 value as the directory for temporary files instead of @file{/tmp}. The
4107 @option{--temporary-directory} (@option{-T}) option in turn overrides
4108 the environment variable.
4110 The following options affect the ordering of output lines. They may be
4111 specified globally or as part of a specific key field. If no key
4112 fields are specified, global options apply to comparison of entire
4113 lines; otherwise the global options are inherited by key fields that do
4114 not specify any special options of their own. In pre-POSIX
4115 versions of @command{sort}, global options affect only later key fields,
4116 so portable shell scripts should specify global options first.
4121 @itemx --ignore-leading-blanks
4123 @opindex --ignore-leading-blanks
4124 @cindex blanks, ignoring leading
4126 Ignore leading blanks when finding sort keys in each line.
4127 By default a blank is a space or a tab, but the @env{LC_CTYPE} locale
4128 can change this. Note blanks may be ignored by your locale's collating
4129 rules, but without this option they will be significant for character
4130 positions specified in keys with the @option{-k} option.
4133 @itemx --dictionary-order
4135 @opindex --dictionary-order
4136 @cindex dictionary order
4137 @cindex phone directory order
4138 @cindex telephone directory order
4140 Sort in @dfn{phone directory} order: ignore all characters except
4141 letters, digits and blanks when sorting.
4142 By default letters and digits are those of ASCII and a blank
4143 is a space or a tab, but the @env{LC_CTYPE} locale can change this.
4146 @itemx --ignore-case
4148 @opindex --ignore-case
4149 @cindex ignoring case
4150 @cindex case folding
4152 Fold lowercase characters into the equivalent uppercase characters when
4153 comparing so that, for example, @samp{b} and @samp{B} sort as equal.
4154 The @env{LC_CTYPE} locale determines character types.
4155 When used with @option{--unique} those lower case equivalent lines are
4156 thrown away. (There is currently no way to throw away the upper case
4157 equivalent instead. (Any @option{--reverse} given would only affect
4158 the final result, after the throwing away.))
4161 @itemx --general-numeric-sort
4162 @itemx --sort=general-numeric
4164 @opindex --general-numeric-sort
4166 @cindex general numeric sort
4168 Sort numerically, converting a prefix of each line to a long
4169 double-precision floating point number. @xref{Floating point}.
4170 Do not report overflow, underflow, or conversion errors.
4171 Use the following collating sequence:
4175 Lines that do not start with numbers (all considered to be equal).
4177 NaNs (``Not a Number'' values, in IEEE floating point arithmetic)
4178 in a consistent but machine-dependent order.
4182 Finite numbers in ascending numeric order (with @math{-0} and @math{+0} equal).
4187 Use this option only if there is no alternative; it is much slower than
4188 @option{--numeric-sort} (@option{-n}) and it can lose information when
4189 converting to floating point.
4192 @itemx --human-numeric-sort
4193 @itemx --sort=human-numeric
4195 @opindex --human-numeric-sort
4197 @cindex human numeric sort
4199 Sort numerically, first by numeric sign (negative, zero, or positive);
4200 then by SI suffix (either empty, or @samp{k} or @samp{K}, or
4201 one of @samp{MGTPEZY}, in that order; @pxref{Block size}); and finally
4202 by numeric value. For example, @samp{1023M} sorts before @samp{1G}
4203 because @samp{M} (mega) precedes @samp{G} (giga) as an SI
4204 suffix. This option sorts values that are consistently scaled to the
4205 nearest suffix, regardless of whether suffixes denote powers of 1000
4206 or 1024, and it therefore sorts the output of any single invocation of
4207 the @command{df}, @command{du}, or @command{ls} commands that are
4208 invoked with their @option{--human-readable} or @option{--si} options.
4209 The syntax for numbers is the same as for the @option{--numeric-sort}
4210 option; the SI suffix must immediately follow the number.
4211 Note also the @command{numfmt} command, which can be used to reformat
4212 numbers to human format @emph{after} the sort, thus often allowing
4213 sort to operate on more accurate numbers.
4216 @itemx --ignore-nonprinting
4218 @opindex --ignore-nonprinting
4219 @cindex nonprinting characters, ignoring
4220 @cindex unprintable characters, ignoring
4222 Ignore nonprinting characters.
4223 The @env{LC_CTYPE} locale determines character types.
4224 This option has no effect if the stronger @option{--dictionary-order}
4225 (@option{-d}) option is also given.
4231 @opindex --month-sort
4233 @cindex months, sorting by
4235 An initial string, consisting of any amount of blanks, followed
4236 by a month name abbreviation, is folded to UPPER case and
4237 compared in the order @samp{JAN} < @samp{FEB} < @dots{} < @samp{DEC}@.
4238 Invalid names compare low to valid names. The @env{LC_TIME} locale
4239 category determines the month spellings.
4240 By default a blank is a space or a tab, but the @env{LC_CTYPE} locale
4244 @itemx --numeric-sort
4245 @itemx --sort=numeric
4247 @opindex --numeric-sort
4249 @cindex numeric sort
4251 Sort numerically. The number begins each line and consists
4252 of optional blanks, an optional @samp{-} sign, and zero or more
4253 digits possibly separated by thousands separators, optionally followed
4254 by a decimal-point character and zero or more digits. An empty
4255 number is treated as @samp{0}. The @env{LC_NUMERIC}
4256 locale specifies the decimal-point character and thousands separator.
4257 By default a blank is a space or a tab, but the @env{LC_CTYPE} locale
4260 Comparison is exact; there is no rounding error.
4262 Neither a leading @samp{+} nor exponential notation is recognized.
4263 To compare such strings numerically, use the
4264 @option{--general-numeric-sort} (@option{-g}) option.
4267 @itemx --version-sort
4269 @opindex --version-sort
4270 @cindex version number sort
4271 Sort by version name and number. It behaves like a standard sort,
4272 except that each sequence of decimal digits is treated numerically
4273 as an index/version number. (@xref{Details about version sort}.)
4279 @cindex reverse sorting
4280 Reverse the result of comparison, so that lines with greater key values
4281 appear earlier in the output instead of later.
4284 @itemx --random-sort
4285 @itemx --sort=random
4287 @opindex --random-sort
4290 Sort by hashing the input keys and then sorting the hash values.
4291 Choose the hash function at random, ensuring that it is free of
4292 collisions so that differing keys have differing hash values. This is
4293 like a random permutation of the inputs (@pxref{shuf invocation}),
4294 except that keys with the same value sort together.
4296 If multiple random sort fields are specified, the same random hash
4297 function is used for all fields. To use different random hash
4298 functions for different fields, you can invoke @command{sort} more
4301 The choice of hash function is affected by the
4302 @option{--random-source} option.
4310 @item --compress-program=@var{prog}
4311 Compress any temporary files with the program @var{prog}.
4313 With no arguments, @var{prog} must compress standard input to standard
4314 output, and when given the @option{-d} option it must decompress
4315 standard input to standard output.
4317 Terminate with an error if @var{prog} exits with nonzero status.
4319 White space and the backslash character should not appear in
4320 @var{prog}; they are reserved for future use.
4322 @filesZeroFromOption{sort,,sorted output}
4324 @item -k @var{pos1}[,@var{pos2}]
4325 @itemx --key=@var{pos1}[,@var{pos2}]
4329 Specify a sort field that consists of the part of the line between
4330 @var{pos1} and @var{pos2} (or the end of the line, if @var{pos2} is
4331 omitted), @emph{inclusive}.
4333 Each @var{pos} has the form @samp{@var{f}[.@var{c}][@var{opts}]},
4334 where @var{f} is the number of the field to use, and @var{c} is the number
4335 of the first character from the beginning of the field. Fields and character
4336 positions are numbered starting with 1; a character position of zero in
4337 @var{pos2} indicates the field's last character. If @samp{.@var{c}} is
4338 omitted from @var{pos1}, it defaults to 1 (the beginning of the field);
4339 if omitted from @var{pos2}, it defaults to 0 (the end of the field).
4340 @var{opts} are ordering options, allowing individual keys to be sorted
4341 according to different rules; see below for details. Keys can span
4344 Example: To sort on the second field, use @option{--key=2,2}
4345 (@option{-k 2,2}). See below for more notes on keys and more examples.
4346 See also the @option{--debug} option to help determine the part
4347 of the line being used in the sort.
4350 Highlight the portion of each line used for sorting.
4351 Also issue warnings about questionable usage to stderr.
4353 @item --batch-size=@var{nmerge}
4354 @opindex --batch-size
4355 @cindex number of inputs to merge, nmerge
4356 Merge at most @var{nmerge} inputs at once.
4358 When @command{sort} has to merge more than @var{nmerge} inputs,
4359 it merges them in groups of @var{nmerge}, saving the result in
4360 a temporary file, which is then used as an input in a subsequent merge.
4362 A large value of @var{nmerge} may improve merge performance and decrease
4363 temporary storage utilization at the expense of increased memory usage
4364 and I/O@. Conversely a small value of @var{nmerge} may reduce memory
4365 requirements and I/O at the expense of temporary storage consumption and
4368 The value of @var{nmerge} must be at least 2. The default value is
4369 currently 16, but this is implementation-dependent and may change in
4372 The value of @var{nmerge} may be bounded by a resource limit for open
4373 file descriptors. The commands @samp{ulimit -n} or @samp{getconf
4374 OPEN_MAX} may display limits for your systems; these limits may be
4375 modified further if your program already has some files open, or if
4376 the operating system has other limits on the number of open files. If
4377 the value of @var{nmerge} exceeds the resource limit, @command{sort}
4378 silently uses a smaller value.
4380 @item -o @var{output-file}
4381 @itemx --output=@var{output-file}
4384 @cindex overwriting of input, allowed
4385 Write output to @var{output-file} instead of standard output.
4386 Normally, @command{sort} reads all input before opening
4387 @var{output-file}, so you can safely sort a file in place by using
4388 commands like @code{sort -o F F} and @code{cat F | sort -o F}@.
4389 However, @command{sort} with @option{--merge} (@option{-m}) can open
4390 the output file before reading all input, so a command like @code{cat
4391 F | sort -m -o F - G} is not safe as @command{sort} might start
4392 writing @file{F} before @command{cat} is done reading it.
4394 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
4395 On newer systems, @option{-o} cannot appear after an input file if
4396 @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is set, e.g., @samp{sort F -o F}@. Portable
4397 scripts should specify @option{-o @var{output-file}} before any input
4400 @item --random-source=@var{file}
4401 @opindex --random-source
4402 @cindex random source for sorting
4403 Use @var{file} as a source of random data used to determine which
4404 random hash function to use with the @option{-R} option. @xref{Random
4411 @cindex sort stability
4412 @cindex sort's last-resort comparison
4414 Make @command{sort} stable by disabling its last-resort comparison.
4415 This option has no effect if no fields or global ordering options
4416 other than @option{--reverse} (@option{-r}) are specified.
4419 @itemx --buffer-size=@var{size}
4421 @opindex --buffer-size
4422 @cindex size for main memory sorting
4423 Use a main-memory sort buffer of the given @var{size}. By default,
4424 @var{size} is in units of 1024 bytes. Appending @samp{%} causes
4425 @var{size} to be interpreted as a percentage of physical memory.
4426 Appending @samp{K} multiplies @var{size} by 1024 (the default),
4427 @samp{M} by 1,048,576, @samp{G} by 1,073,741,824, and so on for
4428 @samp{T}, @samp{P}, @samp{E}, @samp{Z}, and @samp{Y}@. Appending
4429 @samp{b} causes @var{size} to be interpreted as a byte count, with no
4432 This option can improve the performance of @command{sort} by causing it
4433 to start with a larger or smaller sort buffer than the default.
4434 However, this option affects only the initial buffer size. The buffer
4435 grows beyond @var{size} if @command{sort} encounters input lines larger
4438 @item -t @var{separator}
4439 @itemx --field-separator=@var{separator}
4441 @opindex --field-separator
4442 @cindex field separator character
4443 Use character @var{separator} as the field separator when finding the
4444 sort keys in each line. By default, fields are separated by the empty
4445 string between a non-blank character and a blank character.
4446 By default a blank is a space or a tab, but the @env{LC_CTYPE} locale
4449 That is, given the input line @w{@samp{ foo bar}}, @command{sort} breaks it
4450 into fields @w{@samp{ foo}} and @w{@samp{ bar}}. The field separator is
4451 not considered to be part of either the field preceding or the field
4452 following, so with @samp{sort @w{-t " "}} the same input line has
4453 three fields: an empty field, @samp{foo}, and @samp{bar}.
4454 However, fields that extend to the end of the line,
4455 as @option{-k 2}, or fields consisting of a range, as @option{-k 2,3},
4456 retain the field separators present between the endpoints of the range.
4458 To specify ASCII NUL as the field separator,
4459 use the two-character string @samp{\0}, e.g., @samp{sort -t '\0'}.
4461 @item -T @var{tempdir}
4462 @itemx --temporary-directory=@var{tempdir}
4464 @opindex --temporary-directory
4465 @cindex temporary directory
4467 Use directory @var{tempdir} to store temporary files, overriding the
4468 @env{TMPDIR} environment variable. If this option is given more than
4469 once, temporary files are stored in all the directories given. If you
4470 have a large sort or merge that is I/O-bound, you can often improve
4471 performance by using this option to specify directories on different
4472 disks and controllers.
4474 @item --parallel=@var{n}
4476 @cindex multithreaded sort
4477 Set the number of sorts run in parallel to @var{n}. By default,
4478 @var{n} is set to the number of available processors, but limited
4479 to 8, as there are diminishing performance gains after that.
4480 Note also that using @var{n} threads increases the memory usage by
4481 a factor of log @var{n}. Also see @ref{nproc invocation}.
4487 @cindex uniquifying output
4489 Normally, output only the first of a sequence of lines that compare
4490 equal. For the @option{--check} (@option{-c} or @option{-C}) option,
4491 check that no pair of consecutive lines compares equal.
4493 This option also disables the default last-resort comparison.
4495 The commands @code{sort -u} and @code{sort | uniq} are equivalent, but
4496 this equivalence does not extend to arbitrary @command{sort} options.
4497 For example, @code{sort -n -u} inspects only the value of the initial
4498 numeric string when checking for uniqueness, whereas @code{sort -n |
4499 uniq} inspects the entire line. @xref{uniq invocation}.
4502 @macro newlineFieldSeparator
4503 Note with @option{-z} the newline character is treated as a field separator.
4508 Historical (BSD and System V) implementations of @command{sort} have
4509 differed in their interpretation of some options, particularly
4510 @option{-b}, @option{-f}, and @option{-n}.
4511 GNU sort follows the POSIX
4512 behavior, which is usually (but not always!) like the System V behavior.
4513 According to POSIX, @option{-n} no longer implies @option{-b}. For
4514 consistency, @option{-M} has been changed in the same way. This may
4515 affect the meaning of character positions in field specifications in
4516 obscure cases. The only fix is to add an explicit @option{-b}.
4518 A position in a sort field specified with @option{-k} may have any
4519 of the option letters @samp{MbdfghinRrV} appended to it, in which case no
4520 global ordering options are inherited by that particular field. The
4521 @option{-b} option may be independently attached to either or both of
4522 the start and end positions of a field specification, and if it is
4523 inherited from the global options it will be attached to both.
4524 If input lines can contain leading or adjacent blanks and @option{-t}
4525 is not used, then @option{-k} is typically combined with @option{-b} or
4526 an option that implicitly ignores leading blanks (@samp{Mghn}) as otherwise
4527 the varying numbers of leading blanks in fields can cause confusing results.
4529 If the start position in a sort field specifier falls after the end of
4530 the line or after the end field, the field is empty. If the @option{-b}
4531 option was specified, the @samp{.@var{c}} part of a field specification
4532 is counted from the first nonblank character of the field.
4534 @vindex _POSIX2_VERSION
4535 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
4536 On older systems, @command{sort} supports an obsolete origin-zero
4537 syntax @samp{+@var{pos1} [-@var{pos2}]} for specifying sort keys.
4538 The obsolete sequence @samp{sort +@var{a}.@var{x} -@var{b}.@var{y}}
4539 is equivalent to @samp{sort -k @var{a+1}.@var{x+1},@var{b}} if @var{y}
4540 is @samp{0} or absent, otherwise it is equivalent to @samp{sort -k
4541 @var{a+1}.@var{x+1},@var{b+1}.@var{y}}.
4543 This obsolete behavior can be enabled or disabled with the
4544 @env{_POSIX2_VERSION} environment variable (@pxref{Standards
4545 conformance}); it can also be enabled when @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is
4546 not set by using the obsolete syntax with @samp{-@var{pos2}} present.
4548 Scripts intended for use on standard hosts should avoid obsolete
4549 syntax and should use @option{-k} instead. For example, avoid
4550 @samp{sort +2}, since it might be interpreted as either @samp{sort
4551 ./+2} or @samp{sort -k 3}. If your script must also run on hosts that
4552 support only the obsolete syntax, it can use a test like @samp{if sort
4553 -k 1 </dev/null >/dev/null 2>&1; then @dots{}} to decide which syntax
4556 Here are some examples to illustrate various combinations of options.
4561 Sort in descending (reverse) numeric order.
4568 Run no more than 4 sorts concurrently, using a buffer size of 10M.
4571 sort --parallel=4 -S 10M
4575 Sort alphabetically, omitting the first and second fields
4576 and the blanks at the start of the third field.
4577 This uses a single key composed of the characters beginning
4578 at the start of the first nonblank character in field three
4579 and extending to the end of each line.
4586 Sort numerically on the second field and resolve ties by sorting
4587 alphabetically on the third and fourth characters of field five.
4588 Use @samp{:} as the field delimiter.
4591 sort -t : -k 2,2n -k 5.3,5.4
4594 Note that if you had written @option{-k 2n} instead of @option{-k 2,2n}
4595 @command{sort} would have used all characters beginning in the second field
4596 and extending to the end of the line as the primary @emph{numeric}
4597 key. For the large majority of applications, treating keys spanning
4598 more than one field as numeric will not do what you expect.
4600 Also note that the @samp{n} modifier was applied to the field-end
4601 specifier for the first key. It would have been equivalent to
4602 specify @option{-k 2n,2} or @option{-k 2n,2n}. All modifiers except
4603 @samp{b} apply to the associated @emph{field}, regardless of whether
4604 the modifier character is attached to the field-start and/or the
4605 field-end part of the key specifier.
4608 Sort the password file on the fifth field and ignore any
4609 leading blanks. Sort lines with equal values in field five
4610 on the numeric user ID in field three. Fields are separated
4614 sort -t : -k 5b,5 -k 3,3n /etc/passwd
4615 sort -t : -n -k 5b,5 -k 3,3 /etc/passwd
4616 sort -t : -b -k 5,5 -k 3,3n /etc/passwd
4619 These three commands have equivalent effect. The first specifies that
4620 the first key's start position ignores leading blanks and the second
4621 key is sorted numerically. The other two commands rely on global
4622 options being inherited by sort keys that lack modifiers. The inheritance
4623 works in this case because @option{-k 5b,5b} and @option{-k 5b,5} are
4624 equivalent, as the location of a field-end lacking a @samp{.@var{c}}
4625 character position is not affected by whether initial blanks are
4629 Sort a set of log files, primarily by IPv4 address and secondarily by
4630 time stamp. If two lines' primary and secondary keys are identical,
4631 output the lines in the same order that they were input. The log
4632 files contain lines that look like this:
4635 4.150.156.3 - - [01/Apr/2004:06:31:51 +0000] message 1
4636 211.24.3.231 - - [24/Apr/2004:20:17:39 +0000] message 2
4639 Fields are separated by exactly one space. Sort IPv4 addresses
4640 lexicographically, e.g., 212.61.52.2 sorts before 212.129.233.201
4641 because 61 is less than 129.
4644 sort -s -t ' ' -k 4.9n -k 4.5M -k 4.2n -k 4.14,4.21 file*.log |
4645 sort -s -t '.' -k 1,1n -k 2,2n -k 3,3n -k 4,4n
4648 This example cannot be done with a single @command{sort} invocation,
4649 since IPv4 address components are separated by @samp{.} while dates
4650 come just after a space. So it is broken down into two invocations of
4651 @command{sort}: the first sorts by time stamp and the second by IPv4
4652 address. The time stamp is sorted by year, then month, then day, and
4653 finally by hour-minute-second field, using @option{-k} to isolate each
4654 field. Except for hour-minute-second there's no need to specify the
4655 end of each key field, since the @samp{n} and @samp{M} modifiers sort
4656 based on leading prefixes that cannot cross field boundaries. The
4657 IPv4 addresses are sorted lexicographically. The second sort uses
4658 @samp{-s} so that ties in the primary key are broken by the secondary
4659 key; the first sort uses @samp{-s} so that the combination of the two
4663 Generate a tags file in case-insensitive sorted order.
4666 find src -type f -print0 | sort -z -f | xargs -0 etags --append
4669 The use of @option{-print0}, @option{-z}, and @option{-0} in this case means
4670 that file names that contain blanks or other special characters are
4672 by the sort operation.
4674 @c This example is a bit contrived and needs more explanation.
4676 @c Sort records separated by an arbitrary string by using a pipe to convert
4677 @c each record delimiter string to @samp{\0}, then using sort's -z option,
4678 @c and converting each @samp{\0} back to the original record delimiter.
4681 @c printf 'c\n\nb\n\na\n' |
4682 @c perl -0pe 's/\n\n/\n\0/g' |
4684 @c perl -0pe 's/\0/\n/g'
4688 Use the common DSU, Decorate Sort Undecorate idiom to
4689 sort lines according to their length.
4692 awk '@{print length, $0@}' /etc/passwd | sort -n | cut -f2- -d' '
4695 In general this technique can be used to sort data that the @command{sort}
4696 command does not support, or is inefficient at, sorting directly.
4699 Shuffle a list of directories, but preserve the order of files within
4700 each directory. For instance, one could use this to generate a music
4701 playlist in which albums are shuffled but the songs of each album are
4705 ls */* | sort -t / -k 1,1R -k 2,2
4711 @node shuf invocation
4712 @section @command{shuf}: Shuffling text
4715 @cindex shuffling files
4717 @command{shuf} shuffles its input by outputting a random permutation
4718 of its input lines. Each output permutation is equally likely.
4722 shuf [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]
4723 shuf -e [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{arg}]@dots{}
4724 shuf -i @var{lo}-@var{hi} [@var{option}]@dots{}
4727 @command{shuf} has three modes of operation that affect where it
4728 obtains its input lines. By default, it reads lines from standard
4729 input. The following options change the operation mode:
4737 @cindex command-line operands to shuffle
4738 Treat each command-line operand as an input line.
4740 @item -i @var{lo}-@var{hi}
4741 @itemx --input-range=@var{lo}-@var{hi}
4743 @opindex --input-range
4744 @cindex input range to shuffle
4745 Act as if input came from a file containing the range of unsigned
4746 decimal integers @var{lo}@dots{}@var{hi}, one per line.
4750 @command{shuf}'s other options can affect its behavior in all
4755 @item -n @var{count}
4756 @itemx --head-count=@var{count}
4758 @opindex --head-count
4759 @cindex head of output
4760 Output at most @var{count} lines. By default, all input lines are
4763 @item -o @var{output-file}
4764 @itemx --output=@var{output-file}
4767 @cindex overwriting of input, allowed
4768 Write output to @var{output-file} instead of standard output.
4769 @command{shuf} reads all input before opening
4770 @var{output-file}, so you can safely shuffle a file in place by using
4771 commands like @code{shuf -o F <F} and @code{cat F | shuf -o F}.
4773 @item --random-source=@var{file}
4774 @opindex --random-source
4775 @cindex random source for shuffling
4776 Use @var{file} as a source of random data used to determine which
4777 permutation to generate. @xref{Random sources}.
4783 @cindex repeat output values
4784 Repeat output values, that is, select with replacement. With this
4785 option the output is not a permutation of the input; instead, each
4786 output line is randomly chosen from all the inputs. This option is
4787 typically combined with @option{--head-count}; if
4788 @option{--head-count} is not given, @command{shuf} repeats
4807 might produce the output
4817 Similarly, the command:
4820 shuf -e clubs hearts diamonds spades
4834 and the command @samp{shuf -i 1-4} might output:
4844 The above examples all have four input lines, so @command{shuf} might
4845 produce any of the twenty-four possible permutations of the input. In
4846 general, if there are @var{n} input lines, there are @var{n}! (i.e.,
4847 @var{n} factorial, or @var{n} * (@var{n} - 1) * @dots{} * 1) possible
4848 output permutations.
4851 To output 50 random numbers each in the range 0 through 9, use:
4854 shuf -r -n 50 -i 0-9
4858 To simulate 100 coin flips, use:
4861 shuf -r -n 100 -e Head Tail
4867 @node uniq invocation
4868 @section @command{uniq}: Uniquify files
4871 @cindex uniquify files
4873 @command{uniq} writes the unique lines in the given @file{input}, or
4874 standard input if nothing is given or for an @var{input} name of
4878 uniq [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{input} [@var{output}]]
4881 By default, @command{uniq} prints its input lines, except that
4882 it discards all but the first of adjacent repeated lines, so that
4883 no output lines are repeated. Optionally, it can instead discard
4884 lines that are not repeated, or all repeated lines.
4886 The input need not be sorted, but repeated input lines are detected
4887 only if they are adjacent. If you want to discard non-adjacent
4888 duplicate lines, perhaps you want to use @code{sort -u}.
4889 @xref{sort invocation}.
4892 Comparisons honor the rules specified by the @env{LC_COLLATE}
4895 If no @var{output} file is specified, @command{uniq} writes to standard
4898 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
4903 @itemx --skip-fields=@var{n}
4905 @opindex --skip-fields
4906 Skip @var{n} fields on each line before checking for uniqueness. Use
4907 a null string for comparison if a line has fewer than @var{n} fields. Fields
4908 are sequences of non-space non-tab characters that are separated from
4909 each other by at least one space or tab.
4911 For compatibility @command{uniq} supports an obsolete option syntax
4912 @option{-@var{n}}. New scripts should use @option{-f @var{n}} instead.
4915 @itemx --skip-chars=@var{n}
4917 @opindex --skip-chars
4918 Skip @var{n} characters before checking for uniqueness. Use a null string
4919 for comparison if a line has fewer than @var{n} characters. If you use both
4920 the field and character skipping options, fields are skipped over first.
4922 @vindex _POSIX2_VERSION
4923 On older systems, @command{uniq} supports an obsolete option syntax
4925 This obsolete behavior can be enabled or disabled with the
4926 @env{_POSIX2_VERSION} environment variable (@pxref{Standards
4927 conformance}), but portable scripts should avoid commands whose
4928 behavior depends on this variable.
4929 For example, use @samp{uniq ./+10} or @samp{uniq -s 10} rather than
4930 the ambiguous @samp{uniq +10}.
4936 Print the number of times each line occurred along with the line.
4939 @itemx --ignore-case
4941 @opindex --ignore-case
4942 Ignore differences in case when comparing lines.
4948 @cindex repeated lines, outputting
4949 Discard lines that are not repeated. When used by itself, this option
4950 causes @command{uniq} to print the first copy of each repeated line,
4954 @itemx --all-repeated[=@var{delimit-method}]
4956 @opindex --all-repeated
4957 @cindex all repeated lines, outputting
4958 Do not discard the second and subsequent repeated input lines,
4959 but discard lines that are not repeated.
4960 This option is useful mainly in conjunction with other options e.g.,
4961 to ignore case or to compare only selected fields.
4962 The optional @var{delimit-method}, supported with the long form option,
4963 specifies how to delimit groups of repeated lines, and must be one of the
4969 Do not delimit groups of repeated lines.
4970 This is equivalent to @option{--all-repeated} (@option{-D}).
4973 Output a newline before each group of repeated lines.
4974 @macro nulOutputNote
4975 With @option{--zero-terminated} (@option{-z}), use a zero
4976 byte (ASCII NUL) instead of a newline as the delimiter.
4981 Separate groups of repeated lines with a single newline.
4982 This is the same as using @samp{prepend}, except that
4983 no delimiter is inserted before the first group, and hence
4984 may be better suited for output direct to users.
4988 @macro ambiguousGroupNote
4989 Note that when groups are delimited and the input stream contains
4990 blank lines, then the output is ambiguous.
4991 To avoid that, filter the input through @samp{tr -s '\\n'} to
4996 This is a GNU extension.
4997 @c FIXME: give an example showing *how* it's useful
4999 @item --group[=@var{delimit-method}]
5001 @cindex all lines, grouping
5002 Output all lines, and delimit each unique group.
5004 The optional @var{delimit-method} specifies how to delimit
5005 groups, and must be one of the following:
5010 Separate unique groups with a single delimiter.
5011 This is the default delimiting method if none is specified,
5012 and better suited for output direct to users.
5015 Output a delimiter before each group of unique items.
5018 Output a delimiter after each group of unique items.
5021 Output a delimiter around each group of unique items.
5026 This is a GNU extension.
5032 @cindex unique lines, outputting
5033 Discard the last line that would be output for a repeated input group.
5034 When used by itself, this option causes @command{uniq} to print unique
5035 lines, and nothing else.
5038 @itemx --check-chars=@var{n}
5040 @opindex --check-chars
5041 Compare at most @var{n} characters on each line (after skipping any specified
5042 fields and characters). By default the entire rest of the lines are
5046 @newlineFieldSeparator
5053 @node comm invocation
5054 @section @command{comm}: Compare two sorted files line by line
5057 @cindex line-by-line comparison
5058 @cindex comparing sorted files
5060 @command{comm} writes to standard output lines that are common, and lines
5061 that are unique, to two input files; a file name of @samp{-} means
5062 standard input. Synopsis:
5065 comm [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{file1} @var{file2}
5069 Before @command{comm} can be used, the input files must be sorted using the
5070 collating sequence specified by the @env{LC_COLLATE} locale.
5071 If an input file ends in a non-newline
5072 character, a newline is silently appended. The @command{sort} command with
5073 no options always outputs a file that is suitable input to @command{comm}.
5075 @cindex differing lines
5076 @cindex common lines
5077 With no options, @command{comm} produces three-column output. Column one
5078 contains lines unique to @var{file1}, column two contains lines unique
5079 to @var{file2}, and column three contains lines common to both files.
5080 Columns are separated by a single TAB character.
5081 @c FIXME: when there's an option to supply an alternative separator
5082 @c string, append "by default" to the above sentence.
5087 The options @option{-1}, @option{-2}, and @option{-3} suppress printing of
5088 the corresponding columns (and separators). Also see @ref{Common options}.
5090 Unlike some other comparison utilities, @command{comm} has an exit
5091 status that does not depend on the result of the comparison.
5092 Upon normal completion @command{comm} produces an exit code of zero.
5093 If there is an error it exits with nonzero status.
5095 @macro checkOrderOption{cmd}
5096 If the @option{--check-order} option is given, unsorted inputs will
5097 cause a fatal error message. If the option @option{--nocheck-order}
5098 is given, unsorted inputs will never cause an error message. If neither
5099 of these options is given, wrongly sorted inputs are diagnosed
5100 only if an input file is found to contain unpairable
5102 lines, and when both input files are non empty.
5104 @ifclear JOIN_COMMAND
5107 If an input file is diagnosed as being unsorted, the @command{\cmd\}
5108 command will exit with a nonzero status (and the output should not be used).
5110 Forcing @command{\cmd\} to process wrongly sorted input files
5111 containing unpairable lines by specifying @option{--nocheck-order} is
5112 not guaranteed to produce any particular output. The output will
5113 probably not correspond with whatever you hoped it would be.
5115 @checkOrderOption{comm}
5120 Fail with an error message if either input file is wrongly ordered.
5122 @item --nocheck-order
5123 Do not check that both input files are in sorted order.
5127 @item --output-delimiter=@var{str}
5128 Print @var{str} between adjacent output columns,
5129 rather than the default of a single TAB character.
5131 The delimiter @var{str} may not be empty.
5137 @node ptx invocation
5138 @section @command{ptx}: Produce permuted indexes
5142 @command{ptx} reads a text file and essentially produces a permuted index, with
5143 each keyword in its context. The calling sketch is either one of:
5146 ptx [@var{option} @dots{}] [@var{file} @dots{}]
5147 ptx -G [@var{option} @dots{}] [@var{input} [@var{output}]]
5150 The @option{-G} (or its equivalent: @option{--traditional}) option disables
5151 all GNU extensions and reverts to traditional mode, thus introducing some
5152 limitations and changing several of the program's default option values.
5153 When @option{-G} is not specified, GNU extensions are always enabled.
5154 GNU extensions to @command{ptx} are documented wherever appropriate in this
5155 document. @xref{Compatibility in ptx}, for the full list.
5157 Individual options are explained in the following sections.
5159 When GNU extensions are enabled, there may be zero, one or several
5160 @var{file}s after the options. If there is no @var{file}, the program
5161 reads the standard input. If there is one or several @var{file}s, they
5162 give the name of input files which are all read in turn, as if all the
5163 input files were concatenated. However, there is a full contextual
5164 break between each file and, when automatic referencing is requested,
5165 file names and line numbers refer to individual text input files. In
5166 all cases, the program outputs the permuted index to the standard
5169 When GNU extensions are @emph{not} enabled, that is, when the program
5170 operates in traditional mode, there may be zero, one or two parameters
5171 besides the options. If there are no parameters, the program reads the
5172 standard input and outputs the permuted index to the standard output.
5173 If there is only one parameter, it names the text @var{input} to be read
5174 instead of the standard input. If two parameters are given, they give
5175 respectively the name of the @var{input} file to read and the name of
5176 the @var{output} file to produce. @emph{Be very careful} to note that,
5177 in this case, the contents of file given by the second parameter is
5178 destroyed. This behavior is dictated by System V @command{ptx}
5179 compatibility; GNU Standards normally discourage output parameters not
5180 introduced by an option.
5182 Note that for @emph{any} file named as the value of an option or as an
5183 input text file, a single dash @samp{-} may be used, in which case
5184 standard input is assumed. However, it would not make sense to use this
5185 convention more than once per program invocation.
5188 * General options in ptx:: Options which affect general program behavior.
5189 * Charset selection in ptx:: Underlying character set considerations.
5190 * Input processing in ptx:: Input fields, contexts, and keyword selection.
5191 * Output formatting in ptx:: Types of output format, and sizing the fields.
5192 * Compatibility in ptx::
5196 @node General options in ptx
5197 @subsection General options
5202 @itemx --traditional
5203 As already explained, this option disables all GNU extensions to
5204 @command{ptx} and switches to traditional mode.
5207 Print a short help on standard output, then exit without further
5211 Print the program version on standard output, then exit without further
5219 @node Charset selection in ptx
5220 @subsection Charset selection
5222 @c FIXME: People don't necessarily know what an IBM-PC was these days.
5223 As it is set up now, the program assumes that the input file is coded
5224 using 8-bit ISO 8859-1 code, also known as Latin-1 character set,
5225 @emph{unless} it is compiled for MS-DOS, in which case it uses the
5226 character set of the IBM-PC@. (GNU @command{ptx} is not known to work on
5227 smaller MS-DOS machines anymore.) Compared to 7-bit ASCII, the set
5228 of characters which are letters is different; this alters the behavior
5229 of regular expression matching. Thus, the default regular expression
5230 for a keyword allows foreign or diacriticized letters. Keyword sorting,
5231 however, is still crude; it obeys the underlying character set ordering
5237 @itemx --ignore-case
5239 @opindex --ignore-case
5240 Fold lower case letters to upper case for sorting.
5245 @node Input processing in ptx
5246 @subsection Word selection and input processing
5251 @itemx --break-file=@var{file}
5253 @opindex --break-file
5255 This option provides an alternative (to @option{-W}) method of describing
5256 which characters make up words. It introduces the name of a
5257 file which contains a list of characters which can@emph{not} be part of
5258 one word; this file is called the @dfn{Break file}. Any character which
5259 is not part of the Break file is a word constituent. If both options
5260 @option{-b} and @option{-W} are specified, then @option{-W} has precedence and
5261 @option{-b} is ignored.
5263 When GNU extensions are enabled, the only way to avoid newline as a
5264 break character is to write all the break characters in the file with no
5265 newline at all, not even at the end of the file. When GNU extensions
5266 are disabled, spaces, tabs and newlines are always considered as break
5267 characters even if not included in the Break file.
5270 @itemx --ignore-file=@var{file}
5272 @opindex --ignore-file
5274 The file associated with this option contains a list of words which will
5275 never be taken as keywords in concordance output. It is called the
5276 @dfn{Ignore file}. The file contains exactly one word in each line; the
5277 end of line separation of words is not subject to the value of the
5281 @itemx --only-file=@var{file}
5283 @opindex --only-file
5285 The file associated with this option contains a list of words which will
5286 be retained in concordance output; any word not mentioned in this file
5287 is ignored. The file is called the @dfn{Only file}. The file contains
5288 exactly one word in each line; the end of line separation of words is
5289 not subject to the value of the @option{-S} option.
5291 There is no default for the Only file. When both an Only file and an
5292 Ignore file are specified, a word is considered a keyword only
5293 if it is listed in the Only file and not in the Ignore file.
5298 @opindex --references
5300 On each input line, the leading sequence of non-white space characters will be
5301 taken to be a reference that has the purpose of identifying this input
5302 line in the resulting permuted index.
5303 @xref{Output formatting in ptx},
5304 for more information about reference production.
5305 Using this option changes the default value for option @option{-S}.
5307 Using this option, the program does not try very hard to remove
5308 references from contexts in output, but it succeeds in doing so
5309 @emph{when} the context ends exactly at the newline. If option
5310 @option{-r} is used with @option{-S} default value, or when GNU extensions
5311 are disabled, this condition is always met and references are completely
5312 excluded from the output contexts.
5314 @item -S @var{regexp}
5315 @itemx --sentence-regexp=@var{regexp}
5317 @opindex --sentence-regexp
5319 This option selects which regular expression will describe the end of a
5320 line or the end of a sentence. In fact, this regular expression is not
5321 the only distinction between end of lines or end of sentences, and input
5322 line boundaries have no special significance outside this option. By
5323 default, when GNU extensions are enabled and if @option{-r} option is not
5324 used, end of sentences are used. In this case, this @var{regex} is
5325 imported from GNU Emacs:
5328 [.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*
5331 Whenever GNU extensions are disabled or if @option{-r} option is used, end
5332 of lines are used; in this case, the default @var{regexp} is just:
5338 Using an empty @var{regexp} is equivalent to completely disabling end of
5339 line or end of sentence recognition. In this case, the whole file is
5340 considered to be a single big line or sentence. The user might want to
5341 disallow all truncation flag generation as well, through option @option{-F
5342 ""}. @xref{Regexps, , Syntax of Regular Expressions, emacs, The GNU Emacs
5345 When the keywords happen to be near the beginning of the input line or
5346 sentence, this often creates an unused area at the beginning of the
5347 output context line; when the keywords happen to be near the end of the
5348 input line or sentence, this often creates an unused area at the end of
5349 the output context line. The program tries to fill those unused areas
5350 by wrapping around context in them; the tail of the input line or
5351 sentence is used to fill the unused area on the left of the output line;
5352 the head of the input line or sentence is used to fill the unused area
5353 on the right of the output line.
5355 As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed escape
5356 sequences from the C language are recognized and converted to the
5357 corresponding characters by @command{ptx} itself.
5359 @item -W @var{regexp}
5360 @itemx --word-regexp=@var{regexp}
5362 @opindex --word-regexp
5364 This option selects which regular expression will describe each keyword.
5365 By default, if GNU extensions are enabled, a word is a sequence of
5366 letters; the @var{regexp} used is @samp{\w+}. When GNU extensions are
5367 disabled, a word is by default anything which ends with a space, a tab
5368 or a newline; the @var{regexp} used is @samp{[^ \t\n]+}.
5370 An empty @var{regexp} is equivalent to not using this option.
5371 @xref{Regexps, , Syntax of Regular Expressions, emacs, The GNU Emacs
5374 As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed escape
5375 sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and converted to
5376 the corresponding characters by @command{ptx} itself.
5381 @node Output formatting in ptx
5382 @subsection Output formatting
5384 Output format is mainly controlled by the @option{-O} and @option{-T} options
5385 described in the table below. When neither @option{-O} nor @option{-T} are
5386 selected, and if GNU extensions are enabled, the program chooses an
5387 output format suitable for a dumb terminal. Each keyword occurrence is
5388 output to the center of one line, surrounded by its left and right
5389 contexts. Each field is properly justified, so the concordance output
5390 can be readily observed. As a special feature, if automatic
5391 references are selected by option @option{-A} and are output before the
5392 left context, that is, if option @option{-R} is @emph{not} selected, then
5393 a colon is added after the reference; this nicely interfaces with GNU
5394 Emacs @code{next-error} processing. In this default output format, each
5395 white space character, like newline and tab, is merely changed to
5396 exactly one space, with no special attempt to compress consecutive
5397 spaces. This might change in the future. Except for those white space
5398 characters, every other character of the underlying set of 256
5399 characters is transmitted verbatim.
5401 Output format is further controlled by the following options.
5405 @item -g @var{number}
5406 @itemx --gap-size=@var{number}
5410 Select the size of the minimum white space gap between the fields on the
5413 @item -w @var{number}
5414 @itemx --width=@var{number}
5418 Select the maximum output width of each final line. If references are
5419 used, they are included or excluded from the maximum output width
5420 depending on the value of option @option{-R}@. If this option is not
5421 selected, that is, when references are output before the left context,
5422 the maximum output width takes into account the maximum length of all
5423 references. If this option is selected, that is, when references are
5424 output after the right context, the maximum output width does not take
5425 into account the space taken by references, nor the gap that precedes
5429 @itemx --auto-reference
5431 @opindex --auto-reference
5433 Select automatic references. Each input line will have an automatic
5434 reference made up of the file name and the line ordinal, with a single
5435 colon between them. However, the file name will be empty when standard
5436 input is being read. If both @option{-A} and @option{-r} are selected, then
5437 the input reference is still read and skipped, but the automatic
5438 reference is used at output time, overriding the input reference.
5441 @itemx --right-side-refs
5443 @opindex --right-side-refs
5445 In the default output format, when option @option{-R} is not used, any
5446 references produced by the effect of options @option{-r} or @option{-A} are
5447 placed to the far right of output lines, after the right context. With
5448 default output format, when the @option{-R} option is specified, references
5449 are rather placed at the beginning of each output line, before the left
5450 context. For any other output format, option @option{-R} is
5451 ignored, with one exception: with @option{-R} the width of references
5452 is @emph{not} taken into account in total output width given by @option{-w}.
5454 This option is automatically selected whenever GNU extensions are
5457 @item -F @var{string}
5458 @itemx --flag-truncation=@var{string}
5460 @opindex --flag-truncation
5462 This option will request that any truncation in the output be reported
5463 using the string @var{string}. Most output fields theoretically extend
5464 towards the beginning or the end of the current line, or current
5465 sentence, as selected with option @option{-S}@. But there is a maximum
5466 allowed output line width, changeable through option @option{-w}, which is
5467 further divided into space for various output fields. When a field has
5468 to be truncated because it cannot extend beyond the beginning or the end of
5469 the current line to fit in, then a truncation occurs. By default,
5470 the string used is a single slash, as in @option{-F /}.
5472 @var{string} may have more than one character, as in @option{-F @dots{}}.
5473 Also, in the particular case when @var{string} is empty (@option{-F ""}),
5474 truncation flagging is disabled, and no truncation marks are appended in
5477 As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed escape
5478 sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and converted to
5479 the corresponding characters by @command{ptx} itself.
5481 @item -M @var{string}
5482 @itemx --macro-name=@var{string}
5484 @opindex --macro-name
5486 Select another @var{string} to be used instead of @samp{xx}, while
5487 generating output suitable for @command{nroff}, @command{troff} or @TeX{}.
5490 @itemx --format=roff
5492 @opindex --format=roff
5494 Choose an output format suitable for @command{nroff} or @command{troff}
5495 processing. Each output line will look like:
5498 .xx "@var{tail}" "@var{before}" "@var{keyword_and_after}"@c
5499 "@var{head}" "@var{ref}"
5502 so it will be possible to write a @samp{.xx} roff macro to take care of
5503 the output typesetting. This is the default output format when GNU
5504 extensions are disabled. Option @option{-M} can be used to change
5505 @samp{xx} to another macro name.
5507 In this output format, each non-graphical character, like newline and
5508 tab, is merely changed to exactly one space, with no special attempt to
5509 compress consecutive spaces. Each quote character @samp{"} is doubled
5510 so it will be correctly processed by @command{nroff} or @command{troff}.
5515 @opindex --format=tex
5517 Choose an output format suitable for @TeX{} processing. Each output
5518 line will look like:
5521 \xx @{@var{tail}@}@{@var{before}@}@{@var{keyword}@}@c
5522 @{@var{after}@}@{@var{head}@}@{@var{ref}@}
5526 so it will be possible to write a @code{\xx} definition to take care of
5527 the output typesetting. Note that when references are not being
5528 produced, that is, neither option @option{-A} nor option @option{-r} is
5529 selected, the last parameter of each @code{\xx} call is inhibited.
5530 Option @option{-M} can be used to change @samp{xx} to another macro
5533 In this output format, some special characters, like @samp{$}, @samp{%},
5534 @samp{&}, @samp{#} and @samp{_} are automatically protected with a
5535 backslash. Curly brackets @samp{@{}, @samp{@}} are protected with a
5536 backslash and a pair of dollar signs (to force mathematical mode). The
5537 backslash itself produces the sequence @code{\backslash@{@}}.
5538 Circumflex and tilde diacritical marks produce the sequence @code{^\@{ @}} and
5539 @code{~\@{ @}} respectively. Other diacriticized characters of the
5540 underlying character set produce an appropriate @TeX{} sequence as far
5541 as possible. The other non-graphical characters, like newline and tab,
5542 and all other characters which are not part of ASCII, are merely
5543 changed to exactly one space, with no special attempt to compress
5544 consecutive spaces. Let me know how to improve this special character
5545 processing for @TeX{}.
5550 @node Compatibility in ptx
5551 @subsection The GNU extensions to @command{ptx}
5553 This version of @command{ptx} contains a few features which do not exist in
5554 System V @command{ptx}. These extra features are suppressed by using the
5555 @option{-G} command line option, unless overridden by other command line
5556 options. Some GNU extensions cannot be recovered by overriding, so the
5557 simple rule is to avoid @option{-G} if you care about GNU extensions.
5558 Here are the differences between this program and System V @command{ptx}.
5563 This program can read many input files at once, it always writes the
5564 resulting concordance on standard output. On the other hand, System V
5565 @command{ptx} reads only one file and sends the result to standard output
5566 or, if a second @var{file} parameter is given on the command, to that
5569 Having output parameters not introduced by options is a dangerous
5570 practice which GNU avoids as far as possible. So, for using @command{ptx}
5571 portably between GNU and System V, you should always use it with a
5572 single input file, and always expect the result on standard output. You
5573 might also want to automatically configure in a @option{-G} option to
5574 @command{ptx} calls in products using @command{ptx}, if the configurator finds
5575 that the installed @command{ptx} accepts @option{-G}.
5578 The only options available in System V @command{ptx} are options @option{-b},
5579 @option{-f}, @option{-g}, @option{-i}, @option{-o}, @option{-r}, @option{-t} and
5580 @option{-w}. All other options are GNU extensions and are not repeated in
5581 this enumeration. Moreover, some options have a slightly different
5582 meaning when GNU extensions are enabled, as explained below.
5585 By default, concordance output is not formatted for @command{troff} or
5586 @command{nroff}. It is rather formatted for a dumb terminal. @command{troff}
5587 or @command{nroff} output may still be selected through option @option{-O}.
5590 Unless @option{-R} option is used, the maximum reference width is
5591 subtracted from the total output line width. With GNU extensions
5592 disabled, width of references is not taken into account in the output
5593 line width computations.
5596 All 256 bytes, even ASCII NUL bytes, are always read and
5597 processed from input file with no adverse effect, even if GNU extensions
5598 are disabled. However, System V @command{ptx} does not accept 8-bit
5599 characters, a few control characters are rejected, and the tilde
5600 @samp{~} is also rejected.
5603 Input line length is only limited by available memory, even if GNU
5604 extensions are disabled. However, System V @command{ptx} processes only
5605 the first 200 characters in each line.
5608 The break (non-word) characters default to be every character except all
5609 letters of the underlying character set, diacriticized or not. When GNU
5610 extensions are disabled, the break characters default to space, tab and
5614 The program makes better use of output line width. If GNU extensions
5615 are disabled, the program rather tries to imitate System V @command{ptx},
5616 but still, there are some slight disposition glitches this program does
5617 not completely reproduce.
5620 The user can specify both an Ignore file and an Only file. This is not
5621 allowed with System V @command{ptx}.
5626 @node tsort invocation
5627 @section @command{tsort}: Topological sort
5630 @cindex topological sort
5632 @command{tsort} performs a topological sort on the given @var{file}, or
5633 standard input if no input file is given or for a @var{file} of
5634 @samp{-}. For more details and some history, see @ref{tsort background}.
5638 tsort [@var{option}] [@var{file}]
5641 @command{tsort} reads its input as pairs of strings, separated by blanks,
5642 indicating a partial ordering. The output is a total ordering that
5643 corresponds to the given partial ordering.
5657 will produce the output
5668 Consider a more realistic example.
5669 You have a large set of functions all in one file, and they may all be
5670 declared static except one. Currently that one (say @code{main}) is the
5671 first function defined in the file, and the ones it calls directly follow
5672 it, followed by those they call, etc. Let's say that you are determined
5673 to take advantage of prototypes, so you have to choose between declaring
5674 all of those functions (which means duplicating a lot of information from
5675 the definitions) and rearranging the functions so that as many as possible
5676 are defined before they are used. One way to automate the latter process
5677 is to get a list for each function of the functions it calls directly.
5678 Many programs can generate such lists. They describe a call graph.
5679 Consider the following list, in which a given line indicates that the
5680 function on the left calls the one on the right directly.
5686 tail_file pretty_name
5687 tail_file write_header
5689 tail_forever recheck
5690 tail_forever pretty_name
5691 tail_forever write_header
5692 tail_forever dump_remainder
5695 tail_lines start_lines
5696 tail_lines dump_remainder
5697 tail_lines file_lines
5698 tail_lines pipe_lines
5700 tail_bytes start_bytes
5701 tail_bytes dump_remainder
5702 tail_bytes pipe_bytes
5703 file_lines dump_remainder
5707 then you can use @command{tsort} to produce an ordering of those
5708 functions that satisfies your requirement.
5711 example$ tsort call-graph | tac
5731 @command{tsort} detects any cycles in the input and writes the first cycle
5732 encountered to standard error.
5734 Note that for a given partial ordering, generally there is no unique
5735 total ordering. In the context of the call graph above, the function
5736 @code{parse_options} may be placed anywhere in the list as long as it
5737 precedes @code{main}.
5739 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
5745 * tsort background:: Where tsort came from.
5748 @node tsort background
5749 @subsection @command{tsort}: Background
5751 @command{tsort} exists because very early versions of the Unix linker processed
5752 an archive file exactly once, and in order. As @command{ld} read each object
5753 in the archive, it decided whether it was needed in the program based on
5754 whether it defined any symbols which were undefined at that point in
5757 This meant that dependencies within the archive had to be handled
5758 specially. For example, @code{scanf} probably calls @code{read}. That means
5759 that in a single pass through an archive, it was important for @code{scanf.o}
5760 to appear before read.o, because otherwise a program which calls
5761 @code{scanf} but not @code{read} might end up with an unexpected unresolved
5762 reference to @code{read}.
5764 The way to address this problem was to first generate a set of
5765 dependencies of one object file on another. This was done by a shell
5766 script called @command{lorder}. The GNU tools don't provide a version of
5767 lorder, as far as I know, but you can still find it in BSD
5770 Then you ran @command{tsort} over the @command{lorder} output, and you used the
5771 resulting sort to define the order in which you added objects to the archive.
5773 This whole procedure has been obsolete since about 1980, because
5774 Unix archives now contain a symbol table (traditionally built by
5775 @command{ranlib}, now generally built by @command{ar} itself), and the Unix
5776 linker uses the symbol table to effectively make multiple passes over
5779 Anyhow, that's where tsort came from. To solve an old problem with
5780 the way the linker handled archive files, which has since been solved
5784 @node Operating on fields
5785 @chapter Operating on fields
5788 * cut invocation:: Print selected parts of lines.
5789 * paste invocation:: Merge lines of files.
5790 * join invocation:: Join lines on a common field.
5794 @node cut invocation
5795 @section @command{cut}: Print selected parts of lines
5798 @command{cut} writes to standard output selected parts of each line of each
5799 input file, or standard input if no files are given or for a file name of
5803 cut @var{option}@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
5806 In the table which follows, the @var{byte-list}, @var{character-list},
5807 and @var{field-list} are one or more numbers or ranges (two numbers
5808 separated by a dash) separated by commas. Bytes, characters, and
5809 fields are numbered starting at 1. Incomplete ranges may be
5810 given: @option{-@var{m}} means @samp{1-@var{m}}; @samp{@var{n}-} means
5811 @samp{@var{n}} through end of line or last field. The list elements
5812 can be repeated, can overlap, and can be specified in any order; but
5813 the selected input is written in the same order that it is read, and
5814 is written exactly once.
5816 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common
5821 @item -b @var{byte-list}
5822 @itemx --bytes=@var{byte-list}
5825 Select for printing only the bytes in positions listed in
5826 @var{byte-list}. Tabs and backspaces are treated like any other
5827 character; they take up 1 byte. If an output delimiter is specified,
5828 (see the description of @option{--output-delimiter}), then output that
5829 string between ranges of selected bytes.
5831 @item -c @var{character-list}
5832 @itemx --characters=@var{character-list}
5834 @opindex --characters
5835 Select for printing only the characters in positions listed in
5836 @var{character-list}. The same as @option{-b} for now, but
5837 internationalization will change that. Tabs and backspaces are
5838 treated like any other character; they take up 1 character. If an
5839 output delimiter is specified, (see the description of
5840 @option{--output-delimiter}), then output that string between ranges
5843 @item -f @var{field-list}
5844 @itemx --fields=@var{field-list}
5847 Select for printing only the fields listed in @var{field-list}.
5848 Fields are separated by a TAB character by default. Also print any
5849 line that contains no delimiter character, unless the
5850 @option{--only-delimited} (@option{-s}) option is specified.
5852 Note @command{awk} supports more sophisticated field processing,
5853 and by default will use (and discard) runs of blank characters to
5854 separate fields, and ignore leading and trailing blanks.
5857 awk '{print $2}' # print the second field
5858 awk '{print $NF-1}' # print the penultimate field
5859 awk '{print $2,$1}' # reorder the first two fields
5863 In the unlikely event that @command{awk} is unavailable,
5864 one can use the @command{join} command, to process blank
5865 characters as @command{awk} does above.
5868 join -a1 -o 1.2 - /dev/null # print the second field
5869 join -a1 -o 1.2,1.1 - /dev/null # reorder the first two fields
5873 @item -d @var{input_delim_byte}
5874 @itemx --delimiter=@var{input_delim_byte}
5876 @opindex --delimiter
5877 With @option{-f}, use the first byte of @var{input_delim_byte} as
5878 the input fields separator (default is TAB).
5882 Do not split multi-byte characters (no-op for now).
5885 @itemx --only-delimited
5887 @opindex --only-delimited
5888 For @option{-f}, do not print lines that do not contain the field separator
5889 character. Normally, any line without a field separator is printed verbatim.
5891 @item --output-delimiter=@var{output_delim_string}
5892 @opindex --output-delimiter
5893 With @option{-f}, output fields are separated by @var{output_delim_string}.
5894 The default with @option{-f} is to use the input delimiter.
5895 When using @option{-b} or @option{-c} to select ranges of byte or
5896 character offsets (as opposed to ranges of fields),
5897 output @var{output_delim_string} between non-overlapping
5898 ranges of selected bytes.
5901 @opindex --complement
5902 This option is a GNU extension.
5903 Select for printing the complement of the bytes, characters or fields
5904 selected with the @option{-b}, @option{-c} or @option{-f} options.
5905 In other words, do @emph{not} print the bytes, characters or fields
5906 specified via those options. This option is useful when you have
5907 many fields and want to print all but a few of them.
5916 @node paste invocation
5917 @section @command{paste}: Merge lines of files
5920 @cindex merging files
5922 @command{paste} writes to standard output lines consisting of sequentially
5923 corresponding lines of each given file, separated by a TAB character.
5924 Standard input is used for a file name of @samp{-} or if no input files
5930 paste [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
5944 Take lines sequentially from each file:
5952 Duplicate lines from a file:
5954 $ paste num2 let3 num2
5960 Intermix lines from stdin:
5962 $ paste - let3 - < num2
5968 Join consecutive lines with a space:
5970 $ seq 4 | paste -d ' ' - -
5975 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
5983 Paste the lines of one file at a time rather than one line from each
5984 file. Using the above example data:
5987 $ paste -s num2 let3
5992 @item -d @var{delim-list}
5993 @itemx --delimiters=@var{delim-list}
5995 @opindex --delimiters
5996 Consecutively use the characters in @var{delim-list} instead of
5997 TAB to separate merged lines. When @var{delim-list} is
5998 exhausted, start again at its beginning. Using the above example data:
6001 $ paste -d '%_' num2 let3 num2
6012 @node join invocation
6013 @section @command{join}: Join lines on a common field
6016 @cindex common field, joining on
6018 @command{join} writes to standard output a line for each pair of input
6019 lines that have identical join fields. Synopsis:
6022 join [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{file1} @var{file2}
6025 Either @var{file1} or @var{file2} (but not both) can be @samp{-},
6026 meaning standard input. @var{file1} and @var{file2} should be
6027 sorted on the join fields.
6030 Normally, the sort order is that of the
6031 collating sequence specified by the @env{LC_COLLATE} locale. Unless
6032 the @option{-t} option is given, the sort comparison ignores blanks at
6033 the start of the join field, as in @code{sort -b}. If the
6034 @option{--ignore-case} option is given, the sort comparison ignores
6035 the case of characters in the join field, as in @code{sort -f}.
6037 The @command{sort} and @command{join} commands should use consistent
6038 locales and options if the output of @command{sort} is fed to
6039 @command{join}. You can use a command like @samp{sort -k 1b,1} to
6040 sort a file on its default join field, but if you select a non-default
6041 locale, join field, separator, or comparison options, then you should
6042 do so consistently between @command{join} and @command{sort}.
6043 If @samp{join -t ''} is specified then the whole line is considered which
6044 matches the default operation of sort.
6046 If the input has no unpairable lines, a GNU extension is
6047 available; the sort order can be any order that considers two fields
6048 to be equal if and only if the sort comparison described above
6049 considers them to be equal. For example:
6067 @checkOrderOption{join}
6072 @item the join field is the first field in each line;
6073 @item fields in the input are separated by one or more blanks, with leading
6074 blanks on the line ignored;
6075 @item fields in the output are separated by a space;
6076 @item each output line consists of the join field, the remaining
6077 fields from @var{file1}, then the remaining fields from @var{file2}.
6080 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
6084 @item -a @var{file-number}
6086 Print a line for each unpairable line in file @var{file-number} (either
6087 @samp{1} or @samp{2}), in addition to the normal output.
6090 Fail with an error message if either input file is wrongly ordered.
6092 @item --nocheck-order
6093 Do not check that both input files are in sorted order. This is the default.
6095 @item -e @var{string}
6097 Replace those output fields that are missing in the input with @var{string}.
6098 I.e., missing fields specified with the @option{-12jo} options.
6102 Treat the first line of each input file as a header line. The header lines
6103 will be joined and printed as the first output line. If @option{-o} is used to
6104 specify output format, the header line will be printed according to the
6105 specified format. The header lines will not be checked for ordering even if
6106 @option{--check-order} is specified. Also if the header lines from each file
6107 do not match, the heading fields from the first file will be used.
6110 @itemx --ignore-case
6112 @opindex --ignore-case
6113 Ignore differences in case when comparing keys.
6114 With this option, the lines of the input files must be ordered in the same way.
6115 Use @samp{sort -f} to produce this ordering.
6117 @item -1 @var{field}
6119 Join on field @var{field} (a positive integer) of file 1.
6121 @item -2 @var{field}
6123 Join on field @var{field} (a positive integer) of file 2.
6125 @item -j @var{field}
6126 Equivalent to @option{-1 @var{field} -2 @var{field}}.
6128 @item -o @var{field-list}
6130 If the keyword @samp{auto} is specified, infer the output format from
6131 the first line in each file. This is the same as the default output format
6132 but also ensures the same number of fields are output for each line.
6133 Missing fields are replaced with the @option{-e} option and extra fields
6136 Otherwise, construct each output line according to the format in
6137 @var{field-list}. Each element in @var{field-list} is either the single
6138 character @samp{0} or has the form @var{m.n} where the file number, @var{m},
6139 is @samp{1} or @samp{2} and @var{n} is a positive field number.
6141 A field specification of @samp{0} denotes the join field.
6142 In most cases, the functionality of the @samp{0} field spec
6143 may be reproduced using the explicit @var{m.n} that corresponds
6144 to the join field. However, when printing unpairable lines
6145 (using either of the @option{-a} or @option{-v} options), there is no way
6146 to specify the join field using @var{m.n} in @var{field-list}
6147 if there are unpairable lines in both files.
6148 To give @command{join} that functionality, POSIX invented the @samp{0}
6149 field specification notation.
6151 The elements in @var{field-list}
6152 are separated by commas or blanks.
6153 Blank separators typically need to be quoted for the shell. For
6154 example, the commands @samp{join -o 1.2,2.2} and @samp{join -o '1.2
6155 2.2'} are equivalent.
6157 All output lines---including those printed because of any -a or -v
6158 option---are subject to the specified @var{field-list}.
6161 Use character @var{char} as the input and output field separator.
6162 Treat as significant each occurrence of @var{char} in the input file.
6163 Use @samp{sort -t @var{char}}, without the @option{-b} option of
6164 @samp{sort}, to produce this ordering. If @samp{join -t ''} is specified,
6165 the whole line is considered, matching the default operation of sort.
6166 If @samp{-t '\0'} is specified then the ASCII NUL
6167 character is used to delimit the fields.
6169 @item -v @var{file-number}
6170 Print a line for each unpairable line in file @var{file-number}
6171 (either @samp{1} or @samp{2}), instead of the normal output.
6174 @newlineFieldSeparator
6181 @node Operating on characters
6182 @chapter Operating on characters
6184 @cindex operating on characters
6186 These commands operate on individual characters.
6189 * tr invocation:: Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters.
6190 * expand invocation:: Convert tabs to spaces.
6191 * unexpand invocation:: Convert spaces to tabs.
6196 @section @command{tr}: Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters
6203 tr [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{set1} [@var{set2}]
6206 @command{tr} copies standard input to standard output, performing
6207 one of the following operations:
6211 translate, and optionally squeeze repeated characters in the result,
6213 squeeze repeated characters,
6217 delete characters, then squeeze repeated characters from the result.
6220 The @var{set1} and (if given) @var{set2} arguments define ordered
6221 sets of characters, referred to below as @var{set1} and @var{set2}. These
6222 sets are the characters of the input that @command{tr} operates on.
6223 The @option{--complement} (@option{-c}, @option{-C}) option replaces
6225 complement (all of the characters that are not in @var{set1}).
6227 Currently @command{tr} fully supports only single-byte characters.
6228 Eventually it will support multibyte characters; when it does, the
6229 @option{-C} option will cause it to complement the set of characters,
6230 whereas @option{-c} will cause it to complement the set of values.
6231 This distinction will matter only when some values are not characters,
6232 and this is possible only in locales using multibyte encodings when
6233 the input contains encoding errors.
6235 The program accepts the @option{--help} and @option{--version}
6236 options. @xref{Common options}. Options must precede operands.
6241 * Character sets:: Specifying sets of characters.
6242 * Translating:: Changing one set of characters to another.
6243 * Squeezing and deleting:: Removing characters.
6247 @node Character sets
6248 @subsection Specifying sets of characters
6250 @cindex specifying sets of characters
6252 The format of the @var{set1} and @var{set2} arguments resembles
6253 the format of regular expressions; however, they are not regular
6254 expressions, only lists of characters. Most characters simply
6255 represent themselves in these strings, but the strings can contain
6256 the shorthands listed below, for convenience. Some of them can be
6257 used only in @var{set1} or @var{set2}, as noted below.
6261 @item Backslash escapes
6262 @cindex backslash escapes
6264 The following backslash escape sequences are recognized:
6282 The 8-bit character with the value given by @var{ooo}, which is 1 to 3
6283 octal digits. Note that @samp{\400} is interpreted as the two-byte
6284 sequence, @samp{\040} @samp{0}.
6289 While a backslash followed by a character not listed above is
6290 interpreted as that character, the backslash also effectively
6291 removes any special significance, so it is useful to escape
6292 @samp{[}, @samp{]}, @samp{*}, and @samp{-}.
6297 The notation @samp{@var{m}-@var{n}} expands to all of the characters
6298 from @var{m} through @var{n}, in ascending order. @var{m} should
6299 collate before @var{n}; if it doesn't, an error results. As an example,
6300 @samp{0-9} is the same as @samp{0123456789}.
6302 GNU @command{tr} does not support the System V syntax that uses square
6303 brackets to enclose ranges. Translations specified in that format
6304 sometimes work as expected, since the brackets are often transliterated
6305 to themselves. However, they should be avoided because they sometimes
6306 behave unexpectedly. For example, @samp{tr -d '[0-9]'} deletes brackets
6309 Many historically common and even accepted uses of ranges are not
6310 portable. For example, on EBCDIC hosts using the @samp{A-Z}
6311 range will not do what most would expect because @samp{A} through @samp{Z}
6312 are not contiguous as they are in ASCII@.
6313 If you can rely on a POSIX compliant version of @command{tr}, then
6314 the best way to work around this is to use character classes (see below).
6315 Otherwise, it is most portable (and most ugly) to enumerate the members
6318 @item Repeated characters
6319 @cindex repeated characters
6321 The notation @samp{[@var{c}*@var{n}]} in @var{set2} expands to @var{n}
6322 copies of character @var{c}. Thus, @samp{[y*6]} is the same as
6323 @samp{yyyyyy}. The notation @samp{[@var{c}*]} in @var{string2} expands
6324 to as many copies of @var{c} as are needed to make @var{set2} as long as
6325 @var{set1}. If @var{n} begins with @samp{0}, it is interpreted in
6326 octal, otherwise in decimal.
6328 @item Character classes
6329 @cindex character classes
6331 The notation @samp{[:@var{class}:]} expands to all of the characters in
6332 the (predefined) class @var{class}. The characters expand in no
6333 particular order, except for the @code{upper} and @code{lower} classes,
6334 which expand in ascending order. When the @option{--delete} (@option{-d})
6335 and @option{--squeeze-repeats} (@option{-s}) options are both given, any
6336 character class can be used in @var{set2}. Otherwise, only the
6337 character classes @code{lower} and @code{upper} are accepted in
6338 @var{set2}, and then only if the corresponding character class
6339 (@code{upper} and @code{lower}, respectively) is specified in the same
6340 relative position in @var{set1}. Doing this specifies case conversion.
6341 The class names are given below; an error results when an invalid class
6353 Horizontal whitespace.
6362 Printable characters, not including space.
6368 Printable characters, including space.
6371 Punctuation characters.
6374 Horizontal or vertical whitespace.
6383 @item Equivalence classes
6384 @cindex equivalence classes
6386 The syntax @samp{[=@var{c}=]} expands to all of the characters that are
6387 equivalent to @var{c}, in no particular order. Equivalence classes are
6388 a relatively recent invention intended to support non-English alphabets.
6389 But there seems to be no standard way to define them or determine their
6390 contents. Therefore, they are not fully implemented in GNU @command{tr};
6391 each character's equivalence class consists only of that character,
6392 which is of no particular use.
6398 @subsection Translating
6400 @cindex translating characters
6402 @command{tr} performs translation when @var{set1} and @var{set2} are
6403 both given and the @option{--delete} (@option{-d}) option is not given.
6404 @command{tr} translates each character of its input that is in @var{set1}
6405 to the corresponding character in @var{set2}. Characters not in
6406 @var{set1} are passed through unchanged. When a character appears more
6407 than once in @var{set1} and the corresponding characters in @var{set2}
6408 are not all the same, only the final one is used. For example, these
6409 two commands are equivalent:
6416 A common use of @command{tr} is to convert lowercase characters to
6417 uppercase. This can be done in many ways. Here are three of them:
6420 tr abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
6422 tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]'
6426 But note that using ranges like @code{a-z} above is not portable.
6428 When @command{tr} is performing translation, @var{set1} and @var{set2}
6429 typically have the same length. If @var{set1} is shorter than
6430 @var{set2}, the extra characters at the end of @var{set2} are ignored.
6432 On the other hand, making @var{set1} longer than @var{set2} is not
6433 portable; POSIX says that the result is undefined. In this situation,
6434 BSD @command{tr} pads @var{set2} to the length of @var{set1} by repeating
6435 the last character of @var{set2} as many times as necessary. System V
6436 @command{tr} truncates @var{set1} to the length of @var{set2}.
6438 By default, GNU @command{tr} handles this case like BSD @command{tr}.
6439 When the @option{--truncate-set1} (@option{-t}) option is given,
6440 GNU @command{tr} handles this case like the System V @command{tr}
6441 instead. This option is ignored for operations other than translation.
6443 Acting like System V @command{tr} in this case breaks the relatively common
6447 tr -cs A-Za-z0-9 '\012'
6451 because it converts only zero bytes (the first element in the
6452 complement of @var{set1}), rather than all non-alphanumerics, to
6456 By the way, the above idiom is not portable because it uses ranges, and
6457 it assumes that the octal code for newline is 012.
6458 Assuming a POSIX compliant @command{tr}, here is a better
6462 tr -cs '[:alnum:]' '[\n*]'
6466 @node Squeezing and deleting
6467 @subsection Squeezing repeats and deleting
6469 @cindex squeezing repeat characters
6470 @cindex deleting characters
6471 @cindex removing characters
6473 When given just the @option{--delete} (@option{-d}) option, @command{tr}
6474 removes any input characters that are in @var{set1}.
6476 When given just the @option{--squeeze-repeats} (@option{-s}) option
6477 and not translating, @command{tr} replaces each input sequence of a
6478 repeated character that is in @var{set1} with a single occurrence of
6481 When given both @option{--delete} and @option{--squeeze-repeats}, @command{tr}
6482 first performs any deletions using @var{set1}, then squeezes repeats
6483 from any remaining characters using @var{set2}.
6485 The @option{--squeeze-repeats} option may also be used when translating,
6486 in which case @command{tr} first performs translation, then squeezes
6487 repeats from any remaining characters using @var{set2}.
6489 Here are some examples to illustrate various combinations of options:
6494 Remove all zero bytes:
6501 Put all words on lines by themselves. This converts all
6502 non-alphanumeric characters to newlines, then squeezes each string
6503 of repeated newlines into a single newline:
6506 tr -cs '[:alnum:]' '[\n*]'
6510 Convert each sequence of repeated newlines to a single newline.
6511 I.e., delete blank lines:
6518 Find doubled occurrences of words in a document.
6519 @c Separate the following two "the"s, so typo checkers don't complain.
6520 For example, people often write ``the @w{}the'' with the repeated words
6521 separated by a newline. The Bourne shell script below works first
6522 by converting each sequence of punctuation and blank characters to a
6523 single newline. That puts each ``word'' on a line by itself.
6524 Next it maps all uppercase characters to lower case, and finally it
6525 runs @command{uniq} with the @option{-d} option to print out only the words
6531 | tr -s '[:punct:][:blank:]' '[\n*]' \
6532 | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' \
6537 Deleting a small set of characters is usually straightforward. For example,
6538 to remove all @samp{a}s, @samp{x}s, and @samp{M}s you would do this:
6544 However, when @samp{-} is one of those characters, it can be tricky because
6545 @samp{-} has special meanings. Performing the same task as above but also
6546 removing all @samp{-} characters, we might try @code{tr -d -axM}, but
6547 that would fail because @command{tr} would try to interpret @option{-a} as
6548 a command-line option. Alternatively, we could try putting the hyphen
6549 inside the string, @code{tr -d a-xM}, but that wouldn't work either because
6550 it would make @command{tr} interpret @code{a-x} as the range of characters
6551 @samp{a}@dots{}@samp{x} rather than the three.
6552 One way to solve the problem is to put the hyphen at the end of the list
6559 Or you can use @samp{--} to terminate option processing:
6565 More generally, use the character class notation @code{[=c=]}
6566 with @samp{-} (or any other character) in place of the @samp{c}:
6572 Note how single quotes are used in the above example to protect the
6573 square brackets from interpretation by a shell.
6578 @node expand invocation
6579 @section @command{expand}: Convert tabs to spaces
6582 @cindex tabs to spaces, converting
6583 @cindex converting tabs to spaces
6585 @command{expand} writes the contents of each given @var{file}, or standard
6586 input if none are given or for a @var{file} of @samp{-}, to standard
6587 output, with tab characters converted to the appropriate number of
6591 expand [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
6594 By default, @command{expand} converts all tabs to spaces. It preserves
6595 backspace characters in the output; they decrement the column count for
6596 tab calculations. The default action is equivalent to @option{-t 8} (set
6597 tabs every 8 columns).
6599 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
6603 @item -t @var{tab1}[,@var{tab2}]@dots{}
6604 @itemx --tabs=@var{tab1}[,@var{tab2}]@dots{}
6607 @cindex tab stops, setting
6608 If only one tab stop is given, set the tabs @var{tab1} spaces apart
6609 (default is 8). Otherwise, set the tabs at columns @var{tab1},
6610 @var{tab2}, @dots{} (numbered from 0), and replace any tabs beyond the
6611 last tab stop given with single spaces. Tab stops can be separated by
6612 blanks as well as by commas.
6614 For compatibility, GNU @command{expand} also accepts the obsolete
6615 option syntax, @option{-@var{t1}[,@var{t2}]@dots{}}. New scripts
6616 should use @option{-t @var{t1}[,@var{t2}]@dots{}} instead.
6622 @cindex initial tabs, converting
6623 Only convert initial tabs (those that precede all non-space or non-tab
6624 characters) on each line to spaces.
6631 @node unexpand invocation
6632 @section @command{unexpand}: Convert spaces to tabs
6636 @command{unexpand} writes the contents of each given @var{file}, or
6637 standard input if none are given or for a @var{file} of @samp{-}, to
6638 standard output, converting blanks at the beginning of each line into
6639 as many tab characters as needed. In the default POSIX
6640 locale, a @dfn{blank} is a space or a tab; other locales may specify
6641 additional blank characters. Synopsis:
6644 unexpand [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
6647 By default, @command{unexpand} converts only initial blanks (those
6648 that precede all non-blank characters) on each line. It
6649 preserves backspace characters in the output; they decrement the column
6650 count for tab calculations. By default, tabs are set at every 8th
6653 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
6657 @item -t @var{tab1}[,@var{tab2}]@dots{}
6658 @itemx --tabs=@var{tab1}[,@var{tab2}]@dots{}
6661 If only one tab stop is given, set the tabs @var{tab1} columns apart
6662 instead of the default 8. Otherwise, set the tabs at columns
6663 @var{tab1}, @var{tab2}, @dots{} (numbered from 0), and leave blanks
6664 beyond the tab stops given unchanged. Tab stops can be separated by
6665 blanks as well as by commas. This option implies the @option{-a} option.
6667 For compatibility, GNU @command{unexpand} supports the obsolete option syntax,
6668 @option{-@var{tab1}[,@var{tab2}]@dots{}}, where tab stops must be
6669 separated by commas. (Unlike @option{-t}, this obsolete option does
6670 not imply @option{-a}.) New scripts should use @option{--first-only -t
6671 @var{tab1}[,@var{tab2}]@dots{}} instead.
6677 Also convert all sequences of two or more blanks just before a tab stop,
6678 even if they occur after non-blank characters in a line.
6685 @node Directory listing
6686 @chapter Directory listing
6688 This chapter describes the @command{ls} command and its variants @command{dir}
6689 and @command{vdir}, which list information about files.
6692 * ls invocation:: List directory contents.
6693 * dir invocation:: Briefly ls.
6694 * vdir invocation:: Verbosely ls.
6695 * dircolors invocation:: Color setup for ls, etc.
6700 @section @command{ls}: List directory contents
6703 @cindex directory listing
6705 The @command{ls} program lists information about files (of any type,
6706 including directories). Options and file arguments can be intermixed
6707 arbitrarily, as usual.
6709 For non-option command-line arguments that are directories, by default
6710 @command{ls} lists the contents of directories, not recursively, and
6711 omitting files with names beginning with @samp{.}. For other non-option
6712 arguments, by default @command{ls} lists just the file name. If no
6713 non-option argument is specified, @command{ls} operates on the current
6714 directory, acting as if it had been invoked with a single argument of @samp{.}.
6717 By default, the output is sorted alphabetically, according to the locale
6718 settings in effect.@footnote{If you use a non-POSIX
6719 locale (e.g., by setting @env{LC_ALL} to @samp{en_US}), then @command{ls} may
6720 produce output that is sorted differently than you're accustomed to.
6721 In that case, set the @env{LC_ALL} environment variable to @samp{C}.}
6722 If standard output is
6723 a terminal, the output is in columns (sorted vertically) and control
6724 characters are output as question marks; otherwise, the output is listed
6725 one per line and control characters are output as-is.
6727 Because @command{ls} is such a fundamental program, it has accumulated many
6728 options over the years. They are described in the subsections below;
6729 within each section, options are listed alphabetically (ignoring case).
6730 The division of options into the subsections is not absolute, since some
6731 options affect more than one aspect of @command{ls}'s operation.
6733 @cindex exit status of @command{ls}
6738 1 minor problems (e.g., failure to access a file or directory not
6739 specified as a command line argument. This happens when listing a
6740 directory in which entries are actively being removed or renamed.)
6741 2 serious trouble (e.g., memory exhausted, invalid option, failure
6742 to access a file or directory specified as a command line argument
6743 or a directory loop)
6746 Also see @ref{Common options}.
6749 * Which files are listed::
6750 * What information is listed::
6751 * Sorting the output::
6752 * Details about version sort::
6753 * General output formatting::
6754 * Formatting file timestamps::
6755 * Formatting the file names::
6759 @node Which files are listed
6760 @subsection Which files are listed
6762 These options determine which files @command{ls} lists information for.
6763 By default, @command{ls} lists files and the contents of any
6764 directories on the command line, except that in directories it ignores
6765 files whose names start with @samp{.}.
6773 In directories, do not ignore file names that start with @samp{.}.
6778 @opindex --almost-all
6779 In directories, do not ignore all file names that start with @samp{.};
6780 ignore only @file{.} and @file{..}. The @option{--all} (@option{-a})
6781 option overrides this option.
6784 @itemx --ignore-backups
6786 @opindex --ignore-backups
6787 @cindex backup files, ignoring
6788 In directories, ignore files that end with @samp{~}. This option is
6789 equivalent to @samp{--ignore='*~' --ignore='.*~'}.
6794 @opindex --directory
6795 List just the names of directories, as with other types of files, rather
6796 than listing their contents.
6797 @c The following sentence is the same as the one for -F.
6798 Do not follow symbolic links listed on the
6799 command line unless the @option{--dereference-command-line} (@option{-H}),
6800 @option{--dereference} (@option{-L}), or
6801 @option{--dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir} options are specified.
6804 @itemx --dereference-command-line
6806 @opindex --dereference-command-line
6807 @cindex symbolic links, dereferencing
6808 If a command line argument specifies a symbolic link, show information
6809 for the file the link references rather than for the link itself.
6811 @item --dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir
6812 @opindex --dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir
6813 @cindex symbolic links, dereferencing
6814 Do not dereference symbolic links, with one exception:
6815 if a command line argument specifies a symbolic link that refers to
6816 a directory, show information for that directory rather than for the
6818 This is the default behavior when no other dereferencing-related
6819 option has been specified (@option{--classify} (@option{-F}),
6820 @option{--directory} (@option{-d}),
6822 @option{--dereference} (@option{-L}), or
6823 @option{--dereference-command-line} (@option{-H})).
6825 @item --group-directories-first
6826 @opindex --group-directories-first
6827 Group all the directories before the files and then sort the
6828 directories and the files separately using the selected sort key
6829 (see --sort option).
6830 That is, this option specifies a primary sort key,
6831 and the --sort option specifies a secondary key.
6832 However, any use of @option{--sort=none}
6833 (@option{-U}) disables this option altogether.
6835 @item --hide=PATTERN
6836 @opindex --hide=@var{pattern}
6837 In directories, ignore files whose names match the shell pattern
6838 @var{pattern}, unless the @option{--all} (@option{-a}) or
6839 @option{--almost-all} (@option{-A}) is also given. This
6840 option acts like @option{--ignore=@var{pattern}} except that it has no
6841 effect if @option{--all} (@option{-a}) or @option{--almost-all}
6842 (@option{-A}) is also given.
6844 This option can be useful in shell aliases. For example, if
6845 @command{lx} is an alias for @samp{ls --hide='*~'} and @command{ly} is
6846 an alias for @samp{ls --ignore='*~'}, then the command @samp{lx -A}
6847 lists the file @file{README~} even though @samp{ly -A} would not.
6849 @item -I @var{pattern}
6850 @itemx --ignore=@var{pattern}
6852 @opindex --ignore=@var{pattern}
6853 In directories, ignore files whose names match the shell pattern
6854 (not regular expression) @var{pattern}. As
6855 in the shell, an initial @samp{.} in a file name does not match a
6856 wildcard at the start of @var{pattern}. Sometimes it is useful
6857 to give this option several times. For example,
6860 $ ls --ignore='.??*' --ignore='.[^.]' --ignore='#*'
6863 The first option ignores names of length 3 or more that start with @samp{.},
6864 the second ignores all two-character names that start with @samp{.}
6865 except @samp{..}, and the third ignores names that start with @samp{#}.
6868 @itemx --dereference
6870 @opindex --dereference
6871 @cindex symbolic links, dereferencing
6872 When showing file information for a symbolic link, show information
6873 for the file the link references rather than the link itself.
6874 However, even with this option, @command{ls} still prints the name
6875 of the link itself, not the name of the file that the link points to.
6880 @opindex --recursive
6881 @cindex recursive directory listing
6882 @cindex directory listing, recursive
6883 List the contents of all directories recursively.
6888 @node What information is listed
6889 @subsection What information is listed
6891 These options affect the information that @command{ls} displays. By
6892 default, only file names are shown.
6898 @cindex hurd, author, printing
6899 List each file's author when producing long format directory listings.
6900 In GNU/Hurd, file authors can differ from their owners, but in other
6901 operating systems the two are the same.
6907 @cindex dired Emacs mode support
6908 With the long listing (@option{-l}) format, print an additional line after
6912 //DIRED// @var{beg1} @var{end1} @var{beg2} @var{end2} @dots{}
6916 The @var{begn} and @var{endn} are unsigned integers that record the
6917 byte position of the beginning and end of each file name in the output.
6918 This makes it easy for Emacs to find the names, even when they contain
6919 unusual characters such as space or newline, without fancy searching.
6921 If directories are being listed recursively (@option{-R}), output a similar
6922 line with offsets for each subdirectory name:
6925 //SUBDIRED// @var{beg1} @var{end1} @dots{}
6928 Finally, output a line of the form:
6931 //DIRED-OPTIONS// --quoting-style=@var{word}
6935 where @var{word} is the quoting style (@pxref{Formatting the file names}).
6937 Here is an actual example:
6940 $ mkdir -p a/sub/deeper a/sub2
6942 $ touch a/sub/deeper/file
6943 $ ls -gloRF --dired a
6946 -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Jun 10 12:27 f1
6947 -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Jun 10 12:27 f2
6948 drwxr-xr-x 3 4096 Jun 10 12:27 sub/
6949 drwxr-xr-x 2 4096 Jun 10 12:27 sub2/
6953 drwxr-xr-x 2 4096 Jun 10 12:27 deeper/
6957 -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Jun 10 12:27 file
6961 //DIRED// 48 50 84 86 120 123 158 162 217 223 282 286
6962 //SUBDIRED// 2 3 167 172 228 240 290 296
6963 //DIRED-OPTIONS// --quoting-style=literal
6966 Note that the pairs of offsets on the @samp{//DIRED//} line above delimit
6967 these names: @file{f1}, @file{f2}, @file{sub}, @file{sub2}, @file{deeper},
6969 The offsets on the @samp{//SUBDIRED//} line delimit the following
6970 directory names: @file{a}, @file{a/sub}, @file{a/sub/deeper}, @file{a/sub2}.
6972 Here is an example of how to extract the fifth entry name, @samp{deeper},
6973 corresponding to the pair of offsets, 222 and 228:
6976 $ ls -gloRF --dired a > out
6977 $ dd bs=1 skip=222 count=6 < out 2>/dev/null; echo
6981 Note that although the listing above includes a trailing slash
6982 for the @samp{deeper} entry, the offsets select the name without
6983 the trailing slash. However, if you invoke @command{ls} with @option{--dired}
6984 along with an option like @option{--escape} (aka @option{-b}) and operate
6985 on a file whose name contains special characters, notice that the backslash
6990 $ ls -blog --dired 'a b'
6991 -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Jun 10 12:28 a\ b
6993 //DIRED-OPTIONS// --quoting-style=escape
6996 If you use a quoting style that adds quote marks
6997 (e.g., @option{--quoting-style=c}), then the offsets include the quote marks.
6998 So beware that the user may select the quoting style via the environment
6999 variable @env{QUOTING_STYLE}@. Hence, applications using @option{--dired}
7000 should either specify an explicit @option{--quoting-style=literal} option
7001 (aka @option{-N} or @option{--literal}) on the command line, or else be
7002 prepared to parse the escaped names.
7005 @opindex --full-time
7006 Produce long format directory listings, and list times in full. It is
7007 equivalent to using @option{--format=long} with
7008 @option{--time-style=full-iso} (@pxref{Formatting file timestamps}).
7012 Produce long format directory listings, but don't display owner information.
7018 Inhibit display of group information in a long format directory listing.
7019 (This is the default in some non-GNU versions of @command{ls}, so we
7020 provide this option for compatibility.)
7028 @cindex inode number, printing
7029 Print the inode number (also called the file serial number and index
7030 number) of each file to the left of the file name. (This number
7031 uniquely identifies each file within a particular file system.)
7034 @itemx --format=long
7035 @itemx --format=verbose
7038 @opindex long ls @r{format}
7039 @opindex verbose ls @r{format}
7040 In addition to the name of each file, print the file type, file mode bits,
7041 number of hard links, owner name, group name, size, and
7042 timestamp (@pxref{Formatting file timestamps}), normally
7043 the modification time. Print question marks for information that
7044 cannot be determined.
7046 Normally the size is printed as a byte count without punctuation, but
7047 this can be overridden (@pxref{Block size}). For example, @option{-h}
7048 prints an abbreviated, human-readable count, and
7049 @samp{--block-size="'1"} prints a byte count with the thousands
7050 separator of the current locale.
7052 For each directory that is listed, preface the files with a line
7053 @samp{total @var{blocks}}, where @var{blocks} is the total disk allocation
7054 for all files in that directory. The block size currently defaults to 1024
7055 bytes, but this can be overridden (@pxref{Block size}).
7056 The @var{blocks} computed counts each hard link separately;
7057 this is arguably a deficiency.
7059 The file type is one of the following characters:
7061 @c The commented-out entries are ones we're not sure about.
7069 character special file
7071 high performance (``contiguous data'') file
7075 door (Solaris 2.5 and up)
7077 @c semaphore, if this is a distinct file type
7081 @c multiplexed file (7th edition Unix; obsolete)
7083 off-line (``migrated'') file (Cray DMF)
7085 network special file (HP-UX)
7089 port (Solaris 10 and up)
7091 @c message queue, if this is a distinct file type
7095 @c shared memory object, if this is a distinct file type
7097 @c typed memory object, if this is a distinct file type
7099 @c whiteout (4.4BSD; not implemented)
7101 some other file type
7104 @cindex permissions, output by @command{ls}
7105 The file mode bits listed are similar to symbolic mode specifications
7106 (@pxref{Symbolic Modes}). But @command{ls} combines multiple bits into the
7107 third character of each set of permissions as follows:
7111 If the set-user-ID or set-group-ID bit and the corresponding executable bit
7115 If the set-user-ID or set-group-ID bit is set but the corresponding
7116 executable bit is not set.
7119 If the restricted deletion flag or sticky bit, and the
7120 other-executable bit, are both set. The restricted deletion flag is
7121 another name for the sticky bit. @xref{Mode Structure}.
7124 If the restricted deletion flag or sticky bit is set but the
7125 other-executable bit is not set.
7128 If the executable bit is set and none of the above apply.
7134 Following the file mode bits is a single character that specifies
7135 whether an alternate access method such as an access control list
7136 applies to the file. When the character following the file mode bits is a
7137 space, there is no alternate access method. When it is a printing
7138 character, then there is such a method.
7140 GNU @command{ls} uses a @samp{.} character to indicate a file
7141 with a security context, but no other alternate access method.
7143 A file with any other combination of alternate access methods
7144 is marked with a @samp{+} character.
7147 @itemx --numeric-uid-gid
7149 @opindex --numeric-uid-gid
7150 @cindex numeric uid and gid
7151 @cindex numeric user and group IDs
7152 Produce long format directory listings, but
7153 display numeric user and group IDs instead of the owner and group names.
7157 Produce long format directory listings, but don't display group information.
7158 It is equivalent to using @option{--format=long} with @option{--no-group} .
7164 @cindex disk allocation
7165 @cindex size of files, reporting
7166 Print the disk allocation of each file to the left of the file name.
7167 This is the amount of disk space used by the file, which is usually a
7168 bit more than the file's size, but it can be less if the file has holes.
7170 Normally the disk allocation is printed in units of
7171 1024 bytes, but this can be overridden (@pxref{Block size}).
7173 @cindex NFS mounts from BSD to HP-UX
7174 For files that are NFS-mounted from an HP-UX system to a BSD system,
7175 this option reports sizes that are half the correct values. On HP-UX
7176 systems, it reports sizes that are twice the correct values for files
7177 that are NFS-mounted from BSD systems. This is due to a flaw in HP-UX;
7178 it also affects the HP-UX @command{ls} program.
7187 @cindex security context
7188 Display the SELinux security context or @samp{?} if none is found.
7189 When used with the @option{-l} option, print the security context
7190 to the left of the size column.
7195 @node Sorting the output
7196 @subsection Sorting the output
7198 @cindex sorting @command{ls} output
7199 These options change the order in which @command{ls} sorts the information
7200 it outputs. By default, sorting is done by character code
7201 (e.g., ASCII order).
7207 @itemx --time=status
7210 @opindex ctime@r{, printing or sorting by}
7211 @opindex status time@r{, printing or sorting by}
7212 @opindex use time@r{, printing or sorting files by}
7213 If the long listing format (e.g., @option{-l}, @option{-o}) is being used,
7214 print the status change time (the @samp{ctime} in the inode) instead of
7215 the modification time.
7216 When explicitly sorting by time (@option{--sort=time} or @option{-t})
7217 or when not using a long listing format,
7218 sort according to the status change time.
7222 @cindex unsorted directory listing
7223 @cindex directory order, listing by
7224 Primarily, like @option{-U}---do not sort; list the files in whatever
7225 order they are stored in the directory. But also enable @option{-a} (list
7226 all files) and disable @option{-l}, @option{--color}, and @option{-s} (if they
7227 were specified before the @option{-f}).
7233 @cindex reverse sorting
7234 Reverse whatever the sorting method is---e.g., list files in reverse
7235 alphabetical order, youngest first, smallest first, or whatever.
7241 @opindex size of files@r{, sorting files by}
7242 Sort by file size, largest first.
7248 @opindex modification time@r{, sorting files by}
7249 Sort by modification time (the @samp{mtime} in the inode), newest first.
7253 @itemx --time=access
7257 @opindex use time@r{, printing or sorting files by}
7258 @opindex atime@r{, printing or sorting files by}
7259 @opindex access time@r{, printing or sorting files by}
7260 If the long listing format (e.g., @option{--format=long}) is being used,
7261 print the last access time (the @samp{atime} in the inode).
7262 When explicitly sorting by time (@option{--sort=time} or @option{-t})
7263 or when not using a long listing format, sort according to the access time.
7269 @opindex none@r{, sorting option for @command{ls}}
7270 Do not sort; list the files in whatever order they are
7271 stored in the directory. (Do not do any of the other unrelated things
7272 that @option{-f} does.) This is especially useful when listing very large
7273 directories, since not doing any sorting can be noticeably faster.
7276 @itemx --sort=version
7279 @opindex version@r{, sorting option for @command{ls}}
7280 Sort by version name and number, lowest first. It behaves like a default
7281 sort, except that each sequence of decimal digits is treated numerically
7282 as an index/version number. (@xref{Details about version sort}.)
7285 @itemx --sort=extension
7288 @opindex extension@r{, sorting files by}
7289 Sort directory contents alphabetically by file extension (characters
7290 after the last @samp{.}); files with no extension are sorted first.
7295 @node Details about version sort
7296 @subsection Details about version sort
7298 Version sorting handles the fact that file names frequently include indices or
7299 version numbers. Standard sorting usually does not produce the order that one
7300 expects because comparisons are made on a character-by-character basis.
7301 Version sorting is especially useful when browsing directories that contain
7302 many files with indices/version numbers in their names:
7306 abc.zml-1.gz abc.zml-1.gz
7307 abc.zml-12.gz abc.zml-2.gz
7308 abc.zml-2.gz abc.zml-12.gz
7311 Version-sorted strings are compared such that if @var{ver1} and @var{ver2}
7312 are version numbers and @var{prefix} and @var{suffix} (@var{suffix} matching
7313 the regular expression @samp{(\.[A-Za-z~][A-Za-z0-9~]*)*}) are strings then
7314 @var{ver1} < @var{ver2} implies that the name composed of
7315 ``@var{prefix} @var{ver1} @var{suffix}'' sorts before
7316 ``@var{prefix} @var{ver2} @var{suffix}''.
7318 Note also that leading zeros of numeric parts are ignored:
7322 abc-1.007.tgz abc-1.01a.tgz
7323 abc-1.012b.tgz abc-1.007.tgz
7324 abc-1.01a.tgz abc-1.012b.tgz
7327 This functionality is implemented using gnulib's @code{filevercmp} function,
7328 which has some caveats worth noting.
7331 @item @env{LC_COLLATE} is ignored, which means @samp{ls -v} and @samp{sort -V}
7332 will sort non-numeric prefixes as if the @env{LC_COLLATE} locale category
7333 was set to @samp{C}@.
7334 @item Some suffixes will not be matched by the regular
7335 expression mentioned above. Consequently these examples may
7336 not sort as you expect:
7344 abc-1.2.3.4.x86_64.rpm
7345 abc-1.2.3.x86_64.rpm
7349 @node General output formatting
7350 @subsection General output formatting
7352 These options affect the appearance of the overall output.
7357 @itemx --format=single-column
7360 @opindex single-column @r{output of files}
7361 List one file per line. This is the default for @command{ls} when standard
7362 output is not a terminal. See also the @option{-b} and @option{-q} options
7363 to suppress direct output of newline characters within a file name.
7366 @itemx --format=vertical
7369 @opindex vertical @r{sorted files in columns}
7370 List files in columns, sorted vertically. This is the default for
7371 @command{ls} if standard output is a terminal. It is always the default
7372 for the @command{dir} program.
7373 GNU @command{ls} uses variable width columns to display as many files as
7374 possible in the fewest lines.
7376 @item --color [=@var{when}]
7378 @cindex color, distinguishing file types with
7379 Specify whether to use color for distinguishing file types. @var{when}
7380 may be omitted, or one of:
7383 @vindex none @r{color option}
7384 - Do not use color at all. This is the default.
7386 @vindex auto @r{color option}
7387 @cindex terminal, using color iff
7388 - Only use color if standard output is a terminal.
7390 @vindex always @r{color option}
7393 Specifying @option{--color} and no @var{when} is equivalent to
7394 @option{--color=always}.
7395 Piping a colorized listing through a pager like @command{more} or
7396 @command{less} usually produces unreadable results. However, using
7397 @code{more -f} does seem to work.
7400 @vindex SHELL @r{environment variable, and color}
7401 Note that using the @option{--color} option may incur a noticeable
7402 performance penalty when run in a directory with very many entries,
7403 because the default settings require that @command{ls} @code{stat} every
7404 single file it lists.
7405 However, if you would like most of the file-type coloring
7406 but can live without the other coloring options (e.g.,
7407 executable, orphan, sticky, other-writable, capability), use
7408 @command{dircolors} to set the @env{LS_COLORS} environment variable like this,
7410 eval $(dircolors -p | perl -pe \
7411 's/^((CAP|S[ET]|O[TR]|M|E)\w+).*/$1 00/' | dircolors -)
7413 and on a @code{dirent.d_type}-capable file system, @command{ls}
7414 will perform only one @code{stat} call per command line argument.
7418 @itemx --indicator-style=classify
7421 @opindex --indicator-style
7422 @cindex file type and executables, marking
7423 @cindex executables and file type, marking
7424 Append a character to each file name indicating the file type. Also,
7425 for regular files that are executable, append @samp{*}. The file type
7426 indicators are @samp{/} for directories, @samp{@@} for symbolic links,
7427 @samp{|} for FIFOs, @samp{=} for sockets, @samp{>} for doors,
7428 and nothing for regular files.
7429 @c The following sentence is the same as the one for -d.
7430 Do not follow symbolic links listed on the
7431 command line unless the @option{--dereference-command-line} (@option{-H}),
7432 @option{--dereference} (@option{-L}), or
7433 @option{--dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir} options are specified.
7436 @itemx --indicator-style=file-type
7437 @opindex --file-type
7438 @opindex --indicator-style
7439 @cindex file type, marking
7440 Append a character to each file name indicating the file type. This is
7441 like @option{-F}, except that executables are not marked.
7443 @item --indicator-style=@var{word}
7444 @opindex --indicator-style
7445 Append a character indicator with style @var{word} to entry names,
7450 Do not append any character indicator; this is the default.
7452 Append @samp{/} for directories. This is the same as the @option{-p}
7455 Append @samp{/} for directories, @samp{@@} for symbolic links, @samp{|}
7456 for FIFOs, @samp{=} for sockets, and nothing for regular files. This is
7457 the same as the @option{--file-type} option.
7459 Append @samp{*} for executable regular files, otherwise behave as for
7460 @samp{file-type}. This is the same as the @option{-F} or
7461 @option{--classify} option.
7467 @opindex --kibibytes
7468 Set the default block size to its normal value of 1024 bytes,
7469 overriding any contrary specification in environment variables
7470 (@pxref{Block size}). This option is in turn overridden by the
7471 @option{--block-size}, @option{-h} or @option{--human-readable}, and
7472 @option{--si} options.
7474 The @option{-k} or @option{--kibibytes} option affects the
7475 per-directory block count written by the @option{-l} and similar
7476 options, and the size written by the @option{-s} or @option{--size}
7477 option. It does not affect the file size written by @option{-l}.
7480 @itemx --format=commas
7483 @opindex commas@r{, outputting between files}
7484 List files horizontally, with as many as will fit on each line,
7485 separated by @samp{, } (a comma and a space).
7488 @itemx --indicator-style=slash
7490 @opindex --indicator-style
7491 @cindex file type, marking
7492 Append a @samp{/} to directory names.
7495 @itemx --format=across
7496 @itemx --format=horizontal
7499 @opindex across@r{, listing files}
7500 @opindex horizontal@r{, listing files}
7501 List the files in columns, sorted horizontally.
7504 @itemx --tabsize=@var{cols}
7507 Assume that each tab stop is @var{cols} columns wide. The default is 8.
7508 @command{ls} uses tabs where possible in the output, for efficiency. If
7509 @var{cols} is zero, do not use tabs at all.
7511 Some terminal emulators might not properly align columns to the right of a
7512 TAB following a non-ASCII byte. You can avoid that issue by using the
7513 @option{-T0} option or put @code{TABSIZE=0} in your environment, to tell
7514 @command{ls} to align using spaces, not tabs.
7517 @itemx --width=@var{cols}
7521 Assume the screen is @var{cols} columns wide. The default is taken
7522 from the terminal settings if possible; otherwise the environment
7523 variable @env{COLUMNS} is used if it is set; otherwise the default
7524 is 80. With a @var{cols} value of @samp{0}, there is no limit on
7525 the length of the output line, and that single output line will
7526 be delimited with spaces, not tabs.
7531 @node Formatting file timestamps
7532 @subsection Formatting file timestamps
7534 By default, file timestamps are listed in abbreviated form, using
7535 a date like @samp{Mar 30@ @ 2002} for non-recent timestamps, and a
7536 date-without-year and time like @samp{Mar 30 23:45} for recent timestamps.
7537 This format can change depending on the current locale as detailed below.
7540 A timestamp is considered to be @dfn{recent} if it is less than six
7541 months old, and is not dated in the future. If a timestamp dated
7542 today is not listed in recent form, the timestamp is in the future,
7543 which means you probably have clock skew problems which may break
7544 programs like @command{make} that rely on file timestamps.
7547 Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified by
7548 the @env{TZ} environment variable, or by the system default rules if
7549 @env{TZ} is not set. @xref{TZ Variable,, Specifying the Time Zone
7550 with @env{TZ}, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
7552 The following option changes how file timestamps are printed.
7555 @item --time-style=@var{style}
7556 @opindex --time-style
7558 List timestamps in style @var{style}. The @var{style} should
7559 be one of the following:
7564 List timestamps using @var{format}, where @var{format} is interpreted
7565 like the format argument of @command{date} (@pxref{date invocation}).
7566 For example, @option{--time-style="+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"} causes
7567 @command{ls} to list timestamps like @samp{2002-03-30 23:45:56}. As
7568 with @command{date}, @var{format}'s interpretation is affected by the
7569 @env{LC_TIME} locale category.
7571 If @var{format} contains two format strings separated by a newline,
7572 the former is used for non-recent files and the latter for recent
7573 files; if you want output columns to line up, you may need to insert
7574 spaces in one of the two formats.
7577 List timestamps in full using ISO 8601 date, time, and time zone
7578 components with nanosecond precision, e.g., @samp{2002-03-30
7579 23:45:56.477817180 -0700}. This style is equivalent to
7580 @samp{+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%N %z}.
7582 This is useful because the time output includes all the information that
7583 is available from the operating system. For example, this can help
7584 explain @command{make}'s behavior, since GNU @command{make}
7585 uses the full timestamp to determine whether a file is out of date.
7588 List ISO 8601 date and time components with minute precision, e.g.,
7589 @samp{2002-03-30 23:45}. These timestamps are shorter than
7590 @samp{full-iso} timestamps, and are usually good enough for everyday
7591 work. This style is equivalent to @samp{+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M}.
7594 List ISO 8601 dates for non-recent timestamps (e.g.,
7595 @samp{2002-03-30@ }), and ISO 8601-like month, day, hour, and
7596 minute for recent timestamps (e.g., @samp{03-30 23:45}). These
7597 timestamps are uglier than @samp{long-iso} timestamps, but they carry
7598 nearly the same information in a smaller space and their brevity helps
7599 @command{ls} output fit within traditional 80-column output lines.
7600 The following two @command{ls} invocations are equivalent:
7605 ls -l --time-style="+%Y-%m-%d $newline%m-%d %H:%M"
7606 ls -l --time-style="iso"
7611 List timestamps in a locale-dependent form. For example, a Finnish
7612 locale might list non-recent timestamps like @samp{maalis 30@ @ 2002}
7613 and recent timestamps like @samp{maalis 30 23:45}. Locale-dependent
7614 timestamps typically consume more space than @samp{iso} timestamps and
7615 are harder for programs to parse because locale conventions vary so
7616 widely, but they are easier for many people to read.
7618 The @env{LC_TIME} locale category specifies the timestamp format. The
7619 default POSIX locale uses timestamps like @samp{Mar 30@
7620 @ 2002} and @samp{Mar 30 23:45}; in this locale, the following two
7621 @command{ls} invocations are equivalent:
7626 ls -l --time-style="+%b %e %Y$newline%b %e %H:%M"
7627 ls -l --time-style="locale"
7630 Other locales behave differently. For example, in a German locale,
7631 @option{--time-style="locale"} might be equivalent to
7632 @option{--time-style="+%e. %b %Y $newline%e. %b %H:%M"}
7633 and might generate timestamps like @samp{30. M@"ar 2002@ } and
7634 @samp{30. M@"ar 23:45}.
7636 @item posix-@var{style}
7638 List POSIX-locale timestamps if the @env{LC_TIME} locale
7639 category is POSIX, @var{style} timestamps otherwise. For
7640 example, the @samp{posix-long-iso} style lists
7641 timestamps like @samp{Mar 30@ @ 2002} and @samp{Mar 30 23:45} when in
7642 the POSIX locale, and like @samp{2002-03-30 23:45} otherwise.
7647 You can specify the default value of the @option{--time-style} option
7648 with the environment variable @env{TIME_STYLE}; if @env{TIME_STYLE} is not set
7649 the default style is @samp{locale}. GNU Emacs 21.3 and
7650 later use the @option{--dired} option and therefore can parse any date
7651 format, but if you are using Emacs 21.1 or 21.2 and specify a
7652 non-POSIX locale you may need to set
7653 @samp{TIME_STYLE="posix-long-iso"}.
7655 To avoid certain denial-of-service attacks, timestamps that would be
7656 longer than 1000 bytes may be treated as errors.
7659 @node Formatting the file names
7660 @subsection Formatting the file names
7662 These options change how file names themselves are printed.
7668 @itemx --quoting-style=escape
7671 @opindex --quoting-style
7672 @cindex backslash sequences for file names
7673 Quote nongraphic characters in file names using alphabetic and octal
7674 backslash sequences like those used in C.
7678 @itemx --quoting-style=literal
7681 @opindex --quoting-style
7682 Do not quote file names. However, with @command{ls} nongraphic
7683 characters are still printed as question marks if the output is a
7684 terminal and you do not specify the @option{--show-control-chars}
7688 @itemx --hide-control-chars
7690 @opindex --hide-control-chars
7691 Print question marks instead of nongraphic characters in file names.
7692 This is the default if the output is a terminal and the program is
7697 @itemx --quoting-style=c
7699 @opindex --quote-name
7700 @opindex --quoting-style
7701 Enclose file names in double quotes and quote nongraphic characters as
7704 @item --quoting-style=@var{word}
7705 @opindex --quoting-style
7706 @cindex quoting style
7707 Use style @var{word} to quote file names and other strings that may
7708 contain arbitrary characters. The @var{word} should
7709 be one of the following:
7713 Output strings as-is; this is the same as the @option{-N} or
7714 @option{--literal} option.
7716 Quote strings for the shell if they contain shell metacharacters or would
7717 cause ambiguous output.
7718 The quoting is suitable for POSIX-compatible shells like
7719 @command{bash}, but it does not always work for incompatible shells
7722 Quote strings for the shell, even if they would normally not require quoting.
7724 Like @samp{shell}, but also quoting non-printable characters using the POSIX
7725 proposed @samp{$''} syntax suitable for most shells.
7726 @item shell-escape-always
7727 Like @samp{shell-escape}, but quote strings even if they would
7728 normally not require quoting.
7730 Quote strings as for C character string literals, including the
7731 surrounding double-quote characters; this is the same as the
7732 @option{-Q} or @option{--quote-name} option.
7734 Quote strings as for C character string literals, except omit the
7735 surrounding double-quote
7736 characters; this is the same as the @option{-b} or @option{--escape} option.
7738 Quote strings as for C character string literals, except use
7739 surrounding quotation marks appropriate for the
7742 @c Use @t instead of @samp to avoid duplicate quoting in some output styles.
7743 Quote strings as for C character string literals, except use
7744 surrounding quotation marks appropriate for the locale, and quote
7745 @t{'like this'} instead of @t{"like
7746 this"} in the default C locale. This looks nicer on many displays.
7749 You can specify the default value of the @option{--quoting-style} option
7750 with the environment variable @env{QUOTING_STYLE}@. If that environment
7751 variable is not set, the default value is @samp{shell-escape} when the
7752 output is a terminal, and @samp{literal} otherwise.
7754 @item --show-control-chars
7755 @opindex --show-control-chars
7756 Print nongraphic characters as-is in file names.
7757 This is the default unless the output is a terminal and the program is
7763 @node dir invocation
7764 @section @command{dir}: Briefly list directory contents
7767 @cindex directory listing, brief
7769 @command{dir} is equivalent to @code{ls -C
7770 -b}; that is, by default files are listed in columns, sorted vertically,
7771 and special characters are represented by backslash escape sequences.
7773 @xref{ls invocation, @command{ls}}.
7776 @node vdir invocation
7777 @section @command{vdir}: Verbosely list directory contents
7780 @cindex directory listing, verbose
7782 @command{vdir} is equivalent to @code{ls -l
7783 -b}; that is, by default files are listed in long format and special
7784 characters are represented by backslash escape sequences.
7786 @xref{ls invocation, @command{ls}}.
7788 @node dircolors invocation
7789 @section @command{dircolors}: Color setup for @command{ls}
7793 @cindex setup for color
7795 @command{dircolors} outputs a sequence of shell commands to set up the
7796 terminal for color output from @command{ls} (and @command{dir}, etc.).
7800 eval "$(dircolors [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}])"
7803 If @var{file} is specified, @command{dircolors} reads it to determine which
7804 colors to use for which file types and extensions. Otherwise, a
7805 precompiled database is used. For details on the format of these files,
7806 run @samp{dircolors --print-database}.
7808 To make @command{dircolors} read a @file{~/.dircolors} file if it
7809 exists, you can put the following lines in your @file{~/.bashrc} (or
7810 adapt them to your favorite shell):
7814 test -r $d && eval "$(dircolors $d)"
7818 @vindex SHELL @r{environment variable, and color}
7819 The output is a shell command to set the @env{LS_COLORS} environment
7820 variable. You can specify the shell syntax to use on the command line,
7821 or @command{dircolors} will guess it from the value of the @env{SHELL}
7822 environment variable.
7824 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
7829 @itemx --bourne-shell
7832 @opindex --bourne-shell
7833 @cindex Bourne shell syntax for color setup
7834 @cindex @command{sh} syntax for color setup
7835 Output Bourne shell commands. This is the default if the @env{SHELL}
7836 environment variable is set and does not end with @samp{csh} or
7845 @cindex C shell syntax for color setup
7846 @cindex @command{csh} syntax for color setup
7847 Output C shell commands. This is the default if @code{SHELL} ends with
7848 @command{csh} or @command{tcsh}.
7851 @itemx --print-database
7853 @opindex --print-database
7854 @cindex color database, printing
7855 @cindex database for color setup, printing
7856 @cindex printing color database
7857 Print the (compiled-in) default color configuration database. This
7858 output is itself a valid configuration file, and is fairly descriptive
7859 of the possibilities.
7866 @node Basic operations
7867 @chapter Basic operations
7869 @cindex manipulating files
7871 This chapter describes the commands for basic file manipulation:
7872 copying, moving (renaming), and deleting (removing).
7875 * cp invocation:: Copy files.
7876 * dd invocation:: Convert and copy a file.
7877 * install invocation:: Copy files and set attributes.
7878 * mv invocation:: Move (rename) files.
7879 * rm invocation:: Remove files or directories.
7880 * shred invocation:: Remove files more securely.
7885 @section @command{cp}: Copy files and directories
7888 @cindex copying files and directories
7889 @cindex files, copying
7890 @cindex directories, copying
7892 @command{cp} copies files (or, optionally, directories). The copy is
7893 completely independent of the original. You can either copy one file to
7894 another, or copy arbitrarily many files to a destination directory.
7898 cp [@var{option}]@dots{} [-T] @var{source} @var{dest}
7899 cp [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{source}@dots{} @var{directory}
7900 cp [@var{option}]@dots{} -t @var{directory} @var{source}@dots{}
7905 If two file names are given, @command{cp} copies the first file to the
7909 If the @option{--target-directory} (@option{-t}) option is given, or
7910 failing that if the last file is a directory and the
7911 @option{--no-target-directory} (@option{-T}) option is not given,
7912 @command{cp} copies each @var{source} file to the specified directory,
7913 using the @var{source}s' names.
7916 Generally, files are written just as they are read. For exceptions,
7917 see the @option{--sparse} option below.
7919 By default, @command{cp} does not copy directories. However, the
7920 @option{-R}, @option{-a}, and @option{-r} options cause @command{cp} to
7921 copy recursively by descending into source directories and copying files
7922 to corresponding destination directories.
7924 When copying from a symbolic link, @command{cp} normally follows the
7925 link only when not copying recursively or when @option{--link}
7926 (@option{-l}) is used. This default can be overridden with the
7927 @option{--archive} (@option{-a}), @option{-d}, @option{--dereference}
7928 (@option{-L}), @option{--no-dereference} (@option{-P}), and
7929 @option{-H} options. If more than one of these options is specified,
7930 the last one silently overrides the others.
7932 When copying to a symbolic link, @command{cp} follows the
7933 link only when it refers to an existing regular file.
7934 However, when copying to a dangling symbolic link, @command{cp}
7935 refuses by default, and fails with a diagnostic, since the operation
7936 is inherently dangerous. This behavior is contrary to historical
7937 practice and to POSIX@.
7938 Set @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} to make @command{cp} attempt to create
7939 the target of a dangling destination symlink, in spite of the possible risk.
7940 Also, when an option like
7941 @option{--backup} or @option{--link} acts to rename or remove the
7942 destination before copying, @command{cp} renames or removes the
7943 symbolic link rather than the file it points to.
7945 By default, @command{cp} copies the contents of special files only
7946 when not copying recursively. This default can be overridden with the
7947 @option{--copy-contents} option.
7949 @cindex self-backups
7950 @cindex backups, making only
7951 @command{cp} generally refuses to copy a file onto itself, with the
7952 following exception: if @option{--force --backup} is specified with
7953 @var{source} and @var{dest} identical, and referring to a regular file,
7954 @command{cp} will make a backup file, either regular or numbered, as
7955 specified in the usual ways (@pxref{Backup options}). This is useful when
7956 you simply want to make a backup of an existing file before changing it.
7958 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
7965 Preserve as much as possible of the structure and attributes of the
7966 original files in the copy (but do not attempt to preserve internal
7967 directory structure; i.e., @samp{ls -U} may list the entries in a copied
7968 directory in a different order).
7969 Try to preserve SELinux security context and extended attributes (xattr),
7970 but ignore any failure to do that and print no corresponding diagnostic.
7971 Equivalent to @option{-dR --preserve=all} with the reduced diagnostics.
7973 @item --attributes-only
7974 @opindex --attributes-only
7975 Copy only the specified attributes of the source file to the destination.
7976 If the destination already exists, do not alter its contents.
7977 See the @option{--preserve} option for controlling which attributes to copy.
7980 @itemx --backup[=@var{method}]
7983 @vindex VERSION_CONTROL
7984 @cindex backups, making
7985 @xref{Backup options}.
7986 Make a backup of each file that would otherwise be overwritten or removed.
7987 As a special case, @command{cp} makes a backup of @var{source} when the force
7988 and backup options are given and @var{source} and @var{dest} are the same
7989 name for an existing, regular file. One useful application of this
7990 combination of options is this tiny Bourne shell script:
7994 # Usage: backup FILE...
7995 # Create a GNU-style backup of each listed FILE.
7998 cp --backup --force --preserve=all -- "$i" "$i" || fail=1
8003 @item --copy-contents
8004 @cindex directories, copying recursively
8005 @cindex copying directories recursively
8006 @cindex recursively copying directories
8007 @cindex non-directories, copying as special files
8008 If copying recursively, copy the contents of any special files (e.g.,
8009 FIFOs and device files) as if they were regular files. This means
8010 trying to read the data in each source file and writing it to the
8011 destination. It is usually a mistake to use this option, as it
8012 normally has undesirable effects on special files like FIFOs and the
8013 ones typically found in the @file{/dev} directory. In most cases,
8014 @code{cp -R --copy-contents} will hang indefinitely trying to read
8015 from FIFOs and special files like @file{/dev/console}, and it will
8016 fill up your destination disk if you use it to copy @file{/dev/zero}.
8017 This option has no effect unless copying recursively, and it does not
8018 affect the copying of symbolic links.
8022 @cindex symbolic links, copying
8023 @cindex hard links, preserving
8024 Copy symbolic links as symbolic links rather than copying the files that
8025 they point to, and preserve hard links between source files in the copies.
8026 Equivalent to @option{--no-dereference --preserve=links}.
8032 When copying without this option and an existing destination file cannot
8033 be opened for writing, the copy fails. However, with @option{--force},
8034 when a destination file cannot be opened, @command{cp} then removes it and
8035 tries to open it again. Contrast this behavior with that enabled by
8036 @option{--link} and @option{--symbolic-link}, whereby the destination file
8037 is never opened but rather is removed unconditionally. Also see the
8038 description of @option{--remove-destination}.
8040 This option is independent of the @option{--interactive} or
8041 @option{-i} option: neither cancels the effect of the other.
8043 This option is ignored when the @option{--no-clobber} or @option{-n} option
8048 If a command line argument specifies a symbolic link, then copy the
8049 file it points to rather than the symbolic link itself. However,
8050 copy (preserving its nature) any symbolic link that is encountered
8051 via recursive traversal.
8054 @itemx --interactive
8056 @opindex --interactive
8057 When copying a file other than a directory, prompt whether to
8058 overwrite an existing destination file. The @option{-i} option overrides
8059 a previous @option{-n} option.
8065 Make hard links instead of copies of non-directories.
8068 @itemx --dereference
8070 @opindex --dereference
8071 Follow symbolic links when copying from them.
8072 With this option, @command{cp} cannot create a symbolic link.
8073 For example, a symlink (to regular file) in the source tree will be copied to
8074 a regular file in the destination tree.
8079 @opindex --no-clobber
8080 Do not overwrite an existing file. The @option{-n} option overrides a previous
8081 @option{-i} option. This option is mutually exclusive with @option{-b} or
8082 @option{--backup} option.
8085 @itemx --no-dereference
8087 @opindex --no-dereference
8088 @cindex symbolic links, copying
8089 Copy symbolic links as symbolic links rather than copying the files that
8090 they point to. This option affects only symbolic links in the source;
8091 symbolic links in the destination are always followed if possible.
8094 @itemx --preserve[=@var{attribute_list}]
8097 @cindex file information, preserving, extended attributes, xattr
8098 Preserve the specified attributes of the original files.
8099 If specified, the @var{attribute_list} must be a comma-separated list
8100 of one or more of the following strings:
8104 Preserve the file mode bits and access control lists.
8106 Preserve the owner and group. On most modern systems,
8107 only users with appropriate privileges may change the owner of a file,
8109 may preserve the group ownership of a file only if they happen to be
8110 a member of the desired group.
8112 Preserve the times of last access and last modification, when possible.
8113 On older systems, it is not possible to preserve these attributes
8114 when the affected file is a symbolic link.
8115 However, many systems now provide the @code{utimensat} function,
8116 which makes it possible even for symbolic links.
8118 Preserve in the destination files
8119 any links between corresponding source files.
8120 Note that with @option{-L} or @option{-H}, this option can convert
8121 symbolic links to hard links. For example,
8123 $ mkdir c; : > a; ln -s a b; cp -aH a b c; ls -i1 c
8128 Note the inputs: @file{b} is a symlink to regular file @file{a},
8129 yet the files in destination directory, @file{c/}, are hard-linked.
8130 Since @option{-a} implies @option{--no-dereference} it would copy the symlink,
8131 but the later @option{-H} tells @command{cp} to dereference the command line
8132 arguments where it then sees two files with the same inode number.
8133 Then the @option{--preserve=links} option also implied by @option{-a}
8134 will preserve the perceived hard link.
8136 Here is a similar example that exercises @command{cp}'s @option{-L} option:
8138 $ mkdir b c; (cd b; : > a; ln -s a b); cp -aL b c; ls -i1 c/b
8144 Preserve SELinux security context of the file, or fail with full diagnostics.
8146 Preserve extended attributes of the file, or fail with full diagnostics.
8147 If @command{cp} is built without xattr support, ignore this option.
8148 If SELinux context, ACLs or Capabilities are implemented using xattrs,
8149 they are preserved implicitly by this option as well, i.e., even without
8150 specifying @option{--preserve=mode} or @option{--preserve=context}.
8152 Preserve all file attributes.
8153 Equivalent to specifying all of the above, but with the difference
8154 that failure to preserve SELinux security context or extended attributes
8155 does not change @command{cp}'s exit status. In contrast to @option{-a},
8156 all but @samp{Operation not supported} warnings are output.
8159 Using @option{--preserve} with no @var{attribute_list} is equivalent
8160 to @option{--preserve=mode,ownership,timestamps}.
8162 In the absence of this option, the permissions of existing destination
8163 files are unchanged. Each new file is created with the mode of the
8164 corresponding source file minus the set-user-ID, set-group-ID, and
8165 sticky bits as the create mode; the operating system then applies either
8166 the umask or a default ACL, possibly resulting in a more restrictive
8168 @xref{File permissions}.
8170 @item --no-preserve=@var{attribute_list}
8171 @cindex file information, preserving
8172 Do not preserve the specified attributes. The @var{attribute_list}
8173 has the same form as for @option{--preserve}.
8177 @cindex parent directories and @command{cp}
8178 Form the name of each destination file by appending to the target
8179 directory a slash and the specified name of the source file. The last
8180 argument given to @command{cp} must be the name of an existing directory.
8181 For example, the command:
8184 cp --parents a/b/c existing_dir
8188 copies the file @file{a/b/c} to @file{existing_dir/a/b/c}, creating
8189 any missing intermediate directories.
8196 @opindex --recursive
8197 @cindex directories, copying recursively
8198 @cindex copying directories recursively
8199 @cindex recursively copying directories
8200 @cindex non-directories, copying as special files
8201 Copy directories recursively. By default, do not follow symbolic
8202 links in the source unless used together with the @option{--link}
8203 (@option{-l}) option; see the @option{--archive} (@option{-a}), @option{-d},
8204 @option{--dereference} (@option{-L}), @option{--no-dereference}
8205 (@option{-P}), and @option{-H} options. Special files are copied by
8206 creating a destination file of the same type as the source; see the
8207 @option{--copy-contents} option. It is not portable to use
8208 @option{-r} to copy symbolic links or special files. On some
8209 non-GNU systems, @option{-r} implies the equivalent of
8210 @option{-L} and @option{--copy-contents} for historical reasons.
8211 Also, it is not portable to use @option{-R} to copy symbolic links
8212 unless you also specify @option{-P}, as POSIX allows
8213 implementations that dereference symbolic links by default.
8215 @item --reflink[=@var{when}]
8216 @opindex --reflink[=@var{when}]
8219 @cindex copy on write
8220 Perform a lightweight, copy-on-write (COW) copy, if supported by the
8221 file system. Once it has succeeded, beware that the source and destination
8222 files share the same disk data blocks as long as they remain unmodified.
8223 Thus, if a disk I/O error affects data blocks of one of the files,
8224 the other suffers the same fate.
8226 The @var{when} value can be one of the following:
8230 The default behavior: if the copy-on-write operation is not supported
8231 then report the failure for each file and exit with a failure status.
8234 If the copy-on-write operation is not supported then fall back
8235 to the standard copy behavior.
8238 This option is overridden by the @option{--link}, @option{--symbolic-link}
8239 and @option{--attributes-only} options, thus allowing it to be used
8240 to configure the default data copying behavior for @command{cp}.
8241 For example, with the following alias, @command{cp} will use the
8242 minimum amount of space supported by the file system.
8245 alias cp='cp --reflink=auto --sparse=always'
8248 @item --remove-destination
8249 @opindex --remove-destination
8250 Remove each existing destination file before attempting to open it
8251 (contrast with @option{-f} above).
8253 @item --sparse=@var{when}
8254 @opindex --sparse=@var{when}
8255 @cindex sparse files, copying
8256 @cindex holes, copying files with
8257 @findex read @r{system call, and holes}
8258 A @dfn{sparse file} contains @dfn{holes}---a sequence of zero bytes that
8259 does not occupy any physical disk blocks; the @samp{read} system call
8260 reads these as zeros. This can both save considerable disk space and
8261 increase speed, since many binary files contain lots of consecutive zero
8262 bytes. By default, @command{cp} detects holes in input source files via a crude
8263 heuristic and makes the corresponding output file sparse as well.
8264 Only regular files may be sparse.
8266 The @var{when} value can be one of the following:
8270 The default behavior: if the input file is sparse, attempt to make
8271 the output file sparse, too. However, if an output file exists but
8272 refers to a non-regular file, then do not attempt to make it sparse.
8275 For each sufficiently long sequence of zero bytes in the input file,
8276 attempt to create a corresponding hole in the output file, even if the
8277 input file does not appear to be sparse.
8278 This is useful when the input file resides on a file system
8279 that does not support sparse files
8280 (for example, @samp{efs} file systems in SGI IRIX 5.3 and earlier),
8281 but the output file is on a type of file system that does support them.
8282 Holes may be created only in regular files, so if the destination file
8283 is of some other type, @command{cp} does not even try to make it sparse.
8286 Never make the output file sparse.
8287 This is useful in creating a file for use with the @command{mkswap} command,
8288 since such a file must not have any holes.
8291 @optStripTrailingSlashes
8294 @itemx --symbolic-link
8296 @opindex --symbolic-link
8297 @cindex symbolic links, copying with
8298 Make symbolic links instead of copies of non-directories. All source
8299 file names must be absolute (starting with @samp{/}) unless the
8300 destination files are in the current directory. This option merely
8301 results in an error message on systems that do not support symbolic links.
8307 @optNoTargetDirectory
8313 @cindex newer files, copying only
8314 Do not copy a non-directory that has an existing destination with the
8315 same or newer modification time. If time stamps are being preserved,
8316 the comparison is to the source time stamp truncated to the
8317 resolutions of the destination file system and of the system calls
8318 used to update time stamps; this avoids duplicate work if several
8319 @samp{cp -pu} commands are executed with the same source and destination.
8320 If @option{--preserve=links} is also specified (like with @samp{cp -au}
8321 for example), that will take precedence. Consequently, depending on the
8322 order that files are processed from the source, newer files in the destination
8323 may be replaced, to mirror hard links in the source.
8329 Print the name of each file before copying it.
8332 @itemx --one-file-system
8334 @opindex --one-file-system
8335 @cindex file systems, omitting copying to different
8336 Skip subdirectories that are on different file systems from the one that
8337 the copy started on.
8338 However, mount point directories @emph{are} copied.
8342 @itemx --context[=@var{context}]
8345 @cindex SELinux, setting/restoring security context
8346 @cindex security context
8347 Without a specified @var{context}, adjust the SELinux security context according
8348 to the system default type for destination files, similarly to the
8349 @command{restorecon} command.
8350 The long form of this option with a specific context specified,
8351 will set the context for newly created files only.
8352 With a specified context, if both SELinux and SMACK are disabled, a warning is
8356 This option is mutually exclusive with the @option{--preserve=context}
8357 option, and overrides the @option{--preserve=all} and @option{-a} options.
8365 @section @command{dd}: Convert and copy a file
8368 @cindex converting while copying a file
8370 @command{dd} copies a file (from standard input to standard output, by
8371 default) with a changeable I/O block size, while optionally performing
8372 conversions on it. Synopses:
8375 dd [@var{operand}]@dots{}
8379 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}.
8380 @xref{Common options}. @command{dd} accepts the following operands,
8381 whose syntax was inspired by the DD (data definition) statement of
8388 Read from @var{file} instead of standard input.
8392 Write to @var{file} instead of standard output. Unless
8393 @samp{conv=notrunc} is given, @command{dd} truncates @var{file} to zero
8394 bytes (or the size specified with @samp{seek=}).
8396 @item ibs=@var{bytes}
8398 @cindex block size of input
8399 @cindex input block size
8400 Set the input block size to @var{bytes}.
8401 This makes @command{dd} read @var{bytes} per block.
8402 The default is 512 bytes.
8404 @item obs=@var{bytes}
8406 @cindex block size of output
8407 @cindex output block size
8408 Set the output block size to @var{bytes}.
8409 This makes @command{dd} write @var{bytes} per block.
8410 The default is 512 bytes.
8412 @item bs=@var{bytes}
8415 Set both input and output block sizes to @var{bytes}.
8416 This makes @command{dd} read and write @var{bytes} per block,
8417 overriding any @samp{ibs} and @samp{obs} settings.
8418 In addition, if no data-transforming @option{conv} option is specified,
8419 input is copied to the output as soon as it's read,
8420 even if it is smaller than the block size.
8422 @item cbs=@var{bytes}
8424 @cindex block size of conversion
8425 @cindex conversion block size
8426 @cindex fixed-length records, converting to variable-length
8427 @cindex variable-length records, converting to fixed-length
8428 Set the conversion block size to @var{bytes}.
8429 When converting variable-length records to fixed-length ones
8430 (@option{conv=block}) or the reverse (@option{conv=unblock}),
8431 use @var{bytes} as the fixed record length.
8435 Skip @var{n} @samp{ibs}-byte blocks in the input file before copying.
8436 If @samp{iflag=skip_bytes} is specified, @var{n} is interpreted
8437 as a byte count rather than a block count.
8441 Skip @var{n} @samp{obs}-byte blocks in the output file before copying.
8442 if @samp{oflag=seek_bytes} is specified, @var{n} is interpreted
8443 as a byte count rather than a block count.
8447 Copy @var{n} @samp{ibs}-byte blocks from the input file, instead
8448 of everything until the end of the file.
8449 if @samp{iflag=count_bytes} is specified, @var{n} is interpreted
8450 as a byte count rather than a block count.
8451 Note if the input may return short reads as could be the case
8452 when reading from a pipe for example, @samp{iflag=fullblock}
8453 will ensure that @samp{count=} corresponds to complete input blocks
8454 rather than the traditional POSIX specified behavior of counting
8455 input read operations.
8457 @item status=@var{level}
8459 Transfer information is normally output to stderr upon
8460 receipt of the @samp{INFO} signal or when @command{dd} exits.
8461 Specifying @var{level} will adjust the amount of information printed,
8462 with the last @var{level} specified taking precedence.
8467 @opindex none @r{dd status=}
8468 Do not print any informational or warning messages to stderr.
8469 Error messages are output as normal.
8472 @opindex noxfer @r{dd status=}
8473 Do not print the final transfer rate and volume statistics
8474 that normally make up the last status line.
8477 @opindex progress @r{dd status=}
8478 Print the transfer rate and volume statistics on stderr,
8479 when processing each input block. Statistics are output
8480 on a single line at most once every second, but updates
8481 can be delayed when waiting on I/O.
8485 @item conv=@var{conversion}[,@var{conversion}]@dots{}
8487 Convert the file as specified by the @var{conversion} argument(s).
8488 (No spaces around any comma(s).)
8495 @opindex ascii@r{, converting to}
8496 Convert EBCDIC to ASCII,
8497 using the conversion table specified by POSIX@.
8498 This provides a 1:1 translation for all 256 bytes.
8499 This option implies @samp{conv=unblock}; input is converted to
8500 ASCII before trailing spaces are deleted.
8503 @opindex ebcdic@r{, converting to}
8504 Convert ASCII to EBCDIC@.
8505 This is the inverse of the @samp{ascii} conversion.
8506 This option implies @samp{conv=block}; trailing spaces are added
8507 before being converted to EBCDIC@.
8510 @opindex alternate ebcdic@r{, converting to}
8511 This acts like @samp{conv=ebcdic}, except it
8512 uses the alternate conversion table specified by POSIX@.
8513 This is not a 1:1 translation, but reflects common historical practice
8514 for @samp{~}, @samp{[}, and @samp{]}.
8516 The @samp{ascii}, @samp{ebcdic}, and @samp{ibm} conversions are
8517 mutually exclusive. If you use any of these options, you should also
8518 use the @samp{cbs=} option.
8521 @opindex block @r{(space-padding)}
8522 For each line in the input, output @samp{cbs} bytes, replacing the
8523 input newline with a space and padding with spaces as necessary.
8527 Remove any trailing spaces in each @samp{cbs}-sized input block,
8528 and append a newline.
8530 The @samp{block} and @samp{unblock} conversions are mutually exclusive.
8533 @opindex lcase@r{, converting to}
8534 Change uppercase letters to lowercase.
8537 @opindex ucase@r{, converting to}
8538 Change lowercase letters to uppercase.
8540 The @samp{lcase} and @samp{ucase} conversions are mutually exclusive.
8544 Try to seek rather than write NUL output blocks.
8545 On a file system that supports sparse files, this will create
8546 sparse output when extending the output file.
8547 Be careful when using this option in conjunction with
8548 @samp{conv=notrunc} or @samp{oflag=append}.
8549 With @samp{conv=notrunc}, existing data in the output file
8550 corresponding to NUL blocks from the input, will be untouched.
8551 With @samp{oflag=append} the seeks performed will be ineffective.
8552 Similarly, when the output is a device rather than a file,
8553 NUL input blocks are not copied, and therefore this option
8554 is most useful with virtual or pre zeroed devices.
8557 @opindex swab @r{(byte-swapping)}
8558 @cindex byte-swapping
8559 Swap every pair of input bytes. GNU @command{dd}, unlike others, works
8560 when an odd number of bytes are read---the last byte is simply copied
8561 (since there is nothing to swap it with).
8564 @opindex sync @r{(padding with ASCII NULs)}
8565 Pad every input block to size of @samp{ibs} with trailing zero bytes.
8566 When used with @samp{block} or @samp{unblock}, pad with spaces instead of
8571 The following ``conversions'' are really file flags
8572 and don't affect internal processing:
8577 @cindex creating output file, requiring
8578 Fail if the output file already exists; @command{dd} must create the
8583 @cindex creating output file, avoiding
8584 Do not create the output file; the output file must already exist.
8586 The @samp{excl} and @samp{nocreat} conversions are mutually exclusive.
8590 @cindex truncating output file, avoiding
8591 Do not truncate the output file.
8595 @cindex read errors, ignoring
8596 Continue after read errors.
8600 @cindex synchronized data writes, before finishing
8601 Synchronize output data just before finishing. This forces a physical
8602 write of output data.
8606 @cindex synchronized data and metadata writes, before finishing
8607 Synchronize output data and metadata just before finishing. This
8608 forces a physical write of output data and metadata.
8612 @item iflag=@var{flag}[,@var{flag}]@dots{}
8614 Access the input file using the flags specified by the @var{flag}
8615 argument(s). (No spaces around any comma(s).)
8617 @item oflag=@var{flag}[,@var{flag}]@dots{}
8619 Access the output file using the flags specified by the @var{flag}
8620 argument(s). (No spaces around any comma(s).)
8622 Here are the flags. Not every flag is supported on every operating
8629 @cindex appending to the output file
8630 Write in append mode, so that even if some other process is writing to
8631 this file, every @command{dd} write will append to the current
8632 contents of the file. This flag makes sense only for output.
8633 If you combine this flag with the @samp{of=@var{file}} operand,
8634 you should also specify @samp{conv=notrunc} unless you want the
8635 output file to be truncated before being appended to.
8639 @cindex concurrent I/O
8640 Use concurrent I/O mode for data. This mode performs direct I/O
8641 and drops the POSIX requirement to serialize all I/O to the same file.
8642 A file cannot be opened in CIO mode and with a standard open at the
8648 Use direct I/O for data, avoiding the buffer cache.
8649 Note that the kernel may impose restrictions on read or write buffer sizes.
8650 For example, with an ext4 destination file system and a Linux-based kernel,
8651 using @samp{oflag=direct} will cause writes to fail with @code{EINVAL} if the
8652 output buffer size is not a multiple of 512.
8656 @cindex directory I/O
8658 Fail unless the file is a directory. Most operating systems do not
8659 allow I/O to a directory, so this flag has limited utility.
8663 @cindex synchronized data reads
8664 Use synchronized I/O for data. For the output file, this forces a
8665 physical write of output data on each write. For the input file,
8666 this flag can matter when reading from a remote file that has been
8667 written to synchronously by some other process. Metadata (e.g.,
8668 last-access and last-modified time) is not necessarily synchronized.
8672 @cindex synchronized data and metadata I/O
8673 Use synchronized I/O for both data and metadata.
8677 @cindex discarding file cache
8678 Discard the data cache for a file.
8679 When count=0 all cache is discarded,
8680 otherwise the cache is dropped for the processed
8681 portion of the file. Also when count=0
8682 failure to discard the cache is diagnosed
8683 and reflected in the exit status.
8684 Here are some usage examples:
8687 # Advise to drop cache for whole file
8688 dd if=ifile iflag=nocache count=0
8690 # Ensure drop cache for the whole file
8691 dd of=ofile oflag=nocache conv=notrunc,fdatasync count=0
8693 # Drop cache for part of file
8694 dd if=ifile iflag=nocache skip=10 count=10 of=/dev/null
8696 # Stream data using just the read-ahead cache
8697 dd if=ifile of=ofile iflag=nocache oflag=nocache
8702 @cindex nonblocking I/O
8703 Use non-blocking I/O.
8708 Do not update the file's access time.
8709 Some older file systems silently ignore this flag, so it is a good
8710 idea to test it on your files before relying on it.
8714 @cindex controlling terminal
8715 Do not assign the file to be a controlling terminal for @command{dd}.
8716 This has no effect when the file is not a terminal.
8717 On many hosts (e.g., GNU/Linux hosts), this option has no effect
8722 @cindex symbolic links, following
8723 Do not follow symbolic links.
8728 Fail if the file has multiple hard links.
8733 Use binary I/O@. This option has an effect only on nonstandard
8734 platforms that distinguish binary from text I/O.
8739 Use text I/O@. Like @samp{binary}, this option has no effect on
8744 Accumulate full blocks from input. The @code{read} system call
8745 may return early if a full block is not available.
8746 When that happens, continue calling @code{read} to fill the remainder
8748 This flag can be used only with @code{iflag}.
8749 This flag is useful with pipes for example
8750 as they may return short reads. In that case,
8751 this flag is needed to ensure that a @samp{count=} argument is
8752 interpreted as a block count rather than a count of read operations.
8755 @opindex count_bytes
8756 Interpret the @samp{count=} operand as a byte count,
8757 rather than a block count, which allows specifying
8758 a length that is not a multiple of the I/O block size.
8759 This flag can be used only with @code{iflag}.
8763 Interpret the @samp{skip=} operand as a byte count,
8764 rather than a block count, which allows specifying
8765 an offset that is not a multiple of the I/O block size.
8766 This flag can be used only with @code{iflag}.
8770 Interpret the @samp{seek=} operand as a byte count,
8771 rather than a block count, which allows specifying
8772 an offset that is not a multiple of the I/O block size.
8773 This flag can be used only with @code{oflag}.
8777 These flags are not supported on all systems, and @samp{dd} rejects
8778 attempts to use them when they are not supported. When reading from
8779 standard input or writing to standard output, the @samp{nofollow} and
8780 @samp{noctty} flags should not be specified, and the other flags
8781 (e.g., @samp{nonblock}) can affect how other processes behave with the
8782 affected file descriptors, even after @command{dd} exits.
8786 @cindex multipliers after numbers
8787 The numeric-valued strings above (@var{n} and @var{bytes})
8788 can be followed by a multiplier: @samp{b}=512, @samp{c}=1,
8789 @samp{w}=2, @samp{x@var{m}}=@var{m}, or any of the
8790 standard block size suffixes like @samp{k}=1024 (@pxref{Block size}).
8792 Any block size you specify via @samp{bs=}, @samp{ibs=}, @samp{obs=}, @samp{cbs=}
8793 should not be too large---values larger than a few megabytes
8794 are generally wasteful or (as in the gigabyte..exabyte case) downright
8795 counterproductive or error-inducing.
8797 To process data that is at an offset or size that is not a
8798 multiple of the I/O@ block size, you can use the @samp{skip_bytes},
8799 @samp{seek_bytes} and @samp{count_bytes} flags. Alternatively
8800 the traditional method of separate @command{dd} invocations can be used.
8801 For example, the following shell commands copy data
8802 in 512 KiB blocks between a disk and a tape, but do not save
8803 or restore a 4 KiB label at the start of the disk:
8806 disk=/dev/rdsk/c0t1d0s2
8809 # Copy all but the label from disk to tape.
8810 (dd bs=4k skip=1 count=0 && dd bs=512k) <$disk >$tape
8812 # Copy from tape back to disk, but leave the disk label alone.
8813 (dd bs=4k seek=1 count=0 && dd bs=512k) <$tape >$disk
8817 @cindex disks, failing
8818 For failing disks, other tools come with a great variety of extra
8819 functionality to ease the saving of as much data as possible before the
8820 disk finally dies, e.g.
8821 @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/ddrescue/, GNU @command{ddrescue}}.
8822 However, in some cases such a tool is not available or the administrator
8823 feels more comfortable with the handling of @command{dd}.
8824 As a simple rescue method, call @command{dd} as shown in the following
8825 example: the options @samp{conv=noerror,sync} are used to continue
8826 after read errors and to pad out bad reads with NULs, while
8827 @samp{iflag=fullblock} caters for short reads (which traditionally never
8828 occur on disk based devices):
8831 # Rescue data from an (unmounted!) partition of a failing disk.
8832 dd conv=noerror,sync iflag=fullblock </dev/sda1 > /mnt/rescue.img
8835 Sending an @samp{INFO} signal (or @samp{USR1} signal where that is unavailable)
8836 to a running @command{dd} process makes it print I/O statistics to
8837 standard error and then resume copying. In the example below,
8838 @command{dd} is run in the background to copy 5GB of data.
8839 The @command{kill} command makes it output intermediate I/O statistics,
8840 and when @command{dd} completes normally or is killed by the
8841 @code{SIGINT} signal, it outputs the final statistics.
8844 # Ignore the signal so we never inadvertently terminate the dd child.
8845 # Note this is not needed when SIGINFO is available.
8848 # Run dd with the fullblock iflag to avoid short reads
8849 # which can be triggered by reception of signals.
8850 dd iflag=fullblock if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null count=5000000 bs=1000 & pid=$!
8852 # Output stats every second.
8853 while kill -s USR1 $pid 2>/dev/null; do sleep 1; done
8856 The above script will output in the following format:
8859 3441325+0 records in
8860 3441325+0 records out
8861 3441325000 bytes (3.4 GB, 3.2 GiB) copied, 1.00036 s, 3.4 GB/s
8862 5000000+0 records in
8863 5000000+0 records out
8864 5000000000 bytes (5.0 GB, 4.7 GiB) copied, 1.44433 s, 3.5 GB/s
8867 The @samp{status=progress} option periodically updates the last line
8868 of the transfer statistics above.
8870 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
8871 On systems lacking the @samp{INFO} signal @command{dd} responds to the
8872 @samp{USR1} signal instead, unless the @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT}
8873 environment variable is set.
8878 @node install invocation
8879 @section @command{install}: Copy files and set attributes
8882 @cindex copying files and setting attributes
8884 @command{install} copies files while setting their file mode bits and, if
8885 possible, their owner and group. Synopses:
8888 install [@var{option}]@dots{} [-T] @var{source} @var{dest}
8889 install [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{source}@dots{} @var{directory}
8890 install [@var{option}]@dots{} -t @var{directory} @var{source}@dots{}
8891 install [@var{option}]@dots{} -d @var{directory}@dots{}
8896 If two file names are given, @command{install} copies the first file to the
8900 If the @option{--target-directory} (@option{-t}) option is given, or
8901 failing that if the last file is a directory and the
8902 @option{--no-target-directory} (@option{-T}) option is not given,
8903 @command{install} copies each @var{source} file to the specified
8904 directory, using the @var{source}s' names.
8907 If the @option{--directory} (@option{-d}) option is given,
8908 @command{install} creates each @var{directory} and any missing parent
8909 directories. Parent directories are created with mode
8910 @samp{u=rwx,go=rx} (755), regardless of the @option{-m} option or the
8911 current umask. @xref{Directory Setuid and Setgid}, for how the
8912 set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits of parent directories are inherited.
8915 @cindex Makefiles, installing programs in
8916 @command{install} is similar to @command{cp}, but allows you to control the
8917 attributes of destination files. It is typically used in Makefiles to
8918 copy programs into their destination directories. It refuses to copy
8919 files onto themselves.
8921 @cindex extended attributes, xattr
8922 @command{install} never preserves extended attributes (xattr).
8924 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
8934 Compare each pair of source and destination files, and if the destination has
8935 identical content and any specified owner, group, permissions, and possibly
8936 SELinux context, then do not modify the destination at all.
8937 Note this option is best used in conjunction with @option{--user},
8938 @option{--group} and @option{--mode} options, lest @command{install}
8939 incorrectly determines the default attributes that installed files would have
8940 (as it doesn't consider setgid directories and POSIX default ACLs for example).
8941 This could result in redundant copies or attributes that are not reset to the
8946 Ignored; for compatibility with old Unix versions of @command{install}.
8950 Create any missing parent directories of @var{dest},
8951 then copy @var{source} to @var{dest}.
8952 Explicitly specifying the @option{--target-directory=@var{dir}} will similarly
8953 ensure the presence of that hierarchy before copying @var{source} arguments.
8958 @opindex --directory
8959 @cindex directories, creating with given attributes
8960 @cindex parent directories, creating missing
8961 @cindex leading directories, creating missing
8962 Create any missing parent directories, giving them the default
8963 attributes. Then create each given directory, setting their owner,
8964 group and mode as given on the command line or to the defaults.
8966 @item -g @var{group}
8967 @itemx --group=@var{group}
8970 @cindex group ownership of installed files, setting
8971 Set the group ownership of installed files or directories to
8972 @var{group}. The default is the process's current group. @var{group}
8973 may be either a group name or a numeric group ID.
8976 @itemx --mode=@var{mode}
8979 @cindex permissions of installed files, setting
8980 Set the file mode bits for the installed file or directory to @var{mode},
8981 which can be either an octal number, or a symbolic mode as in
8982 @command{chmod}, with @samp{a=} (no access allowed to anyone) as the
8983 point of departure (@pxref{File permissions}).
8984 The default mode is @samp{u=rwx,go=rx,a-s}---read, write, and
8985 execute for the owner, read and execute for group and other, and with
8986 set-user-ID and set-group-ID disabled.
8987 This default is not quite the same as @samp{755}, since it disables
8988 instead of preserving set-user-ID and set-group-ID on directories.
8989 @xref{Directory Setuid and Setgid}.
8991 @item -o @var{owner}
8992 @itemx --owner=@var{owner}
8995 @cindex ownership of installed files, setting
8996 @cindex appropriate privileges
8997 @vindex root @r{as default owner}
8998 If @command{install} has appropriate privileges (is run as root), set the
8999 ownership of installed files or directories to @var{owner}. The default
9000 is @code{root}. @var{owner} may be either a user name or a numeric user
9003 @item --preserve-context
9004 @opindex --preserve-context
9006 @cindex security context
9007 Preserve the SELinux security context of files and directories.
9008 Failure to preserve the context in all of the files or directories
9009 will result in an exit status of 1. If SELinux is disabled then
9010 print a warning and ignore the option.
9013 @itemx --preserve-timestamps
9015 @opindex --preserve-timestamps
9016 @cindex timestamps of installed files, preserving
9017 Set the time of last access and the time of last modification of each
9018 installed file to match those of each corresponding original file.
9019 When a file is installed without this option, its last access and
9020 last modification times are both set to the time of installation.
9021 This option is useful if you want to use the last modification times
9022 of installed files to keep track of when they were last built as opposed
9023 to when they were last installed.
9029 @cindex symbol table information, stripping
9030 @cindex stripping symbol table information
9031 Strip the symbol tables from installed binary executables.
9033 @item --strip-program=@var{program}
9034 @opindex --strip-program
9035 @cindex symbol table information, stripping, program
9036 Program used to strip binaries.
9041 Also specifying the @option{-D} option will ensure the directory is present.
9043 @optNoTargetDirectory
9049 Print the name of each file before copying it.
9052 This option is mutually exclusive with the @option{--preserve-context} option.
9061 @section @command{mv}: Move (rename) files
9065 @command{mv} moves or renames files (or directories). Synopses:
9068 mv [@var{option}]@dots{} [-T] @var{source} @var{dest}
9069 mv [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{source}@dots{} @var{directory}
9070 mv [@var{option}]@dots{} -t @var{directory} @var{source}@dots{}
9075 If two file names are given, @command{mv} moves the first file to the
9079 If the @option{--target-directory} (@option{-t}) option is given, or
9080 failing that if the last file is a directory and the
9081 @option{--no-target-directory} (@option{-T}) option is not given,
9082 @command{mv} moves each @var{source} file to the specified
9083 directory, using the @var{source}s' names.
9086 @command{mv} can move any type of file from one file system to another.
9087 Prior to version @code{4.0} of the fileutils,
9088 @command{mv} could move only regular files between file systems.
9089 For example, now @command{mv} can move an entire directory hierarchy
9090 including special device files from one partition to another. It first
9091 uses some of the same code that's used by @code{cp -a} to copy the
9092 requested directories and files, then (assuming the copy succeeded)
9093 it removes the originals. If the copy fails, then the part that was
9094 copied to the destination partition is removed. If you were to copy
9095 three directories from one partition to another and the copy of the first
9096 directory succeeded, but the second didn't, the first would be left on
9097 the destination partition and the second and third would be left on the
9100 @cindex extended attributes, xattr
9101 @command{mv} always tries to copy extended attributes (xattr), which may
9102 include SELinux context, ACLs or Capabilities.
9103 Upon failure all but @samp{Operation not supported} warnings are output.
9105 @cindex prompting, and @command{mv}
9106 If a destination file exists but is normally unwritable, standard input
9107 is a terminal, and the @option{-f} or @option{--force} option is not given,
9108 @command{mv} prompts the user for whether to replace the file. (You might
9109 own the file, or have write permission on its directory.) If the
9110 response is not affirmative, the file is skipped.
9112 @emph{Warning}: Avoid specifying a source name with a trailing slash,
9113 when it might be a symlink to a directory.
9114 Otherwise, @command{mv} may do something very surprising, since
9115 its behavior depends on the underlying rename system call.
9116 On a system with a modern Linux-based kernel, it fails with
9117 @code{errno=ENOTDIR}@.
9118 However, on other systems (at least FreeBSD 6.1 and Solaris 10) it silently
9119 renames not the symlink but rather the directory referenced by the symlink.
9120 @xref{Trailing slashes}.
9122 @emph{Note}: @command{mv} will only replace empty directories in the
9123 destination. Conflicting populated directories are skipped with a diagnostic.
9125 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
9135 @cindex prompts, omitting
9136 Do not prompt the user before removing a destination file.
9138 If you specify more than one of the @option{-i}, @option{-f}, @option{-n}
9139 options, only the final one takes effect.
9144 @itemx --interactive
9146 @opindex --interactive
9147 @cindex prompts, forcing
9148 Prompt whether to overwrite each existing destination file, regardless
9150 If the response is not affirmative, the file is skipped.
9156 @opindex --no-clobber
9157 @cindex prompts, omitting
9158 Do not overwrite an existing file.
9160 This option is mutually exclusive with @option{-b} or @option{--backup} option.
9166 @cindex newer files, moving only
9167 Do not move a non-directory that has an existing destination with the
9168 same or newer modification time.
9169 If the move is across file system boundaries, the comparison is to the
9170 source time stamp truncated to the resolutions of the destination file
9171 system and of the system calls used to update time stamps; this avoids
9172 duplicate work if several @samp{mv -u} commands are executed with the
9173 same source and destination.
9179 Print the name of each file before moving it.
9181 @optStripTrailingSlashes
9187 @optNoTargetDirectory
9193 @cindex SELinux, restoring security context
9194 @cindex security context
9195 This option functions similarly to the @command{restorecon} command,
9196 by adjusting the SELinux security context according
9197 to the system default type for destination files.
9205 @section @command{rm}: Remove files or directories
9208 @cindex removing files or directories
9210 @command{rm} removes each given @var{file}. By default, it does not remove
9211 directories. Synopsis:
9214 rm [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
9217 @cindex prompting, and @command{rm}
9218 If the @option{-I} or @option{--interactive=once} option is given,
9219 and there are more than three files or the @option{-r}, @option{-R},
9220 or @option{--recursive} are given, then @command{rm} prompts the user
9221 for whether to proceed with the entire operation. If the response is
9222 not affirmative, the entire command is aborted.
9224 Otherwise, if a file is unwritable, standard input is a terminal, and
9225 the @option{-f} or @option{--force} option is not given, or the
9226 @option{-i} or @option{--interactive=always} option @emph{is} given,
9227 @command{rm} prompts the user for whether to remove the file.
9228 If the response is not affirmative, the file is skipped.
9230 Any attempt to remove a file whose last file name component is
9231 @file{.} or @file{..} is rejected without any prompting, as mandated
9234 @emph{Warning}: If you use @command{rm} to remove a file, it is usually
9235 possible to recover the contents of that file. If you want more assurance
9236 that the contents are truly unrecoverable, consider using @command{shred}.
9238 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
9246 @cindex directories, removing
9247 Remove the listed directories if they are empty.
9253 Ignore nonexistent files and missing operands, and never prompt the user.
9254 Ignore any previous @option{--interactive} (@option{-i}) option.
9258 Prompt whether to remove each file.
9259 If the response is not affirmative, the file is skipped.
9260 Ignore any previous @option{--force} (@option{-f}) option.
9261 Equivalent to @option{--interactive=always}.
9265 Prompt once whether to proceed with the command, if more than three
9266 files are named or if a recursive removal is requested. Ignore any
9267 previous @option{--force} (@option{-f}) option. Equivalent to
9268 @option{--interactive=once}.
9270 @item --interactive [=@var{when}]
9271 @opindex --interactive
9272 Specify when to issue an interactive prompt. @var{when} may be
9276 @vindex never @r{interactive option}
9277 - Do not prompt at all.
9279 @vindex once @r{interactive option}
9280 - Prompt once if more than three files are named or if a recursive
9281 removal is requested. Equivalent to @option{-I}.
9283 @vindex always @r{interactive option}
9284 - Prompt for every file being removed. Equivalent to @option{-i}.
9286 @option{--interactive} with no @var{when} is equivalent to
9287 @option{--interactive=always}.
9289 @item --one-file-system
9290 @opindex --one-file-system
9291 @cindex one file system, restricting @command{rm} to
9292 When removing a hierarchy recursively, skip any directory that is on a
9293 file system different from that of the corresponding command line argument.
9296 This option is useful when removing a build ``chroot'' hierarchy,
9297 which normally contains no valuable data. However, it is not uncommon
9298 to bind-mount @file{/home} into such a hierarchy, to make it easier to
9299 use one's start-up file. The catch is that it's easy to forget to
9300 unmount @file{/home}. Then, when you use @command{rm -rf} to remove
9301 your normally throw-away chroot, that command will remove everything
9302 under @file{/home}, too.
9303 Use the @option{--one-file-system} option, and it will
9304 warn about and skip directories on other file systems.
9305 Of course, this will not save your @file{/home} if it and your
9306 chroot happen to be on the same file system.
9308 @item --preserve-root
9309 @opindex --preserve-root
9310 @cindex root directory, disallow recursive destruction
9311 Fail upon any attempt to remove the root directory, @file{/},
9312 when used with the @option{--recursive} option.
9313 This is the default behavior.
9314 @xref{Treating / specially}.
9316 @item --no-preserve-root
9317 @opindex --no-preserve-root
9318 @cindex root directory, allow recursive destruction
9319 Do not treat @file{/} specially when removing recursively.
9320 This option is not recommended unless you really want to
9321 remove all the files on your computer.
9322 @xref{Treating / specially}.
9329 @opindex --recursive
9330 @cindex directories, removing (recursively)
9331 Remove the listed directories and their contents recursively.
9337 Print the name of each file before removing it.
9341 @cindex files beginning with @samp{-}, removing
9342 @cindex @samp{-}, removing files beginning with
9343 One common question is how to remove files whose names begin with a
9344 @samp{-}. GNU @command{rm}, like every program that uses the @code{getopt}
9345 function to parse its arguments, lets you use the @samp{--} option to
9346 indicate that all following arguments are non-options. To remove a file
9347 called @file{-f} in the current directory, you could type either:
9360 @opindex - @r{and Unix @command{rm}}
9361 The Unix @command{rm} program's use of a single @samp{-} for this purpose
9362 predates the development of the @code{getopt} standard syntax.
9367 @node shred invocation
9368 @section @command{shred}: Remove files more securely
9371 @cindex data, erasing
9372 @cindex erasing data
9374 @command{shred} overwrites devices or files, to help prevent even
9375 very expensive hardware from recovering the data.
9377 Ordinarily when you remove a file (@pxref{rm invocation}), the data is
9378 not actually destroyed. Only the index listing where the file is
9379 stored is destroyed, and the storage is made available for reuse.
9380 There are undelete utilities that will attempt to reconstruct the index
9381 and can bring the file back if the parts were not reused.
9383 On a busy system with a nearly-full drive, space can get reused in a few
9384 seconds. But there is no way to know for sure. If you have sensitive
9385 data, you may want to be sure that recovery is not possible by actually
9386 overwriting the file with non-sensitive data.
9388 However, even after doing that, it is possible to take the disk back
9389 to a laboratory and use a lot of sensitive (and expensive) equipment
9390 to look for the faint ``echoes'' of the original data underneath the
9391 overwritten data. If the data has only been overwritten once, it's not
9394 The best way to remove something irretrievably is to destroy the media
9395 it's on with acid, melt it down, or the like. For cheap removable media
9396 like floppy disks, this is the preferred method. However, hard drives
9397 are expensive and hard to melt, so the @command{shred} utility tries
9398 to achieve a similar effect non-destructively.
9400 This uses many overwrite passes, with the data patterns chosen to
9401 maximize the damage they do to the old data. While this will work on
9402 floppies, the patterns are designed for best effect on hard drives.
9403 For more details, see the source code and Peter Gutmann's paper
9404 @uref{http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/secure_del.html,
9405 @cite{Secure Deletion of Data from Magnetic and Solid-State Memory}},
9406 from the proceedings of the Sixth USENIX Security Symposium (San Jose,
9407 California, July 22--25, 1996).
9409 @strong{Please note} that @command{shred} relies on a very important assumption:
9410 that the file system overwrites data in place. This is the traditional
9411 way to do things, but many modern file system designs do not satisfy this
9412 assumption. Exceptions include:
9417 Log-structured or journaled file systems, such as those supplied with
9418 AIX and Solaris, and JFS, ReiserFS, XFS, Ext3 (in @code{data=journal} mode),
9419 BFS, NTFS, etc., when they are configured to journal @emph{data}.
9422 File systems that write redundant data and carry on even if some writes
9423 fail, such as RAID-based file systems.
9426 File systems that make snapshots, such as Network Appliance's NFS server.
9429 File systems that cache in temporary locations, such as NFS version 3
9433 Compressed file systems.
9436 In the particular case of ext3 file systems, the above disclaimer applies (and
9437 @command{shred} is thus of limited effectiveness) only in @code{data=journal}
9438 mode, which journals file data in addition to just metadata. In both
9439 the @code{data=ordered} (default) and @code{data=writeback} modes,
9440 @command{shred} works as usual. Ext3 journaling modes can be changed
9441 by adding the @code{data=something} option to the mount options for a
9442 particular file system in the @file{/etc/fstab} file, as documented in
9443 the mount man page (man mount).
9445 If you are not sure how your file system operates, then you should assume
9446 that it does not overwrite data in place, which means that shred cannot
9447 reliably operate on regular files in your file system.
9449 Generally speaking, it is more reliable to shred a device than a file,
9450 since this bypasses the problem of file system design mentioned above.
9451 However, even shredding devices is not always completely reliable. For
9452 example, most disks map out bad sectors invisibly to the application; if
9453 the bad sectors contain sensitive data, @command{shred} won't be able to
9456 @command{shred} makes no attempt to detect or report this problem, just as
9457 it makes no attempt to do anything about backups. However, since it is
9458 more reliable to shred devices than files, @command{shred} by default does
9459 not truncate or remove the output file. This default is more suitable
9460 for devices, which typically cannot be truncated and should not be
9463 Finally, consider the risk of backups and mirrors.
9464 File system backups and remote mirrors may contain copies of the
9465 file that cannot be removed, and that will allow a shredded file
9466 to be recovered later. So if you keep any data you may later want
9467 to destroy using @command{shred}, be sure that it is not backed up or mirrored.
9470 shred [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{file}[@dots{}]
9473 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
9481 @cindex force deletion
9482 Override file permissions if necessary to allow overwriting.
9484 @item -n @var{number}
9485 @itemx --iterations=@var{number}
9486 @opindex -n @var{number}
9487 @opindex --iterations=@var{number}
9488 @cindex iterations, selecting the number of
9489 By default, @command{shred} uses @value{SHRED_DEFAULT_PASSES} passes of
9490 overwrite. You can reduce this to save time, or increase it if you think it's
9491 appropriate. After 25 passes all of the internal overwrite patterns will have
9492 been used at least once.
9494 @item --random-source=@var{file}
9495 @opindex --random-source
9496 @cindex random source for shredding
9497 Use @var{file} as a source of random data used to overwrite and to
9498 choose pass ordering. @xref{Random sources}.
9500 @item -s @var{bytes}
9501 @itemx --size=@var{bytes}
9502 @opindex -s @var{bytes}
9503 @opindex --size=@var{bytes}
9504 @cindex size of file to shred
9505 Shred the first @var{bytes} bytes of the file. The default is to shred
9506 the whole file. @var{bytes} can be followed by a size specification like
9507 @samp{K}, @samp{M}, or @samp{G} to specify a multiple. @xref{Block size}.
9510 @itemx --remove[=@var{how}]
9513 @opindex --remove=unlink
9514 @opindex --remove=wipe
9515 @opindex --remove=wipesync
9516 @cindex removing files after shredding
9517 After shredding a file, truncate it (if possible) and then remove it.
9518 If a file has multiple links, only the named links will be removed.
9519 Often the file name is less sensitive than the file data, in which case
9520 the optional @var{how} parameter, supported with the long form option,
9521 gives control of how to more efficiently remove each directory entry.
9522 The @samp{unlink} parameter will just use a standard unlink call,
9523 @samp{wipe} will also first obfuscate bytes in the name, and
9524 @samp{wipesync} will also sync each obfuscated byte in the name to disk.
9525 Note @samp{wipesync} is the default method, but can be expensive,
9526 requiring a sync for every character in every file. This can become
9527 significant with many files, or is redundant if your file system provides
9528 synchronous metadata updates.
9534 Display to standard error all status updates as sterilization proceeds.
9540 By default, @command{shred} rounds the size of a regular file up to the next
9541 multiple of the file system block size to fully erase the slack space in
9542 the last block of the file. This space may contain portions of the current
9543 system memory on some systems for example.
9544 Use @option{--exact} to suppress that behavior.
9545 Thus, by default if you shred a 10-byte regular file on a system with 512-byte
9546 blocks, the resulting file will be 512 bytes long. With this option,
9547 shred does not increase the apparent size of the file.
9553 Normally, the last pass that @command{shred} writes is made up of
9554 random data. If this would be conspicuous on your hard drive (for
9555 example, because it looks like encrypted data), or you just think
9556 it's tidier, the @option{--zero} option adds an additional overwrite pass with
9557 all zero bits. This is in addition to the number of passes specified
9558 by the @option{--iterations} option.
9562 You might use the following command to erase all trace of the
9563 file system you'd created on the floppy disk in your first drive.
9564 That command takes about 20 minutes to erase a ``1.44MB'' (actually
9568 shred --verbose /dev/fd0
9571 Similarly, to erase all data on a selected partition of
9572 your hard disk, you could give a command like this:
9575 shred --verbose /dev/sda5
9578 On modern disks, a single pass should be adequate,
9579 and it will take one third the time of the default three-pass approach.
9582 # 1 pass, write pseudo-random data; 3x faster than the default
9583 shred --verbose -n1 /dev/sda5
9586 To be on the safe side, use at least one pass that overwrites using
9587 pseudo-random data. I.e., don't be tempted to use @samp{-n0 --zero},
9588 in case some disk controller optimizes the process of writing blocks
9589 of all zeros, and thereby does not clear all bytes in a block.
9590 Some SSDs may do just that.
9592 A @var{file} of @samp{-} denotes standard output.
9593 The intended use of this is to shred a removed temporary file.
9600 echo "Hello, world" >&3
9605 However, the command @samp{shred - >file} does not shred the contents
9606 of @var{file}, since the shell truncates @var{file} before invoking
9607 @command{shred}. Use the command @samp{shred file} or (if using a
9608 Bourne-compatible shell) the command @samp{shred - 1<>file} instead.
9613 @node Special file types
9614 @chapter Special file types
9616 @cindex special file types
9617 @cindex file types, special
9619 This chapter describes commands which create special types of files (and
9620 @command{rmdir}, which removes directories, one special file type).
9622 @cindex special file types
9624 Although Unix-like operating systems have markedly fewer special file
9625 types than others, not @emph{everything} can be treated only as the
9626 undifferentiated byte stream of @dfn{normal files}. For example, when a
9627 file is created or removed, the system must record this information,
9628 which it does in a @dfn{directory}---a special type of file. Although
9629 you can read directories as normal files, if you're curious, in order
9630 for the system to do its job it must impose a structure, a certain
9631 order, on the bytes of the file. Thus it is a ``special'' type of file.
9633 Besides directories, other special file types include named pipes
9634 (FIFOs), symbolic links, sockets, and so-called @dfn{special files}.
9637 * link invocation:: Make a hard link via the link syscall
9638 * ln invocation:: Make links between files.
9639 * mkdir invocation:: Make directories.
9640 * mkfifo invocation:: Make FIFOs (named pipes).
9641 * mknod invocation:: Make block or character special files.
9642 * readlink invocation:: Print value of a symlink or canonical file name.
9643 * rmdir invocation:: Remove empty directories.
9644 * unlink invocation:: Remove files via the unlink syscall
9648 @node link invocation
9649 @section @command{link}: Make a hard link via the link syscall
9652 @cindex links, creating
9653 @cindex hard links, creating
9654 @cindex creating links (hard only)
9656 @command{link} creates a single hard link at a time.
9657 It is a minimalist interface to the system-provided
9658 @code{link} function. @xref{Hard Links, , , libc,
9659 The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
9660 It avoids the bells and whistles of the more commonly-used
9661 @command{ln} command (@pxref{ln invocation}).
9665 link @var{filename} @var{linkname}
9668 @var{filename} must specify an existing file, and @var{linkname}
9669 must specify a nonexistent entry in an existing directory.
9670 @command{link} simply calls @code{link (@var{filename}, @var{linkname})}
9673 On a GNU system, this command acts like @samp{ln --directory
9674 --no-target-directory @var{filename} @var{linkname}}. However, the
9675 @option{--directory} and @option{--no-target-directory} options are
9676 not specified by POSIX, and the @command{link} command is
9677 more portable in practice.
9679 If @var{filename} is a symbolic link, it is unspecified whether
9680 @var{linkname} will be a hard link to the symbolic link or to the
9681 target of the symbolic link. Use @command{ln -P} or @command{ln -L}
9682 to specify which behavior is desired.
9688 @section @command{ln}: Make links between files
9691 @cindex links, creating
9692 @cindex hard links, creating
9693 @cindex symbolic (soft) links, creating
9694 @cindex creating links (hard or soft)
9696 @cindex file systems and hard links
9697 @command{ln} makes links between files. By default, it makes hard links;
9698 with the @option{-s} option, it makes symbolic (or @dfn{soft}) links.
9702 ln [@var{option}]@dots{} [-T] @var{target} @var{linkname}
9703 ln [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{target}
9704 ln [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{target}@dots{} @var{directory}
9705 ln [@var{option}]@dots{} -t @var{directory} @var{target}@dots{}
9711 If two file names are given, @command{ln} creates a link to the first
9712 file from the second.
9715 If one @var{target} is given, @command{ln} creates a link to that file
9716 in the current directory.
9719 If the @option{--target-directory} (@option{-t}) option is given, or
9720 failing that if the last file is a directory and the
9721 @option{--no-target-directory} (@option{-T}) option is not given,
9722 @command{ln} creates a link to each @var{target} file in the specified
9723 directory, using the @var{target}s' names.
9727 Normally @command{ln} does not remove existing files. Use the
9728 @option{--force} (@option{-f}) option to remove them unconditionally,
9729 the @option{--interactive} (@option{-i}) option to remove them
9730 conditionally, and the @option{--backup} (@option{-b}) option to
9733 @cindex hard link, defined
9734 @cindex inode, and hard links
9735 A @dfn{hard link} is another name for an existing file; the link and the
9736 original are indistinguishable. Technically speaking, they share the
9737 same inode, and the inode contains all the information about a
9738 file---indeed, it is not incorrect to say that the inode @emph{is} the
9739 file. Most systems prohibit making a hard link to
9740 a directory; on those where it is allowed, only the super-user can do
9741 so (and with caution, since creating a cycle will cause problems to many
9742 other utilities). Hard links cannot cross file system boundaries. (These
9743 restrictions are not mandated by POSIX, however.)
9745 @cindex dereferencing symbolic links
9746 @cindex symbolic link, defined
9747 @dfn{Symbolic links} (@dfn{symlinks} for short), on the other hand, are
9748 a special file type (which not all kernels support: System V release 3
9749 (and older) systems lack symlinks) in which the link file actually
9750 refers to a different file, by name. When most operations (opening,
9751 reading, writing, and so on) are passed the symbolic link file, the
9752 kernel automatically @dfn{dereferences} the link and operates on the
9753 target of the link. But some operations (e.g., removing) work on the
9754 link file itself, rather than on its target. The owner and group of a
9755 symlink are not significant to file access performed through
9756 the link, but do have implications on deleting a symbolic link from a
9757 directory with the restricted deletion bit set. On the GNU system,
9758 the mode of a symlink has no significance and cannot be changed, but
9759 on some BSD systems, the mode can be changed and will affect whether
9760 the symlink will be traversed in file name resolution. @xref{Symbolic Links,,,
9761 libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
9763 Symbolic links can contain arbitrary strings; a @dfn{dangling symlink}
9764 occurs when the string in the symlink does not resolve to a file.
9765 There are no restrictions against creating dangling symbolic links.
9766 There are trade-offs to using absolute or relative symlinks. An
9767 absolute symlink always points to the same file, even if the directory
9768 containing the link is moved. However, if the symlink is visible from
9769 more than one machine (such as on a networked file system), the file
9770 pointed to might not always be the same. A relative symbolic link is
9771 resolved in relation to the directory that contains the link, and is
9772 often useful in referring to files on the same device without regards
9773 to what name that device is mounted on when accessed via networked
9776 When creating a relative symlink in a different location than the
9777 current directory, the resolution of the symlink will be different
9778 than the resolution of the same string from the current directory.
9779 Therefore, many users prefer to first change directories to the
9780 location where the relative symlink will be created, so that
9781 tab-completion or other file resolution will find the same target as
9782 what will be placed in the symlink.
9784 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
9795 @opindex --directory
9796 @cindex hard links to directories
9797 Allow users with appropriate privileges to attempt to make hard links
9799 However, note that this will probably fail due to
9800 system restrictions, even for the super-user.
9806 Remove existing destination files.
9809 @itemx --interactive
9811 @opindex --interactive
9812 @cindex prompting, and @command{ln}
9813 Prompt whether to remove existing destination files.
9819 If @option{-s} is not in effect, and the source file is a symbolic
9820 link, create the hard link to the file referred to by the symbolic
9821 link, rather than the symbolic link itself.
9824 @itemx --no-dereference
9826 @opindex --no-dereference
9827 Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a symbolic link to
9828 a directory. Instead, treat it as if it were a normal file.
9830 When the destination is an actual directory (not a symlink to one),
9831 there is no ambiguity. The link is created in that directory.
9832 But when the specified destination is a symlink to a directory,
9833 there are two ways to treat the user's request. @command{ln} can
9834 treat the destination just as it would a normal directory and create
9835 the link in it. On the other hand, the destination can be viewed as a
9836 non-directory---as the symlink itself. In that case, @command{ln}
9837 must delete or backup that symlink before creating the new link.
9838 The default is to treat a destination that is a symlink to a directory
9839 just like a directory.
9841 This option is weaker than the @option{--no-target-directory}
9842 (@option{-T}) option, so it has no effect if both options are given.
9848 If @option{-s} is not in effect, and the source file is a symbolic
9849 link, create the hard link to the symbolic link itself. On platforms
9850 where this is not supported by the kernel, this option creates a
9851 symbolic link with identical contents; since symbolic link contents
9852 cannot be edited, any file name resolution performed through either
9853 link will be the same as if a hard link had been created.
9859 Make symbolic links relative to the link location.
9864 ln -srv /a/file /tmp
9865 '/tmp/file' -> '../a/file'
9868 Relative symbolic links are generated based on their canonicalized
9869 containing directory, and canonicalized targets. I.e., all symbolic
9870 links in these file names will be resolved.
9871 @xref{realpath invocation}, which gives greater control
9872 over relative file name generation, as demonstrated in the following example:
9877 test "$1" = --no-symlinks && { nosym=$1; shift; }
9879 test -d "$2" && link="$2/." || link="$2"
9880 rtarget="$(realpath $nosym -m "$target" \
9881 --relative-to "$(dirname "$link")")"
9882 ln -s -v "$rtarget" "$link"
9891 Make symbolic links instead of hard links. This option merely produces
9892 an error message on systems that do not support symbolic links.
9898 @optNoTargetDirectory
9904 Print the name of each file after linking it successfully.
9908 @cindex hard links to symbolic links
9909 @cindex symbolic links and @command{ln}
9910 If @option{-L} and @option{-P} are both given, the last one takes
9911 precedence. If @option{-s} is also given, @option{-L} and @option{-P}
9912 are silently ignored. If neither option is given, then this
9913 implementation defaults to @option{-P} if the system @code{link} supports
9914 hard links to symbolic links (such as the GNU system), and @option{-L}
9915 if @code{link} follows symbolic links (such as on BSD).
9924 # Create link ../a pointing to a in that directory.
9925 # Not really useful because it points to itself.
9930 # Change to the target before creating symlinks to avoid being confused.
9936 # Hard coded file names don't move well.
9937 ln -s $(pwd)/a /some/dir/
9941 # Relative file names survive directory moves and also
9942 # work across networked file systems.
9943 ln -s afile anotherfile
9944 ln -s ../adir/afile yetanotherfile
9948 @node mkdir invocation
9949 @section @command{mkdir}: Make directories
9952 @cindex directories, creating
9953 @cindex creating directories
9955 @command{mkdir} creates directories with the specified names. Synopsis:
9958 mkdir [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{name}@dots{}
9961 @command{mkdir} creates each directory @var{name} in the order given.
9962 It reports an error if @var{name} already exists, unless the
9963 @option{-p} option is given and @var{name} is a directory.
9965 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
9970 @itemx --mode=@var{mode}
9973 @cindex modes of created directories, setting
9974 Set the file permission bits of created directories to @var{mode},
9975 which uses the same syntax as
9976 in @command{chmod} and uses @samp{a=rwx} (read, write and execute allowed for
9977 everyone) for the point of the departure. @xref{File permissions}.
9979 Normally the directory has the desired file mode bits at the moment it
9980 is created. As a GNU extension, @var{mode} may also mention
9981 special mode bits, but in this case there may be a temporary window
9982 during which the directory exists but its special mode bits are
9983 incorrect. @xref{Directory Setuid and Setgid}, for how the
9984 set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits of directories are inherited unless
9985 overridden in this way.
9991 @cindex parent directories, creating
9992 Make any missing parent directories for each argument, setting their
9993 file permission bits to the umask modified by @samp{u+wx}. Ignore
9994 existing parent directories, and do not change their file permission
9997 To set the file permission bits of any newly-created parent
9998 directories to a value that includes @samp{u+wx}, you can set the
9999 umask before invoking @command{mkdir}. For example, if the shell
10000 command @samp{(umask u=rwx,go=rx; mkdir -p P/Q)} creates the parent
10001 @file{P} it sets the parent's permission bits to @samp{u=rwx,go=rx}.
10002 To set a parent's special mode bits as well, you can invoke
10003 @command{chmod} after @command{mkdir}. @xref{Directory Setuid and
10004 Setgid}, for how the set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits of
10005 newly-created parent directories are inherited.
10011 Print a message for each created directory. This is most useful with
10012 @option{--parents}.
10021 @node mkfifo invocation
10022 @section @command{mkfifo}: Make FIFOs (named pipes)
10025 @cindex FIFOs, creating
10026 @cindex named pipes, creating
10027 @cindex creating FIFOs (named pipes)
10029 @command{mkfifo} creates FIFOs (also called @dfn{named pipes}) with the
10030 specified names. Synopsis:
10033 mkfifo [@var{option}] @var{name}@dots{}
10036 A @dfn{FIFO} is a special file type that permits independent processes
10037 to communicate. One process opens the FIFO file for writing, and
10038 another for reading, after which data can flow as with the usual
10039 anonymous pipe in shells or elsewhere.
10041 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
10045 @item -m @var{mode}
10046 @itemx --mode=@var{mode}
10049 @cindex modes of created FIFOs, setting
10050 Set the mode of created FIFOs to @var{mode}, which is symbolic as in
10051 @command{chmod} and uses @samp{a=rw} (read and write allowed for everyone)
10052 for the point of departure. @var{mode} should specify only file
10053 permission bits. @xref{File permissions}.
10062 @node mknod invocation
10063 @section @command{mknod}: Make block or character special files
10066 @cindex block special files, creating
10067 @cindex character special files, creating
10069 @command{mknod} creates a FIFO, character special file, or block special
10070 file with the specified name. Synopsis:
10073 mknod [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{name} @var{type} [@var{major} @var{minor}]
10076 @cindex special files
10077 @cindex block special files
10078 @cindex character special files
10079 Unlike the phrase ``special file type'' above, the term @dfn{special
10080 file} has a technical meaning on Unix: something that can generate or
10081 receive data. Usually this corresponds to a physical piece of hardware,
10082 e.g., a printer or a disk. (These files are typically created at
10083 system-configuration time.) The @command{mknod} command is what creates
10084 files of this type. Such devices can be read either a character at a
10085 time or a ``block'' (many characters) at a time, hence we say there are
10086 @dfn{block special} files and @dfn{character special} files.
10088 @c mknod is a shell built-in at least with OpenBSD's /bin/sh
10089 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{mknod}
10091 The arguments after @var{name} specify the type of file to make:
10096 @opindex p @r{for FIFO file}
10100 @opindex b @r{for block special file}
10101 for a block special file
10104 @c Don't document the 'u' option -- it's just a synonym for 'c'.
10105 @c Do *any* versions of mknod still use it?
10107 @opindex c @r{for character special file}
10108 @c @opindex u @r{for character special file}
10109 for a character special file
10113 When making a block or character special file, the major and minor
10114 device numbers must be given after the file type.
10115 If a major or minor device number begins with @samp{0x} or @samp{0X},
10116 it is interpreted as hexadecimal; otherwise, if it begins with @samp{0},
10117 as octal; otherwise, as decimal.
10119 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
10123 @item -m @var{mode}
10124 @itemx --mode=@var{mode}
10127 Set the mode of created files to @var{mode}, which is symbolic as in
10128 @command{chmod} and uses @samp{a=rw} as the point of departure.
10129 @var{mode} should specify only file permission bits.
10130 @xref{File permissions}.
10139 @node readlink invocation
10140 @section @command{readlink}: Print value of a symlink or canonical file name
10143 @cindex displaying value of a symbolic link
10144 @cindex canonical file name
10145 @cindex canonicalize a file name
10148 @command{readlink} may work in one of two supported modes:
10152 @item Readlink mode
10154 @command{readlink} outputs the value of the given symbolic links.
10155 If @command{readlink} is invoked with an argument other than the name
10156 of a symbolic link, it produces no output and exits with a nonzero exit code.
10158 @item Canonicalize mode
10160 @command{readlink} outputs the absolute name of the given files which contain
10161 no @file{.}, @file{..} components nor any repeated separators
10162 (@file{/}) or symbolic links.
10167 readlink [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{file}@dots{}
10170 By default, @command{readlink} operates in readlink mode.
10172 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
10177 @itemx --canonicalize
10179 @opindex --canonicalize
10180 Activate canonicalize mode.
10181 If any component of the file name except the last one is missing or unavailable,
10182 @command{readlink} produces no output and exits with a nonzero exit
10183 code. A trailing slash is ignored.
10186 @itemx --canonicalize-existing
10188 @opindex --canonicalize-existing
10189 Activate canonicalize mode.
10190 If any component is missing or unavailable, @command{readlink} produces
10191 no output and exits with a nonzero exit code. A trailing slash
10192 requires that the name resolve to a directory.
10195 @itemx --canonicalize-missing
10197 @opindex --canonicalize-missing
10198 Activate canonicalize mode.
10199 If any component is missing or unavailable, @command{readlink} treats it
10203 @itemx --no-newline
10205 @opindex --no-newline
10206 Do not print the output delimiter, when a single @var{file} is specified.
10207 Print a warning if specified along with multiple @var{file}s.
10217 Suppress most error messages.
10223 Report error messages.
10229 The @command{readlink} utility first appeared in OpenBSD 2.1.
10231 The @command{realpath} command without options, operates like
10232 @command{readlink} in canonicalize mode.
10237 @node rmdir invocation
10238 @section @command{rmdir}: Remove empty directories
10241 @cindex removing empty directories
10242 @cindex directories, removing empty
10244 @command{rmdir} removes empty directories. Synopsis:
10247 rmdir [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{directory}@dots{}
10250 If any @var{directory} argument does not refer to an existing empty
10251 directory, it is an error.
10253 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
10257 @item --ignore-fail-on-non-empty
10258 @opindex --ignore-fail-on-non-empty
10259 @cindex directory deletion, ignoring failures
10260 Ignore each failure to remove a directory that is solely because
10261 the directory is non-empty.
10267 @cindex parent directories, removing
10268 Remove @var{directory}, then try to remove each component of @var{directory}.
10269 So, for example, @samp{rmdir -p a/b/c} is similar to @samp{rmdir a/b/c a/b a}.
10270 As such, it fails if any of those directories turns out not to be empty.
10271 Use the @option{--ignore-fail-on-non-empty} option to make it so such
10272 a failure does not evoke a diagnostic and does not cause @command{rmdir} to
10273 exit unsuccessfully.
10279 @cindex directory deletion, reporting
10280 Give a diagnostic for each successful removal.
10281 @var{directory} is removed.
10285 @xref{rm invocation}, for how to remove non-empty directories (recursively).
10290 @node unlink invocation
10291 @section @command{unlink}: Remove files via the unlink syscall
10294 @cindex removing files or directories (via the unlink syscall)
10296 @command{unlink} deletes a single specified file name.
10297 It is a minimalist interface to the system-provided
10298 @code{unlink} function. @xref{Deleting Files, , , libc,
10299 The GNU C Library Reference Manual}. Synopsis:
10300 It avoids the bells and whistles of the more commonly-used
10301 @command{rm} command (@pxref{rm invocation}).
10304 unlink @var{filename}
10307 On some systems @code{unlink} can be used to delete the name of a
10308 directory. On others, it can be used that way only by a privileged user.
10309 In the GNU system @code{unlink} can never delete the name of a directory.
10311 The @command{unlink} command honors the @option{--help} and
10312 @option{--version} options. To remove a file whose name begins with
10313 @samp{-}, prefix the name with @samp{./}, e.g., @samp{unlink ./--help}.
10318 @node Changing file attributes
10319 @chapter Changing file attributes
10321 @cindex changing file attributes
10322 @cindex file attributes, changing
10323 @cindex attributes, file
10325 A file is not merely its contents, a name, and a file type
10326 (@pxref{Special file types}). A file also has an owner (a user ID), a
10327 group (a group ID), permissions (what the owner can do with the file,
10328 what people in the group can do, and what everyone else can do), various
10329 timestamps, and other information. Collectively, we call these a file's
10332 These commands change file attributes.
10335 * chown invocation:: Change file owners and groups.
10336 * chgrp invocation:: Change file groups.
10337 * chmod invocation:: Change access permissions.
10338 * touch invocation:: Change file timestamps.
10342 @node chown invocation
10343 @section @command{chown}: Change file owner and group
10346 @cindex file ownership, changing
10347 @cindex group ownership, changing
10348 @cindex changing file ownership
10349 @cindex changing group ownership
10351 @command{chown} changes the user and/or group ownership of each given @var{file}
10352 to @var{new-owner} or to the user and group of an existing reference file.
10356 chown [@var{option}]@dots{} @{@var{new-owner} | --reference=@var{ref_file}@}@c
10360 If used, @var{new-owner} specifies the new owner and/or group as follows
10361 (with no embedded white space):
10364 [@var{owner}] [ : [@var{group}] ]
10371 If only an @var{owner} (a user name or numeric user ID) is given, that
10372 user is made the owner of each given file, and the files' group is not
10375 @item owner@samp{:}group
10376 If the @var{owner} is followed by a colon and a @var{group} (a
10377 group name or numeric group ID), with no spaces between them, the group
10378 ownership of the files is changed as well (to @var{group}).
10380 @item owner@samp{:}
10381 If a colon but no group name follows @var{owner}, that user is
10382 made the owner of the files and the group of the files is changed to
10383 @var{owner}'s login group.
10385 @item @samp{:}group
10386 If the colon and following @var{group} are given, but the owner
10387 is omitted, only the group of the files is changed; in this case,
10388 @command{chown} performs the same function as @command{chgrp}.
10391 If only a colon is given, or if @var{new-owner} is empty, neither the
10392 owner nor the group is changed.
10396 If @var{owner} or @var{group} is intended to represent a numeric user
10397 or group ID, then you may specify it with a leading @samp{+}.
10398 @xref{Disambiguating names and IDs}.
10400 Some older scripts may still use @samp{.} in place of the @samp{:} separator.
10401 POSIX 1003.1-2001 (@pxref{Standards conformance}) does not
10402 require support for that, but for backward compatibility GNU
10403 @command{chown} supports @samp{.} so long as no ambiguity results.
10404 New scripts should avoid the use of @samp{.} because it is not
10405 portable, and because it has undesirable results if the entire
10406 @var{owner@samp{.}group} happens to identify a user whose name
10409 @macro chownGroupRestrictions
10410 It is system dependent whether a user can change the group to an arbitrary one,
10411 or the more portable behavior of being restricted to setting a group of
10412 which the user is a member.
10414 @chownGroupRestrictions
10416 The @command{chown} command sometimes clears the set-user-ID or
10417 set-group-ID permission bits. This behavior depends on the policy and
10418 functionality of the underlying @code{chown} system call, which may
10419 make system-dependent file mode modifications outside the control of
10420 the @command{chown} command. For example, the @command{chown} command
10421 might not affect those bits when invoked by a user with appropriate
10422 privileges, or when the
10423 bits signify some function other than executable permission (e.g.,
10424 mandatory locking).
10425 When in doubt, check the underlying system behavior.
10427 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
10435 @cindex changed owners, verbosely describing
10436 Verbosely describe the action for each @var{file} whose ownership
10445 @cindex error messages, omitting
10446 Do not print error messages about files whose ownership cannot be
10449 @item --from=@var{old-owner}
10451 @cindex symbolic links, changing owner
10452 Change a @var{file}'s ownership only if it has current attributes specified
10453 by @var{old-owner}. @var{old-owner} has the same form as @var{new-owner}
10455 This option is useful primarily from a security standpoint in that
10456 it narrows considerably the window of potential abuse.
10457 For example, to reflect a user ID numbering change for one user's files
10458 without an option like this, @code{root} might run
10461 find / -owner OLDUSER -print0 | xargs -0 chown -h NEWUSER
10464 But that is dangerous because the interval between when the @command{find}
10465 tests the existing file's owner and when the @command{chown} is actually run
10466 may be quite large.
10467 One way to narrow the gap would be to invoke chown for each file
10471 find / -owner OLDUSER -exec chown -h NEWUSER @{@} \;
10474 But that is very slow if there are many affected files.
10475 With this option, it is safer (the gap is narrower still)
10476 though still not perfect:
10479 chown -h -R --from=OLDUSER NEWUSER /
10482 @item --dereference
10483 @opindex --dereference
10484 @cindex symbolic links, changing owner
10486 Do not act on symbolic links themselves but rather on what they point to.
10487 This is the default.
10490 @itemx --no-dereference
10492 @opindex --no-dereference
10493 @cindex symbolic links, changing owner
10495 Act on symbolic links themselves instead of what they point to.
10496 This mode relies on the @code{lchown} system call.
10497 On systems that do not provide the @code{lchown} system call,
10498 @command{chown} fails when a file specified on the command line
10499 is a symbolic link.
10500 By default, no diagnostic is issued for symbolic links encountered
10501 during a recursive traversal, but see @option{--verbose}.
10503 @item --preserve-root
10504 @opindex --preserve-root
10505 @cindex root directory, disallow recursive modification
10506 Fail upon any attempt to recursively change the root directory, @file{/}.
10507 Without @option{--recursive}, this option has no effect.
10508 @xref{Treating / specially}.
10510 @item --no-preserve-root
10511 @opindex --no-preserve-root
10512 @cindex root directory, allow recursive modification
10513 Cancel the effect of any preceding @option{--preserve-root} option.
10514 @xref{Treating / specially}.
10516 @item --reference=@var{ref_file}
10517 @opindex --reference
10518 Change the user and group of each @var{file} to be the same as those of
10519 @var{ref_file}. If @var{ref_file} is a symbolic link, do not use the
10520 user and group of the symbolic link, but rather those of the file it
10527 Output a diagnostic for every file processed.
10528 If a symbolic link is encountered during a recursive traversal
10529 on a system without the @code{lchown} system call, and @option{--no-dereference}
10530 is in effect, then issue a diagnostic saying neither the symbolic link nor
10531 its referent is being changed.
10536 @opindex --recursive
10537 @cindex recursively changing file ownership
10538 Recursively change ownership of directories and their contents.
10541 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
10544 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
10547 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
10556 # Change the owner of /u to "root".
10559 # Likewise, but also change its group to "staff".
10560 chown root:staff /u
10562 # Change the owner of /u and subfiles to "root".
10567 @node chgrp invocation
10568 @section @command{chgrp}: Change group ownership
10571 @cindex group ownership, changing
10572 @cindex changing group ownership
10574 @command{chgrp} changes the group ownership of each given @var{file}
10575 to @var{group} (which can be either a group name or a numeric group ID)
10576 or to the group of an existing reference file. @xref{chown invocation}.
10580 chgrp [@var{option}]@dots{} @{@var{group} | --reference=@var{ref_file}@}@c
10584 If @var{group} is intended to represent a
10585 numeric group ID, then you may specify it with a leading @samp{+}.
10586 @xref{Disambiguating names and IDs}.
10588 @chownGroupRestrictions
10590 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
10598 @cindex changed files, verbosely describing
10599 Verbosely describe the action for each @var{file} whose group actually
10608 @cindex error messages, omitting
10609 Do not print error messages about files whose group cannot be
10612 @item --dereference
10613 @opindex --dereference
10614 @cindex symbolic links, changing owner
10616 Do not act on symbolic links themselves but rather on what they point to.
10617 This is the default.
10620 @itemx --no-dereference
10622 @opindex --no-dereference
10623 @cindex symbolic links, changing group
10625 Act on symbolic links themselves instead of what they point to.
10626 This mode relies on the @code{lchown} system call.
10627 On systems that do not provide the @code{lchown} system call,
10628 @command{chgrp} fails when a file specified on the command line
10629 is a symbolic link.
10630 By default, no diagnostic is issued for symbolic links encountered
10631 during a recursive traversal, but see @option{--verbose}.
10633 @item --preserve-root
10634 @opindex --preserve-root
10635 @cindex root directory, disallow recursive modification
10636 Fail upon any attempt to recursively change the root directory, @file{/}.
10637 Without @option{--recursive}, this option has no effect.
10638 @xref{Treating / specially}.
10640 @item --no-preserve-root
10641 @opindex --no-preserve-root
10642 @cindex root directory, allow recursive modification
10643 Cancel the effect of any preceding @option{--preserve-root} option.
10644 @xref{Treating / specially}.
10646 @item --reference=@var{ref_file}
10647 @opindex --reference
10648 Change the group of each @var{file} to be the same as that of
10649 @var{ref_file}. If @var{ref_file} is a symbolic link, do not use the
10650 group of the symbolic link, but rather that of the file it refers to.
10656 Output a diagnostic for every file processed.
10657 If a symbolic link is encountered during a recursive traversal
10658 on a system without the @code{lchown} system call, and @option{--no-dereference}
10659 is in effect, then issue a diagnostic saying neither the symbolic link nor
10660 its referent is being changed.
10665 @opindex --recursive
10666 @cindex recursively changing group ownership
10667 Recursively change the group ownership of directories and their contents.
10670 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
10673 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
10676 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
10685 # Change the group of /u to "staff".
10688 # Change the group of /u and subfiles to "staff".
10693 @node chmod invocation
10694 @section @command{chmod}: Change access permissions
10697 @cindex changing access permissions
10698 @cindex access permissions, changing
10699 @cindex permissions, changing access
10701 @command{chmod} changes the access permissions of the named files. Synopsis:
10704 chmod [@var{option}]@dots{} @{@var{mode} | --reference=@var{ref_file}@}@c
10708 @cindex symbolic links, permissions of
10709 @command{chmod} never changes the permissions of symbolic links, since
10710 the @command{chmod} system call cannot change their permissions.
10711 This is not a problem since the permissions of symbolic links are
10712 never used. However, for each symbolic link listed on the command
10713 line, @command{chmod} changes the permissions of the pointed-to file.
10714 In contrast, @command{chmod} ignores symbolic links encountered during
10715 recursive directory traversals.
10717 A successful use of @command{chmod} clears the set-group-ID bit of a
10718 regular file if the file's group ID does not match the user's
10719 effective group ID or one of the user's supplementary group IDs,
10720 unless the user has appropriate privileges. Additional restrictions
10721 may cause the set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits of @var{mode} or
10722 @var{ref_file} to be ignored. This behavior depends on the policy and
10723 functionality of the underlying @code{chmod} system call. When in
10724 doubt, check the underlying system behavior.
10726 If used, @var{mode} specifies the new file mode bits.
10727 For details, see the section on @ref{File permissions}.
10728 If you really want @var{mode} to have a leading @samp{-}, you should
10729 use @option{--} first, e.g., @samp{chmod -- -w file}. Typically,
10730 though, @samp{chmod a-w file} is preferable, and @command{chmod -w
10731 file} (without the @option{--}) complains if it behaves differently
10732 from what @samp{chmod a-w file} would do.
10734 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
10742 Verbosely describe the action for each @var{file} whose permissions
10751 @cindex error messages, omitting
10752 Do not print error messages about files whose permissions cannot be
10755 @item --preserve-root
10756 @opindex --preserve-root
10757 @cindex root directory, disallow recursive modification
10758 Fail upon any attempt to recursively change the root directory, @file{/}.
10759 Without @option{--recursive}, this option has no effect.
10760 @xref{Treating / specially}.
10762 @item --no-preserve-root
10763 @opindex --no-preserve-root
10764 @cindex root directory, allow recursive modification
10765 Cancel the effect of any preceding @option{--preserve-root} option.
10766 @xref{Treating / specially}.
10772 Verbosely describe the action or non-action taken for every @var{file}.
10774 @item --reference=@var{ref_file}
10775 @opindex --reference
10776 Change the mode of each @var{file} to be the same as that of @var{ref_file}.
10777 @xref{File permissions}.
10778 If @var{ref_file} is a symbolic link, do not use the mode
10779 of the symbolic link, but rather that of the file it refers to.
10784 @opindex --recursive
10785 @cindex recursively changing access permissions
10786 Recursively change permissions of directories and their contents.
10793 @node touch invocation
10794 @section @command{touch}: Change file timestamps
10797 @cindex changing file timestamps
10798 @cindex file timestamps, changing
10799 @cindex timestamps, changing file
10801 @command{touch} changes the access and/or modification times of the
10802 specified files. Synopsis:
10805 touch [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{file}@dots{}
10808 @cindex empty files, creating
10809 Any @var{file} argument that does not exist is created empty, unless
10810 option @option{--no-create} (@option{-c}) or @option{--no-dereference}
10811 (@option{-h}) was in effect.
10813 A @var{file} argument string of @samp{-} is handled specially and
10814 causes @command{touch} to change the times of the file associated with
10818 By default, @command{touch} sets file timestamps to the current time.
10819 Because @command{touch} acts on its operands left to right, the
10820 resulting timestamps of earlier and later operands may disagree.
10821 Also, the determination of what time is ``current'' depends on the
10822 platform. Platforms with network file systems often use different
10823 clocks for the operating system and for file systems; because
10824 @command{touch} typically uses file systems' clocks by default, clock
10825 skew can cause the resulting file timestamps to appear to be in a
10826 program's ``future'' or ``past''.
10828 @cindex file timestamp resolution
10829 The @command{touch} command sets the file's timestamp to the greatest
10830 representable value that is not greater than the requested time. This
10831 can differ from the requested time for several reasons. First, the
10832 requested time may have a higher resolution than supported. Second, a
10833 file system may use different resolutions for different types of
10834 times. Third, file timestamps may use a different resolution than
10835 operating system timestamps. Fourth, the operating system primitives
10836 used to update timestamps may employ yet a different resolution. For
10837 example, in theory a file system might use 10-microsecond resolution
10838 for access time and 100-nanosecond resolution for modification time,
10839 and the operating system might use nanosecond resolution for the
10840 current time and microsecond resolution for the primitive that
10841 @command{touch} uses to set a file's timestamp to an arbitrary value.
10843 @cindex permissions, for changing file timestamps
10844 When setting file timestamps to the current time, @command{touch} can
10845 change the timestamps for files that the user does not own but has
10846 write permission for. Otherwise, the user must own the files. Some
10847 older systems have a further restriction: the user must own the files
10848 unless both the access and modification times are being set to the
10851 Although @command{touch} provides options for changing two of the times---the
10852 times of last access and modification---of a file, there is actually
10853 a standard third one as well: the inode change time. This is often
10854 referred to as a file's @code{ctime}.
10855 The inode change time represents the time when the file's meta-information
10856 last changed. One common example of this is when the permissions of a
10857 file change. Changing the permissions doesn't access the file, so
10858 the atime doesn't change, nor does it modify the file, so the mtime
10859 doesn't change. Yet, something about the file itself has changed,
10860 and this must be noted somewhere. This is the job of the ctime field.
10861 This is necessary, so that, for example, a backup program can make a
10862 fresh copy of the file, including the new permissions value.
10863 Another operation that modifies a file's ctime without affecting
10864 the others is renaming. In any case, it is not possible, in normal
10865 operations, for a user to change the ctime field to a user-specified value.
10866 Some operating systems and file systems support a fourth time: the
10867 birth time, when the file was first created; by definition, this
10868 timestamp never changes.
10871 Time stamps assume the time zone rules specified by the @env{TZ}
10872 environment variable, or by the system default rules if @env{TZ} is
10873 not set. @xref{TZ Variable,, Specifying the Time Zone with @env{TZ},
10874 libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
10875 You can avoid ambiguities during
10876 daylight saving transitions by using UTC time stamps.
10878 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
10883 @itemx --time=atime
10884 @itemx --time=access
10888 @opindex atime@r{, changing}
10889 @opindex access @r{time, changing}
10890 @opindex use @r{time, changing}
10891 Change the access time only.
10896 @opindex --no-create
10897 Do not warn about or create files that do not exist.
10899 @item -d @var{time}
10900 @itemx --date=@var{time}
10904 Use @var{time} instead of the current time. It can contain month names,
10905 time zones, @samp{am} and @samp{pm}, @samp{yesterday}, etc. For
10906 example, @option{--date="2004-02-27 14:19:13.489392193 +0530"}
10907 specifies the instant of time that is 489,392,193 nanoseconds after
10908 February 27, 2004 at 2:19:13 PM in a time zone that is 5 hours and 30
10909 minutes east of UTC@. @xref{Date input formats}.
10910 File systems that do not support high-resolution time stamps
10911 silently ignore any excess precision here.
10915 @cindex BSD @command{touch} compatibility
10916 Ignored; for compatibility with BSD versions of @command{touch}.
10919 @itemx --no-dereference
10921 @opindex --no-dereference
10922 @cindex symbolic links, changing time
10924 Attempt to change the timestamps of a symbolic link, rather than what
10925 the link refers to. When using this option, empty files are not
10926 created, but option @option{-c} must also be used to avoid warning
10927 about files that do not exist. Not all systems support changing the
10928 timestamps of symlinks, since underlying system support for this
10929 action was not required until POSIX 2008. Also, on some
10930 systems, the mere act of examining a symbolic link changes the access
10931 time, such that only changes to the modification time will persist
10932 long enough to be observable. When coupled with option @option{-r}, a
10933 reference timestamp is taken from a symbolic link rather than the file
10937 @itemx --time=mtime
10938 @itemx --time=modify
10941 @opindex mtime@r{, changing}
10942 @opindex modify @r{time, changing}
10943 Change the modification time only.
10945 @item -r @var{file}
10946 @itemx --reference=@var{file}
10948 @opindex --reference
10949 Use the times of the reference @var{file} instead of the current time.
10950 If this option is combined with the @option{--date=@var{time}}
10951 (@option{-d @var{time}}) option, the reference @var{file}'s time is
10952 the origin for any relative @var{time}s given, but is otherwise ignored.
10953 For example, @samp{-r foo -d '-5 seconds'} specifies a time stamp
10954 equal to five seconds before the corresponding time stamp for @file{foo}.
10955 If @var{file} is a symbolic link, the reference timestamp is taken
10956 from the target of the symlink, unless @option{-h} was also in effect.
10958 @item -t [[@var{cc}]@var{yy}]@var{mmddhhmm}[.@var{ss}]
10959 @cindex leap seconds
10960 Use the argument (optional four-digit or two-digit years, months,
10961 days, hours, minutes, optional seconds) instead of the current time.
10962 If the year is specified with only two digits, then @var{cc}
10963 is 20 for years in the range 0 @dots{} 68, and 19 for years in
10964 69 @dots{} 99. If no digits of the year are specified,
10965 the argument is interpreted as a date in the current year.
10966 On the atypical systems that support leap seconds, @var{ss} may be
10971 @vindex _POSIX2_VERSION
10972 On older systems, @command{touch} supports an obsolete syntax, as follows.
10973 If no timestamp is given with any of the @option{-d}, @option{-r}, or
10974 @option{-t} options, and if there are two or more @var{file}s and the
10975 first @var{file} is of the form @samp{@var{mmddhhmm}[@var{yy}]} and this
10976 would be a valid argument to the @option{-t} option (if the @var{yy}, if
10977 any, were moved to the front), and if the represented year
10978 is in the range 1969--1999, that argument is interpreted as the time
10979 for the other files instead of as a file name.
10980 This obsolete behavior can be enabled or disabled with the
10981 @env{_POSIX2_VERSION} environment variable (@pxref{Standards
10982 conformance}), but portable scripts should avoid commands whose
10983 behavior depends on this variable.
10984 For example, use @samp{touch ./12312359 main.c} or @samp{touch -t
10985 12312359 main.c} rather than the ambiguous @samp{touch 12312359 main.c}.
10991 @chapter Disk usage
10995 No disk can hold an infinite amount of data. These commands report
10996 how much disk storage is in use or available, report other file and
10997 file status information, and write buffers to disk.
11000 * df invocation:: Report file system disk space usage.
11001 * du invocation:: Estimate file space usage.
11002 * stat invocation:: Report file or file system status.
11003 * sync invocation:: Synchronize cached writes to persistent storage.
11004 * truncate invocation:: Shrink or extend the size of a file.
11008 @node df invocation
11009 @section @command{df}: Report file system disk space usage
11012 @cindex file system disk usage
11013 @cindex disk usage by file system
11015 @command{df} reports the amount of disk space used and available on
11016 file systems. Synopsis:
11019 df [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
11022 With no arguments, @command{df} reports the space used and available on all
11023 currently mounted file systems (of all types). Otherwise, @command{df}
11024 reports on the file system containing each argument @var{file}.
11026 Normally the disk space is printed in units of
11027 1024 bytes, but this can be overridden (@pxref{Block size}).
11028 Non-integer quantities are rounded up to the next higher unit.
11030 For bind mounts and without arguments, @command{df} only outputs the statistics
11031 for that device with the shortest mount point name in the list of file systems
11032 (@var{mtab}), i.e., it hides duplicate entries, unless the @option{-a} option is
11035 With the same logic, @command{df} elides a mount entry of a dummy pseudo device
11036 if there is another mount entry of a real block device for that mount point with
11037 the same device number, e.g. the early-boot pseudo file system @samp{rootfs} is
11038 not shown per default when already the real root device has been mounted.
11040 @cindex disk device file
11041 @cindex device file, disk
11042 If an argument @var{file} resolves to a special file containing
11043 a mounted file system, @command{df} shows the space available on that
11044 file system rather than on the file system containing the device node.
11045 GNU @command{df} does not attempt to determine the disk usage
11046 on unmounted file systems, because on most kinds of systems doing so
11047 requires extremely nonportable intimate knowledge of file system structures.
11049 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
11057 @cindex ignore file systems
11058 Include in the listing dummy, duplicate, or inaccessible file systems, which
11059 are omitted by default. Dummy file systems are typically special purpose
11060 pseudo file systems such as @samp{/proc}, with no associated storage.
11061 Duplicate file systems are local or remote file systems that are mounted
11062 at separate locations in the local file hierarchy, or bind mounted locations.
11063 Inaccessible file systems are those which are mounted but subsequently
11064 over-mounted by another file system at that point, or otherwise inaccessible
11065 due to permissions of the mount point etc.
11067 @item -B @var{size}
11068 @itemx --block-size=@var{size}
11070 @opindex --block-size
11071 @cindex file system sizes
11072 Scale sizes by @var{size} before printing them (@pxref{Block size}).
11073 For example, @option{-BG} prints sizes in units of 1,073,741,824 bytes.
11079 Equivalent to @option{--si}.
11085 @cindex inode usage
11086 List inode usage information instead of block usage. An inode (short
11087 for index node) contains information about a file such as its owner,
11088 permissions, timestamps, and location on the disk.
11092 @cindex kibibytes for file system sizes
11093 Print sizes in 1024-byte blocks, overriding the default block size
11094 (@pxref{Block size}).
11095 This option is equivalent to @option{--block-size=1K}.
11101 @cindex file system types, limiting output to certain
11102 Limit the listing to local file systems. By default, remote file systems
11107 @cindex file system space, retrieving old data more quickly
11108 Do not invoke the @code{sync} system call before getting any usage data.
11109 This may make @command{df} run significantly faster on systems with many
11110 disks, but on some systems (notably SunOS) the results may be slightly
11111 out of date. This is the default.
11114 @itemx --output[=@var{field_list}]
11116 Use the output format defined by @var{field_list}, or print all fields if
11117 @var{field_list} is omitted. In the latter case, the order of the columns
11118 conforms to the order of the field descriptions below.
11120 The use of the @option{--output} together with each of the options @option{-i},
11121 @option{-P}, and @option{-T} is mutually exclusive.
11123 FIELD_LIST is a comma-separated list of columns to be included in @command{df}'s
11124 output and therefore effectively controls the order of output columns.
11125 Each field can thus be used at the place of choice, but yet must only be
11128 Valid field names in the @var{field_list} are:
11131 The source of the mount point, usually a device.
11136 Total number of inodes.
11138 Number of used inodes.
11140 Number of available inodes.
11142 Percentage of @var{iused} divided by @var{itotal}.
11145 Total number of blocks.
11147 Number of used blocks.
11149 Number of available blocks.
11151 Percentage of @var{used} divided by @var{size}.
11154 The file name if specified on the command line.
11159 The fields for block and inodes statistics are affected by the scaling
11160 options like @option{-h} as usual.
11162 The definition of the @var{field_list} can even be split among several
11163 @option{--output} uses.
11167 # Print the TARGET (i.e., the mount point) along with their percentage
11168 # statistic regarding the blocks and the inodes.
11169 df --out=target --output=pcent,ipcent
11171 # Print all available fields.
11177 @itemx --portability
11179 @opindex --portability
11180 @cindex one-line output format
11181 @cindex POSIX output format
11182 @cindex portable output format
11183 @cindex output format, portable
11184 Use the POSIX output format. This is like the default format except
11189 The information about each file system is always printed on exactly
11190 one line; a mount device is never put on a line by itself. This means
11191 that if the mount device name is more than 20 characters long (e.g., for
11192 some network mounts), the columns are misaligned.
11195 The labels in the header output line are changed to conform to POSIX.
11198 The default block size and output format are unaffected by the
11199 @env{DF_BLOCK_SIZE}, @env{BLOCK_SIZE} and @env{BLOCKSIZE} environment
11200 variables. However, the default block size is still affected by
11201 @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT}: it is 512 if @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is set, 1024
11202 otherwise. @xref{Block size}.
11209 @cindex file system space, retrieving current data more slowly
11210 Invoke the @code{sync} system call before getting any usage data. On
11211 some systems (notably SunOS), doing this yields more up to date results,
11212 but in general this option makes @command{df} much slower, especially when
11213 there are many or very busy file systems.
11217 @cindex grand total of disk size, usage and available space
11218 Print a grand total of all arguments after all arguments have
11219 been processed. This can be used to find out the total disk size, usage
11220 and available space of all listed devices. If no arguments are specified
11221 df will try harder to elide file systems insignificant to the total
11222 available space, by suppressing duplicate remote file systems.
11224 For the grand total line, @command{df} prints @samp{"total"} into the
11225 @var{source} column, and @samp{"-"} into the @var{target} column.
11226 If there is no @var{source} column (see @option{--output}), then
11227 @command{df} prints @samp{"total"} into the @var{target} column,
11230 @item -t @var{fstype}
11231 @itemx --type=@var{fstype}
11234 @cindex file system types, limiting output to certain
11235 Limit the listing to file systems of type @var{fstype}. Multiple
11236 file system types can be specified by giving multiple @option{-t} options.
11237 By default, nothing is omitted.
11240 @itemx --print-type
11242 @opindex --print-type
11243 @cindex file system types, printing
11244 Print each file system's type. The types printed here are the same ones
11245 you can include or exclude with @option{-t} and @option{-x}. The particular
11246 types printed are whatever is supported by the system. Here are some of
11247 the common names (this list is certainly not exhaustive):
11252 @cindex NFS file system type
11253 An NFS file system, i.e., one mounted over a network from another
11254 machine. This is the one type name which seems to be used uniformly by
11257 @item ext2@r{, }ext3@r{, }ext4@r{, }xfs@r{, }btrfs@dots{}
11258 @cindex Linux file system types
11259 @cindex local file system types
11260 @opindex ext2 @r{file system type}
11261 @opindex ext3 @r{file system type}
11262 @opindex ext4 @r{file system type}
11263 @opindex xfs @r{file system type}
11264 @opindex btrfs @r{file system type}
11265 A file system on a locally-mounted hard disk. (The system might even
11266 support more than one type here; Linux does.)
11268 @item iso9660@r{, }cdfs
11269 @cindex CD-ROM file system type
11270 @cindex DVD file system type
11271 @cindex ISO9660 file system type
11272 @opindex iso9660 @r{file system type}
11273 @opindex cdfs @r{file system type}
11274 A file system on a CD or DVD drive. HP-UX uses @samp{cdfs}, most other
11275 systems use @samp{iso9660}.
11278 @cindex NTFS file system
11279 @cindex DOS file system
11280 @cindex MS-DOS file system
11281 @cindex MS-Windows file system
11282 @opindex ntfs @r{file system file}
11283 @opindex fat @r{file system file}
11284 File systems used by MS-Windows / MS-DOS.
11288 @item -x @var{fstype}
11289 @itemx --exclude-type=@var{fstype}
11291 @opindex --exclude-type
11292 Limit the listing to file systems not of type @var{fstype}.
11293 Multiple file system types can be eliminated by giving multiple
11294 @option{-x} options. By default, no file system types are omitted.
11297 Ignored; for compatibility with System V versions of @command{df}.
11301 @command{df} is installed only on systems that have usable mount tables,
11302 so portable scripts should not rely on its existence.
11305 Failure includes the case where no output is generated, so you can
11306 inspect the exit status of a command like @samp{df -t ext3 -t reiserfs
11307 @var{dir}} to test whether @var{dir} is on a file system of type
11308 @samp{ext3} or @samp{reiserfs}.
11310 Since the list of file systems (@var{mtab}) is needed to determine the
11311 file system type, failure includes the cases when that list cannot
11312 be read and one or more of the options @option{-a}, @option{-l}, @option{-t}
11313 or @option{-x} is used together with a file name argument.
11316 @node du invocation
11317 @section @command{du}: Estimate file space usage
11320 @cindex file space usage
11321 @cindex disk usage for files
11323 @command{du} reports the amount of disk space used by the set of specified files
11324 and for each subdirectory (of directory arguments). Synopsis:
11327 du [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
11330 With no arguments, @command{du} reports the disk space for the current
11331 directory. Normally the disk space is printed in units of
11332 1024 bytes, but this can be overridden (@pxref{Block size}).
11333 Non-integer quantities are rounded up to the next higher unit.
11335 If two or more hard links point to the same file, only one of the hard
11336 links is counted. The @var{file} argument order affects which links
11337 are counted, and changing the argument order may change the numbers
11338 and entries that @command{du} outputs.
11340 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
11350 Show counts for all files, not just directories.
11352 @item --apparent-size
11353 @opindex --apparent-size
11354 Print apparent sizes, rather than disk usage. The apparent size of a
11355 file is the number of bytes reported by @code{wc -c} on regular files,
11356 or more generally, @code{ls -l --block-size=1} or @code{stat --format=%s}.
11357 For example, a file containing the word @samp{zoo} with no newline would,
11358 of course, have an apparent size of 3. Such a small file may require
11359 anywhere from 0 to 16 KiB or more of disk space, depending on
11360 the type and configuration of the file system on which the file resides.
11361 However, a sparse file created with this command:
11364 dd bs=1 seek=2GiB if=/dev/null of=big
11368 has an apparent size of 2 GiB, yet on most modern
11369 systems, it actually uses almost no disk space.
11371 @item -B @var{size}
11372 @itemx --block-size=@var{size}
11374 @opindex --block-size
11376 Scale sizes by @var{size} before printing them (@pxref{Block size}).
11377 For example, @option{-BG} prints sizes in units of 1,073,741,824 bytes.
11383 Equivalent to @code{--apparent-size --block-size=1}.
11389 @cindex grand total of disk space
11390 Print a grand total of all arguments after all arguments have
11391 been processed. This can be used to find out the total disk usage of
11392 a given set of files or directories.
11395 @itemx --dereference-args
11397 @opindex --dereference-args
11398 Dereference symbolic links that are command line arguments.
11399 Does not affect other symbolic links. This is helpful for finding
11400 out the disk usage of directories, such as @file{/usr/tmp}, which
11401 are often symbolic links.
11403 @item -d @var{depth}
11404 @itemx --max-depth=@var{depth}
11405 @opindex -d @var{depth}
11406 @opindex --max-depth=@var{depth}
11407 @cindex limiting output of @command{du}
11408 Show the total for each directory (and file if --all) that is at
11409 most MAX_DEPTH levels down from the root of the hierarchy. The root
11410 is at level 0, so @code{du --max-depth=0} is equivalent to @code{du -s}.
11412 @c --files0-from=FILE
11413 @filesZeroFromOption{du,, with the @option{--total} (@option{-c}) option}
11417 Equivalent to @option{--dereference-args} (@option{-D}).
11423 @cindex inode usage, dereferencing in @command{du}
11424 List inode usage information instead of block usage.
11425 This option is useful for finding directories which contain many files, and
11426 therefore eat up most of the inodes space of a file system (see @command{df},
11427 option @option{--inodes}).
11428 It can well be combined with the options @option{-a}, @option{-c},
11429 @option{-h}, @option{-l}, @option{-s}, @option{-S}, @option{-t} and
11430 @option{-x}; however, passing other options regarding the block size, for
11431 example @option{-b}, @option{-m} and @option{--apparent-size}, is ignored.
11435 @cindex kibibytes for file sizes
11436 Print sizes in 1024-byte blocks, overriding the default block size
11437 (@pxref{Block size}).
11438 This option is equivalent to @option{--block-size=1K}.
11441 @itemx --dereference
11443 @opindex --dereference
11444 @cindex symbolic links, dereferencing in @command{du}
11445 Dereference symbolic links (show the disk space used by the file
11446 or directory that the link points to instead of the space used by
11450 @itemx --count-links
11452 @opindex --count-links
11453 @cindex hard links, counting in @command{du}
11454 Count the size of all files, even if they have appeared already (as a
11459 @cindex mebibytes for file sizes
11460 Print sizes in 1,048,576-byte blocks, overriding the default block size
11461 (@pxref{Block size}).
11462 This option is equivalent to @option{--block-size=1M}.
11465 @itemx --no-dereference
11467 @opindex --no-dereference
11468 @cindex symbolic links, dereferencing in @command{du}
11469 For each symbolic links encountered by @command{du},
11470 consider the disk space used by the symbolic link.
11473 @itemx --separate-dirs
11475 @opindex --separate-dirs
11476 Normally, in the output of @command{du} (when not using @option{--summarize}),
11477 the size listed next to a directory name, @var{d}, represents the sum
11478 of sizes of all entries beneath @var{d} as well as the size of @var{d} itself.
11479 With @option{--separate-dirs}, the size reported for a directory name,
11480 @var{d}, will exclude the size of any subdirectories.
11487 @opindex --summarize
11488 Display only a total for each argument.
11490 @item -t @var{size}
11491 @itemx --threshold=@var{size}
11493 @opindex --threshold
11494 Exclude entries based on a given @var{size}. The @var{size} refers to used
11495 blocks in normal mode (@pxref{Block size}), or inodes count in conjunction
11496 with the @option{--inodes} option.
11498 If @var{size} is positive, then @command{du} will only print entries with a size
11499 greater than or equal to that.
11501 If @var{size} is negative, then @command{du} will only print entries with a size
11502 smaller than or equal to that.
11504 Although GNU @command{find} can be used to find files of a certain size,
11505 @command{du}'s @option{--threshold} option can be used to also filter
11506 directories based on a given size.
11508 Please note that the @option{--threshold} option can be combined with the
11509 @option{--apparent-size} option, and in this case would elide entries based on
11512 Please note that the @option{--threshold} option can be combined with the
11513 @option{--inodes} option, and in this case would elide entries based on
11516 Here's how you would use @option{--threshold} to find directories with a size
11517 greater than or equal to 200 megabytes:
11520 du --threshold=200MB
11523 Here's how you would use @option{--threshold} to find directories and files -
11524 note the @option{-a} - with an apparent size smaller than or equal to 500 bytes:
11527 du -a -t -500 --apparent-size
11530 Here's how you would use @option{--threshold} to find directories on the root
11531 file system with more than 20000 inodes used in the directory tree below:
11534 du --inodes -x --threshold=20000 /
11540 @cindex last modified dates, displaying in @command{du}
11541 Show time of the most recent modification of any file in the directory,
11542 or any of its subdirectories.
11545 @itemx --time=status
11548 @opindex ctime@r{, show the most recent}
11549 @opindex status time@r{, show the most recent}
11550 @opindex use time@r{, show the most recent}
11551 Show the most recent status change time (the @samp{ctime} in the inode) of
11552 any file in the directory, instead of the modification time.
11555 @itemx --time=access
11557 @opindex atime@r{, show the most recent}
11558 @opindex access time@r{, show the most recent}
11559 Show the most recent access time (the @samp{atime} in the inode) of
11560 any file in the directory, instead of the modification time.
11562 @item --time-style=@var{style}
11563 @opindex --time-style
11565 List timestamps in style @var{style}. This option has an effect only if
11566 the @option{--time} option is also specified. The @var{style} should
11567 be one of the following:
11570 @item +@var{format}
11572 List timestamps using @var{format}, where @var{format} is interpreted
11573 like the format argument of @command{date} (@pxref{date invocation}).
11574 For example, @option{--time-style="+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"} causes
11575 @command{du} to list timestamps like @samp{2002-03-30 23:45:56}. As
11576 with @command{date}, @var{format}'s interpretation is affected by the
11577 @env{LC_TIME} locale category.
11580 List timestamps in full using ISO 8601 date, time, and time zone
11581 components with nanosecond precision, e.g., @samp{2002-03-30
11582 23:45:56.477817180 -0700}. This style is equivalent to
11583 @samp{+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%N %z}.
11586 List ISO 8601 date and time components with minute precision, e.g.,
11587 @samp{2002-03-30 23:45}. These timestamps are shorter than
11588 @samp{full-iso} timestamps, and are usually good enough for everyday
11589 work. This style is equivalent to @samp{+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M}.
11592 List ISO 8601 dates for timestamps, e.g., @samp{2002-03-30}.
11593 This style is equivalent to @samp{+%Y-%m-%d}.
11597 You can specify the default value of the @option{--time-style} option
11598 with the environment variable @env{TIME_STYLE}; if @env{TIME_STYLE} is not set
11599 the default style is @samp{long-iso}. For compatibility with @command{ls},
11600 if @env{TIME_STYLE} begins with @samp{+} and contains a newline,
11601 the newline and any later characters are ignored; if @env{TIME_STYLE}
11602 begins with @samp{posix-} the @samp{posix-} is ignored; and if
11603 @env{TIME_STYLE} is @samp{locale} it is ignored.
11605 @item -X @var{file}
11606 @itemx --exclude-from=@var{file}
11607 @opindex -X @var{file}
11608 @opindex --exclude-from=@var{file}
11609 @cindex excluding files from @command{du}
11610 Like @option{--exclude}, except take the patterns to exclude from @var{file},
11611 one per line. If @var{file} is @samp{-}, take the patterns from standard
11614 @item --exclude=@var{pattern}
11615 @opindex --exclude=@var{pattern}
11616 @cindex excluding files from @command{du}
11617 When recursing, skip subdirectories or files matching @var{pattern}.
11618 For example, @code{du --exclude='*.o'} excludes files whose names
11622 @itemx --one-file-system
11624 @opindex --one-file-system
11625 @cindex one file system, restricting @command{du} to
11626 Skip directories that are on different file systems from the one that
11627 the argument being processed is on.
11631 @cindex NFS mounts from BSD to HP-UX
11632 On BSD systems, @command{du} reports sizes that are half the correct
11633 values for files that are NFS-mounted from HP-UX systems. On HP-UX
11634 systems, it reports sizes that are twice the correct values for
11635 files that are NFS-mounted from BSD systems. This is due to a flaw
11636 in HP-UX; it also affects the HP-UX @command{du} program.
11641 @node stat invocation
11642 @section @command{stat}: Report file or file system status
11645 @cindex file status
11646 @cindex file system status
11648 @command{stat} displays information about the specified file(s). Synopsis:
11651 stat [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
11654 With no option, @command{stat} reports all information about the given files.
11655 But it also can be used to report the information of the file systems the
11656 given files are located on. If the files are links, @command{stat} can
11657 also give information about the files the links point to.
11659 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{stat}
11664 @itemx --dereference
11666 @opindex --dereference
11667 @cindex symbolic links, dereferencing in @command{stat}
11668 Change how @command{stat} treats symbolic links.
11669 With this option, @command{stat} acts on the file referenced
11670 by each symbolic link argument.
11671 Without it, @command{stat} acts on any symbolic link argument directly.
11674 @itemx --file-system
11676 @opindex --file-system
11677 @cindex file systems
11678 Report information about the file systems where the given files are located
11679 instead of information about the files themselves.
11680 This option implies the @option{-L} option.
11683 @itemx --format=@var{format}
11685 @opindex --format=@var{format}
11686 @cindex output format
11687 Use @var{format} rather than the default format.
11688 @var{format} is automatically newline-terminated, so
11689 running a command like the following with two or more @var{file}
11690 operands produces a line of output for each operand:
11692 $ stat --format=%d:%i / /usr
11697 @item --printf=@var{format}
11698 @opindex --printf=@var{format}
11699 @cindex output format
11700 Use @var{format} rather than the default format.
11701 Like @option{--format}, but interpret backslash escapes,
11702 and do not output a mandatory trailing newline.
11703 If you want a newline, include @samp{\n} in the @var{format}.
11704 Here's how you would use @option{--printf} to print the device
11705 and inode numbers of @file{/} and @file{/usr}:
11707 $ stat --printf='%d:%i\n' / /usr
11716 @cindex terse output
11717 Print the information in terse form, suitable for parsing by other programs.
11719 The output of the following commands are identical and the @option{--format}
11720 also identifies the items printed (in fuller form) in the default format.
11721 Note the format string would include another @samp{%C} at the end with an
11722 active SELinux security context.
11724 $ stat --format="%n %s %b %f %u %g %D %i %h %t %T %X %Y %Z %W %o" ...
11728 The same illustrating terse output in @option{--file-system} mode:
11730 $ stat -f --format="%n %i %l %t %s %S %b %f %a %c %d" ...
11731 $ stat -f --terse ...
11735 The valid @var{format} directives for files with @option{--format} and
11736 @option{--printf} are:
11739 @item %a - Access rights in octal
11740 @item %A - Access rights in human readable form
11741 @item %b - Number of blocks allocated (see @samp{%B})
11742 @item %B - The size in bytes of each block reported by @samp{%b}
11743 @item %C - The SELinux security context of a file, if available
11744 @item %d - Device number in decimal
11745 @item %D - Device number in hex
11746 @item %f - Raw mode in hex
11747 @item %F - File type
11748 @item %g - Group ID of owner
11749 @item %G - Group name of owner
11750 @item %h - Number of hard links
11751 @item %i - Inode number
11752 @item %m - Mount point (See note below)
11753 @item %n - File name
11754 @item %N - Quoted file name with dereference if symbolic link
11755 @item %o - Optimal I/O transfer size hint
11756 @item %s - Total size, in bytes
11757 @item %t - Major device type in hex (see below)
11758 @item %T - Minor device type in hex (see below)
11759 @item %u - User ID of owner
11760 @item %U - User name of owner
11761 @item %w - Time of file birth, or @samp{-} if unknown
11762 @item %W - Time of file birth as seconds since Epoch, or @samp{0}
11763 @item %x - Time of last access
11764 @item %X - Time of last access as seconds since Epoch
11765 @item %y - Time of last data modification
11766 @item %Y - Time of last data modification as seconds since Epoch
11767 @item %z - Time of last status change
11768 @item %Z - Time of last status change as seconds since Epoch
11771 The @samp{%t} and @samp{%T} formats operate on the st_rdev member of
11772 the stat(2) structure, and are only defined for character and block
11773 special files. On some systems or file types, st_rdev may be used to
11774 represent other quantities.
11776 The @samp{%W}, @samp{%X}, @samp{%Y}, and @samp{%Z} formats accept a
11777 precision preceded by a period to specify the number of digits to
11778 print after the decimal point. For example, @samp{%.3X} outputs the
11779 last access time to millisecond precision. If a period is given but no
11780 precision, @command{stat} uses 9 digits, so @samp{%.X} is equivalent to
11781 @samp{%.9X}@. When discarding excess precision, time stamps are truncated
11782 toward minus infinity.
11786 $ stat -c '[%015Y]' /usr
11789 $ stat -c '[%15Y]' /usr
11791 $ stat -c '[%-15Y]' /usr
11794 $ stat -c '[%.3Y]' /usr
11796 $ stat -c '[%.Y]' /usr
11797 [1288929712.114951834]
11800 The mount point printed by @samp{%m} is similar to that output
11801 by @command{df}, except that:
11804 stat does not dereference symlinks by default
11805 (unless @option{-L} is specified)
11807 stat does not search for specified device nodes in the
11808 file system list, instead operating on them directly
11811 stat outputs the alias for a bind mounted file, rather than
11812 the initial mount point of its backing device.
11813 One can recursively call stat until there is no change in output,
11814 to get the current base mount point
11817 When listing file system information (@option{--file-system} (@option{-f})),
11818 you must use a different set of @var{format} directives:
11821 @item %a - Free blocks available to non-super-user
11822 @item %b - Total data blocks in file system
11823 @item %c - Total file nodes in file system
11824 @item %d - Free file nodes in file system
11825 @item %f - Free blocks in file system
11826 @item %i - File System ID in hex
11827 @item %l - Maximum length of file names
11828 @item %n - File name
11829 @item %s - Block size (for faster transfers)
11830 @item %S - Fundamental block size (for block counts)
11831 @item %t - Type in hex
11832 @item %T - Type in human readable form
11836 Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified by
11837 the @env{TZ} environment variable, or by the system default rules if
11838 @env{TZ} is not set. @xref{TZ Variable,, Specifying the Time Zone
11839 with @env{TZ}, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
11844 @node sync invocation
11845 @section @command{sync}: Synchronize cached writes to persistent storage
11848 @cindex synchronize disk and memory
11849 @cindex Synchronize cached writes to persistent storage
11851 @command{sync} synchronizes in memory files or file systems to persistent
11855 sync [@var{option}] [@var{file}]@dots{}
11858 @cindex superblock, writing
11859 @cindex inodes, written buffered
11860 @command{sync} writes any data buffered in memory out to disk. This can
11861 include (but is not limited to) modified superblocks, modified inodes,
11862 and delayed reads and writes. This must be implemented by the kernel;
11863 The @command{sync} program does nothing but exercise the @code{sync},
11864 @code{syncfs}, @code{fsync}, and @code{fdatasync} system calls.
11866 @cindex crashes and corruption
11867 The kernel keeps data in memory to avoid doing (relatively slow) disk
11868 reads and writes. This improves performance, but if the computer
11869 crashes, data may be lost or the file system corrupted as a
11870 result. The @command{sync} command instructs the kernel to write
11871 data in memory to persistent storage.
11873 If any argument is specified then only those files will be
11874 synchronized using the fsync(2) syscall by default.
11876 If at least one file is specified, it is possible to change the
11877 synchronization method with the following options. Also see
11878 @ref{Common options}.
11884 Use fdatasync(2) to sync only the data for the file,
11885 and any metadata required to maintain file system consistency.
11888 @itemx --file-system
11889 @opindex --file-system
11890 Synchronize all the I/O waiting for the file systems that contain the file,
11891 using the syscall syncfs(2). Note you would usually @emph{not} specify
11892 this option if passing a device node like @samp{/dev/sda} for example,
11893 as that would sync the containing file system rather than the referenced one.
11894 Note also that depending on the system, passing individual device nodes or files
11895 may have different sync characteristics than using no arguments.
11896 I.e., arguments passed to fsync(2) may provide greater guarantees through
11897 write barriers, than a global sync(2) used when no arguments are provided.
11903 @node truncate invocation
11904 @section @command{truncate}: Shrink or extend the size of a file
11907 @cindex truncating, file sizes
11909 @command{truncate} shrinks or extends the size of each @var{file} to the
11910 specified size. Synopsis:
11913 truncate @var{option}@dots{} @var{file}@dots{}
11916 @cindex files, creating
11917 Any @var{file} that does not exist is created.
11919 @cindex sparse files, creating
11920 @cindex holes, creating files with
11921 If a @var{file} is larger than the specified size, the extra data is lost.
11922 If a @var{file} is shorter, it is extended and the extended part (or hole)
11923 reads as zero bytes.
11925 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
11932 @opindex --no-create
11933 Do not create files that do not exist.
11938 @opindex --io-blocks
11939 Treat @var{size} as number of I/O blocks of the @var{file} rather than bytes.
11941 @item -r @var{rfile}
11942 @itemx --reference=@var{rfile}
11944 @opindex --reference
11945 Base the size of each @var{file} on the size of @var{rfile}.
11947 @item -s @var{size}
11948 @itemx --size=@var{size}
11951 Set or adjust the size of each @var{file} according to @var{size}.
11952 @var{size} is in bytes unless @option{--io-blocks} is specified.
11953 @multiplierSuffixesNoBlocks{size}
11955 @var{size} may also be prefixed by one of the following to adjust
11956 the size of each @var{file} based on its current size:
11958 @samp{+} => extend by
11959 @samp{-} => reduce by
11960 @samp{<} => at most
11961 @samp{>} => at least
11962 @samp{/} => round down to multiple of
11963 @samp{%} => round up to multiple of
11971 @node Printing text
11972 @chapter Printing text
11974 @cindex printing text, commands for
11975 @cindex commands for printing text
11977 This section describes commands that display text strings.
11980 * echo invocation:: Print a line of text.
11981 * printf invocation:: Format and print data.
11982 * yes invocation:: Print a string until interrupted.
11986 @node echo invocation
11987 @section @command{echo}: Print a line of text
11990 @cindex displaying text
11991 @cindex printing text
11992 @cindex text, displaying
11993 @cindex arbitrary text, displaying
11995 @command{echo} writes each given @var{string} to standard output, with a
11996 space between each and a newline after the last one. Synopsis:
11999 echo [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{string}]@dots{}
12002 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{echo}
12004 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
12005 Options must precede operands, and the normally-special argument
12006 @samp{--} has no special meaning and is treated like any other
12012 Do not output the trailing newline.
12016 @cindex backslash escapes
12017 Enable interpretation of the following backslash-escaped characters in
12026 produce no further output
12042 the eight-bit value that is the octal number @var{nnn}
12043 (zero to three octal digits), if @var{nnn} is
12044 a nine-bit value, the ninth bit is ignored
12046 the eight-bit value that is the octal number @var{nnn}
12047 (one to three octal digits), if @var{nnn} is
12048 a nine-bit value, the ninth bit is ignored
12050 the eight-bit value that is the hexadecimal number @var{hh}
12051 (one or two hexadecimal digits)
12056 @cindex backslash escapes
12057 Disable interpretation of backslash escapes in each @var{string}.
12058 This is the default. If @option{-e} and @option{-E} are both
12059 specified, the last one given takes effect.
12063 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
12064 If the @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} environment variable is set, then when
12065 @command{echo}'s first argument is not @option{-n} it outputs
12066 option-like arguments instead of treating them as options. For
12067 example, @code{echo -ne hello} outputs @samp{-ne hello} instead of
12068 plain @samp{hello}.
12070 POSIX does not require support for any options, and says
12071 that the behavior of @command{echo} is implementation-defined if any
12072 @var{string} contains a backslash or if the first argument is
12073 @option{-n}. Portable programs can use the @command{printf} command
12074 if they need to omit trailing newlines or output control characters or
12075 backslashes. @xref{printf invocation}.
12080 @node printf invocation
12081 @section @command{printf}: Format and print data
12084 @command{printf} does formatted printing of text. Synopsis:
12087 printf @var{format} [@var{argument}]@dots{}
12090 @command{printf} prints the @var{format} string, interpreting @samp{%}
12091 directives and @samp{\} escapes to format numeric and string arguments
12092 in a way that is mostly similar to the C @samp{printf} function.
12093 @xref{Output Conversion Syntax,, @command{printf} format directives,
12094 libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}, for details.
12095 The differences are listed below.
12097 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{printf}
12102 The @var{format} argument is reused as necessary to convert all the
12103 given @var{argument}s. For example, the command @samp{printf %s a b}
12107 Missing @var{argument}s are treated as null strings or as zeros,
12108 depending on whether the context expects a string or a number. For
12109 example, the command @samp{printf %sx%d} prints @samp{x0}.
12113 An additional escape, @samp{\c}, causes @command{printf} to produce no
12114 further output. For example, the command @samp{printf 'A%sC\cD%sF' B
12115 E} prints @samp{ABC}.
12118 The hexadecimal escape sequence @samp{\x@var{hh}} has at most two
12119 digits, as opposed to C where it can have an unlimited number of
12120 digits. For example, the command @samp{printf '\x07e'} prints two
12121 bytes, whereas the C statement @samp{printf ("\x07e")} prints just
12126 An additional directive @samp{%b}, prints its
12127 argument string with @samp{\} escapes interpreted in the same way as in
12128 the @var{format} string, except that octal escapes are of the form
12129 @samp{\0@var{ooo}} where @var{ooo} is 0 to 3 octal digits. If
12130 @samp{\@var{ooo}} is nine-bit value, ignore the ninth bit.
12131 If a precision is also given, it limits the number of bytes printed
12132 from the converted string.
12136 An additional directive @samp{%q}, prints its argument string
12137 in a format that can be reused as input by most shells.
12138 Non-printable characters are escaped with the POSIX proposed @samp{$''} syntax,
12139 and shell metacharacters are quoted appropriately.
12140 This is an equivalent format to @command{ls --quoting=shell-escape} output.
12143 Numeric arguments must be single C constants, possibly with leading
12144 @samp{+} or @samp{-}. For example, @samp{printf %.4d -3} outputs
12148 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
12149 If the leading character of a numeric argument is @samp{"} or @samp{'}
12150 then its value is the numeric value of the immediately following
12151 character. Any remaining characters are silently ignored if the
12152 @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} environment variable is set; otherwise, a
12153 warning is printed. For example, @samp{printf "%d" "'a"} outputs
12154 @samp{97} on hosts that use the ASCII character set, since
12155 @samp{a} has the numeric value 97 in ASCII.
12160 A floating-point argument must use a period before any fractional
12161 digits, but is printed according to the @env{LC_NUMERIC} category of the
12162 current locale. For example, in a locale whose radix character is a
12163 comma, the command @samp{printf %g 3.14} outputs @samp{3,14} whereas
12164 the command @samp{printf %g 3,14} is an error.
12165 @xref{Floating point}.
12169 @command{printf} interprets @samp{\@var{ooo}} in @var{format} as an octal number
12170 (if @var{ooo} is 1 to 3 octal digits) specifying a byte to print,
12171 and @samp{\x@var{hh}} as a hexadecimal number (if @var{hh} is 1 to 2 hex
12172 digits) specifying a character to print.
12173 Note however that when @samp{\@var{ooo}} specifies a number larger than 255,
12174 @command{printf} ignores the ninth bit.
12175 For example, @samp{printf '\400'} is equivalent to @samp{printf '\0'}.
12180 @cindex ISO/IEC 10646
12182 @command{printf} interprets two character syntaxes introduced in
12184 @samp{\u} for 16-bit Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646)
12185 characters, specified as
12186 four hexadecimal digits @var{hhhh}, and @samp{\U} for 32-bit Unicode
12187 characters, specified as eight hexadecimal digits @var{hhhhhhhh}.
12188 @command{printf} outputs the Unicode characters
12189 according to the @env{LC_CTYPE} locale. Unicode characters in the ranges
12190 U+0000@dots{}U+009F, U+D800@dots{}U+DFFF cannot be specified by this syntax,
12191 except for U+0024 ($), U+0040 (@@), and U+0060 (@`).
12193 The processing of @samp{\u} and @samp{\U} requires a full-featured
12194 @code{iconv} facility. It is activated on systems with glibc 2.2 (or newer),
12195 or when @code{libiconv} is installed prior to this package. Otherwise
12196 @samp{\u} and @samp{\U} will print as-is.
12198 The only options are a lone @option{--help} or
12199 @option{--version}. @xref{Common options}.
12200 Options must precede operands.
12202 The Unicode character syntaxes are useful for writing strings in a locale
12203 independent way. For example, a string containing the Euro currency symbol
12206 $ env printf '\u20AC 14.95'
12210 will be output correctly in all locales supporting the Euro symbol
12211 (ISO-8859-15, UTF-8, and others). Similarly, a Chinese string
12214 $ env printf '\u4e2d\u6587'
12218 will be output correctly in all Chinese locales (GB2312, BIG5, UTF-8, etc).
12220 Note that in these examples, the @command{printf} command has been
12221 invoked via @command{env} to ensure that we run the program found via
12222 your shell's search path, and not a shell alias or a built-in function.
12224 For larger strings, you don't need to look up the hexadecimal code
12225 values of each character one by one. ASCII characters mixed with \u
12226 escape sequences is also known as the JAVA source file encoding. You can
12227 use GNU recode 3.5c (or newer) to convert strings to this encoding. Here
12228 is how to convert a piece of text into a shell script which will output
12229 this text in a locale-independent way:
12232 $ LC_CTYPE=zh_CN.big5 /usr/local/bin/printf \
12233 '\u4e2d\u6587\n' > sample.txt
12234 $ recode BIG5..JAVA < sample.txt \
12235 | sed -e "s|^|/usr/local/bin/printf '|" -e "s|$|\\\\n'|" \
12242 @node yes invocation
12243 @section @command{yes}: Print a string until interrupted
12246 @cindex repeated output of a string
12248 @command{yes} prints the command line arguments, separated by spaces and
12249 followed by a newline, forever until it is killed. If no arguments are
12250 given, it prints @samp{y} followed by a newline forever until killed.
12252 Upon a write error, @command{yes} exits with status @samp{1}.
12254 The only options are a lone @option{--help} or @option{--version}.
12255 To output an argument that begins with
12256 @samp{-}, precede it with @option{--}, e.g., @samp{yes -- --help}.
12257 @xref{Common options}.
12261 @chapter Conditions
12264 @cindex commands for exit status
12265 @cindex exit status commands
12267 This section describes commands that are primarily useful for their exit
12268 status, rather than their output. Thus, they are often used as the
12269 condition of shell @code{if} statements, or as the last command in a
12273 * false invocation:: Do nothing, unsuccessfully.
12274 * true invocation:: Do nothing, successfully.
12275 * test invocation:: Check file types and compare values.
12276 * expr invocation:: Evaluate expressions.
12280 @node false invocation
12281 @section @command{false}: Do nothing, unsuccessfully
12284 @cindex do nothing, unsuccessfully
12285 @cindex failure exit status
12286 @cindex exit status of @command{false}
12288 @command{false} does nothing except return an exit status of 1, meaning
12289 @dfn{failure}. It can be used as a place holder in shell scripts
12290 where an unsuccessful command is needed.
12291 In most modern shells, @command{false} is a built-in command, so when
12292 you use @samp{false} in a script, you're probably using the built-in
12293 command, not the one documented here.
12295 @command{false} honors the @option{--help} and @option{--version} options.
12297 This version of @command{false} is implemented as a C program, and is thus
12298 more secure and faster than a shell script implementation, and may safely
12299 be used as a dummy shell for the purpose of disabling accounts.
12301 Note that @command{false} (unlike all other programs documented herein)
12302 exits unsuccessfully, even when invoked with
12303 @option{--help} or @option{--version}.
12305 Portable programs should not assume that the exit status of
12306 @command{false} is 1, as it is greater than 1 on some
12310 @node true invocation
12311 @section @command{true}: Do nothing, successfully
12314 @cindex do nothing, successfully
12316 @cindex successful exit
12317 @cindex exit status of @command{true}
12319 @command{true} does nothing except return an exit status of 0, meaning
12320 @dfn{success}. It can be used as a place holder in shell scripts
12321 where a successful command is needed, although the shell built-in
12322 command @code{:} (colon) may do the same thing faster.
12323 In most modern shells, @command{true} is a built-in command, so when
12324 you use @samp{true} in a script, you're probably using the built-in
12325 command, not the one documented here.
12327 @command{true} honors the @option{--help} and @option{--version} options.
12329 Note, however, that it is possible to cause @command{true}
12330 to exit with nonzero status: with the @option{--help} or @option{--version}
12331 option, and with standard
12332 output already closed or redirected to a file that evokes an I/O error.
12333 For example, using a Bourne-compatible shell:
12336 $ ./true --version >&-
12337 ./true: write error: Bad file number
12338 $ ./true --version > /dev/full
12339 ./true: write error: No space left on device
12342 This version of @command{true} is implemented as a C program, and is thus
12343 more secure and faster than a shell script implementation, and may safely
12344 be used as a dummy shell for the purpose of disabling accounts.
12346 @node test invocation
12347 @section @command{test}: Check file types and compare values
12350 @cindex check file types
12351 @cindex compare values
12352 @cindex expression evaluation
12354 @command{test} returns a status of 0 (true) or 1 (false) depending on the
12355 evaluation of the conditional expression @var{expr}. Each part of the
12356 expression must be a separate argument.
12358 @command{test} has file status checks, string operators, and numeric
12359 comparison operators.
12361 @command{test} has an alternate form that uses opening and closing
12362 square brackets instead a leading @samp{test}. For example, instead
12363 of @samp{test -d /}, you can write @samp{[ -d / ]}. The square
12364 brackets must be separate arguments; for example, @samp{[-d /]} does
12365 not have the desired effect. Since @samp{test @var{expr}} and @samp{[
12366 @var{expr} ]} have the same meaning, only the former form is discussed
12372 test @var{expression}
12374 [ @var{expression} ]
12379 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{test}
12381 If @var{expression} is omitted, @command{test} returns false.
12382 If @var{expression} is a single argument,
12383 @command{test} returns false if the argument is null and true
12384 otherwise. The argument
12385 can be any string, including strings like @samp{-d}, @samp{-1},
12386 @samp{--}, @samp{--help}, and @samp{--version} that most other
12387 programs would treat as options. To get help and version information,
12388 invoke the commands @samp{[ --help} and @samp{[ --version}, without
12389 the usual closing brackets. @xref{Common options}.
12391 @cindex exit status of @command{test}
12395 0 if the expression is true,
12396 1 if the expression is false,
12397 2 if an error occurred.
12401 * File type tests:: -[bcdfhLpSt]
12402 * Access permission tests:: -[gkruwxOG]
12403 * File characteristic tests:: -e -s -nt -ot -ef
12404 * String tests:: -z -n = == !=
12405 * Numeric tests:: -eq -ne -lt -le -gt -ge
12406 * Connectives for test:: ! -a -o
12410 @node File type tests
12411 @subsection File type tests
12413 @cindex file type tests
12415 These options test for particular types of files. (Everything's a file,
12416 but not all files are the same!)
12420 @item -b @var{file}
12422 @cindex block special check
12423 True if @var{file} exists and is a block special device.
12425 @item -c @var{file}
12427 @cindex character special check
12428 True if @var{file} exists and is a character special device.
12430 @item -d @var{file}
12432 @cindex directory check
12433 True if @var{file} exists and is a directory.
12435 @item -f @var{file}
12437 @cindex regular file check
12438 True if @var{file} exists and is a regular file.
12440 @item -h @var{file}
12441 @itemx -L @var{file}
12444 @cindex symbolic link check
12445 True if @var{file} exists and is a symbolic link.
12446 Unlike all other file-related tests, this test does not dereference
12447 @var{file} if it is a symbolic link.
12449 @item -p @var{file}
12451 @cindex named pipe check
12452 True if @var{file} exists and is a named pipe.
12454 @item -S @var{file}
12456 @cindex socket check
12457 True if @var{file} exists and is a socket.
12461 @cindex terminal check
12462 True if @var{fd} is a file descriptor that is associated with a
12468 @node Access permission tests
12469 @subsection Access permission tests
12471 @cindex access permission tests
12472 @cindex permission tests
12474 These options test for particular access permissions.
12478 @item -g @var{file}
12480 @cindex set-group-ID check
12481 True if @var{file} exists and has its set-group-ID bit set.
12483 @item -k @var{file}
12485 @cindex sticky bit check
12486 True if @var{file} exists and has its @dfn{sticky} bit set.
12488 @item -r @var{file}
12490 @cindex readable file check
12491 True if @var{file} exists and read permission is granted.
12493 @item -u @var{file}
12495 @cindex set-user-ID check
12496 True if @var{file} exists and has its set-user-ID bit set.
12498 @item -w @var{file}
12500 @cindex writable file check
12501 True if @var{file} exists and write permission is granted.
12503 @item -x @var{file}
12505 @cindex executable file check
12506 True if @var{file} exists and execute permission is granted
12507 (or search permission, if it is a directory).
12509 @item -O @var{file}
12511 @cindex owned by effective user ID check
12512 True if @var{file} exists and is owned by the current effective user ID.
12514 @item -G @var{file}
12516 @cindex owned by effective group ID check
12517 True if @var{file} exists and is owned by the current effective group ID.
12521 @node File characteristic tests
12522 @subsection File characteristic tests
12524 @cindex file characteristic tests
12526 These options test other file characteristics.
12530 @item -e @var{file}
12532 @cindex existence-of-file check
12533 True if @var{file} exists.
12535 @item -s @var{file}
12537 @cindex nonempty file check
12538 True if @var{file} exists and has a size greater than zero.
12540 @item @var{file1} -nt @var{file2}
12542 @cindex newer-than file check
12543 True if @var{file1} is newer (according to modification date) than
12544 @var{file2}, or if @var{file1} exists and @var{file2} does not.
12546 @item @var{file1} -ot @var{file2}
12548 @cindex older-than file check
12549 True if @var{file1} is older (according to modification date) than
12550 @var{file2}, or if @var{file2} exists and @var{file1} does not.
12552 @item @var{file1} -ef @var{file2}
12554 @cindex same file check
12555 @cindex hard link check
12556 True if @var{file1} and @var{file2} have the same device and inode
12557 numbers, i.e., if they are hard links to each other.
12563 @subsection String tests
12565 @cindex string tests
12567 These options test string characteristics. You may need to quote
12568 @var{string} arguments for the shell. For example:
12574 The quotes here prevent the wrong arguments from being passed to
12575 @command{test} if @samp{$V} is empty or contains special characters.
12579 @item -z @var{string}
12581 @cindex zero-length string check
12582 True if the length of @var{string} is zero.
12584 @item -n @var{string}
12585 @itemx @var{string}
12587 @cindex nonzero-length string check
12588 True if the length of @var{string} is nonzero.
12590 @item @var{string1} = @var{string2}
12592 @cindex equal string check
12593 True if the strings are equal.
12595 @item @var{string1} == @var{string2}
12597 @cindex equal string check
12598 True if the strings are equal (synonym for =).
12600 @item @var{string1} != @var{string2}
12602 @cindex not-equal string check
12603 True if the strings are not equal.
12608 @node Numeric tests
12609 @subsection Numeric tests
12611 @cindex numeric tests
12612 @cindex arithmetic tests
12614 Numeric relational operators. The arguments must be entirely numeric
12615 (possibly negative), or the special expression @w{@code{-l @var{string}}},
12616 which evaluates to the length of @var{string}.
12620 @item @var{arg1} -eq @var{arg2}
12621 @itemx @var{arg1} -ne @var{arg2}
12622 @itemx @var{arg1} -lt @var{arg2}
12623 @itemx @var{arg1} -le @var{arg2}
12624 @itemx @var{arg1} -gt @var{arg2}
12625 @itemx @var{arg1} -ge @var{arg2}
12632 These arithmetic binary operators return true if @var{arg1} is equal,
12633 not-equal, less-than, less-than-or-equal, greater-than, or
12634 greater-than-or-equal than @var{arg2}, respectively.
12641 test -1 -gt -2 && echo yes
12643 test -l abc -gt 1 && echo yes
12646 @error{} test: integer expression expected before -eq
12650 @node Connectives for test
12651 @subsection Connectives for @command{test}
12653 @cindex logical connectives
12654 @cindex connectives, logical
12656 Note it's preferred to use shell logical primitives
12657 rather than these logical connectives internal to @command{test},
12658 because an expression may become ambiguous
12659 depending on the expansion of its parameters.
12661 For example, this becomes ambiguous when @samp{$1}
12662 is set to @samp{'!'} and @samp{$2} to the empty string @samp{''}:
12668 and should be written as:
12671 test "$1" && test "$2"
12674 Note the shell logical primitives also benefit from
12675 short circuit operation, which can be significant
12676 for file attribute tests.
12682 True if @var{expr} is false.
12683 @samp{!} has lower precedence than all parts of @var{expr}.
12684 Note @samp{!} needs to be specified to the left
12685 of a binary expression, I.e., @samp{'!' 1 -gt 2}
12686 rather than @samp{1 '!' -gt 2}.
12687 Also @samp{!} is often a shell special character
12688 and is best used quoted.
12691 @item @var{expr1} -a @var{expr2}
12693 @cindex logical and operator
12694 @cindex and operator
12695 True if both @var{expr1} and @var{expr2} are true.
12696 @samp{-a} is left associative,
12697 and has a higher precedence than @samp{-o}.
12699 @item @var{expr1} -o @var{expr2}
12701 @cindex logical or operator
12702 @cindex or operator
12703 True if either @var{expr1} or @var{expr2} is true.
12704 @samp{-o} is left associative.
12709 @node expr invocation
12710 @section @command{expr}: Evaluate expressions
12713 @cindex expression evaluation
12714 @cindex evaluation of expressions
12716 @command{expr} evaluates an expression and writes the result on standard
12717 output. Each token of the expression must be a separate argument.
12719 Operands are either integers or strings. Integers consist of one or
12720 more decimal digits, with an optional leading @samp{-}.
12721 @command{expr} converts
12722 anything appearing in an operand position to an integer or a string
12723 depending on the operation being applied to it.
12725 Strings are not quoted for @command{expr} itself, though you may need to
12726 quote them to protect characters with special meaning to the shell,
12727 e.g., spaces. However, regardless of whether it is quoted, a string
12728 operand should not be a parenthesis or any of @command{expr}'s
12729 operators like @code{+}, so you cannot safely pass an arbitrary string
12730 @code{$str} to expr merely by quoting it to the shell. One way to
12731 work around this is to use the GNU extension @code{+},
12732 (e.g., @code{+ "$str" = foo}); a more portable way is to use
12733 @code{@w{" $str"}} and to adjust the rest of the expression to take
12734 the leading space into account (e.g., @code{@w{" $str" = " foo"}}).
12736 You should not pass a negative integer or a string with leading
12737 @samp{-} as @command{expr}'s first argument, as it might be
12738 misinterpreted as an option; this can be avoided by parenthesization.
12739 Also, portable scripts should not use a string operand that happens to
12740 take the form of an integer; this can be worked around by inserting
12741 leading spaces as mentioned above.
12743 @cindex parentheses for grouping
12744 Operators may be given as infix symbols or prefix keywords. Parentheses
12745 may be used for grouping in the usual manner. You must quote
12746 parentheses and many operators to avoid the shell evaluating them,
12749 When built with support for the GNU MP library, @command{expr} uses
12750 arbitrary-precision arithmetic; otherwise, it uses native arithmetic
12751 types and may fail due to arithmetic overflow.
12753 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
12754 options}. Options must precede operands.
12756 @cindex exit status of @command{expr}
12760 0 if the expression is neither null nor 0,
12761 1 if the expression is null or 0,
12762 2 if the expression is invalid,
12763 3 if an internal error occurred (e.g., arithmetic overflow).
12767 * String expressions:: + : match substr index length
12768 * Numeric expressions:: + - * / %
12769 * Relations for expr:: | & < <= = == != >= >
12770 * Examples of expr:: Examples.
12774 @node String expressions
12775 @subsection String expressions
12777 @cindex string expressions
12778 @cindex expressions, string
12780 @command{expr} supports pattern matching and other string operators. These
12781 have higher precedence than both the numeric and relational operators (in
12782 the next sections).
12786 @item @var{string} : @var{regex}
12787 @cindex pattern matching
12788 @cindex regular expression matching
12789 @cindex matching patterns
12790 Perform pattern matching. The arguments are converted to strings and the
12791 second is considered to be a (basic, a la GNU @code{grep}) regular
12792 expression, with a @code{^} implicitly prepended. The first argument is
12793 then matched against this regular expression.
12795 If the match succeeds and @var{regex} uses @samp{\(} and @samp{\)}, the
12796 @code{:} expression returns the part of @var{string} that matched the
12797 subexpression; otherwise, it returns the number of characters matched.
12799 If the match fails, the @code{:} operator returns the null string if
12800 @samp{\(} and @samp{\)} are used in @var{regex}, otherwise 0.
12802 @kindex \( @r{regexp operator}
12803 Only the first @samp{\( @dots{} \)} pair is relevant to the return
12804 value; additional pairs are meaningful only for grouping the regular
12805 expression operators.
12807 @kindex \+ @r{regexp operator}
12808 @kindex \? @r{regexp operator}
12809 @kindex \| @r{regexp operator}
12810 In the regular expression, @code{\+}, @code{\?}, and @code{\|} are
12811 operators which respectively match one or more, zero or one, or separate
12812 alternatives. SunOS and other @command{expr}'s treat these as regular
12813 characters. (POSIX allows either behavior.)
12814 @xref{Top, , Regular Expression Library, regex, Regex}, for details of
12815 regular expression syntax. Some examples are in @ref{Examples of expr}.
12817 @item match @var{string} @var{regex}
12819 An alternative way to do pattern matching. This is the same as
12820 @w{@samp{@var{string} : @var{regex}}}.
12822 @item substr @var{string} @var{position} @var{length}
12824 Returns the substring of @var{string} beginning at @var{position}
12825 with length at most @var{length}. If either @var{position} or
12826 @var{length} is negative, zero, or non-numeric, returns the null string.
12828 @item index @var{string} @var{charset}
12830 Returns the first position in @var{string} where the first character in
12831 @var{charset} was found. If no character in @var{charset} is found in
12832 @var{string}, return 0.
12834 @item length @var{string}
12836 Returns the length of @var{string}.
12838 @item + @var{token}
12840 Interpret @var{token} as a string, even if it is a keyword like @var{match}
12841 or an operator like @code{/}.
12842 This makes it possible to test @code{expr length + "$x"} or
12843 @code{expr + "$x" : '.*/\(.\)'} and have it do the right thing even if
12844 the value of @var{$x} happens to be (for example) @code{/} or @code{index}.
12845 This operator is a GNU extension. Portable shell scripts should use
12846 @code{@w{" $token"} : @w{' \(.*\)'}} instead of @code{+ "$token"}.
12850 To make @command{expr} interpret keywords as strings, you must use the
12851 @code{quote} operator.
12854 @node Numeric expressions
12855 @subsection Numeric expressions
12857 @cindex numeric expressions
12858 @cindex expressions, numeric
12860 @command{expr} supports the usual numeric operators, in order of increasing
12861 precedence. These numeric operators have lower precedence than the
12862 string operators described in the previous section, and higher precedence
12863 than the connectives (next section).
12871 @cindex subtraction
12872 Addition and subtraction. Both arguments are converted to integers;
12873 an error occurs if this cannot be done.
12879 @cindex multiplication
12882 Multiplication, division, remainder. Both arguments are converted to
12883 integers; an error occurs if this cannot be done.
12888 @node Relations for expr
12889 @subsection Relations for @command{expr}
12891 @cindex connectives, logical
12892 @cindex logical connectives
12893 @cindex relations, numeric or string
12895 @command{expr} supports the usual logical connectives and relations. These
12896 have lower precedence than the string and numeric operators
12897 (previous sections). Here is the list, lowest-precedence operator first.
12903 @cindex logical or operator
12904 @cindex or operator
12905 Returns its first argument if that is neither null nor zero, otherwise
12906 its second argument if it is neither null nor zero, otherwise 0. It
12907 does not evaluate its second argument if its first argument is neither
12912 @cindex logical and operator
12913 @cindex and operator
12914 Return its first argument if neither argument is null or zero, otherwise
12915 0. It does not evaluate its second argument if its first argument is
12918 @item < <= = == != >= >
12925 @cindex comparison operators
12927 Compare the arguments and return 1 if the relation is true, 0 otherwise.
12928 @code{==} is a synonym for @code{=}. @command{expr} first tries to convert
12929 both arguments to integers and do a numeric comparison; if either
12930 conversion fails, it does a lexicographic comparison using the character
12931 collating sequence specified by the @env{LC_COLLATE} locale.
12936 @node Examples of expr
12937 @subsection Examples of using @command{expr}
12939 @cindex examples of @command{expr}
12940 Here are a few examples, including quoting for shell metacharacters.
12942 To add 1 to the shell variable @code{foo}, in Bourne-compatible shells:
12945 foo=$(expr $foo + 1)
12948 To print the non-directory part of the file name stored in
12949 @code{$fname}, which need not contain a @code{/}:
12952 expr $fname : '.*/\(.*\)' '|' $fname
12955 An example showing that @code{\+} is an operator:
12963 expr abc : 'a\(.\)c'
12965 expr index abcdef cz
12968 @error{} expr: syntax error
12969 expr index + index a
12975 @chapter Redirection
12977 @cindex redirection
12978 @cindex commands for redirection
12980 Unix shells commonly provide several forms of @dfn{redirection}---ways
12981 to change the input source or output destination of a command. But one
12982 useful redirection is performed by a separate command, not by the shell;
12983 it's described here.
12986 * tee invocation:: Redirect output to multiple files or processes.
12990 @node tee invocation
12991 @section @command{tee}: Redirect output to multiple files or processes
12994 @cindex pipe fitting
12995 @cindex destinations, multiple output
12996 @cindex read from stdin and write to stdout and files
12998 The @command{tee} command copies standard input to standard output and also
12999 to any files given as arguments. This is useful when you want not only
13000 to send some data down a pipe, but also to save a copy. Synopsis:
13003 tee [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{file}]@dots{}
13006 If a file being written to does not already exist, it is created. If a
13007 file being written to already exists, the data it previously contained
13008 is overwritten unless the @option{-a} option is used.
13010 In previous versions of GNU coreutils (v5.3.0 - v8.23), a @var{file} of @samp{-}
13011 caused @command{tee} to send another copy of input to standard output.
13012 However, as the interleaved output was not very useful, @command{tee} now
13013 conforms to POSIX which explicitly mandates it to treat @samp{-} as a file
13016 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
13023 Append standard input to the given files rather than overwriting
13027 @itemx --ignore-interrupts
13029 @opindex --ignore-interrupts
13030 Ignore interrupt signals.
13033 @itemx --output-error[=@var{mode}]
13035 @opindex --output-error
13036 Adjust the behavior with errors on the outputs,
13037 with the long form option supporting selection
13038 between the following @var{mode}s:
13042 Warn on error opening or writing any output, including pipes.
13043 Writing is continued to still open files/pipes.
13044 Exit status indicates failure if any output has an error.
13047 This is the default @var{mode} when not specified,
13048 or when the short form @option{-p} is used.
13049 Warn on error opening or writing any output, except pipes.
13050 Writing is continued to still open files/pipes.
13051 Exit status indicates failure if any non pipe output had an error.
13054 Exit on error opening or writing any output, including pipes.
13057 Exit on error opening or writing any output, except pipes.
13062 The @command{tee} command is useful when you happen to be transferring a large
13063 amount of data and also want to summarize that data without reading
13064 it a second time. For example, when you are downloading a DVD image,
13065 you often want to verify its signature or checksum right away.
13066 The inefficient way to do it is simply:
13069 wget http://example.com/some.iso && sha1sum some.iso
13072 One problem with the above is that it makes you wait for the
13073 download to complete before starting the time-consuming SHA1 computation.
13074 Perhaps even more importantly, the above requires reading
13075 the DVD image a second time (the first was from the network).
13077 The efficient way to do it is to interleave the download
13078 and SHA1 computation. Then, you'll get the checksum for
13079 free, because the entire process parallelizes so well:
13082 # slightly contrived, to demonstrate process substitution
13083 wget -O - http://example.com/dvd.iso \
13084 | tee >(sha1sum > dvd.sha1) > dvd.iso
13087 That makes @command{tee} write not just to the expected output file,
13088 but also to a pipe running @command{sha1sum} and saving the final
13089 checksum in a file named @file{dvd.sha1}.
13091 Note, however, that this example relies on a feature of modern shells
13092 called @dfn{process substitution}
13093 (the @samp{>(command)} syntax, above;
13094 @xref{Process Substitution,,Process Substitution, bash,
13095 The Bash Reference Manual}.),
13096 so it works with @command{zsh}, @command{bash}, and @command{ksh},
13097 but not with @command{/bin/sh}. So if you write code like this
13098 in a shell script, be sure to start the script with @samp{#!/bin/bash}.
13100 Note also that if any of the process substitutions (or piped stdout)
13101 might exit early without consuming all the data, the @option{-p} option
13102 is needed to allow @command{tee} to continue to process the input
13103 to any remaining outputs.
13105 Since the above example writes to one file and one process,
13106 a more conventional and portable use of @command{tee} is even better:
13109 wget -O - http://example.com/dvd.iso \
13110 | tee dvd.iso | sha1sum > dvd.sha1
13113 You can extend this example to make @command{tee} write to two processes,
13114 computing MD5 and SHA1 checksums in parallel. In this case,
13115 process substitution is required:
13118 wget -O - http://example.com/dvd.iso \
13119 | tee >(sha1sum > dvd.sha1) \
13120 >(md5sum > dvd.md5) \
13124 This technique is also useful when you want to make a @emph{compressed}
13125 copy of the contents of a pipe.
13126 Consider a tool to graphically summarize disk usage data from @samp{du -ak}.
13127 For a large hierarchy, @samp{du -ak} can run for a long time,
13128 and can easily produce terabytes of data, so you won't want to
13129 rerun the command unnecessarily. Nor will you want to save
13130 the uncompressed output.
13132 Doing it the inefficient way, you can't even start the GUI
13133 until after you've compressed all of the @command{du} output:
13136 du -ak | gzip -9 > /tmp/du.gz
13137 gzip -d /tmp/du.gz | xdiskusage -a
13140 With @command{tee} and process substitution, you start the GUI
13141 right away and eliminate the decompression completely:
13144 du -ak | tee >(gzip -9 > /tmp/du.gz) | xdiskusage -a
13147 Finally, if you regularly create more than one type of
13148 compressed tarball at once, for example when @code{make dist} creates
13149 both @command{gzip}-compressed and @command{bzip2}-compressed tarballs,
13150 there may be a better way.
13151 Typical @command{automake}-generated @file{Makefile} rules create
13152 the two compressed tar archives with commands in sequence, like this
13153 (slightly simplified):
13156 tardir=your-pkg-M.N
13157 tar chof - "$tardir" | gzip -9 -c > your-pkg-M.N.tar.gz
13158 tar chof - "$tardir" | bzip2 -9 -c > your-pkg-M.N.tar.bz2
13161 However, if the hierarchy you are archiving and compressing is larger
13162 than a couple megabytes, and especially if you are using a multi-processor
13163 system with plenty of memory, then you can do much better by reading the
13164 directory contents only once and running the compression programs in parallel:
13167 tardir=your-pkg-M.N
13168 tar chof - "$tardir" \
13169 | tee >(gzip -9 -c > your-pkg-M.N.tar.gz) \
13170 | bzip2 -9 -c > your-pkg-M.N.tar.bz2
13173 If you want to further process the output from process substitutions,
13174 and those processes write atomically (i.e., write less than the system's
13175 PIPE_BUF size at a time), that's possible with a construct like:
13178 tardir=your-pkg-M.N
13179 tar chof - "$tardir" \
13180 | tee >(md5sum --tag) > >(sha256sum --tag) \
13181 | sort | gpg --clearsign > your-pkg-M.N.tar.sig
13187 @node File name manipulation
13188 @chapter File name manipulation
13190 @cindex file name manipulation
13191 @cindex manipulation of file names
13192 @cindex commands for file name manipulation
13194 This section describes commands that manipulate file names.
13197 * basename invocation:: Strip directory and suffix from a file name.
13198 * dirname invocation:: Strip last file name component.
13199 * pathchk invocation:: Check file name validity and portability.
13200 * mktemp invocation:: Create temporary file or directory.
13201 * realpath invocation:: Print resolved file names.
13205 @node basename invocation
13206 @section @command{basename}: Strip directory and suffix from a file name
13209 @cindex strip directory and suffix from file names
13210 @cindex directory, stripping from file names
13211 @cindex suffix, stripping from file names
13212 @cindex file names, stripping directory and suffix
13213 @cindex leading directory components, stripping
13215 @command{basename} removes any leading directory components from
13216 @var{name}. Synopsis:
13219 basename @var{name} [@var{suffix}]
13220 basename @var{option}@dots{} @var{name}@dots{}
13223 If @var{suffix} is specified and is identical to the end of @var{name},
13224 it is removed from @var{name} as well. Note that since trailing slashes
13225 are removed prior to suffix matching, @var{suffix} will do nothing if it
13226 contains slashes. @command{basename} prints the result on standard
13229 @c This test is used both here and in the section on dirname.
13230 @macro basenameAndDirname
13231 Together, @command{basename} and @command{dirname} are designed such
13232 that if @samp{ls "$name"} succeeds, then the command sequence @samp{cd
13233 "$(dirname "$name")"; ls "$(basename "$name")"} will, too. This works
13234 for everything except file names containing a trailing newline.
13236 @basenameAndDirname
13238 POSIX allows the implementation to define the results if
13239 @var{name} is empty or @samp{//}. In the former case, GNU
13240 @command{basename} returns the empty string. In the latter case, the
13241 result is @samp{//} on platforms where @var{//} is distinct from
13242 @var{/}, and @samp{/} on platforms where there is no difference.
13244 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
13245 Options must precede operands.
13252 @opindex --multiple
13253 Support more than one argument. Treat every argument as a @var{name}.
13254 With this, an optional @var{suffix} must be specified using the
13255 @option{-s} option.
13257 @item -s @var{suffix}
13258 @itemx --suffix=@var{suffix}
13261 Remove a trailing @var{suffix}.
13262 This option implies the @option{-a} option.
13274 basename /usr/bin/sort
13277 basename include/stdio.h .h
13280 basename -s .h include/stdio.h
13282 # Output "stdio" followed by "stdlib"
13283 basename -a -s .h include/stdio.h include/stdlib.h
13287 @node dirname invocation
13288 @section @command{dirname}: Strip last file name component
13291 @cindex directory components, printing
13292 @cindex stripping non-directory suffix
13293 @cindex non-directory suffix, stripping
13295 @command{dirname} prints all but the final slash-delimited component
13296 of each @var{name}. Slashes on either side of the final component are
13297 also removed. If the string contains no slash, @command{dirname}
13298 prints @samp{.} (meaning the current directory). Synopsis:
13301 dirname [@var{option}] @var{name}@dots{}
13304 @var{name} need not be a file name, but if it is, this operation
13305 effectively lists the directory that contains the final component,
13306 including the case when the final component is itself a directory.
13308 @basenameAndDirname
13310 POSIX allows the implementation to define the results if
13311 @var{name} is @samp{//}. With GNU @command{dirname}, the
13312 result is @samp{//} on platforms where @var{//} is distinct from
13313 @var{/}, and @samp{/} on platforms where there is no difference.
13315 The program accepts the following option. Also see @ref{Common options}.
13328 # Output "/usr/bin".
13329 dirname /usr/bin/sort
13330 dirname /usr/bin//.//
13332 # Output "dir1" followed by "dir2"
13333 dirname dir1/str dir2/str
13340 @node pathchk invocation
13341 @section @command{pathchk}: Check file name validity and portability
13344 @cindex file names, checking validity and portability
13345 @cindex valid file names, checking for
13346 @cindex portable file names, checking for
13348 @command{pathchk} checks validity and portability of file names. Synopsis:
13351 pathchk [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{name}@dots{}
13354 For each @var{name}, @command{pathchk} prints an error message if any of
13355 these conditions is true:
13359 One of the existing directories in @var{name} does not have search
13360 (execute) permission,
13362 The length of @var{name} is larger than the maximum supported by the
13365 The length of one component of @var{name} is longer than
13366 its file system's maximum.
13369 A nonexistent @var{name} is not an error, so long a file with that
13370 name could be created under the above conditions.
13372 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
13373 Options must precede operands.
13379 Instead of performing checks based on the underlying file system,
13380 print an error message if any of these conditions is true:
13384 A file name is empty.
13387 A file name contains a character outside the POSIX portable file
13388 name character set, namely, the ASCII letters and digits, @samp{.},
13389 @samp{_}, @samp{-}, and @samp{/}.
13392 The length of a file name or one of its components exceeds the
13393 POSIX minimum limits for portability.
13398 Print an error message if a file name is empty, or if it contains a component
13399 that begins with @samp{-}.
13401 @item --portability
13402 @opindex --portability
13403 Print an error message if a file name is not portable to all POSIX
13404 hosts. This option is equivalent to @samp{-p -P}.
13408 @cindex exit status of @command{pathchk}
13412 0 if all specified file names passed all checks,
13416 @node mktemp invocation
13417 @section @command{mktemp}: Create temporary file or directory
13420 @cindex file names, creating temporary
13421 @cindex directory, creating temporary
13422 @cindex temporary files and directories
13424 @command{mktemp} manages the creation of temporary files and
13425 directories. Synopsis:
13428 mktemp [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{template}]
13431 Safely create a temporary file or directory based on @var{template},
13432 and print its name. If given, @var{template} must include at least
13433 three consecutive @samp{X}s in the last component. If omitted, the template
13434 @samp{tmp.XXXXXXXXXX} is used, and option @option{--tmpdir} is
13435 implied. The final run of @samp{X}s in the @var{template} will be replaced
13436 by alpha-numeric characters; thus, on a case-sensitive file system,
13437 and with a @var{template} including a run of @var{n} instances of @samp{X},
13438 there are @samp{62**@var{n}} potential file names.
13440 Older scripts used to create temporary files by simply joining the
13441 name of the program with the process id (@samp{$$}) as a suffix.
13442 However, that naming scheme is easily predictable, and suffers from a
13443 race condition where the attacker can create an appropriately named
13444 symbolic link, such that when the script then opens a handle to what
13445 it thought was an unused file, it is instead modifying an existing
13446 file. Using the same scheme to create a directory is slightly safer,
13447 since the @command{mkdir} will fail if the target already exists, but
13448 it is still inferior because it allows for denial of service attacks.
13449 Therefore, modern scripts should use the @command{mktemp} command to
13450 guarantee that the generated name will be unpredictable, and that
13451 knowledge of the temporary file name implies that the file was created
13452 by the current script and cannot be modified by other users.
13454 When creating a file, the resulting file has read and write
13455 permissions for the current user, but no permissions for the group or
13456 others; these permissions are reduced if the current umask is more
13459 Here are some examples (although note that if you repeat them, you
13460 will most likely get different file names):
13465 Create a temporary file in the current directory.
13472 Create a temporary file with a known suffix.
13474 $ mktemp --suffix=.txt file-XXXX
13476 $ mktemp file-XXXX-XXXX.txt
13481 Create a secure fifo relative to the user's choice of @env{TMPDIR},
13482 but falling back to the current directory rather than @file{/tmp}.
13483 Note that @command{mktemp} does not create fifos, but can create a
13484 secure directory in which the fifo can live. Exit the shell if the
13485 directory or fifo could not be created.
13487 $ dir=$(mktemp -p "$@{TMPDIR:-.@}" -d dir-XXXX) || exit 1
13489 $ mkfifo "$fifo" || @{ rmdir "$dir"; exit 1; @}
13493 Create and use a temporary file if possible, but ignore failure. The
13494 file will reside in the directory named by @env{TMPDIR}, if specified,
13495 or else in @file{/tmp}.
13497 $ file=$(mktemp -q) && @{
13498 > # Safe to use $file only within this block. Use quotes,
13499 > # since $TMPDIR, and thus $file, may contain whitespace.
13500 > echo ... > "$file"
13506 Act as a semi-random character generator (it is not fully random,
13507 since it is impacted by the contents of the current directory). To
13508 avoid security holes, do not use the resulting names to create a file.
13518 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
13525 @opindex --directory
13526 Create a directory rather than a file. The directory will have read,
13527 write, and search permissions for the current user, but no permissions
13528 for the group or others; these permissions are reduced if the current
13529 umask is more restrictive.
13535 Suppress diagnostics about failure to create a file or directory. The
13536 exit status will still reflect whether a file was created.
13542 Generate a temporary name that does not name an existing file, without
13543 changing the file system contents. Using the output of this command
13544 to create a new file is inherently unsafe, as there is a window of
13545 time between generating the name and using it where another process
13546 can create an object by the same name.
13549 @itemx --tmpdir[=@var{dir}]
13552 Treat @var{template} relative to the directory @var{dir}. If
13553 @var{dir} is not specified (only possible with the long option
13554 @option{--tmpdir}) or is the empty string, use the value of
13555 @env{TMPDIR} if available, otherwise use @samp{/tmp}. If this is
13556 specified, @var{template} must not be absolute. However,
13557 @var{template} can still contain slashes, although intermediate
13558 directories must already exist.
13560 @item --suffix=@var{suffix}
13562 Append @var{suffix} to the @var{template}. @var{suffix} must not
13563 contain slash. If @option{--suffix} is specified, @var{template} must
13564 end in @samp{X}; if it is not specified, then an appropriate
13565 @option{--suffix} is inferred by finding the last @samp{X} in
13566 @var{template}. This option exists for use with the default
13567 @var{template} and for the creation of a @var{suffix} that starts with
13572 Treat @var{template} as a single file relative to the value of
13573 @env{TMPDIR} if available, or to the directory specified by
13574 @option{-p}, otherwise to @samp{/tmp}. @var{template} must not
13575 contain slashes. This option is deprecated; the use of @option{-p}
13576 without @option{-t} offers better defaults (by favoring the command
13577 line over @env{TMPDIR}) and more flexibility (by allowing intermediate
13582 @cindex exit status of @command{mktemp}
13586 0 if the file was created,
13591 @node realpath invocation
13592 @section @command{realpath}: Print the resolved file name.
13595 @cindex file names, canonicalization
13596 @cindex symlinks, resolution
13597 @cindex canonical file name
13598 @cindex canonicalize a file name
13602 @command{realpath} expands all symbolic links and resolves references to
13603 @samp{/./}, @samp{/../} and extra @samp{/} characters. By default,
13604 all but the last component of the specified files must exist. Synopsis:
13607 realpath [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{file}@dots{}
13610 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
13615 @itemx --canonicalize-existing
13617 @opindex --canonicalize-existing
13618 Ensure that all components of the specified file names exist.
13619 If any component is missing or unavailable, @command{realpath} will output
13620 a diagnostic unless the @option{-q} option is specified, and exit with a
13621 nonzero exit code. A trailing slash requires that the name resolve to a
13625 @itemx --canonicalize-missing
13627 @opindex --canonicalize-missing
13628 If any component of a specified file name is missing or unavailable,
13629 treat it as a directory.
13635 Symbolic links are resolved in the specified file names,
13636 but they are resolved after any subsequent @samp{..} components are processed.
13641 @opindex --physical
13642 Symbolic links are resolved in the specified file names,
13643 and they are resolved before any subsequent @samp{..} components are processed.
13644 This is the default mode of operation.
13650 Suppress diagnostic messages for specified file names.
13652 @item --relative-to=@var{file}
13653 @opindex --relative-to
13655 Print the resolved file names relative to the specified file.
13656 Note this option honors the @option{-m} and @option{-e} options
13657 pertaining to file existence.
13659 @item --relative-base=@var{base}
13660 @opindex --relative-base
13661 This option is valid when used with @option{--relative-to}, and will restrict
13662 the output of @option{--relative-to} so that relative names are output,
13663 only when @var{file}s are descendants of @var{base}. Otherwise output the
13664 absolute file name. If @option{--relative-to} was not specified, then
13665 the descendants of @var{base} are printed relative to @var{base}. If
13666 @option{--relative-to} is specified, then that directory must be a
13667 descendant of @var{base} for this option to have an effect.
13668 Note: this option honors the @option{-m} and @option{-e}
13669 options pertaining to file existence. For example:
13672 realpath --relative-to=/usr /tmp /usr/bin
13675 realpath --relative-base=/usr /tmp /usr/bin
13682 @itemx --no-symlinks
13685 @opindex --no-symlinks
13686 Do not resolve symbolic links. Only resolve references to
13687 @samp{/./}, @samp{/../} and remove extra @samp{/} characters.
13688 When combined with the @option{-m} option, realpath operates
13689 only on the file name, and does not touch any actual file.
13695 @cindex exit status of @command{realpath}
13699 0 if all file names were printed without issue.
13704 @node Working context
13705 @chapter Working context
13707 @cindex working context
13708 @cindex commands for printing the working context
13710 This section describes commands that display or alter the context in
13711 which you are working: the current directory, the terminal settings, and
13712 so forth. See also the user-related commands in the next section.
13715 * pwd invocation:: Print working directory.
13716 * stty invocation:: Print or change terminal characteristics.
13717 * printenv invocation:: Print environment variables.
13718 * tty invocation:: Print file name of terminal on standard input.
13722 @node pwd invocation
13723 @section @command{pwd}: Print working directory
13726 @cindex print name of current directory
13727 @cindex current working directory, printing
13728 @cindex working directory, printing
13731 @command{pwd} prints the name of the current directory. Synopsis:
13734 pwd [@var{option}]@dots{}
13737 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
13744 If the contents of the environment variable @env{PWD} provide an
13745 absolute name of the current directory with no @samp{.} or @samp{..}
13746 components, but possibly with symbolic links, then output those
13747 contents. Otherwise, fall back to default @option{-P} handling.
13752 @opindex --physical
13753 Print a fully resolved name for the current directory. That is, all
13754 components of the printed name will be actual directory names---none
13755 will be symbolic links.
13758 @cindex symbolic links and @command{pwd}
13759 If @option{-L} and @option{-P} are both given, the last one takes
13760 precedence. If neither option is given, then this implementation uses
13761 @option{-P} as the default unless the @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT}
13762 environment variable is set.
13764 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{pwd}
13769 @node stty invocation
13770 @section @command{stty}: Print or change terminal characteristics
13773 @cindex change or print terminal settings
13774 @cindex terminal settings
13775 @cindex line settings of terminal
13777 @command{stty} prints or changes terminal characteristics, such as baud rate.
13781 stty [@var{option}] [@var{setting}]@dots{}
13782 stty [@var{option}]
13785 If given no line settings, @command{stty} prints the baud rate, line
13786 discipline number (on systems that support it), and line settings
13787 that have been changed from the values set by @samp{stty sane}.
13788 By default, mode reading and setting are performed on the tty line
13789 connected to standard input, although this can be modified by the
13790 @option{--file} option.
13792 @command{stty} accepts many non-option arguments that change aspects of
13793 the terminal line operation, as described below.
13795 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
13802 Print all current settings in human-readable form. This option may not
13803 be used in combination with any line settings.
13805 @item -F @var{device}
13806 @itemx --file=@var{device}
13809 Set the line opened by the file name specified in @var{device} instead of
13810 the tty line connected to standard input. This option is necessary
13811 because opening a POSIX tty requires use of the
13812 @code{O_NONDELAY} flag to prevent a POSIX tty from blocking
13813 until the carrier detect line is high if
13814 the @code{clocal} flag is not set. Hence, it is not always possible
13815 to allow the shell to open the device in the traditional manner.
13821 @cindex machine-readable @command{stty} output
13822 Print all current settings in a form that can be used as an argument to
13823 another @command{stty} command to restore the current settings. This option
13824 may not be used in combination with any line settings.
13828 Many settings can be turned off by preceding them with a @samp{-}.
13829 Such arguments are marked below with ``May be negated'' in their
13830 description. The descriptions themselves refer to the positive
13831 case, that is, when @emph{not} negated (unless stated otherwise,
13834 Some settings are not available on all POSIX systems, since they use
13835 extensions. Such arguments are marked below with
13836 ``Non-POSIX'' in their description. On non-POSIX
13837 systems, those or other settings also may not
13838 be available, but it's not feasible to document all the variations: just
13841 @command{stty} is installed only on platforms with the POSIX terminal
13842 interface, so portable scripts should not rely on its existence on
13843 non-POSIX platforms.
13848 * Control:: Control settings
13849 * Input:: Input settings
13850 * Output:: Output settings
13851 * Local:: Local settings
13852 * Combination:: Combination settings
13853 * Characters:: Special characters
13854 * Special:: Special settings
13859 @subsection Control settings
13861 @cindex control settings
13867 @cindex two-way parity
13868 Generate parity bit in output and expect parity bit in input.
13874 @cindex even parity
13875 Set odd parity (even if negated). May be negated.
13879 @cindex constant parity
13880 @cindex stick parity
13881 @cindex mark parity
13882 @cindex space parity
13883 Use "stick" (mark/space) parity. If parodd is set, the parity bit is
13884 always 1; if parodd is not set, the parity bit is always zero.
13885 Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
13892 @cindex character size
13893 @cindex eight-bit characters
13894 Set character size to 5, 6, 7, or 8 bits.
13899 Send a hangup signal when the last process closes the tty. May be
13905 Use two stop bits per character (one if negated). May be negated.
13909 Allow input to be received. May be negated.
13913 @cindex modem control
13914 Disable modem control signals. May be negated.
13918 @cindex hardware flow control
13919 @cindex flow control, hardware
13920 @cindex RTS/CTS flow control
13921 Enable RTS/CTS flow control. Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
13925 @cindex hardware flow control
13926 @cindex flow control, hardware
13927 @cindex DTR/DSR flow control
13928 Enable DTR/DSR flow control. Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
13933 @subsection Input settings
13935 @cindex input settings
13936 These settings control operations on data received from the terminal.
13941 @cindex breaks, ignoring
13942 Ignore break characters. May be negated.
13946 @cindex breaks, cause interrupts
13947 Make breaks cause an interrupt signal. May be negated.
13951 @cindex parity, ignoring
13952 Ignore characters with parity errors. May be negated.
13956 @cindex parity errors, marking
13957 Mark parity errors (with a 255-0-character sequence). May be negated.
13961 Enable input parity checking. May be negated.
13965 @cindex eight-bit input
13966 Clear high (8th) bit of input characters. May be negated.
13970 @cindex newline, translating to return
13971 Translate newline to carriage return. May be negated.
13975 @cindex return, ignoring
13976 Ignore carriage return. May be negated.
13980 @cindex return, translating to newline
13981 Translate carriage return to newline. May be negated.
13985 @cindex input encoding, UTF-8
13986 Assume input characters are UTF-8 encoded. May be negated.
13990 @kindex C-s/C-q flow control
13991 @cindex XON/XOFF flow control
13992 Enable XON/XOFF flow control (that is, @kbd{Ctrl-S}/@kbd{Ctrl-Q}). May
13999 @cindex software flow control
14000 @cindex flow control, software
14001 Enable sending of @code{stop} character when the system input buffer
14002 is almost full, and @code{start} character when it becomes almost
14003 empty again. May be negated.
14007 @cindex uppercase, translating to lowercase
14008 Translate uppercase characters to lowercase. Non-POSIX@. May be
14009 negated. Note ilcuc is not implemented, as one would not be able to issue
14010 almost any (lowercase) Unix command, after invoking it.
14014 Allow any character to restart output (only the start character
14015 if negated). Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14019 @cindex beeping at input buffer full
14020 Enable beeping and not flushing input buffer if a character arrives
14021 when the input buffer is full. Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14026 @subsection Output settings
14028 @cindex output settings
14029 These settings control operations on data sent to the terminal.
14034 Postprocess output. May be negated.
14038 @cindex lowercase, translating to output
14039 Translate lowercase characters to uppercase. Non-POSIX@. May be
14040 negated. (Note ouclc is not currently implemented.)
14044 @cindex return, translating to newline
14045 Translate carriage return to newline. Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14049 @cindex newline, translating to crlf
14050 Translate newline to carriage return-newline. Non-POSIX@. May be
14055 Do not print carriage returns in the first column. Non-POSIX@.
14060 Newline performs a carriage return. Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14064 @cindex pad instead of timing for delaying
14065 Use fill (padding) characters instead of timing for delays.
14071 @cindex pad character
14072 Use ASCII DEL characters for fill instead of
14073 ASCII NUL characters. Non-POSIX@.
14079 Newline delay style. Non-POSIX.
14086 Carriage return delay style. Non-POSIX.
14092 @opindex tab@var{n}
14093 Horizontal tab delay style. Non-POSIX.
14098 Backspace delay style. Non-POSIX.
14103 Vertical tab delay style. Non-POSIX.
14108 Form feed delay style. Non-POSIX.
14113 @subsection Local settings
14115 @cindex local settings
14120 Enable @code{interrupt}, @code{quit}, and @code{suspend} special
14121 characters. May be negated.
14125 Enable @code{erase}, @code{kill}, @code{werase}, and @code{rprnt}
14126 special characters. May be negated.
14130 Enable non-POSIX special characters. May be negated.
14134 Echo input characters. May be negated.
14140 Echo @code{erase} characters as backspace-space-backspace. May be
14145 @cindex newline echoing after @code{kill}
14146 Echo a newline after a @code{kill} character. May be negated.
14150 @cindex newline, echoing
14151 Echo newline even if not echoing other characters. May be negated.
14155 @cindex flushing, disabling
14156 Disable flushing after @code{interrupt} and @code{quit} special
14157 characters. May be negated.
14161 @cindex case translation
14162 Enable input and output of uppercase characters by preceding their
14163 lowercase equivalents with @samp{\}, when @code{icanon} is set.
14164 Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14168 @cindex background jobs, stopping at terminal write
14169 Stop background jobs that try to write to the terminal. Non-POSIX@.
14176 Echo erased characters backward, between @samp{\} and @samp{/}.
14177 Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14183 @cindex control characters, using @samp{^@var{c}}
14184 @cindex hat notation for control characters
14185 Echo control characters in hat notation (@samp{^@var{c}}) instead
14186 of literally. Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14192 Echo the @code{kill} special character by erasing each character on
14193 the line as indicated by the @code{echoprt} and @code{echoe} settings,
14194 instead of by the @code{echoctl} and @code{echok} settings.
14200 Enable @samp{LINEMODE}, which is used to avoid echoing
14201 each character over high latency links. See also
14202 @uref{ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1116.txt, Internet RFC 1116}.
14209 Note this setting is currently ignored on GNU/Linux systems.
14216 @subsection Combination settings
14218 @cindex combination settings
14219 Combination settings:
14226 Same as @code{parenb -parodd cs7}. May be negated. If negated, same
14227 as @code{-parenb cs8}.
14231 Same as @code{parenb parodd cs7}. May be negated. If negated, same
14232 as @code{-parenb cs8}.
14236 Same as @code{-icrnl -onlcr}. May be negated. If negated, same as
14237 @code{icrnl -inlcr -igncr onlcr -ocrnl -onlret}.
14241 Reset the @code{erase} and @code{kill} special characters to their default
14248 @c This is too long to write inline.
14250 cread -ignbrk brkint -inlcr -igncr icrnl
14251 icanon iexten echo echoe echok -echonl -noflsh
14252 -ixoff -iutf8 -iuclc -ixany imaxbel -xcase -olcuc -ocrnl
14253 opost -ofill onlcr -onocr -onlret nl0 cr0 tab0 bs0 vt0 ff0
14254 isig -tostop -ofdel -echoprt echoctl echoke -extproc
14258 and also sets all special characters to their default values.
14262 Same as @code{brkint ignpar istrip icrnl ixon opost isig icanon}, plus
14263 sets the @code{eof} and @code{eol} characters to their default values
14264 if they are the same as the @code{min} and @code{time} characters.
14265 May be negated. If negated, same as @code{raw}.
14272 -ignbrk -brkint -ignpar -parmrk -inpck -istrip
14273 -inlcr -igncr -icrnl -ixon -ixoff -icanon -opost
14274 -isig -iuclc -ixany -imaxbel -xcase min 1 time 0
14278 May be negated. If negated, same as @code{cooked}.
14282 Same as @option{-icanon}. May be negated. If negated, same as
14287 @cindex eight-bit characters
14288 Same as @code{-parenb -istrip cs8}. May be negated. If negated,
14289 same as @code{parenb istrip cs7}.
14293 Same as @option{-parenb -istrip -opost cs8}. May be negated.
14294 If negated, same as @code{parenb istrip opost cs7}.
14298 Same as @option{-ixany}. Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14302 Same as @code{tab0}. Non-POSIX@. May be negated. If negated, same
14309 Same as @code{xcase iuclc olcuc}. Non-POSIX@. May be negated.
14310 (Used for terminals with uppercase characters only.)
14314 Same as @code{echoe echoctl echoke}.
14318 Same as @code{echoe echoctl echoke -ixany intr ^C erase ^? kill C-u}.
14323 @subsection Special characters
14325 @cindex special characters
14326 @cindex characters, special
14328 The special characters' default values vary from system to system.
14329 They are set with the syntax @samp{name value}, where the names are
14330 listed below and the value can be given either literally, in hat
14331 notation (@samp{^@var{c}}), or as an integer which may start with
14332 @samp{0x} to indicate hexadecimal, @samp{0} to indicate octal, or
14333 any other digit to indicate decimal.
14335 @cindex disabling special characters
14336 @kindex u@r{, and disabling special characters}
14337 For GNU stty, giving a value of @code{^-} or @code{undef} disables that
14338 special character. (This is incompatible with Ultrix @command{stty},
14339 which uses a value of @samp{u} to disable a special character. GNU
14340 @command{stty} treats a value @samp{u} like any other, namely to set that
14341 special character to @key{U}.)
14347 Send an interrupt signal.
14351 Send a quit signal.
14355 Erase the last character typed.
14359 Erase the current line.
14363 Send an end of file (terminate the input).
14371 Alternate character to end the line. Non-POSIX.
14376 Alternate character to toggle discarding of output. Non-POSIX.
14380 Switch to a different shell layer. Non-POSIX.
14384 Send an info signal. Not currently supported on Linux. Non-POSIX.
14388 Restart the output after stopping it.
14396 Send a terminal stop signal.
14400 Send a terminal stop signal after flushing the input. Non-POSIX.
14404 Redraw the current line. Non-POSIX.
14408 Erase the last word typed. Non-POSIX.
14412 Enter the next character typed literally, even if it is a special
14413 character. Non-POSIX.
14418 @subsection Special settings
14420 @cindex special settings
14425 Set the minimum number of characters that will satisfy a read until
14426 the time value has expired, when @option{-icanon} is set.
14430 Set the number of tenths of a second before reads time out if the minimum
14431 number of characters have not been read, when @option{-icanon} is set.
14433 @item ispeed @var{n}
14435 Set the input speed to @var{n}.
14437 @item ospeed @var{n}
14439 Set the output speed to @var{n}.
14443 Tell the tty kernel driver that the terminal has @var{n} rows.
14447 @itemx columns @var{n}
14450 Tell the kernel that the terminal has @var{n} columns. Non-POSIX.
14454 @cindex nonblocking @command{stty} setting
14455 Apply settings after first waiting for pending output to be transmitted.
14456 This is enabled by default for GNU @command{stty}.
14457 It is useful to disable this option
14458 in cases where the system may be in a state where serial transmission
14460 For example, if the system has received the @samp{DC3} character
14461 with @code{ixon} (software flow control) enabled, then @command{stty} would
14462 block without @code{-drain} being specified.
14463 May be negated. Non-POSIX.
14469 Print the number of rows and columns that the kernel thinks the
14470 terminal has. (Systems that don't support rows and columns in the kernel
14471 typically use the environment variables @env{LINES} and @env{COLUMNS}
14472 instead; however, GNU @command{stty} does not know anything about them.)
14477 Use line discipline @var{n}. Non-POSIX.
14481 Print the terminal speed.
14484 @cindex baud rate, setting
14485 Set the input and output speeds to @var{n}. @var{n} can be one of: 0
14486 50 75 110 134 134.5 150 200 300 600 1200 1800 2400 4800 9600 19200
14487 38400 @code{exta} @code{extb}. @code{exta} is the same as 19200;
14488 @code{extb} is the same as 38400. Many systems, including GNU/Linux,
14489 support higher speeds. The @command{stty} command includes support
14506 4000000 where the system supports these.
14507 0 hangs up the line if @option{-clocal} is set.
14511 @node printenv invocation
14512 @section @command{printenv}: Print all or some environment variables
14515 @cindex printing all or some environment variables
14516 @cindex environment variables, printing
14518 @command{printenv} prints environment variable values. Synopsis:
14521 printenv [@var{option}] [@var{variable}]@dots{}
14524 If no @var{variable}s are specified, @command{printenv} prints the value of
14525 every environment variable. Otherwise, it prints the value of each
14526 @var{variable} that is set, and nothing for those that are not set.
14528 The program accepts the following option. Also see @ref{Common options}.
14536 @cindex exit status of @command{printenv}
14540 0 if all variables specified were found
14541 1 if at least one specified variable was not found
14542 2 if a write error occurred
14546 @node tty invocation
14547 @section @command{tty}: Print file name of terminal on standard input
14550 @cindex print terminal file name
14551 @cindex terminal file name, printing
14553 @command{tty} prints the file name of the terminal connected to its standard
14554 input. It prints @samp{not a tty} if standard input is not a terminal.
14558 tty [@var{option}]@dots{}
14561 The program accepts the following option. Also see @ref{Common options}.
14571 Print nothing; only return an exit status.
14575 @cindex exit status of @command{tty}
14579 0 if standard input is a terminal
14580 1 if standard input is not a terminal
14581 2 if given incorrect arguments
14582 3 if a write error occurs
14586 @node User information
14587 @chapter User information
14589 @cindex user information, commands for
14590 @cindex commands for printing user information
14592 This section describes commands that print user-related information:
14593 logins, groups, and so forth.
14596 * id invocation:: Print user identity.
14597 * logname invocation:: Print current login name.
14598 * whoami invocation:: Print effective user ID.
14599 * groups invocation:: Print group names a user is in.
14600 * users invocation:: Print login names of users currently logged in.
14601 * who invocation:: Print who is currently logged in.
14605 @node id invocation
14606 @section @command{id}: Print user identity
14609 @cindex real user and group IDs, printing
14610 @cindex effective user and group IDs, printing
14611 @cindex printing real and effective user and group IDs
14613 @command{id} prints information about the given user, or the process
14614 running it if no user is specified. Synopsis:
14617 id [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{user}]
14620 @var{user} can be either a user ID or a name, with name look-up
14621 taking precedence unless the ID is specified with a leading @samp{+}.
14622 @xref{Disambiguating names and IDs}.
14624 @vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT
14625 By default, it prints the real user ID, real group ID, effective user ID
14626 if different from the real user ID, effective group ID if different from
14627 the real group ID, and supplemental group IDs.
14628 In addition, if SELinux
14629 is enabled and the @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} environment variable is not set,
14630 then print @samp{context=@var{c}}, where @var{c} is the security context.
14632 Each of these numeric values is preceded by an identifying string and
14633 followed by the corresponding user or group name in parentheses.
14635 The options cause @command{id} to print only part of the above information.
14636 Also see @ref{Common options}.
14643 Print only the group ID.
14649 Print only the group ID and the supplementary groups.
14655 Print the user or group name instead of the ID number. Requires
14656 @option{-u}, @option{-g}, or @option{-G}.
14662 Print the real, instead of effective, user or group ID@. Requires
14663 @option{-u}, @option{-g}, or @option{-G}.
14669 Print only the user ID.
14676 @cindex security context
14677 Print only the security context of the process, which is generally
14678 the user's security context inherited from the parent process.
14679 If neither SELinux or SMACK is enabled then print a warning and
14680 set the exit status to 1.
14686 Delimit output items with NUL characters.
14687 This option is not permitted when using the default format.
14692 users <NUL> devs <NUL>
14697 @macro primaryAndSupplementaryGroups{cmd,arg}
14698 Primary and supplementary groups for a process are normally inherited
14699 from its parent and are usually unchanged since login. This means
14700 that if you change the group database after logging in, @command{\cmd\}
14701 will not reflect your changes within your existing login session.
14702 Running @command{\cmd\} with a \arg\ causes the user and group
14703 database to be consulted afresh, and so will give a different result.
14705 @primaryAndSupplementaryGroups{id,user argument}
14709 @node logname invocation
14710 @section @command{logname}: Print current login name
14713 @cindex printing user's login name
14714 @cindex login name, printing
14715 @cindex user name, printing
14718 @command{logname} prints the calling user's name, as found in a
14719 system-maintained file (often @file{/var/run/utmp} or
14720 @file{/etc/utmp}), and exits with a status of 0. If there is no entry
14721 for the calling process, @command{logname} prints
14722 an error message and exits with a status of 1.
14724 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
14730 @node whoami invocation
14731 @section @command{whoami}: Print effective user ID
14734 @cindex effective user ID, printing
14735 @cindex printing the effective user ID
14737 @command{whoami} prints the user name associated with the current
14738 effective user ID@. It is equivalent to the command @samp{id -un}.
14740 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
14746 @node groups invocation
14747 @section @command{groups}: Print group names a user is in
14750 @cindex printing groups a user is in
14751 @cindex supplementary groups, printing
14753 @command{groups} prints the names of the primary and any supplementary
14754 groups for each given @var{username}, or the current process if no names
14755 are given. If more than one name is given, the name of each user is
14757 the list of that user's groups and the user name is separated from the
14758 group list by a colon. Synopsis:
14761 groups [@var{username}]@dots{}
14764 The group lists are equivalent to the output of the command @samp{id -Gn}.
14766 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
14769 @primaryAndSupplementaryGroups{groups,list of users}
14773 @node users invocation
14774 @section @command{users}: Print login names of users currently logged in
14777 @cindex printing current usernames
14778 @cindex usernames, printing current
14780 @cindex login sessions, printing users with
14781 @command{users} prints on a single line a blank-separated list of user
14782 names of users currently logged in to the current host. Each user name
14783 corresponds to a login session, so if a user has more than one login
14784 session, that user's name will appear the same number of times in the
14793 With no @var{file} argument, @command{users} extracts its information from
14794 a system-maintained file (often @file{/var/run/utmp} or
14795 @file{/etc/utmp}). If a file argument is given, @command{users} uses
14796 that file instead. A common choice is @file{/var/log/wtmp}.
14798 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
14801 The @command{users} command is installed only on platforms with the
14802 POSIX @code{<utmpx.h>} include file or equivalent, so portable scripts
14803 should not rely on its existence on non-POSIX platforms.
14808 @node who invocation
14809 @section @command{who}: Print who is currently logged in
14812 @cindex printing current user information
14813 @cindex information, about current users
14815 @command{who} prints information about users who are currently logged on.
14819 @command{who} [@var{option}] [@var{file}] [am i]
14822 @cindex terminal lines, currently used
14824 @cindex remote hostname
14825 If given no non-option arguments, @command{who} prints the following
14826 information for each user currently logged on: login name, terminal
14827 line, login time, and remote hostname or X display.
14831 If given one non-option argument, @command{who} uses that instead of
14832 a default system-maintained file (often @file{/var/run/utmp} or
14833 @file{/etc/utmp}) as the name of the file containing the record of
14834 users logged on. @file{/var/log/wtmp} is commonly given as an argument
14835 to @command{who} to look at who has previously logged on.
14839 If given two non-option arguments, @command{who} prints only the entry
14840 for the user running it (determined from its standard input), preceded
14841 by the hostname. Traditionally, the two arguments given are @samp{am
14842 i}, as in @samp{who am i}.
14845 Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified by
14846 the @env{TZ} environment variable, or by the system default rules if
14847 @env{TZ} is not set. @xref{TZ Variable,, Specifying the Time Zone
14848 with @env{TZ}, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
14850 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
14858 Same as @samp{-b -d --login -p -r -t -T -u}.
14864 Print the date and time of last system boot.
14870 Print information corresponding to dead processes.
14876 Print a line of column headings.
14882 List only the entries that correspond to processes via which the
14883 system is waiting for a user to login. The user name is always @samp{LOGIN}.
14887 Attempt to canonicalize hostnames found in utmp through a DNS lookup. This
14888 is not the default because it can cause significant delays on systems with
14889 automatic dial-up internet access.
14893 Same as @samp{who am i}.
14899 List active processes spawned by init.
14905 Print only the login names and the number of users logged on.
14906 Overrides all other options.
14911 @opindex --runlevel
14912 Print the current (and maybe previous) run-level of the init process.
14916 Ignored; for compatibility with other versions of @command{who}.
14922 Print last system clock change.
14927 After the login time, print the number of hours and minutes that the
14928 user has been idle. @samp{.} means the user was active in the last minute.
14929 @samp{old} means the user has been idle for more than 24 hours.
14940 @opindex --writable
14941 @cindex message status
14942 @pindex write@r{, allowed}
14943 After each login name print a character indicating the user's message status:
14946 @samp{+} allowing @code{write} messages
14947 @samp{-} disallowing @code{write} messages
14948 @samp{?} cannot find terminal device
14953 The @command{who} command is installed only on platforms with the
14954 POSIX @code{<utmpx.h>} include file or equivalent, so portable scripts
14955 should not rely on its existence on non-POSIX platforms.
14960 @node System context
14961 @chapter System context
14963 @cindex system context
14964 @cindex context, system
14965 @cindex commands for system context
14967 This section describes commands that print or change system-wide
14971 * date invocation:: Print or set system date and time.
14972 * arch invocation:: Print machine hardware name.
14973 * nproc invocation:: Print the number of processors.
14974 * uname invocation:: Print system information.
14975 * hostname invocation:: Print or set system name.
14976 * hostid invocation:: Print numeric host identifier.
14977 * uptime invocation:: Print system uptime and load.
14980 @node date invocation
14981 @section @command{date}: Print or set system date and time
14984 @cindex time, printing or setting
14985 @cindex printing the current time
14990 date [@var{option}]@dots{} [+@var{format}]
14991 date [-u|--utc|--universal] @c this avoids a newline in the output
14992 [ MMDDhhmm[[CC]YY][.ss] ]
14996 Invoking @command{date} with no @var{format} argument is equivalent to invoking
14997 it with a default format that depends on the @env{LC_TIME} locale category.
14998 In the default C locale, this format is @samp{'+%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Z %Y'},
14999 so the output looks like @samp{Thu Mar @ 3 13:47:51 PST 2005}.
15002 Normally, @command{date} uses the time zone rules indicated by the
15003 @env{TZ} environment variable, or the system default rules if @env{TZ}
15004 is not set. @xref{TZ Variable,, Specifying the Time Zone with
15005 @env{TZ}, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
15007 @findex strftime @r{and @command{date}}
15008 @cindex time formats
15009 @cindex formatting times
15010 If given an argument that starts with a @samp{+}, @command{date} prints the
15011 current date and time (or the date and time specified by the
15012 @option{--date} option, see below) in the format defined by that argument,
15013 which is similar to that of the @code{strftime} function. Except for
15014 conversion specifiers, which start with @samp{%}, characters in the
15015 format string are printed unchanged. The conversion specifiers are
15021 * Time conversion specifiers:: %[HIklMNpPrRsSTXzZ]
15022 * Date conversion specifiers:: %[aAbBcCdDeFgGhjmuUVwWxyY]
15023 * Literal conversion specifiers:: %[%nt]
15024 * Padding and other flags:: Pad with zeros, spaces, etc.
15025 * Setting the time:: Changing the system clock.
15026 * Options for date:: Instead of the current time.
15028 * Date input formats:: Specifying date strings.
15030 * Examples of date:: Examples.
15033 @node Time conversion specifiers
15034 @subsection Time conversion specifiers
15036 @cindex time conversion specifiers
15037 @cindex conversion specifiers, time
15039 @command{date} conversion specifiers related to times.
15043 hour (@samp{00}@dots{}@samp{23})
15045 hour (@samp{01}@dots{}@samp{12})
15047 hour, space padded (@samp{ 0}@dots{}@samp{23}); equivalent to @samp{%_H}@.
15048 This is a GNU extension.
15050 hour, space padded (@samp{ 1}@dots{}@samp{12}); equivalent to @samp{%_I}@.
15051 This is a GNU extension.
15053 minute (@samp{00}@dots{}@samp{59})
15055 nanoseconds (@samp{000000000}@dots{}@samp{999999999}).
15056 This is a GNU extension.
15058 locale's equivalent of either @samp{AM} or @samp{PM};
15059 blank in many locales.
15060 Noon is treated as @samp{PM} and midnight as @samp{AM}.
15062 like @samp{%p}, except lower case.
15063 This is a GNU extension.
15065 locale's 12-hour clock time (e.g., @samp{11:11:04 PM})
15067 24-hour hour and minute. Same as @samp{%H:%M}.
15069 @cindex epoch, seconds since
15070 @cindex seconds since the epoch
15071 @cindex beginning of time
15072 @cindex leap seconds
15073 seconds since the epoch, i.e., since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC@.
15074 Leap seconds are not counted unless leap second support is available.
15075 @xref{%s-examples}, for examples.
15076 This is a GNU extension.
15078 @cindex leap seconds
15079 second (@samp{00}@dots{}@samp{60}).
15080 This may be @samp{60} if leap seconds are supported.
15082 24-hour hour, minute, and second. Same as @samp{%H:%M:%S}.
15084 locale's time representation (e.g., @samp{23:13:48})
15086 @w{RFC 2822/ISO 8601} style numeric time zone
15087 (e.g., @samp{-0600} or @samp{+0530}), or nothing if no
15088 time zone is determinable. This value reflects the numeric time zone
15089 appropriate for the current time, using the time zone rules specified
15090 by the @env{TZ} environment variable.
15091 The time (and optionally, the time zone rules) can be overridden
15092 by the @option{--date} option.
15094 @w{RFC 3339/ISO 8601} style numeric time zone with
15095 @samp{:} (e.g., @samp{-06:00} or @samp{+05:30}), or nothing if no time
15096 zone is determinable.
15097 This is a GNU extension.
15099 Numeric time zone to the nearest second with @samp{:} (e.g.,
15100 @samp{-06:00:00} or @samp{+05:30:00}), or nothing if no time zone is
15102 This is a GNU extension.
15104 Numeric time zone with @samp{:} using the minimum necessary precision
15105 (e.g., @samp{-06}, @samp{+05:30}, or @samp{-04:56:02}), or nothing if
15106 no time zone is determinable.
15107 This is a GNU extension.
15109 alphabetic time zone abbreviation (e.g., @samp{EDT}), or nothing if no
15110 time zone is determinable. See @samp{%z} for how it is determined.
15114 @node Date conversion specifiers
15115 @subsection Date conversion specifiers
15117 @cindex date conversion specifiers
15118 @cindex conversion specifiers, date
15120 @command{date} conversion specifiers related to dates.
15124 locale's abbreviated weekday name (e.g., @samp{Sun})
15126 locale's full weekday name, variable length (e.g., @samp{Sunday})
15128 locale's abbreviated month name (e.g., @samp{Jan})
15130 locale's full month name, variable length (e.g., @samp{January})
15132 locale's date and time (e.g., @samp{Thu Mar @ 3 23:05:25 2005})
15134 century. This is like @samp{%Y}, except the last two digits are omitted.
15135 For example, it is @samp{20} if @samp{%Y} is @samp{2000},
15136 and is @samp{-0} if @samp{%Y} is @samp{-001}.
15137 It is normally at least two characters, but it may be more.
15139 day of month (e.g., @samp{01})
15141 date; same as @samp{%m/%d/%y}
15143 day of month, space padded; same as @samp{%_d}
15145 full date in ISO 8601 format; same as @samp{%Y-%m-%d}.
15146 This is a good choice for a date format, as it is standard and
15147 is easy to sort in the usual case where years are in the range
15150 year corresponding to the ISO week number, but without the century
15151 (range @samp{00} through @samp{99}). This has the same format and value
15152 as @samp{%y}, except that if the ISO week number (see
15154 to the previous or next year, that year is used instead.
15156 year corresponding to the ISO week number. This has the
15157 same format and value as @samp{%Y}, except that if the ISO
15159 @samp{%V}) belongs to the previous or next year, that year is used
15161 It is normally useful only if @samp{%V} is also used;
15162 for example, the format @samp{%G-%m-%d} is probably a mistake,
15163 since it combines the ISO week number year with the conventional month and day.
15167 day of year (@samp{001}@dots{}@samp{366})
15169 month (@samp{01}@dots{}@samp{12})
15171 day of week (@samp{1}@dots{}@samp{7}) with @samp{1} corresponding to Monday
15173 week number of year, with Sunday as the first day of the week
15174 (@samp{00}@dots{}@samp{53}).
15175 Days in a new year preceding the first Sunday are in week zero.
15177 ISO week number, that is, the
15178 week number of year, with Monday as the first day of the week
15179 (@samp{01}@dots{}@samp{53}).
15180 If the week containing January 1 has four or more days in
15181 the new year, then it is considered week 1; otherwise, it is week 53 of
15182 the previous year, and the next week is week 1. (See the ISO 8601
15185 day of week (@samp{0}@dots{}@samp{6}) with 0 corresponding to Sunday
15187 week number of year, with Monday as first day of week
15188 (@samp{00}@dots{}@samp{53}).
15189 Days in a new year preceding the first Monday are in week zero.
15191 locale's date representation (e.g., @samp{12/31/99})
15193 last two digits of year (@samp{00}@dots{}@samp{99})
15195 year. This is normally at least four characters, but it may be more.
15196 Year @samp{0000} precedes year @samp{0001}, and year @samp{-001}
15197 precedes year @samp{0000}.
15201 @node Literal conversion specifiers
15202 @subsection Literal conversion specifiers
15204 @cindex literal conversion specifiers
15205 @cindex conversion specifiers, literal
15207 @command{date} conversion specifiers that produce literal strings.
15219 @node Padding and other flags
15220 @subsection Padding and other flags
15222 @cindex numeric field padding
15223 @cindex padding of numeric fields
15224 @cindex fields, padding numeric
15226 Unless otherwise specified, @command{date} normally pads numeric fields
15227 with zeros, so that, for
15228 example, numeric months are always output as two digits.
15229 Seconds since the epoch are not padded, though,
15230 since there is no natural width for them.
15232 As a GNU extension, @command{date} recognizes any of the
15233 following optional flags after the @samp{%}:
15237 (hyphen) Do not pad the field; useful if the output is intended for
15240 (underscore) Pad with spaces; useful if you need a fixed
15241 number of characters in the output, but zeros are too distracting.
15243 (zero) Pad with zeros even if the conversion specifier
15244 would normally pad with spaces.
15246 Use upper case characters if possible.
15248 Use opposite case characters if possible.
15249 A field that is normally upper case becomes lower case, and vice versa.
15253 Here are some examples of padding:
15256 date +%d/%m -d "Feb 1"
15258 date +%-d/%-m -d "Feb 1"
15260 date +%_d/%_m -d "Feb 1"
15264 As a GNU extension, you can specify the field width
15265 (after any flag, if present) as a decimal number. If the natural size of the
15266 output of the field has less than the specified number of characters,
15267 the result is written right adjusted and padded to the given
15268 size. For example, @samp{%9B} prints the right adjusted month name in
15269 a field of width 9.
15271 An optional modifier can follow the optional flag and width
15272 specification. The modifiers are:
15276 Use the locale's alternate representation for date and time. This
15277 modifier applies to the @samp{%c}, @samp{%C}, @samp{%x}, @samp{%X},
15278 @samp{%y} and @samp{%Y} conversion specifiers. In a Japanese locale, for
15279 example, @samp{%Ex} might yield a date format based on the Japanese
15283 Use the locale's alternate numeric symbols for numbers. This modifier
15284 applies only to numeric conversion specifiers.
15287 If the format supports the modifier but no alternate representation
15288 is available, it is ignored.
15291 @node Setting the time
15292 @subsection Setting the time
15294 @cindex setting the time
15295 @cindex time setting
15296 @cindex appropriate privileges
15298 If given an argument that does not start with @samp{+}, @command{date} sets
15299 the system clock to the date and time specified by that argument (as
15300 described below). You must have appropriate privileges to set the
15301 system clock. Note for changes to persist across a reboot, the
15302 hardware clock may need to be updated from the system clock, which
15303 might not happen automatically on your system.
15305 The argument must consist entirely of digits, which have the following
15318 first two digits of year (optional)
15320 last two digits of year (optional)
15325 Note, the @option{--date} and @option{--set} options may not be used with an
15326 argument in the above format. The @option{--universal} option may be used
15327 with such an argument to indicate that the specified date and time are
15328 relative to Coordinated Universal Time rather than to the local time zone.
15331 @node Options for date
15332 @subsection Options for @command{date}
15334 @cindex @command{date} options
15335 @cindex options for @command{date}
15337 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
15341 @item -d @var{datestr}
15342 @itemx --date=@var{datestr}
15345 @cindex parsing date strings
15346 @cindex date strings, parsing
15347 @cindex arbitrary date strings, parsing
15350 @opindex next @var{day}
15351 @opindex last @var{day}
15352 Display the date and time specified in @var{datestr} instead of the
15353 current date and time. @var{datestr} can be in almost any common
15354 format. It can contain month names, time zones, @samp{am} and @samp{pm},
15355 @samp{yesterday}, etc. For example, @option{--date="2004-02-27
15356 14:19:13.489392193 +0530"} specifies the instant of time that is
15357 489,392,193 nanoseconds after February 27, 2004 at 2:19:13 PM in a
15358 time zone that is 5 hours and 30 minutes east of UTC.@*
15359 Note: input currently must be in locale independent format. E.g., the
15360 LC_TIME=C below is needed to print back the correct date in many locales:
15362 date -d "$(LC_TIME=C date)"
15364 @xref{Date input formats}.
15366 @item -f @var{datefile}
15367 @itemx --file=@var{datefile}
15370 Parse each line in @var{datefile} as with @option{-d} and display the
15371 resulting date and time. If @var{datefile} is @samp{-}, use standard
15372 input. This is useful when you have many dates to process, because the
15373 system overhead of starting up the @command{date} executable many times can
15376 @item -I[@var{timespec}]
15377 @itemx --iso-8601[=@var{timespec}]
15378 @opindex -I[@var{timespec}]
15379 @opindex --iso-8601[=@var{timespec}]
15380 Display the date using the ISO 8601 format, @samp{%Y-%m-%d}.
15382 The argument @var{timespec} specifies the number of additional
15383 terms of the time to include. It can be one of the following:
15386 Print just the date. This is the default if @var{timespec} is omitted.
15389 Append the hour of the day to the date.
15392 Append the hours and minutes.
15395 Append the hours, minutes and seconds.
15398 Append the hours, minutes, seconds and nanoseconds.
15401 If showing any time terms, then include the time zone using the format
15403 @macro dateParseNote
15404 This format is always suitable as input
15405 for the @option{--date} (@option{-d}) and @option{--file}
15406 (@option{-f}) options, regardless of the current locale.
15410 @item -r @var{file}
15411 @itemx --reference=@var{file}
15413 @opindex --reference
15414 Display the date and time of the last modification of @var{file},
15415 instead of the current date and time.
15422 @opindex --rfc-2822
15423 Display the date and time using the format @samp{%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S
15424 %z}, evaluated in the C locale so abbreviations are always in English.
15428 Fri, 09 Sep 2005 13:51:39 -0700
15431 This format conforms to
15432 @uref{ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2822.txt, Internet
15434 @uref{ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc822.txt, 822}, the
15435 current and previous standards for Internet email.
15437 @item --rfc-3339=@var{timespec}
15438 @opindex --rfc-3339=@var{timespec}
15439 Display the date using a format specified by
15440 @uref{ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc3339.txt, Internet
15441 RFC 3339}. This is a subset of the ISO 8601
15442 format, except that it also permits applications to use a space rather
15443 than a @samp{T} to separate dates from times.
15446 The argument @var{timespec} specifies how much of the time to include.
15447 It can be one of the following:
15451 Print just the full-date, e.g., @samp{2005-09-14}.
15452 This is equivalent to the format @samp{%Y-%m-%d}.
15455 Print the full-date and full-time separated by a space, e.g.,
15456 @samp{2005-09-14 00:56:06+05:30}. The output ends with a numeric
15457 time-offset; here the @samp{+05:30} means that local time is five
15458 hours and thirty minutes east of UTC@. This is equivalent to
15459 the format @samp{%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S%:z}.
15462 Like @samp{seconds}, but also print nanoseconds, e.g.,
15463 @samp{2005-09-14 00:56:06.998458565+05:30}.
15464 This is equivalent to the format @samp{%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%N%:z}.
15468 @item -s @var{datestr}
15469 @itemx --set=@var{datestr}
15472 Set the date and time to @var{datestr}. See @option{-d} above.
15473 See also @ref{Setting the time}.
15480 @opindex --universal
15481 @cindex Coordinated Universal Time
15483 @cindex Greenwich Mean Time
15485 @cindex leap seconds
15487 Use Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) by operating as if the
15488 @env{TZ} environment variable were set to the string @samp{UTC0}.
15490 Universal Time is often called ``Greenwich Mean Time'' (GMT) for
15491 historical reasons.
15492 Typically, systems ignore leap seconds and thus implement an
15493 approximation to UTC rather than true UTC.
15497 @node Examples of date
15498 @subsection Examples of @command{date}
15500 @cindex examples of @command{date}
15502 Here are a few examples. Also see the documentation for the @option{-d}
15503 option in the previous section.
15508 To print the date of the day before yesterday:
15511 date --date='2 days ago'
15515 To print the date of the day three months and one day hence:
15518 date --date='3 months 1 day'
15522 To print the day of year of Christmas in the current year:
15525 date --date='25 Dec' +%j
15529 To print the current full month name and the day of the month:
15535 But this may not be what you want because for the first nine days of
15536 the month, the @samp{%d} expands to a zero-padded two-digit field,
15537 for example @samp{date -d 1may '+%B %d'} will print @samp{May 01}.
15540 To print a date without the leading zero for one-digit days
15541 of the month, you can use the (GNU extension)
15542 @samp{-} flag to suppress
15543 the padding altogether:
15546 date -d 1may '+%B %-d
15550 To print the current date and time in the format required by many
15551 non-GNU versions of @command{date} when setting the system clock:
15554 date +%m%d%H%M%Y.%S
15558 To set the system clock forward by two minutes:
15561 date --set='+2 minutes'
15565 To print the date in RFC 2822 format,
15566 use @samp{date --rfc-2822}. Here is some example output:
15569 Fri, 09 Sep 2005 13:51:39 -0700
15572 @anchor{%s-examples}
15574 To convert a date string to the number of seconds since the epoch
15575 (which is 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC), use the @option{--date} option with
15576 the @samp{%s} format. That can be useful in sorting and/or graphing
15577 and/or comparing data by date. The following command outputs the
15578 number of the seconds since the epoch for the time two minutes after the
15582 date --date='1970-01-01 00:02:00 +0000' +%s
15586 If you do not specify time zone information in the date string,
15587 @command{date} uses your computer's idea of the time zone when
15588 interpreting the string. For example, if your computer's time zone is
15589 that of Cambridge, Massachusetts, which was then 5 hours (i.e., 18,000
15590 seconds) behind UTC:
15593 # local time zone used
15594 date --date='1970-01-01 00:02:00' +%s
15599 If you're sorting or graphing dated data, your raw date values may be
15600 represented as seconds since the epoch. But few people can look at
15601 the date @samp{946684800} and casually note ``Oh, that's the first second
15602 of the year 2000 in Greenwich, England.''
15605 date --date='2000-01-01 UTC' +%s
15609 An alternative is to use the @option{--utc} (@option{-u}) option.
15610 Then you may omit @samp{UTC} from the date string. Although this
15611 produces the same result for @samp{%s} and many other format sequences,
15612 with a time zone offset different from zero, it would give a different
15613 result for zone-dependent formats like @samp{%z}.
15616 date -u --date=2000-01-01 +%s
15620 To convert such an unwieldy number of seconds back to
15621 a more readable form, use a command like this:
15624 # local time zone used
15625 date -d '1970-01-01 UTC 946684800 seconds' +"%Y-%m-%d %T %z"
15626 1999-12-31 19:00:00 -0500
15629 Or if you do not mind depending on the @samp{@@} feature present since
15630 coreutils 5.3.0, you could shorten this to:
15633 date -d @@946684800 +"%F %T %z"
15634 1999-12-31 19:00:00 -0500
15637 Often it is better to output UTC-relative date and time:
15640 date -u -d '1970-01-01 946684800 seconds' +"%Y-%m-%d %T %z"
15641 2000-01-01 00:00:00 +0000
15645 @cindex leap seconds
15646 Typically the seconds count omits leap seconds, but some systems are
15647 exceptions. Because leap seconds are not predictable, the mapping
15648 between the seconds count and a future timestamp is not reliable on
15649 the atypical systems that include leap seconds in their counts.
15651 Here is how the two kinds of systems handle the leap second at
15652 2012-06-30 23:59:60 UTC:
15655 # Typical systems ignore leap seconds:
15656 date --date='2012-06-30 23:59:59 +0000' +%s
15658 date --date='2012-06-30 23:59:60 +0000' +%s
15659 date: invalid date '2012-06-30 23:59:60 +0000'
15660 date --date='2012-07-01 00:00:00 +0000' +%s
15665 # Atypical systems count leap seconds:
15666 date --date='2012-06-30 23:59:59 +0000' +%s
15668 date --date='2012-06-30 23:59:60 +0000' +%s
15670 date --date='2012-07-01 00:00:00 +0000' +%s
15677 @node arch invocation
15678 @section @command{arch}: Print machine hardware name
15681 @cindex print machine hardware name
15682 @cindex system information, printing
15684 @command{arch} prints the machine hardware name,
15685 and is equivalent to @samp{uname -m}.
15689 arch [@var{option}]
15692 The program accepts the @ref{Common options} only.
15694 @command{arch} is not installed by default, so portable scripts should
15695 not rely on its existence.
15700 @node nproc invocation
15701 @section @command{nproc}: Print the number of available processors
15704 @cindex Print the number of processors
15705 @cindex system information, printing
15707 Print the number of processing units available to the current process,
15708 which may be less than the number of online processors.
15709 If this information is not accessible, then print the number of
15710 processors installed. If the @env{OMP_NUM_THREADS} environment variable is
15711 set, then it will determine the returned value. The result is guaranteed to be
15712 greater than zero. Synopsis:
15715 nproc [@var{option}]
15718 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
15724 Print the number of installed processors on the system, which may
15725 be greater than the number online or available to the current process.
15726 The @env{OMP_NUM_THREADS} environment variable is not honored in this case.
15728 @item --ignore=@var{number}
15730 If possible, exclude this @var{number} of processing units.
15737 @node uname invocation
15738 @section @command{uname}: Print system information
15741 @cindex print system information
15742 @cindex system information, printing
15744 @command{uname} prints information about the machine and operating system
15745 it is run on. If no options are given, @command{uname} acts as if the
15746 @option{-s} option were given. Synopsis:
15749 uname [@var{option}]@dots{}
15752 If multiple options or @option{-a} are given, the selected information is
15753 printed in this order:
15756 @var{kernel-name} @var{nodename} @var{kernel-release} @var{kernel-version}
15757 @var{machine} @var{processor} @var{hardware-platform} @var{operating-system}
15760 The information may contain internal spaces, so such output cannot be
15761 parsed reliably. In the following example, @var{release} is
15762 @samp{2.2.18ss.e820-bda652a #4 SMP Tue Jun 5 11:24:08 PDT 2001}:
15766 @result{} Linux dumdum 2.2.18 #4 SMP Tue Jun 5 11:24:08 PDT 2001 i686@c
15767 unknown unknown GNU/Linux
15771 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
15779 Print all of the below information, except omit the processor type
15780 and the hardware platform name if they are unknown.
15783 @itemx --hardware-platform
15785 @opindex --hardware-platform
15786 @cindex implementation, hardware
15787 @cindex hardware platform
15788 @cindex platform, hardware
15789 Print the hardware platform name
15790 (sometimes called the hardware implementation).
15791 Print @samp{unknown} if this information is not available.
15792 Note this is non-portable (even across GNU/Linux distributions).
15798 @cindex machine type
15799 @cindex hardware class
15800 @cindex hardware type
15801 Print the machine hardware name (sometimes called the hardware class
15807 @opindex --nodename
15810 @cindex network node name
15811 Print the network node hostname.
15816 @opindex --processor
15817 @cindex host processor type
15818 Print the processor type (sometimes called the instruction set
15819 architecture or ISA).
15820 Print @samp{unknown} if this information is not available.
15821 Note this is non-portable (even across GNU/Linux distributions).
15824 @itemx --operating-system
15826 @opindex --operating-system
15827 @cindex operating system name
15828 Print the name of the operating system.
15831 @itemx --kernel-release
15833 @opindex --kernel-release
15834 @cindex kernel release
15835 @cindex release of kernel
15836 Print the kernel release.
15839 @itemx --kernel-name
15841 @opindex --kernel-name
15842 @cindex kernel name
15843 @cindex name of kernel
15844 Print the kernel name.
15845 POSIX 1003.1-2001 (@pxref{Standards conformance}) calls this
15846 ``the implementation of the operating system'', because the
15847 POSIX specification itself has no notion of ``kernel''.
15848 The kernel name might be the same as the operating system name printed
15849 by the @option{-o} or @option{--operating-system} option, but it might
15850 differ. Some operating systems (e.g., FreeBSD, HP-UX) have the same
15851 name as their underlying kernels; others (e.g., GNU/Linux, Solaris)
15855 @itemx --kernel-version
15857 @opindex --kernel-version
15858 @cindex kernel version
15859 @cindex version of kernel
15860 Print the kernel version.
15867 @node hostname invocation
15868 @section @command{hostname}: Print or set system name
15871 @cindex setting the hostname
15872 @cindex printing the hostname
15873 @cindex system name, printing
15874 @cindex appropriate privileges
15876 With no arguments, @command{hostname} prints the name of the current host
15877 system. With one argument, it sets the current host name to the
15878 specified string. You must have appropriate privileges to set the host
15882 hostname [@var{name}]
15885 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
15888 @command{hostname} is not installed by default, and other packages
15889 also supply a @command{hostname} command, so portable scripts should
15890 not rely on its existence or on the exact behavior documented above.
15895 @node hostid invocation
15896 @section @command{hostid}: Print numeric host identifier
15899 @cindex printing the host identifier
15901 @command{hostid} prints the numeric identifier of the current host
15902 in hexadecimal. This command accepts no arguments.
15903 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}.
15904 @xref{Common options}.
15906 For example, here's what it prints on one system I use:
15913 On that system, the 32-bit quantity happens to be closely
15914 related to the system's Internet address, but that isn't always
15917 @command{hostid} is installed only on systems that have the
15918 @code{gethostid} function, so portable scripts should not rely on its
15923 @node uptime invocation
15924 @section @command{uptime}: Print system uptime and load
15927 @cindex printing the system uptime and load
15929 @command{uptime} prints the current time, the system's uptime, the
15930 number of logged-in users and the current load average.
15932 If an argument is specified, it is used as the file to be read
15933 to discover how many users are logged in. If no argument is
15934 specified, a system default is used (@command{uptime --help} indicates
15935 the default setting).
15937 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}.
15938 @xref{Common options}.
15940 For example, here's what it prints right now on one system I use:
15944 14:07 up 3:35, 3 users, load average: 1.39, 1.15, 1.04
15947 The precise method of calculation of load average varies somewhat
15948 between systems. Some systems calculate it as the average number of
15949 runnable processes over the last 1, 5 and 15 minutes, but some systems
15950 also include processes in the uninterruptible sleep state (that is,
15951 those processes which are waiting for disk I/O). The Linux kernel
15952 includes uninterruptible processes.
15954 @command{uptime} is installed only on platforms with infrastructure
15955 for obtaining the boot time, and other packages also supply an
15956 @command{uptime} command, so portable scripts should not rely on its
15957 existence or on the exact behavior documented above.
15961 @node SELinux context
15962 @chapter SELinux context
15964 @cindex SELinux context
15965 @cindex SELinux, context
15966 @cindex commands for SELinux context
15968 This section describes commands for operations with SELinux
15972 * chcon invocation:: Change SELinux context of file
15973 * runcon invocation:: Run a command in specified SELinux context
15976 @node chcon invocation
15977 @section @command{chcon}: Change SELinux context of file
15980 @cindex changing security context
15981 @cindex change SELinux context
15983 @command{chcon} changes the SELinux security context of the selected files.
15987 chcon [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{context} @var{file}@dots{}
15988 chcon [@var{option}]@dots{} [-u @var{user}] [-r @var{role}] [-l @var{range}]@c
15989 [-t @var{type}] @var{file}@dots{}
15990 chcon [@var{option}]@dots{} --reference=@var{rfile} @var{file}@dots{}
15993 Change the SELinux security context of each @var{file} to @var{context}.
15994 With @option{--reference}, change the security context of each @var{file}
15995 to that of @var{rfile}.
15997 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
16001 @item --dereference
16002 @opindex --dereference
16003 Do not affect symbolic links but what they refer to; this is the default.
16006 @itemx --no-dereference
16008 @opindex --no-dereference
16009 @cindex no dereference
16010 Affect the symbolic links themselves instead of any referenced file.
16012 @item --reference=@var{rfile}
16013 @opindex --reference
16014 @cindex reference file
16015 Use @var{rfile}'s security context rather than specifying a @var{context} value.
16020 @opindex --recursive
16021 Operate on files and directories recursively.
16023 @item --preserve-root
16024 @opindex --preserve-root
16025 Refuse to operate recursively on the root directory, @file{/},
16026 when used together with the @option{--recursive} option.
16027 @xref{Treating / specially}.
16029 @item --no-preserve-root
16030 @opindex --no-preserve-root
16031 Do not treat the root directory, @file{/}, specially when operating
16032 recursively; this is the default.
16033 @xref{Treating / specially}.
16036 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
16039 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
16042 @xref{Traversing symlinks}.
16049 Output a diagnostic for every file processed.
16051 @item -u @var{user}
16052 @itemx --user=@var{user}
16055 Set user @var{user} in the target security context.
16057 @item -r @var{role}
16058 @itemx --role=@var{role}
16061 Set role @var{role} in the target security context.
16063 @item -t @var{type}
16064 @itemx --type=@var{type}
16067 Set type @var{type} in the target security context.
16069 @item -l @var{range}
16070 @itemx --range=@var{range}
16073 Set range @var{range} in the target security context.
16079 @node runcon invocation
16080 @section @command{runcon}: Run a command in specified SELinux context
16083 @cindex run with security context
16086 @command{runcon} runs file in specified SELinux security context.
16090 runcon @var{context} @var{command} [@var{args}]
16091 runcon [ -c ] [-u @var{user}] [-r @var{role}] [-t @var{type}]@c
16092 [-l @var{range}] @var{command} [@var{args}]
16095 Run @var{command} with completely-specified @var{context}, or with
16096 current or transitioned security context modified by one or more of @var{level},
16097 @var{role}, @var{type} and @var{user}.
16099 If none of @option{-c}, @option{-t}, @option{-u}, @option{-r}, or @option{-l}
16100 is specified, the first argument is used as the complete context.
16101 Any additional arguments after @var{command}
16102 are interpreted as arguments to the command.
16104 With neither @var{context} nor @var{command}, print the current
16107 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
16115 Compute process transition context before modifying.
16117 @item -u @var{user}
16118 @itemx --user=@var{user}
16121 Set user @var{user} in the target security context.
16123 @item -r @var{role}
16124 @itemx --role=@var{role}
16127 Set role @var{role} in the target security context.
16129 @item -t @var{type}
16130 @itemx --type=@var{type}
16133 Set type @var{type} in the target security context.
16135 @item -l @var{range}
16136 @itemx --range=@var{range}
16139 Set range @var{range} in the target security context.
16143 @cindex exit status of @command{runcon}
16147 126 if @var{command} is found but cannot be invoked
16148 127 if @command{runcon} itself fails or if @var{command} cannot be found
16149 the exit status of @var{command} otherwise
16152 @node Modified command invocation
16153 @chapter Modified command invocation
16155 @cindex modified command invocation
16156 @cindex invocation of commands, modified
16157 @cindex commands for invoking other commands
16159 This section describes commands that run other commands in some context
16160 different than the current one: a modified environment, as a different
16164 * chroot invocation:: Modify the root directory.
16165 * env invocation:: Modify environment variables.
16166 * nice invocation:: Modify niceness.
16167 * nohup invocation:: Immunize to hangups.
16168 * stdbuf invocation:: Modify buffering of standard streams.
16169 * timeout invocation:: Run with time limit.
16173 @node chroot invocation
16174 @section @command{chroot}: Run a command with a different root directory
16177 @cindex running a program in a specified root directory
16178 @cindex root directory, running a program in a specified
16180 @command{chroot} runs a command with a specified root directory.
16181 On many systems, only the super-user can do this.@footnote{However,
16182 some systems (e.g., FreeBSD) can be configured to allow certain regular
16183 users to use the @code{chroot} system call, and hence to run this program.
16184 Also, on Cygwin, anyone can run the @command{chroot} command, because the
16185 underlying function is non-privileged due to lack of support in MS-Windows.
16186 Furthermore, the @command{chroot} command avoids the @code{chroot} system call
16187 when @var{newroot} is identical to the old @file{/} directory for consistency
16188 with systems where this is allowed for non-privileged users.}.
16192 chroot @var{option} @var{newroot} [@var{command} [@var{args}]@dots{}]
16193 chroot @var{option}
16196 Ordinarily, file names are looked up starting at the root of the
16197 directory structure, i.e., @file{/}. @command{chroot} changes the root to
16198 the directory @var{newroot} (which must exist), then changes the working
16199 directory to @file{/}, and finally runs @var{command} with optional @var{args}.
16200 If @var{command} is not specified, the default is the value of the @env{SHELL}
16201 environment variable or @command{/bin/sh} if not set, invoked with the
16202 @option{-i} option.
16203 @var{command} must not be a special built-in utility
16204 (@pxref{Special built-in utilities}).
16206 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
16207 Options must precede operands.
16211 @item --groups=@var{groups}
16213 Use this option to override the supplementary @var{groups} to be
16214 used by the new process.
16215 The items in the list (names or numeric IDs) must be separated by commas.
16216 Use @samp{--groups=''} to disable the supplementary group look-up
16217 implicit in the @option{--userspec} option.
16219 @item --userspec=@var{user}[:@var{group}]
16220 @opindex --userspec
16221 By default, @var{command} is run with the same credentials
16222 as the invoking process.
16223 Use this option to run it as a different @var{user} and/or with a
16224 different primary @var{group}.
16225 If a @var{user} is specified then the supplementary groups
16226 are set according to the system defined list for that user,
16227 unless overridden with the @option{--groups} option.
16230 @opindex --skip-chdir
16231 Use this option to not change the working directory to @file{/} after changing
16232 the root directory to @var{newroot}, i.e., inside the chroot.
16233 This option is only permitted when @var{newroot} is the old @file{/} directory,
16234 and therefore is mostly useful together with the @option{--groups} and
16235 @option{--userspec} options to retain the previous working directory.
16239 The user and group name look-up performed by the @option{--userspec}
16240 and @option{--groups} options, is done both outside and inside
16241 the chroot, with successful look-ups inside the chroot taking precedence.
16242 If the specified user or group items are intended to represent a numeric ID,
16243 then a name to ID resolving step is avoided by specifying a leading @samp{+}.
16244 @xref{Disambiguating names and IDs}.
16246 Here are a few tips to help avoid common problems in using chroot.
16247 To start with a simple example, make @var{command} refer to a statically
16248 linked binary. If you were to use a dynamically linked executable, then
16249 you'd have to arrange to have the shared libraries in the right place under
16250 your new root directory.
16252 For example, if you create a statically linked @command{ls} executable,
16253 and put it in @file{/tmp/empty}, you can run this command as root:
16256 $ chroot /tmp/empty /ls -Rl /
16259 Then you'll see output like this:
16264 -rwxr-xr-x 1 0 0 1041745 Aug 16 11:17 ls
16267 If you want to use a dynamically linked executable, say @command{bash},
16268 then first run @samp{ldd bash} to see what shared objects it needs.
16269 Then, in addition to copying the actual binary, also copy the listed
16270 files to the required positions under your intended new root directory.
16271 Finally, if the executable requires any other files (e.g., data, state,
16272 device files), copy them into place, too.
16274 @command{chroot} is installed only on systems that have the
16275 @code{chroot} function, so portable scripts should not rely on its
16278 @cindex exit status of @command{chroot}
16282 125 if @command{chroot} itself fails
16283 126 if @var{command} is found but cannot be invoked
16284 127 if @var{command} cannot be found
16285 the exit status of @var{command} otherwise
16289 @node env invocation
16290 @section @command{env}: Run a command in a modified environment
16293 @cindex environment, running a program in a modified
16294 @cindex modified environment, running a program in a
16295 @cindex running a program in a modified environment
16297 @command{env} runs a command with a modified environment. Synopses:
16300 env [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{name}=@var{value}]@dots{} @c
16301 [@var{command} [@var{args}]@dots{}]
16305 Operands of the form @samp{@var{variable}=@var{value}} set
16306 the environment variable @var{variable} to value @var{value}.
16307 @var{value} may be empty (@samp{@var{variable}=}). Setting a variable
16308 to an empty value is different from unsetting it.
16309 These operands are evaluated left-to-right, so if two operands
16310 mention the same variable the earlier is ignored.
16312 Environment variable names can be empty, and can contain any
16313 characters other than @samp{=} and ASCII NUL.
16314 However, it is wise to limit yourself to names that
16315 consist solely of underscores, digits, and ASCII letters,
16316 and that begin with a non-digit, as applications like the shell do not
16317 work well with other names.
16320 The first operand that does not contain the character @samp{=}
16321 specifies the program to invoke; it is
16322 searched for according to the @env{PATH} environment variable. Any
16323 remaining arguments are passed as arguments to that program.
16324 The program should not be a special built-in utility
16325 (@pxref{Special built-in utilities}).
16327 Modifications to @env{PATH} take effect prior to searching for
16328 @var{command}. Use caution when reducing @env{PATH}; behavior is
16329 not portable when @env{PATH} is undefined or omits key directories
16330 such as @file{/bin}.
16332 In the rare case that a utility contains a @samp{=} in the name, the
16333 only way to disambiguate it from a variable assignment is to use an
16334 intermediate command for @var{command}, and pass the problematic
16335 program name via @var{args}. For example, if @file{./prog=} is an
16336 executable in the current @env{PATH}:
16339 env prog= true # runs 'true', with prog= in environment
16340 env ./prog= true # runs 'true', with ./prog= in environment
16341 env -- prog= true # runs 'true', with prog= in environment
16342 env sh -c '\prog= true' # runs 'prog=' with argument 'true'
16343 env sh -c 'exec "$@@"' sh prog= true # also runs 'prog='
16346 @cindex environment, printing
16348 If no command name is specified following the environment
16349 specifications, the resulting environment is printed. This is like
16350 specifying the @command{printenv} program.
16352 For some examples, suppose the environment passed to @command{env}
16353 contains @samp{LOGNAME=rms}, @samp{EDITOR=emacs}, and
16354 @samp{PATH=.:/gnubin:/hacks}:
16359 Output the current environment.
16361 $ env | LC_ALL=C sort
16364 PATH=.:/gnubin:/hacks
16368 Run @command{foo} with a reduced environment, preserving only the
16369 original @env{PATH} to avoid problems in locating @command{foo}.
16371 env - PATH="$PATH" foo
16375 Run @command{foo} with the environment containing @samp{LOGNAME=rms},
16376 @samp{EDITOR=emacs}, and @samp{PATH=.:/gnubin:/hacks}, and guarantees
16377 that @command{foo} was found in the file system rather than as a shell
16384 Run @command{nemacs} with the environment containing @samp{LOGNAME=foo},
16385 @samp{EDITOR=emacs}, @samp{PATH=.:/gnubin:/hacks}, and
16386 @samp{DISPLAY=gnu:0}.
16388 env DISPLAY=gnu:0 LOGNAME=foo nemacs
16392 Attempt to run the program @command{/energy/--} (as that is the only
16393 possible path search result); if the command exists, the environment
16394 will contain @samp{LOGNAME=rms} and @samp{PATH=/energy}, and the
16395 arguments will be @samp{e=mc2}, @samp{bar}, and @samp{baz}.
16397 env -u EDITOR PATH=/energy -- e=mc2 bar baz
16403 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
16404 Options must precede operands.
16410 @item -u @var{name}
16411 @itemx --unset=@var{name}
16414 Remove variable @var{name} from the environment, if it was in the
16419 @itemx --ignore-environment
16422 @opindex --ignore-environment
16423 Start with an empty environment, ignoring the inherited environment.
16427 @cindex exit status of @command{env}
16431 0 if no @var{command} is specified and the environment is output
16432 125 if @command{env} itself fails
16433 126 if @var{command} is found but cannot be invoked
16434 127 if @var{command} cannot be found
16435 the exit status of @var{command} otherwise
16439 @node nice invocation
16440 @section @command{nice}: Run a command with modified niceness
16444 @cindex scheduling, affecting
16445 @cindex appropriate privileges
16447 @command{nice} prints a process's @dfn{niceness}, or runs
16448 a command with modified niceness. @dfn{niceness} affects how
16449 favorably the process is scheduled in the system.
16453 nice [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{command} [@var{arg}]@dots{}]
16456 If no arguments are given, @command{nice} prints the current niceness.
16457 Otherwise, @command{nice} runs the given @var{command} with its
16458 niceness adjusted. By default, its niceness is incremented by 10.
16460 Niceness values range at least from @minus{}20 (process has high priority
16461 and gets more resources, thus slowing down other processes) through 19
16462 (process has lower priority and runs slowly itself, but has less impact
16463 on the speed of other running processes). Some systems
16464 may have a wider range of niceness values; conversely, other systems may
16465 enforce more restrictive limits. An attempt to set the niceness
16466 outside the supported range is treated as an attempt to use the
16467 minimum or maximum supported value.
16469 A niceness should not be confused with a scheduling priority, which
16470 lets applications determine the order in which threads are scheduled
16471 to run. Unlike a priority, a niceness is merely advice to the
16472 scheduler, which the scheduler is free to ignore. Also, as a point of
16473 terminology, POSIX defines the behavior of @command{nice} in
16474 terms of a @dfn{nice value}, which is the non-negative difference
16475 between a niceness and the minimum niceness. Though @command{nice}
16476 conforms to POSIX, its documentation and diagnostics use the
16477 term ``niceness'' for compatibility with historical practice.
16479 @var{command} must not be a special built-in utility (@pxref{Special
16480 built-in utilities}).
16482 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{nice}
16484 Note to change the @dfn{niceness} of an existing process,
16485 one needs to use the @command{renice} command.
16487 The program accepts the following option. Also see @ref{Common options}.
16488 Options must precede operands.
16491 @item -n @var{adjustment}
16492 @itemx --adjustment=@var{adjustment}
16494 @opindex --adjustment
16495 Add @var{adjustment} instead of 10 to the command's niceness. If
16496 @var{adjustment} is negative and you lack appropriate privileges,
16497 @command{nice} issues a warning but otherwise acts as if you specified
16500 For compatibility @command{nice} also supports an obsolete
16501 option syntax @option{-@var{adjustment}}. New scripts should use
16502 @option{-n @var{adjustment}} instead.
16506 @command{nice} is installed only on systems that have the POSIX
16507 @code{setpriority} function, so portable scripts should not rely on
16508 its existence on non-POSIX platforms.
16510 @cindex exit status of @command{nice}
16514 0 if no @var{command} is specified and the niceness is output
16515 125 if @command{nice} itself fails
16516 126 if @var{command} is found but cannot be invoked
16517 127 if @var{command} cannot be found
16518 the exit status of @var{command} otherwise
16521 It is sometimes useful to run a non-interactive program with reduced niceness.
16524 $ nice factor 4611686018427387903
16527 Since @command{nice} prints the current niceness,
16528 you can invoke it through itself to demonstrate how it works.
16530 The default behavior is to increase the niceness by @samp{10}:
16541 The @var{adjustment} is relative to the current niceness. In the
16542 next example, the first @command{nice} invocation runs the second one
16543 with niceness 10, and it in turn runs the final one with a niceness
16547 $ nice nice -n 3 nice
16551 Specifying a niceness larger than the supported range
16552 is the same as specifying the maximum supported value:
16555 $ nice -n 10000000000 nice
16559 Only a privileged user may run a process with lower niceness:
16563 nice: cannot set niceness: Permission denied
16565 $ sudo nice -n -1 nice
16570 @node nohup invocation
16571 @section @command{nohup}: Run a command immune to hangups
16574 @cindex hangups, immunity to
16575 @cindex immunity to hangups
16576 @cindex logging out and continuing to run
16579 @command{nohup} runs the given @var{command} with hangup signals ignored,
16580 so that the command can continue running in the background after you log
16584 nohup @var{command} [@var{arg}]@dots{}
16587 If standard input is a terminal, redirect it so that terminal sessions
16588 do not mistakenly consider the terminal to be used by the command.
16589 Make the substitute file descriptor unreadable, so that commands that
16590 mistakenly attempt to read from standard input can report an error.
16591 This redirection is a GNU extension; programs intended to be portable
16592 to non-GNU hosts can use @samp{nohup @var{command} [@var{arg}]@dots{}
16593 0>/dev/null} instead.
16596 If standard output is a terminal, the command's standard output is appended
16597 to the file @file{nohup.out}; if that cannot be written to, it is appended
16598 to the file @file{$HOME/nohup.out}; and if that cannot be written to, the
16599 command is not run.
16600 Any @file{nohup.out} or @file{$HOME/nohup.out} file created by
16601 @command{nohup} is made readable and writable only to the user,
16602 regardless of the current umask settings.
16604 If standard error is a terminal, it is normally redirected to the same file
16605 descriptor as the (possibly-redirected) standard output.
16606 However, if standard output is closed, standard error terminal output
16607 is instead appended to the file @file{nohup.out} or
16608 @file{$HOME/nohup.out} as above.
16610 To capture the command's output to a file other than @file{nohup.out}
16611 you can redirect it. For example, to capture the output of
16615 nohup make > make.log
16618 @command{nohup} does not automatically put the command it runs in the
16619 background; you must do that explicitly, by ending the command line
16620 with an @samp{&}. Also, @command{nohup} does not alter the
16621 niceness of @var{command}; use @command{nice} for that,
16622 e.g., @samp{nohup nice @var{command}}.
16624 @var{command} must not be a special built-in utility (@pxref{Special
16625 built-in utilities}).
16627 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
16628 options}. Options must precede operands.
16630 @cindex exit status of @command{nohup}
16634 125 if @command{nohup} itself fails, and @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is not set
16635 126 if @var{command} is found but cannot be invoked
16636 127 if @var{command} cannot be found
16637 the exit status of @var{command} otherwise
16640 If @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is set, internal failures give status 127
16644 @node stdbuf invocation
16645 @section @command{stdbuf}: Run a command with modified I/O stream buffering
16648 @cindex standard streams, buffering
16649 @cindex line buffered
16651 @command{stdbuf} allows one to modify the buffering operations of the
16652 three standard I/O streams associated with a program. Synopsis:
16655 stdbuf @var{option}@dots{} @var{command}
16658 @var{command} must start with the name of a program that
16661 uses the ISO C @code{FILE} streams for input/output (note the
16662 programs @command{dd} and @command{cat} don't do that),
16665 does not adjust the buffering of its standard streams (note the
16666 program @command{tee} is not in this category).
16669 Any additional @var{arg}s are passed as additional arguments to the
16672 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
16676 @item -i @var{mode}
16677 @itemx --input=@var{mode}
16680 Adjust the standard input stream buffering.
16682 @item -o @var{mode}
16683 @itemx --output=@var{mode}
16686 Adjust the standard output stream buffering.
16688 @item -e @var{mode}
16689 @itemx --error=@var{mode}
16692 Adjust the standard error stream buffering.
16696 The @var{mode} can be specified as follows:
16701 Set the stream to line buffered mode.
16702 In this mode data is coalesced until a newline is output or
16703 input is read from any stream attached to a terminal device.
16704 This option is invalid with standard input.
16707 Disable buffering of the selected stream.
16708 In this mode, data is output immediately and only the
16709 amount of data requested is read from input.
16710 Note the difference in function for input and output.
16711 Disabling buffering for input will not influence the responsiveness
16712 or blocking behavior of the stream input functions.
16713 For example @code{fread} will still block until @code{EOF} or error,
16714 even if the underlying @code{read} returns less data than requested.
16717 Specify the size of the buffer to use in fully buffered mode.
16718 @multiplierSuffixesNoBlocks{size}
16722 @command{stdbuf} is installed only on platforms that use the
16723 Executable and Linkable Format (ELF) and support the
16724 @code{constructor} attribute, so portable scripts should not rely on
16727 @cindex exit status of @command{stdbuf}
16731 125 if @command{stdbuf} itself fails
16732 126 if @var{command} is found but cannot be invoked
16733 127 if @var{command} cannot be found
16734 the exit status of @var{command} otherwise
16738 @node timeout invocation
16739 @section @command{timeout}: Run a command with a time limit
16743 @cindex run commands with bounded time
16745 @command{timeout} runs the given @var{command} and kills it if it is
16746 still running after the specified time interval. Synopsis:
16749 timeout [@var{option}] @var{duration} @var{command} [@var{arg}]@dots{}
16752 @var{command} must not be a special built-in utility (@pxref{Special
16753 built-in utilities}).
16755 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
16756 Options must precede operands.
16759 @item --preserve-status
16760 @opindex --preserve-status
16761 Return the exit status of the managed @var{command} on timeout, rather than
16762 a specific exit status indicating a timeout. This is useful if the
16763 managed @var{command} supports running for an indeterminate amount of time.
16766 @opindex --foreground
16767 Don't create a separate background program group, so that
16768 the managed @var{command} can use the foreground TTY normally.
16769 This is needed to support timing out commands not started
16770 directly from an interactive shell, in two situations.
16773 @var{command} is interactive and needs to read from the terminal for example
16775 the user wants to support sending signals directly to @var{command}
16776 from the terminal (like Ctrl-C for example)
16779 Note in this mode of operation, any children of @var{command}
16780 will not be timed out. Also SIGCONT will not be sent to @var{command},
16781 as it's generally not needed with foreground processes, and can
16782 cause intermittent signal delivery issues with programs that are monitors
16783 themselves (like GDB for example).
16785 @item -k @var{duration}
16786 @itemx --kill-after=@var{duration}
16788 @opindex --kill-after
16789 Ensure the monitored @var{command} is killed by also sending a @samp{KILL}
16790 signal, after the specified @var{duration}. Without this option, if the
16791 selected signal proves not to be fatal, @command{timeout} does not kill
16794 @item -s @var{signal}
16795 @itemx --signal=@var{signal}
16798 Send this @var{signal} to @var{command} on timeout, rather than the
16799 default @samp{TERM} signal. @var{signal} may be a name like @samp{HUP}
16800 or a number. @xref{Signal specifications}.
16804 @var{duration} is a floating point number followed by an optional unit:
16806 @samp{s} for seconds (the default)
16807 @samp{m} for minutes
16811 A duration of 0 disables the associated timeout.
16812 Note that the actual timeout duration is dependent on system conditions,
16813 which should be especially considered when specifying sub-second timeouts.
16815 @cindex exit status of @command{timeout}
16819 124 if @var{command} times out
16820 125 if @command{timeout} itself fails
16821 126 if @var{command} is found but cannot be invoked
16822 127 if @var{command} cannot be found
16823 137 if @var{command} is sent the KILL(9) signal (128+9)
16824 the exit status of @var{command} otherwise
16828 @node Process control
16829 @chapter Process control
16831 @cindex processes, commands for controlling
16832 @cindex commands for controlling processes
16835 * kill invocation:: Sending a signal to processes.
16839 @node kill invocation
16840 @section @command{kill}: Send a signal to processes
16843 @cindex send a signal to processes
16845 The @command{kill} command sends a signal to processes, causing them
16846 to terminate or otherwise act upon receiving the signal in some way.
16847 Alternatively, it lists information about signals. Synopses:
16850 kill [-s @var{signal} | --signal @var{signal} | -@var{signal}] @var{pid}@dots{}
16851 kill [-l | --list | -t | --table] [@var{signal}]@dots{}
16854 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{kill}
16856 The first form of the @command{kill} command sends a signal to all
16857 @var{pid} arguments. The default signal to send if none is specified
16858 is @samp{TERM}@. The special signal number @samp{0} does not denote a
16859 valid signal, but can be used to test whether the @var{pid} arguments
16860 specify processes to which a signal could be sent.
16862 If @var{pid} is positive, the signal is sent to the process with the
16863 process ID @var{pid}. If @var{pid} is zero, the signal is sent to all
16864 processes in the process group of the current process. If @var{pid}
16865 is @minus{}1, the signal is sent to all processes for which the user has
16866 permission to send a signal. If @var{pid} is less than @minus{}1, the signal
16867 is sent to all processes in the process group that equals the absolute
16868 value of @var{pid}.
16870 If @var{pid} is not positive, a system-dependent set of system
16871 processes is excluded from the list of processes to which the signal
16874 If a negative @var{pid} argument is desired as the first one, it
16875 should be preceded by @option{--}. However, as a common extension to
16876 POSIX, @option{--} is not required with @samp{kill
16877 -@var{signal} -@var{pid}}. The following commands are equivalent:
16886 The first form of the @command{kill} command succeeds if every @var{pid}
16887 argument specifies at least one process that the signal was sent to.
16889 The second form of the @command{kill} command lists signal information.
16890 Either the @option{-l} or @option{--list} option, or the @option{-t}
16891 or @option{--table} option must be specified. Without any
16892 @var{signal} argument, all supported signals are listed. The output
16893 of @option{-l} or @option{--list} is a list of the signal names, one
16894 per line; if @var{signal} is already a name, the signal number is
16895 printed instead. The output of @option{-t} or @option{--table} is a
16896 table of signal numbers, names, and descriptions. This form of the
16897 @command{kill} command succeeds if all @var{signal} arguments are valid
16898 and if there is no output error.
16900 The @command{kill} command also supports the @option{--help} and
16901 @option{--version} options. @xref{Common options}.
16903 A @var{signal} may be a signal name like @samp{HUP}, or a signal
16904 number like @samp{1}, or an exit status of a process terminated by the
16905 signal. A signal name can be given in canonical form or prefixed by
16906 @samp{SIG}@. The case of the letters is ignored, except for the
16907 @option{-@var{signal}} option which must use upper case to avoid
16908 ambiguity with lower case option letters.
16909 @xref{Signal specifications}, for a list of supported
16910 signal names and numbers.
16915 @cindex delaying commands
16916 @cindex commands for delaying
16918 @c Perhaps @command{wait} or other commands should be described here also?
16921 * sleep invocation:: Delay for a specified time.
16925 @node sleep invocation
16926 @section @command{sleep}: Delay for a specified time
16929 @cindex delay for a specified time
16931 @command{sleep} pauses for an amount of time specified by the sum of
16932 the values of the command line arguments.
16936 sleep @var{number}[smhd]@dots{}
16940 Each argument is a number followed by an optional unit; the default
16941 is seconds. The units are:
16954 Historical implementations of @command{sleep} have required that
16955 @var{number} be an integer, and only accepted a single argument
16956 without a suffix. However, GNU @command{sleep} accepts
16957 arbitrary floating point numbers. @xref{Floating point}.
16959 The only options are @option{--help} and @option{--version}. @xref{Common
16962 @c sleep is a shell built-in at least with Solaris 11's /bin/sh
16963 @mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn{sleep}
16968 @node Numeric operations
16969 @chapter Numeric operations
16971 @cindex numeric operations
16972 These programs do numerically-related operations.
16975 * factor invocation:: Show factors of numbers.
16976 * numfmt invocation:: Reformat numbers.
16977 * seq invocation:: Print sequences of numbers.
16981 @node factor invocation
16982 @section @command{factor}: Print prime factors
16985 @cindex prime factors
16987 @command{factor} prints prime factors. Synopses:
16990 factor [@var{number}]@dots{}
16991 factor @var{option}
16994 If no @var{number} is specified on the command line, @command{factor} reads
16995 numbers from standard input, delimited by newlines, tabs, or spaces.
16997 The @command{factor} command supports only a small number of options:
17001 Print a short help on standard output, then exit without further
17005 Print the program version on standard output, then exit without further
17009 Factoring the product of the eighth and ninth Mersenne primes
17010 takes about 30 milliseconds of CPU time on a 2.2 GHz Athlon.
17013 M8=$(echo 2^31-1|bc)
17014 M9=$(echo 2^61-1|bc)
17015 n=$(echo "$M8 * $M9" | bc)
17016 /usr/bin/time -f %U factor $n
17017 4951760154835678088235319297: 2147483647 2305843009213693951
17021 Similarly, factoring the eighth Fermat number @math{2^{256}+1} takes
17022 about 20 seconds on the same machine.
17024 Factoring large numbers is, in general, hard. The Pollard-Brent rho
17025 algorithm used by @command{factor} is particularly effective for
17026 numbers with relatively small factors. If you wish to factor large
17027 numbers which do not have small factors (for example, numbers which
17028 are the product of two large primes), other methods are far better.
17030 If @command{factor} is built without using GNU MP, only
17031 single-precision arithmetic is available, and so large numbers
17032 (typically @math{2^{128}} and above) will not be supported.
17033 The single-precision code uses an algorithm which is designed
17034 for factoring smaller numbers.
17039 @node numfmt invocation
17040 @section @command{numfmt}: Reformat numbers
17044 @command{numfmt} reads numbers in various representations and reformats them
17045 as requested. The most common usage is converting numbers to/from @emph{human}
17046 representation (e.g. @samp{4G} @expansion{} @samp{4,000,000,000}).
17049 numfmt [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{number}]
17052 @command{numfmt} converts each @var{number} on the command-line according to the
17053 specified options (see below). If no @var{number}s are given, it reads numbers
17054 from standard input. @command{numfmt} can optionally extract numbers from
17055 specific columns, maintaining proper line padding and alignment.
17059 See @option{--invalid} for additional information regarding exit status.
17061 @subsection General options
17063 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
17069 Print (to standard error) warning messages about possible erroneous usage.
17072 @itemx --delimiter=@var{d}
17074 @opindex --delimiter
17075 Use the character @var{d} as input field separator (default: whitespace).
17076 @emph{Note}: Using non-default delimiter turns off automatic padding.
17078 @item --field=@var{fields}
17080 Convert the number in input field @var{fields} (default: 1).
17081 @var{fields} supports @command{cut} style field ranges:
17084 N N'th field, counted from 1
17085 N- from N'th field, to end of line
17086 N-M from N'th to M'th field (inclusive)
17087 -M from first to M'th field (inclusive)
17092 @item --format=@var{format}
17094 Use printf-style floating FORMAT string. The @var{format} string must contain
17095 one @samp{%f} directive, optionally with @samp{'}, @samp{-}, @samp{0}, width
17096 or precision modifiers. The @samp{'} modifier will enable @option{--grouping},
17097 the @samp{-} modifier will enable left-aligned @option{--padding} and the width
17098 modifier will enable right-aligned @option{--padding}. The @samp{0} width
17099 modifier (without the @samp{-} modifier) will generate leading zeros on the
17100 number, up to the specified width. A precision specification like @samp{%.1f}
17101 will override the precision determined from the input data or set due to
17102 @option{--to} option auto scaling.
17104 @item --from=@var{unit}
17106 Auto-scales input numbers according to @var{unit}. See UNITS below.
17107 The default is no scaling, meaning suffixes (e.g. @samp{M}, @samp{G}) will
17110 @item --from-unit=@var{n}
17111 @opindex --from-unit
17112 Specify the input unit size (instead of the default 1). Use this option when
17113 the input numbers represent other units (e.g. if the input number @samp{10}
17114 represents 10 units of 512 bytes, use @samp{--from-unit=512}).
17115 Suffixes are handled as with @samp{--from=auto}.
17118 @opindex --grouping
17119 Group digits in output numbers according to the current locale's grouping rules
17120 (e.g @emph{Thousands Separator} character, commonly @samp{.} (dot) or @samp{,}
17121 comma). This option has no effect in @samp{POSIX/C} locale.
17123 @item --header[=@var{n}]
17125 @opindex --header=N
17126 Print the first @var{n} (default: 1) lines without any conversion.
17128 @item --invalid=@var{mode}
17130 The default action on input errors is to exit immediately with status code 2.
17131 @option{--invalid=@samp{abort}} explicitly specifies this default mode.
17132 With a @var{mode} of @samp{fail}, print a warning for @emph{each} conversion
17133 error, and exit with status 2. With a @var{mode} of @samp{warn}, exit with
17134 status 0, even in the presence of conversion errors, and with a @var{mode} of
17135 @samp{ignore} do not even print diagnostics.
17137 @item --padding=@var{n}
17139 Pad the output numbers to @var{n} characters, by adding spaces. If @var{n} is
17140 a positive number, numbers will be right-aligned. If @var{n} is a negative
17141 number, numbers will be left-aligned. By default, numbers are automatically
17142 aligned based on the input line's width (only with the default delimiter).
17144 @item --round=@var{method}
17146 @opindex --round=up
17147 @opindex --round=down
17148 @opindex --round=from-zero
17149 @opindex --round=towards-zero
17150 @opindex --round=nearest
17151 When converting number representations, round the number according to
17152 @var{method}, which can be @samp{up}, @samp{down},
17153 @samp{from-zero} (the default), @samp{towards-zero}, @samp{nearest}.
17155 @item --suffix=@var{suffix}
17157 Add @samp{SUFFIX} to the output numbers, and accept optional @samp{SUFFIX} in
17160 @item --to=@var{unit}
17162 Auto-scales output numbers according to @var{unit}. See @emph{Units} below.
17163 The default is no scaling, meaning all the digits of the number are printed.
17165 @item --to-unit=@var{n}
17167 Specify the output unit size (instead of the default 1). Use this option when
17168 the output numbers represent other units (e.g. to represent @samp{4,000,000}
17169 bytes in blocks of 1KB, use @samp{--to=si --to-unit=1000}).
17170 Suffixes are handled as with @samp{--from=auto}.
17174 @subsection Possible @var{unit}s:
17176 The following are the possible @var{unit} options with @option{--from=UNITS} and
17177 @option{--to=UNITS}:
17182 No scaling is performed. For input numbers, no suffixes are accepted, and any
17183 trailing characters following the number will trigger an error. For output
17184 numbers, all digits of the numbers will be printed.
17187 Auto-scale numbers according to the @emph{International System of Units (SI)}
17189 For input numbers, accept one of the following suffixes.
17190 For output numbers, values larger than 1000 will be rounded, and printed with
17191 one of the following suffixes:
17194 @samp{K} => @math{1000^1 = 10^3} (Kilo)
17195 @samp{M} => @math{1000^2 = 10^6} (Mega)
17196 @samp{G} => @math{1000^3 = 10^9} (Giga)
17197 @samp{T} => @math{1000^4 = 10^{12}} (Tera)
17198 @samp{P} => @math{1000^5 = 10^{15}} (Peta)
17199 @samp{E} => @math{1000^6 = 10^{18}} (Exa)
17200 @samp{Z} => @math{1000^7 = 10^{21}} (Zetta)
17201 @samp{Y} => @math{1000^8 = 10^{24}} (Yotta)
17205 Auto-scale numbers according to the @emph{International Electrotechnical
17206 Commission (IEC)} standard.
17207 For input numbers, accept one of the following suffixes.
17208 For output numbers, values larger than 1024 will be rounded, and printed with
17209 one of the following suffixes:
17212 @samp{K} => @math{1024^1 = 2^{10}} (Kibi)
17213 @samp{M} => @math{1024^2 = 2^{20}} (Mebi)
17214 @samp{G} => @math{1024^3 = 2^{30}} (Gibi)
17215 @samp{T} => @math{1024^4 = 2^{40}} (Tebi)
17216 @samp{P} => @math{1024^5 = 2^{50}} (Pebi)
17217 @samp{E} => @math{1024^6 = 2^{60}} (Exbi)
17218 @samp{Z} => @math{1024^7 = 2^{70}} (Zebi)
17219 @samp{Y} => @math{1024^8 = 2^{80}} (Yobi)
17222 The @option{iec} option uses a single letter suffix (e.g. @samp{G}), which is
17223 not fully standard, as the @emph{iec} standard recommends a two-letter symbol
17224 (e.g @samp{Gi}) - but in practice, this method common. Compare with
17225 the @option{iec-i} option.
17228 Auto-scale numbers according to the @emph{International Electrotechnical
17229 Commission (IEC)} standard.
17230 For input numbers, accept one of the following suffixes.
17231 For output numbers, values larger than 1024 will be rounded, and printed with
17232 one of the following suffixes:
17235 @samp{Ki} => @math{1024^1 = 2^{10}} (Kibi)
17236 @samp{Mi} => @math{1024^2 = 2^{20}} (Mebi)
17237 @samp{Gi} => @math{1024^3 = 2^{30}} (Gibi)
17238 @samp{Ti} => @math{1024^4 = 2^{40}} (Tebi)
17239 @samp{Pi} => @math{1024^5 = 2^{50}} (Pebi)
17240 @samp{Ei} => @math{1024^6 = 2^{60}} (Exbi)
17241 @samp{Zi} => @math{1024^7 = 2^{70}} (Zebi)
17242 @samp{Yi} => @math{1024^8 = 2^{80}} (Yobi)
17245 The @option{iec-i} option uses a two-letter suffix symbol (e.g. @samp{Gi}),
17246 as the @emph{iec} standard recommends, but this is not always common in
17247 practice. Compare with the @option{iec} option.
17250 @samp{auto} can only be used with @option{--from}. With this method, numbers
17251 with @samp{K},@samp{M},@samp{G},@samp{T},@samp{P},@samp{E},@samp{Z},@samp{Y}
17252 suffixes are interpreted as @emph{SI} values, and numbers with @samp{Ki},
17253 @samp{Mi},@samp{Gi},@samp{Ti},@samp{Pi},@samp{Ei},@samp{Zi},@samp{Yi} suffixes
17254 are interpreted as @emph{IEC} values.
17258 @subsection Examples of using @command{numfmt}
17260 Converting a single number from/to @emph{human} representation:
17262 $ numfmt --to=si 500000
17265 $ numfmt --to=iec 500000
17268 $ numfmt --to=iec-i 500000
17271 $ numfmt --from=si 1M
17274 $ numfmt --from=iec 1M
17277 # with '--from=auto', M=Mega, Mi=Mebi
17278 $ numfmt --from=auto 1M
17280 $ numfmt --from=auto 1Mi
17284 Converting from @samp{SI} to @samp{IEC} scales (e.g. when a harddisk capacity is
17285 advertised as @samp{1TB}, while checking the drive's capacity gives lower
17289 $ numfmt --from=si --to=iec 1T
17294 Converting a single field from an input file / piped input (these contrived
17295 examples are for demonstration purposes only, as both @command{ls} and
17296 @command{df} support the @option{--human-readable} option to
17297 output sizes in human-readable format):
17300 # Third field (file size) will be shown in SI representation
17301 $ ls -log | numfmt --field 3 --header --to=si | head -n4
17302 -rw-r--r-- 1 94K Aug 23 2011 ABOUT-NLS
17303 -rw-r--r-- 1 3.7K Jan 7 16:15 AUTHORS
17304 -rw-r--r-- 1 36K Jun 1 2011 COPYING
17305 -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Jan 7 15:15 ChangeLog
17307 # Second field (size) will be shown in IEC representation
17308 $ df --block-size=1 | numfmt --field 2 --header --to=iec | head -n4
17309 File system 1B-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
17310 rootfs 132G 104741408 26554036 80% /
17311 tmpfs 794M 7580 804960 1% /run/shm
17312 /dev/sdb1 694G 651424756 46074696 94% /home
17316 Output can be tweaked using @option{--padding} or @option{--format}:
17319 # Pad to 10 characters, right-aligned
17320 $ du -s * | numfmt --to=si --padding=10
17326 # Pad to 10 characters, left-aligned
17327 $ du -s * | numfmt --to=si --padding=-10
17333 # Pad to 10 characters, left-aligned, using 'format'
17334 $ du -s * | numfmt --to=si --format="%10f"
17340 # Pad to 10 characters, left-aligned, using 'format'
17341 $ du -s * | numfmt --to=si --padding="%-10f"
17348 With locales that support grouping digits, using @option{--grouping} or
17349 @option{--format} enables grouping. In @samp{POSIX} locale, grouping is
17353 $ LC_ALL=C numfmt --from=iec --grouping 2G
17356 $ LC_ALL=en_US.utf8 numfmt --from=iec --grouping 2G
17359 $ LC_ALL=ta_IN numfmt --from=iec --grouping 2G
17362 $ LC_ALL=C ./src/numfmt --from=iec --format="==%'15f==" 2G
17365 $ LC_ALL=en_US.utf8 ./src/numfmt --from=iec --format="==%'15f==" 2G
17368 $ LC_ALL=en_US.utf8 ./src/numfmt --from=iec --format="==%'-15f==" 2G
17371 $ LC_ALL=ta_IN ./src/numfmt --from=iec --format="==%'15f==" 2G
17372 == 2,14,74,83,648==
17376 @node seq invocation
17377 @section @command{seq}: Print numeric sequences
17380 @cindex numeric sequences
17381 @cindex sequence of numbers
17383 @command{seq} prints a sequence of numbers to standard output. Synopses:
17386 seq [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{last}
17387 seq [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{first} @var{last}
17388 seq [@var{option}]@dots{} @var{first} @var{increment} @var{last}
17391 @command{seq} prints the numbers from @var{first} to @var{last} by
17392 @var{increment}. By default, each number is printed on a separate line.
17393 When @var{increment} is not specified, it defaults to @samp{1},
17394 even when @var{first} is larger than @var{last}.
17395 @var{first} also defaults to @samp{1}. So @code{seq 1} prints
17396 @samp{1}, but @code{seq 0} and @code{seq 10 5} produce no output.
17397 The sequence of numbers ends when the sum of the current number and
17398 @var{increment} would become greater than @var{last},
17399 so @code{seq 1 10 10} only produces @samp{1}.
17400 Floating-point numbers may be specified. @xref{Floating point}.
17402 The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common options}.
17403 Options must precede operands.
17406 @item -f @var{format}
17407 @itemx --format=@var{format}
17410 @cindex formatting of numbers in @command{seq}
17411 Print all numbers using @var{format}.
17412 @var{format} must contain exactly one of the @samp{printf}-style
17413 floating point conversion specifications @samp{%a}, @samp{%e},
17414 @samp{%f}, @samp{%g}, @samp{%A}, @samp{%E}, @samp{%F}, @samp{%G}@.
17415 The @samp{%} may be followed by zero or more flags taken from the set
17416 @samp{-+#0 '}, then an optional width containing one or more digits,
17417 then an optional precision consisting of a @samp{.} followed by zero
17418 or more digits. @var{format} may also contain any number of @samp{%%}
17419 conversion specifications. All conversion specifications have the
17420 same meaning as with @samp{printf}.
17422 The default format is derived from @var{first}, @var{step}, and
17423 @var{last}. If these all use a fixed point decimal representation,
17424 the default format is @samp{%.@var{p}f}, where @var{p} is the minimum
17425 precision that can represent the output numbers exactly. Otherwise,
17426 the default format is @samp{%g}.
17428 @item -s @var{string}
17429 @itemx --separator=@var{string}
17431 @opindex --separator
17432 @cindex separator for numbers in @command{seq}
17433 Separate numbers with @var{string}; default is a newline.
17434 The output always terminates with a newline.
17437 @itemx --equal-width
17439 @opindex --equal-width
17440 Print all numbers with the same width, by padding with leading zeros.
17441 @var{first}, @var{step}, and @var{last} should all use a fixed point
17442 decimal representation.
17443 (To have other kinds of padding, use @option{--format}).
17447 You can get finer-grained control over output with @option{-f}:
17450 $ seq -f '(%9.2E)' -9e5 1.1e6 1.3e6
17456 If you want hexadecimal integer output, you can use @command{printf}
17457 to perform the conversion:
17460 $ printf '%x\n' $(seq 1048575 1024 1050623)
17466 For very long lists of numbers, use xargs to avoid
17467 system limitations on the length of an argument list:
17470 $ seq 1000000 | xargs printf '%x\n' | tail -n 3
17476 To generate octal output, use the printf @code{%o} format instead
17479 On most systems, seq can produce whole-number output for values up to
17480 at least @math{2^{53}}. Larger integers are approximated. The details
17481 differ depending on your floating-point implementation.
17482 @xref{Floating point}. A common
17483 case is that @command{seq} works with integers through @math{2^{64}},
17484 and larger integers may not be numerically correct:
17487 $ seq 50000000000000000000 2 50000000000000000004
17488 50000000000000000000
17489 50000000000000000000
17490 50000000000000000004
17493 However, note that when limited to non-negative whole numbers,
17494 an increment of 1 and no format-specifying option, seq can print
17495 arbitrarily large numbers.
17497 Be careful when using @command{seq} with outlandish values: otherwise
17498 you may see surprising results, as @command{seq} uses floating point
17499 internally. For example, on the x86 platform, where the internal
17500 representation uses a 64-bit fraction, the command:
17503 seq 1 0.0000000000000000001 1.0000000000000000009
17506 outputs 1.0000000000000000007 twice and skips 1.0000000000000000008.
17511 @node File permissions
17512 @chapter File permissions
17515 @include parse-datetime.texi
17519 @node Opening the software toolbox
17520 @chapter Opening the Software Toolbox
17522 An earlier version of this chapter appeared in
17523 @uref{http://www.linuxjournal.com/article.php?sid=2762, the
17524 @cite{What's GNU@?} column of the June 1994 @cite{Linux Journal}}.
17525 It was written by Arnold Robbins.
17528 * Toolbox introduction:: Toolbox introduction
17529 * I/O redirection:: I/O redirection
17530 * The who command:: The @command{who} command
17531 * The cut command:: The @command{cut} command
17532 * The sort command:: The @command{sort} command
17533 * The uniq command:: The @command{uniq} command
17534 * Putting the tools together:: Putting the tools together
17538 @node Toolbox introduction
17539 @unnumberedsec Toolbox Introduction
17541 This month's column is only peripherally related to the GNU Project, in
17542 that it describes a number of the GNU tools on your GNU/Linux system
17544 might be used. What it's really about is the ``Software Tools'' philosophy
17545 of program development and usage.
17547 The software tools philosophy was an important and integral concept
17548 in the initial design and development of Unix (of which Linux and GNU are
17549 essentially clones). Unfortunately, in the modern day press of
17550 Internetworking and flashy GUIs, it seems to have fallen by the
17551 wayside. This is a shame, since it provides a powerful mental model
17552 for solving many kinds of problems.
17554 Many people carry a Swiss Army knife around in their pants pockets (or
17555 purse). A Swiss Army knife is a handy tool to have: it has several knife
17556 blades, a screwdriver, tweezers, toothpick, nail file, corkscrew, and perhaps
17557 a number of other things on it. For the everyday, small miscellaneous jobs
17558 where you need a simple, general purpose tool, it's just the thing.
17560 On the other hand, an experienced carpenter doesn't build a house using
17561 a Swiss Army knife. Instead, he has a toolbox chock full of specialized
17562 tools---a saw, a hammer, a screwdriver, a plane, and so on. And he knows
17563 exactly when and where to use each tool; you won't catch him hammering nails
17564 with the handle of his screwdriver.
17566 The Unix developers at Bell Labs were all professional programmers and trained
17567 computer scientists. They had found that while a one-size-fits-all program
17568 might appeal to a user because there's only one program to use, in practice
17573 difficult to write,
17576 difficult to maintain and
17580 difficult to extend to meet new situations.
17583 Instead, they felt that programs should be specialized tools. In short, each
17584 program ``should do one thing well.'' No more and no less. Such programs are
17585 simpler to design, write, and get right---they only do one thing.
17587 Furthermore, they found that with the right machinery for hooking programs
17588 together, that the whole was greater than the sum of the parts. By combining
17589 several special purpose programs, you could accomplish a specific task
17590 that none of the programs was designed for, and accomplish it much more
17591 quickly and easily than if you had to write a special purpose program.
17592 We will see some (classic) examples of this further on in the column.
17593 (An important additional point was that, if necessary, take a detour
17594 and build any software tools you may need first, if you don't already
17595 have something appropriate in the toolbox.)
17597 @node I/O redirection
17598 @unnumberedsec I/O Redirection
17600 Hopefully, you are familiar with the basics of I/O redirection in the
17601 shell, in particular the concepts of ``standard input,'' ``standard output,''
17602 and ``standard error''. Briefly, ``standard input'' is a data source, where
17603 data comes from. A program should not need to either know or care if the
17604 data source is a disk file, a keyboard, a magnetic tape, or even a punched
17605 card reader. Similarly, ``standard output'' is a data sink, where data goes
17606 to. The program should neither know nor care where this might be.
17607 Programs that only read their standard input, do something to the data,
17608 and then send it on, are called @dfn{filters}, by analogy to filters in a
17611 With the Unix shell, it's very easy to set up data pipelines:
17614 program_to_create_data | filter1 | ... | filterN > final.pretty.data
17617 We start out by creating the raw data; each filter applies some successive
17618 transformation to the data, until by the time it comes out of the pipeline,
17619 it is in the desired form.
17621 This is fine and good for standard input and standard output. Where does the
17622 standard error come in to play? Well, think about @command{filter1} in
17623 the pipeline above. What happens if it encounters an error in the data it
17624 sees? If it writes an error message to standard output, it will just
17625 disappear down the pipeline into @command{filter2}'s input, and the
17626 user will probably never see it. So programs need a place where they can send
17627 error messages so that the user will notice them. This is standard error,
17628 and it is usually connected to your console or window, even if you have
17629 redirected standard output of your program away from your screen.
17631 For filter programs to work together, the format of the data has to be
17632 agreed upon. The most straightforward and easiest format to use is simply
17633 lines of text. Unix data files are generally just streams of bytes, with
17634 lines delimited by the ASCII LF (Line Feed) character,
17635 conventionally called a ``newline'' in the Unix literature. (This is
17636 @code{'\n'} if you're a C programmer.) This is the format used by all
17637 the traditional filtering programs. (Many earlier operating systems
17638 had elaborate facilities and special purpose programs for managing
17639 binary data. Unix has always shied away from such things, under the
17640 philosophy that it's easiest to simply be able to view and edit your
17641 data with a text editor.)
17643 OK, enough introduction. Let's take a look at some of the tools, and then
17644 we'll see how to hook them together in interesting ways. In the following
17645 discussion, we will only present those command line options that interest
17646 us. As you should always do, double check your system documentation
17647 for the full story.
17649 @node The who command
17650 @unnumberedsec The @command{who} Command
17652 The first program is the @command{who} command. By itself, it generates a
17653 list of the users who are currently logged in. Although I'm writing
17654 this on a single-user system, we'll pretend that several people are
17659 @print{} arnold console Jan 22 19:57
17660 @print{} miriam ttyp0 Jan 23 14:19(:0.0)
17661 @print{} bill ttyp1 Jan 21 09:32(:0.0)
17662 @print{} arnold ttyp2 Jan 23 20:48(:0.0)
17665 Here, the @samp{$} is the usual shell prompt, at which I typed @samp{who}.
17666 There are three people logged in, and I am logged in twice. On traditional
17667 Unix systems, user names are never more than eight characters long. This
17668 little bit of trivia will be useful later. The output of @command{who} is nice,
17669 but the data is not all that exciting.
17671 @node The cut command
17672 @unnumberedsec The @command{cut} Command
17674 The next program we'll look at is the @command{cut} command. This program
17675 cuts out columns or fields of input data. For example, we can tell it
17676 to print just the login name and full name from the @file{/etc/passwd}
17677 file. The @file{/etc/passwd} file has seven fields, separated by
17681 arnold:xyzzy:2076:10:Arnold D. Robbins:/home/arnold:/bin/bash
17684 To get the first and fifth fields, we would use @command{cut} like this:
17687 $ cut -d: -f1,5 /etc/passwd
17688 @print{} root:Operator
17690 @print{} arnold:Arnold D. Robbins
17691 @print{} miriam:Miriam A. Robbins
17695 With the @option{-c} option, @command{cut} will cut out specific characters
17696 (i.e., columns) in the input lines. This is useful for input data
17697 that has fixed width fields, and does not have a field separator. For
17698 example, list the Monday dates for the current month:
17700 @c Is using cal ok? Looked at gcal, but I don't like it.
17711 @node The sort command
17712 @unnumberedsec The @command{sort} Command
17714 Next we'll look at the @command{sort} command. This is one of the most
17715 powerful commands on a Unix-style system; one that you will often find
17716 yourself using when setting up fancy data plumbing.
17719 command reads and sorts each file named on the command line. It then
17720 merges the sorted data and writes it to standard output. It will read
17721 standard input if no files are given on the command line (thus
17722 making it into a filter). The sort is based on the character collating
17723 sequence or based on user-supplied ordering criteria.
17726 @node The uniq command
17727 @unnumberedsec The @command{uniq} Command
17729 Finally (at least for now), we'll look at the @command{uniq} program. When
17730 sorting data, you will often end up with duplicate lines, lines that
17731 are identical. Usually, all you need is one instance of each line.
17732 This is where @command{uniq} comes in. The @command{uniq} program reads its
17733 standard input. It prints only one
17734 copy of each repeated line. It does have several options. Later on,
17735 we'll use the @option{-c} option, which prints each unique line, preceded
17736 by a count of the number of times that line occurred in the input.
17739 @node Putting the tools together
17740 @unnumberedsec Putting the Tools Together
17742 Now, let's suppose this is a large ISP server system with dozens of users
17743 logged in. The management wants the system administrator to write a
17745 generate a sorted list of logged in users. Furthermore, even if a user
17746 is logged in multiple times, his or her name should only show up in the
17749 The administrator could sit down with the system documentation and write a C
17750 program that did this. It would take perhaps a couple of hundred lines
17751 of code and about two hours to write it, test it, and debug it.
17752 However, knowing the software toolbox, the administrator can instead start out
17753 by generating just a list of logged on users:
17763 Next, sort the list:
17766 $ who | cut -c1-8 | sort
17773 Finally, run the sorted list through @command{uniq}, to weed out duplicates:
17776 $ who | cut -c1-8 | sort | uniq
17782 The @command{sort} command actually has a @option{-u} option that does what
17783 @command{uniq} does. However, @command{uniq} has other uses for which one
17784 cannot substitute @samp{sort -u}.
17786 The administrator puts this pipeline into a shell script, and makes it
17788 all the users on the system (@samp{#} is the system administrator,
17789 or @code{root}, prompt):
17792 # cat > /usr/local/bin/listusers
17793 who | cut -c1-8 | sort | uniq
17795 # chmod +x /usr/local/bin/listusers
17798 There are four major points to note here. First, with just four
17799 programs, on one command line, the administrator was able to save about two
17800 hours worth of work. Furthermore, the shell pipeline is just about as
17801 efficient as the C program would be, and it is much more efficient in
17802 terms of programmer time. People time is much more expensive than
17803 computer time, and in our modern ``there's never enough time to do
17804 everything'' society, saving two hours of programmer time is no mean
17807 Second, it is also important to emphasize that with the
17808 @emph{combination} of the tools, it is possible to do a special
17809 purpose job never imagined by the authors of the individual programs.
17811 Third, it is also valuable to build up your pipeline in stages, as we did here.
17812 This allows you to view the data at each stage in the pipeline, which helps
17813 you acquire the confidence that you are indeed using these tools correctly.
17815 Finally, by bundling the pipeline in a shell script, other users can use
17816 your command, without having to remember the fancy plumbing you set up for
17817 them. In terms of how you run them, shell scripts and compiled programs are
17820 After the previous warm-up exercise, we'll look at two additional, more
17821 complicated pipelines. For them, we need to introduce two more tools.
17823 The first is the @command{tr} command, which stands for ``transliterate.''
17824 The @command{tr} command works on a character-by-character basis, changing
17825 characters. Normally it is used for things like mapping upper case to
17829 $ echo ThIs ExAmPlE HaS MIXED case! | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]'
17830 @print{} this example has mixed case!
17833 There are several options of interest:
17837 work on the complement of the listed characters, i.e.,
17838 operations apply to characters not in the given set
17841 delete characters in the first set from the output
17844 squeeze repeated characters in the output into just one character.
17847 We will be using all three options in a moment.
17849 The other command we'll look at is @command{comm}. The @command{comm}
17850 command takes two sorted input files as input data, and prints out the
17851 files' lines in three columns. The output columns are the data lines
17852 unique to the first file, the data lines unique to the second file, and
17853 the data lines that are common to both. The @option{-1}, @option{-2}, and
17854 @option{-3} command line options @emph{omit} the respective columns. (This is
17855 non-intuitive and takes a little getting used to.) For example:
17877 The file name @file{-} tells @command{comm} to read standard input
17878 instead of a regular file.
17880 Now we're ready to build a fancy pipeline. The first application is a word
17881 frequency counter. This helps an author determine if he or she is over-using
17884 The first step is to change the case of all the letters in our input file
17885 to one case. ``The'' and ``the'' are the same word when doing counting.
17888 $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | ...
17891 The next step is to get rid of punctuation. Quoted words and unquoted words
17892 should be treated identically; it's easiest to just get the punctuation out of
17896 $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' | ...
17899 The second @command{tr} command operates on the complement of the listed
17900 characters, which are all the letters, the digits, the underscore, and
17901 the blank. The @samp{\n} represents the newline character; it has to
17902 be left alone. (The ASCII tab character should also be included for
17903 good measure in a production script.)
17905 At this point, we have data consisting of words separated by blank space.
17906 The words only contain alphanumeric characters (and the underscore). The
17907 next step is break the data apart so that we have one word per line. This
17908 makes the counting operation much easier, as we will see shortly.
17911 $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' |
17912 > tr -s ' ' '\n' | ...
17915 This command turns blanks into newlines. The @option{-s} option squeezes
17916 multiple newline characters in the output into just one, removing
17917 blank lines. (The @samp{>} is the shell's ``secondary prompt.''
17918 This is what the shell prints when it notices you haven't finished
17919 typing in all of a command.)
17921 We now have data consisting of one word per line, no punctuation, all one
17922 case. We're ready to count each word:
17925 $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' |
17926 > tr -s ' ' '\n' | sort | uniq -c | ...
17929 At this point, the data might look something like this:
17942 The output is sorted by word, not by count! What we want is the most
17943 frequently used words first. Fortunately, this is easy to accomplish,
17944 with the help of two more @command{sort} options:
17948 do a numeric sort, not a textual one
17951 reverse the order of the sort
17954 The final pipeline looks like this:
17957 $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' |
17958 > tr -s ' ' '\n' | sort | uniq -c | sort -n -r
17967 Whew! That's a lot to digest. Yet, the same principles apply. With six
17968 commands, on two lines (really one long one split for convenience), we've
17969 created a program that does something interesting and useful, in much
17970 less time than we could have written a C program to do the same thing.
17972 A minor modification to the above pipeline can give us a simple spelling
17973 checker! To determine if you've spelled a word correctly, all you have to
17974 do is look it up in a dictionary. If it is not there, then chances are
17975 that your spelling is incorrect. So, we need a dictionary.
17976 The conventional location for a dictionary is @file{/usr/dict/words}.
17977 On my GNU/Linux system,@footnote{Redhat Linux 6.1, for the November 2000
17978 revision of this article.}
17979 this is a sorted, 45,402 word dictionary.
17981 Now, how to compare our file with the dictionary? As before, we generate
17982 a sorted list of words, one per line:
17985 $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' |
17986 > tr -s ' ' '\n' | sort -u | ...
17989 Now, all we need is a list of words that are @emph{not} in the
17990 dictionary. Here is where the @command{comm} command comes in.
17993 $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' |
17994 > tr -s ' ' '\n' | sort -u |
17995 > comm -23 - /usr/dict/words
17998 The @option{-2} and @option{-3} options eliminate lines that are only in the
17999 dictionary (the second file), and lines that are in both files. Lines
18000 only in the first file (standard input, our stream of words), are
18001 words that are not in the dictionary. These are likely candidates for
18002 spelling errors. This pipeline was the first cut at a production
18003 spelling checker on Unix.
18005 There are some other tools that deserve brief mention.
18009 search files for text that matches a regular expression
18012 count lines, words, characters
18015 a T-fitting for data pipes, copies data to files and to standard output
18018 the stream editor, an advanced tool
18021 a data manipulation language, another advanced tool
18024 The software tools philosophy also espoused the following bit of
18025 advice: ``Let someone else do the hard part.'' This means, take
18026 something that gives you most of what you need, and then massage it the
18027 rest of the way until it's in the form that you want.
18033 Each program should do one thing well. No more, no less.
18036 Combining programs with appropriate plumbing leads to results where
18037 the whole is greater than the sum of the parts. It also leads to novel
18038 uses of programs that the authors might never have imagined.
18041 Programs should never print extraneous header or trailer data, since these
18042 could get sent on down a pipeline. (A point we didn't mention earlier.)
18045 Let someone else do the hard part.
18048 Know your toolbox! Use each program appropriately. If you don't have an
18049 appropriate tool, build one.
18052 As of this writing, all the programs discussed are available from
18053 @uref{http://ftp.gnu.org/old-gnu/textutils/textutils-1.22.tar.gz},
18054 with more recent versions available from
18055 @uref{http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/coreutils}.
18057 None of what I have presented in this column is new. The Software Tools
18058 philosophy was first introduced in the book @cite{Software Tools}, by
18059 Brian Kernighan and P.J. Plauger (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-03669-X).
18060 This book showed how to write and use software tools. It was written in
18061 1976, using a preprocessor for FORTRAN named @command{ratfor} (RATional
18062 FORtran). At the time, C was not as ubiquitous as it is now; FORTRAN
18063 was. The last chapter presented a @command{ratfor} to FORTRAN
18064 processor, written in @command{ratfor}. @command{ratfor} looks an awful
18065 lot like C; if you know C, you won't have any problem following the
18068 In 1981, the book was updated and made available as @cite{Software Tools
18069 in Pascal} (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-10342-7). Both books are
18070 still in print and are well worth
18071 reading if you're a programmer. They certainly made a major change in
18072 how I view programming.
18074 The programs in both books are available from
18075 @uref{http://cm.bell-labs.com/who/bwk, Brian Kernighan's home page}.
18076 For a number of years, there was an active
18077 Software Tools Users Group, whose members had ported the original
18078 @command{ratfor} programs to essentially every computer system with a
18079 FORTRAN compiler. The popularity of the group waned in the middle 1980s
18080 as Unix began to spread beyond universities.
18082 With the current proliferation of GNU code and other clones of Unix programs,
18083 these programs now receive little attention; modern C versions are
18084 much more efficient and do more than these programs do. Nevertheless, as
18085 exposition of good programming style, and evangelism for a still-valuable
18086 philosophy, these books are unparalleled, and I recommend them highly.
18088 Acknowledgment: I would like to express my gratitude to Brian Kernighan
18089 of Bell Labs, the original Software Toolsmith, for reviewing this column.
18091 @node GNU Free Documentation License
18092 @appendix GNU Free Documentation License
18096 @node Concept index
18103 @c Local variables:
18104 @c texinfo-column-for-description: 32