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bash(1) General Commands Manual bash(1)

NAME

 bash - GNU Bourne-Again SHell

SYNOPSIS

 bash [options] [command_string | file]

COPYRIGHT

 Bash is Copyright (C) 1989-2025 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.

DESCRIPTION

 Bash is a command language interpreter that executes commands read from
 the standard input, from a string, or from a file. It is a
 reimplementation and extension of the Bourne shell, the historical Unix
 command language interpreter. Bash also incorporates useful features
 from the Korn and C shells (ksh and csh).
 POSIX is the name for a family of computing standards based on Unix.
 Bash is intended to be a conformant implementation of the Shell and
 Utilities portion of the IEEE POSIX specification (IEEE Standard
 1003.1). Bash POSIX mode (hereafter referred to as posix mode) changes
 the shell's behavior where its default operation differs from the
 standard to strictly conform to the standard. See SEE ALSO below for a
 reference to a document that details how posix mode affects bash's
 behavior. Bash can be configured to be POSIX-conformant by default.

OPTIONS

 All of the single-character shell options documented in the description
 of the set builtin command, including -o, can be used as options when
 the shell is invoked. In addition, bash interprets the following
 options when it is invoked:
 -c If the -c option is present, then commands are read from the
 first non-option argument command_string. If there are
 arguments after the command_string, the first argument is
 assigned to 0ドル and any remaining arguments are assigned to
 the positional parameters. The assignment to 0ドル sets the
 name of the shell, which is used in warning and error
 messages.
 -i If the -i option is present, the shell is interactive.
 -l Make bash act as if it had been invoked as a login shell (see
 INVOCATION below).
 -r If the -r option is present, the shell becomes restricted
 (see RESTRICTED SHELL below).
 -s If the -s option is present, or if no arguments remain after
 option processing, the shell reads commands from the standard
 input. This option allows the positional parameters to be
 set when invoking an interactive shell or when reading input
 through a pipe.
 -D Print a list of all double-quoted strings preceded by $ on
 the standard output. These are the strings that are subject
 to language translation when the current locale is not C or
 POSIX. This implies the -n option; no commands will be
 executed.
 [-+]O [shopt_option]
 shopt_option is one of the shell options accepted by the
 shopt builtin (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below). If
 shopt_option is present, -O sets the value of that option; +O
 unsets it. If shopt_option is not supplied, bash prints the
 names and values of the shell options accepted by shopt on
 the standard output. If the invocation option is +O, the
 output is displayed in a format that may be reused as input.
 -- A -- signals the end of options and disables further option
 processing. Any arguments after the -- are treated as a
 shell script filename (see below) and arguments passed to
 that script. An argument of - is equivalent to --.
 Bash also interprets a number of multi-character options. These
 options must appear on the command line before the single-character
 options to be recognized.
 --debugger
 Arrange for the debugger profile to be executed before the shell
 starts. Turns on extended debugging mode (see the description
 of the extdebug option to the shopt builtin below).
 --dump-po-strings
 Equivalent to -D, but the output is in the GNU gettext "po"
 (portable object) file format.
 --dump-strings
 Equivalent to -D.
 --help Display a usage message on standard output and exit
 successfully.
 --init-file file
 --rcfile file
 Execute commands from file instead of the standard personal
 initialization file ~/.bashrc if the shell is interactive (see
 INVOCATION below).
 --login
 Equivalent to -l.
 --noediting
 Do not use the GNU readline library to read command lines when
 the shell is interactive.
 --noprofile
 Do not read either the system-wide startup file /etc/profile or
 any of the personal initialization files ~/.bash_profile,
 ~/.bash_login, or ~/.profile. By default, bash reads these
 files when it is invoked as a login shell (see INVOCATION
 below).
 --norc Do not read and execute the personal initialization file
 ~/.bashrc if the shell is interactive. This option is on by
 default if the shell is invoked as sh.
 --posix
 Enable posix mode; change the behavior of bash where the default
 operation differs from the POSIX standard to match the standard.
 --restricted
 The shell becomes restricted (see RESTRICTED SHELL below).
 --verbose
 Equivalent to -v.
 --version
 Show version information for this instance of bash on the
 standard output and exit successfully.

ARGUMENTS

 If arguments remain after option processing, and neither the -c nor the
 -s option has been supplied, the first argument is treated as the name
 of a file containing shell commands (a shell script). When bash is
 invoked in this fashion, 0ドル is set to the name of the file, and the
 positional parameters are set to the remaining arguments. Bash reads
 and executes commands from this file, then exits. Bash's exit status
 is the exit status of the last command executed in the script. If no
 commands are executed, the exit status is 0. Bash first attempts to
 open the file in the current directory, and, if no file is found,
 searches the directories in PATH for the script.

INVOCATION

 A login shell is one whose first character of argument zero is a -, or
 one started with the --login option.
 An interactive shell is one started without non-option arguments
 (unless -s is specified) and without the -c option, and whose standard
 input and standard error are both connected to terminals (as determined
 by isatty(3) ), or one started with the -i option. Bash sets PS1 and $-
 includes i if the shell is interactive, so a shell script or a startup
 file can test this state.
 The following paragraphs describe how bash executes its startup files.
 If any of the files exist but cannot be read, bash reports an error.
 Tildes are expanded in filenames as described below under Tilde
 Expansion in the EXPANSION section.
 When bash is invoked as an interactive login shell, or as a non-
 interactive shell with the --login option, it first reads and executes
 commands from the file /etc/profile, if that file exists. After
 reading that file, it looks for ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bash_login, and
 ~/.profile, in that order, and reads and executes commands from the
 first one that exists and is readable. The --noprofile option may be
 used when the shell is started to inhibit this behavior.
 When an interactive login shell exits, or a non-interactive login shell
 executes the exit builtin command, bash reads and executes commands
 from the file ~/.bash_logout, if it exists.
 When an interactive shell that is not a login shell is started, bash
 reads and executes commands from ~/.bashrc, if that file exists. The
 --norc option inhibits this behavior. The --rcfile file option causes
 bash to use file instead of ~/.bashrc.
 When bash is started non-interactively, to run a shell script, for
 example, it looks for the variable BASH_ENV in the environment, expands
 its value if it appears there, and uses the expanded value as the name
 of a file to read and execute. Bash behaves as if the following
 command were executed:
 if [ -n "$BASH_ENV" ]; then . "$BASH_ENV"; fi
 but does not use the value of the PATH variable to search for the
 filename.
 If bash is invoked with the name sh, it tries to mimic the startup
 behavior of historical versions of sh as closely as possible, while
 conforming to the POSIX standard as well. When invoked as an
 interactive login shell, or a non-interactive shell with the --login
 option, it first attempts to read and execute commands from
 /etc/profile and ~/.profile, in that order. The --noprofile option
 inhibits this behavior. When invoked as an interactive shell with the
 name sh, bash looks for the variable ENV, expands its value if it is
 defined, and uses the expanded value as the name of a file to read and
 execute. Since a shell invoked as sh does not attempt to read and
 execute commands from any other startup files, the --rcfile option has
 no effect. A non-interactive shell invoked with the name sh does not
 attempt to read any other startup files.
 When invoked as sh, bash enters posix mode after reading the startup
 files.
 When bash is started in posix mode, as with the --posix command line
 option, it follows the POSIX standard for startup files. In this mode,
 interactive shells expand the ENV variable and read and execute
 commands from the file whose name is the expanded value. No other
 startup files are read.
 Bash attempts to determine when it is being run with its standard input
 connected to a network connection, as when executed by the historical
 and rarely-seen remote shell daemon, usually rshd, or the secure shell
 daemon sshd. If bash determines it is being run non-interactively in
 this fashion, it reads and executes commands from ~/.bashrc, if that
 file exists and is readable. Bash does not read this file if invoked
 as sh. The --norc option inhibits this behavior, and the --rcfile
 option makes bash use a different file instead of ~/.bashrc, but
 neither rshd nor sshd generally invoke the shell with those options or
 allow them to be specified.
 If the shell is started with the effective user (group) id not equal to
 the real user (group) id, and the -p option is not supplied, no startup
 files are read, shell functions are not inherited from the environment,
 the SHELLOPTS, BASHOPTS, CDPATH, and GLOBIGNORE variables, if they
 appear in the environment, are ignored, and the effective user id is
 set to the real user id. If the -p option is supplied at invocation,
 the startup behavior is the same, but the effective user id is not
 reset.

DEFINITIONS

 The following definitions are used throughout the rest of this
 document.
 blank A space or tab.
 whitespace
 A character belonging to the space character class in the
 current locale, or for which isspace(3)  returns true.
 word A sequence of characters considered as a single unit by the
 shell. Also known as a token.
 name A word consisting only of alphanumeric characters and
 underscores, and beginning with an alphabetic character or an
 underscore. Also referred to as an identifier.
 metacharacter
 A character that, when unquoted, separates words. One of the
 following:
 | & ; ( ) < > space tab newline
 control operator
 A token that performs a control function. It is one of the
 following symbols:
 || & && ; ;; ;& ;;& ( ) | |& <newline>

RESERVED WORDS

 Reserved words are words that have a special meaning to the shell. The
 following words are recognized as reserved when unquoted and either the
 first word of a command (see SHELL GRAMMAR below), the third word of a
 case or select command (only in is valid), or the third word of a for
 command (only in and do are valid):
 ! case coproc do done elif else esac fi for function if in select
 then until while { } time [[ ]]

SHELL GRAMMAR

 This section describes the syntax of the various forms of shell
 commands.
 Simple Commands
 A simple command is a sequence of optional variable assignments
 followed by blank-separated words and redirections, and terminated by a
 control operator. The first word specifies the command to be executed,
 and is passed as argument zero. The remaining words are passed as
 arguments to the invoked command.
 The return value of a simple command is its exit status, or 128+n if
 the command is terminated by signal n.
 Pipelines
 A pipeline is a sequence of one or more commands separated by one of
 the control operators | or |&. The format for a pipeline is:
 [time [-p]] [ ! ] command1 [ [|||&] command2 ... ]
 The standard output of command1 is connected via a pipe to the standard
 input of command2. This connection is performed before any
 redirections specified by the command1(see REDIRECTION below). If |&
 is the pipeline operator, command1's standard error, in addition to its
 standard output, is connected to command2's standard input through the
 pipe; it is shorthand for 2>&1 |. This implicit redirection of the
 standard error to the standard output is performed after any
 redirections specified by command1.
 The return status of a pipeline is the exit status of the last command,
 unless the pipefail option is enabled. If pipefail is enabled, the
 pipeline's return status is the value of the last (rightmost) command
 to exit with a non-zero status, or zero if all commands exit
 successfully. If the reserved word ! precedes a pipeline, the exit
 status of that pipeline is the logical negation of the exit status as
 described above. If a pipeline is executed synchronously, the shell
 waits for all commands in the pipeline to terminate before returning a
 value.
 If the time reserved word precedes a pipeline, the shell reports the
 elapsed as well as user and system time consumed by its execution when
 the pipeline terminates. The -p option changes the output format to
 that specified by POSIX. When the shell is in posix mode, it does not
 recognize time as a reserved word if the next token begins with a "-".
 The value of the TIMEFORMAT variable is a format string that specifies
 how the timing information should be displayed; see the description of
 TIMEFORMAT below under Shell Variables.
 When the shell is in posix mode, time may appear by itself as the only
 word in a simple command. In this case, the shell displays the total
 user and system time consumed by the shell and its children. The
 TIMEFORMAT variable specifies the format of the time information.
 Each command in a multi-command pipeline, where pipes are created, is
 executed in a subshell, which is a separate process. See COMMAND
 EXECUTION ENVIRONMENT for a description of subshells and a subshell
 environment. If the lastpipe option is enabled using the shopt builtin
 (see the description of shopt below), and job control is not active,
 the last element of a pipeline may be run by the shell process.
 Lists
 A list is a sequence of one or more pipelines separated by one of the
 operators ;, &, &&, or ||, and optionally terminated by one of ;, &, or
 <newline>.
 Of these list operators, && and || have equal precedence, followed by ;
 and &, which have equal precedence.
 A sequence of one or more newlines may appear in a list instead of a
 semicolon to delimit commands.
 If a command is terminated by the control operator &, the shell
 executes the command in the background in a subshell. The shell does
 not wait for the command to finish, and the return status is 0. These
 are referred to as asynchronous commands. Commands separated by a ;
 are executed sequentially; the shell waits for each command to
 terminate in turn. The return status is the exit status of the last
 command executed.
 AND and OR lists are sequences of one or more pipelines separated by
 the && and || control operators, respectively. AND and OR lists are
 executed with left associativity. An AND list has the form
 command1 && command2
 command2 is executed if, and only if, command1 returns an exit status
 of zero (success).
 An OR list has the form
 command1 || command2
 command2 is executed if, and only if, command1 returns a non-zero exit
 status. The return status of AND and OR lists is the exit status of
 the last command executed in the list.
 Compound Commands
 A compound command is one of the following. In most cases a list in a
 command's description may be separated from the rest of the command by
 one or more newlines, and may be followed by a newline in place of a
 semicolon.
 (list) list is executed in a subshell (see COMMAND EXECUTION
 ENVIRONMENT below for a description of a subshell environment).
 Variable assignments and builtin commands that affect the
 shell's environment do not remain in effect after the command
 completes. The return status is the exit status of list.
 { list; }
 list is executed in the current shell environment. list must be
 terminated with a newline or semicolon. This is known as a
 group command. The return status is the exit status of list.
 Note that unlike the metacharacters ( and ), { and } are
 reserved words and must occur where a reserved word is permitted
 to be recognized. Since they do not cause a word break, they
 must be separated from list by whitespace or another shell
 metacharacter.
 ((expression))
 The arithmetic expression is evaluated according to the rules
 described below under ARITHMETIC EVALUATION. If the value of
 the expression is non-zero, the return status is 0; otherwise
 the return status is 1. The expression undergoes the same
 expansions as if it were within double quotes, but unescaped
 double quote characters in expression are not treated specially
 and are removed. Since this can potentially result in empty
 strings, this command treats those as expressions that evaluate
 to 0.
 [[ expression ]]
 Evaluate the conditional expression expression and return a
 status of zero (true) or non-zero (false). Expressions are
 composed of the primaries described below under CONDITIONAL
 EXPRESSIONS. The words between the [[ and ]] do not undergo
 word splitting and pathname expansion. The shell performs tilde
 expansion, parameter and variable expansion, arithmetic
 expansion, command substitution, process substitution, and quote
 removal on those words. Conditional operators such as -f must
 be unquoted to be recognized as primaries.
 When used with [[, the < and > operators sort lexicographically
 using the current locale.
 When the == and != operators are used, the string to the right
 of the operator is considered a pattern and matched according to
 the rules described below under Pattern Matching, as if the
 extglob shell option were enabled. The = operator is equivalent
 to ==. If the nocasematch shell option is enabled, the match is
 performed without regard to the case of alphabetic characters.
 The return value is 0 if the string matches (==) or does not
 match (!=) the pattern, and 1 otherwise. If any part of the
 pattern is quoted, the quoted portion is matched as a string:
 every character in the quoted portion matches itself, instead of
 having any special pattern matching meaning.
 An additional binary operator, =~, is available, with the same
 precedence as == and !=. When it is used, the string to the
 right of the operator is considered a POSIX extended regular
 expression and matched accordingly (using the POSIX regcomp and
 regexec interfaces usually described in regex(3) ). The return
 value is 0 if the string matches the pattern, and 1 otherwise.
 If the regular expression is syntactically incorrect, the
 conditional expression's return value is 2. If the nocasematch
 shell option is enabled, the match is performed without regard
 to the case of alphabetic characters.
 If any part of the pattern is quoted, the quoted portion is
 matched literally, as above. If the pattern is stored in a
 shell variable, quoting the variable expansion forces the entire
 pattern to be matched literally. Treat bracket expressions in
 regular expressions carefully, since normal quoting and pattern
 characters lose their meanings between brackets.
 The match succeeds if the pattern matches any part of the
 string. Anchor the pattern using the ^ and $ regular expression
 operators to force it to match the entire string.
 The array variable BASH_REMATCH records which parts of the
 string matched the pattern. The element of BASH_REMATCH with
 index 0 contains the portion of the string matching the entire
 regular expression. Substrings matched by parenthesized
 subexpressions within the regular expression are saved in the
 remaining BASH_REMATCH indices. The element of BASH_REMATCH
 with index n is the portion of the string matching the nth
 parenthesized subexpression. Bash sets BASH_REMATCH in the
 global scope; declaring it as a local variable will lead to
 unexpected results.
 Expressions may be combined using the following operators,
 listed in decreasing order of precedence:
 ( expression )
 Returns the value of expression. This may be used to
 override the normal precedence of operators.
 ! expression
 True if expression is false.
 expression1 && expression2
 True if both expression1 and expression2 are true.
 expression1 || expression2
 True if either expression1 or expression2 is true.
 The && and || operators do not evaluate expression2 if the value
 of expression1 is sufficient to determine the return value of
 the entire conditional expression.
 for name [ [ in word ... ] ; ] do list ; done
 First, expand The list of words following in, generating a list
 of items. Then, the variable name is set to each element of
 this list in turn, and list is executed each time. If the in
 word is omitted, the for command executes list once for each
 positional parameter that is set (see PARAMETERS below). The
 return status is the exit status of the last command that
 executes. If the expansion of the items following in results in
 an empty list, no commands are executed, and the return status
 is 0.
 for (( expr1 ; expr2 ; expr3 )) [;] do list ; done
 First, evaluate the arithmetic expression expr1 according to the
 rules described below under ARITHMETIC EVALUATION. Then,
 repeatedly evaluate the arithmetic expression expr2 until it
 evaluates to zero. Each time expr2 evaluates to a non-zero
 value, execute list and evaluate the arithmetic expression
 expr3. If any expression is omitted, it behaves as if it
 evaluates to 1. The return value is the exit status of the last
 command in list that is executed, or non-zero if any of the
 expressions is invalid.
 Use the break and continue builtins (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS
 below) to control loop execution.
 select name [ in word ] ; do list ; done
 First, expand the list of words following in, generating a list
 of items, and print the set of expanded words the standard
 error, each preceded by a number. If the in word is omitted,
 print the positional parameters (see PARAMETERS below). select
 then displays the PS3 prompt and reads a line from the standard
 input. If the line consists of a number corresponding to one of
 the displayed words, then select sets the value of name to that
 word. If the line is empty, select displays the words and
 prompt again. If EOF is read, select completes and returns 1.
 Any other value sets name to null. The line read is saved in
 the variable REPLY. The list is executed after each selection
 until a break command is executed. The exit status of select is
 the exit status of the last command executed in list, or zero if
 no commands were executed.
 case word in [ [(] pattern [ | pattern ] ... ) list ;; ] ... esac
 A case command first expands word, and tries to match it against
 each pattern in turn, proceeding from first to last, using the
 matching rules described under Pattern Matching below. A
 pattern list is a set of one or more patterns separated by , and
 the ) operator terminates the pattern list. The word is
 expanded using tilde expansion, parameter and variable
 expansion, arithmetic expansion, command substitution, process
 substitution and quote removal. Each pattern examined is
 expanded using tilde expansion, parameter and variable
 expansion, arithmetic expansion, command substitution, process
 substitution, and quote removal. If the nocasematch shell
 option is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the
 case of alphabetic characters. A clause is a pattern list and
 an associated list.
 When a match is found, case executes the corresponding list. If
 the ;; operator terminates the case clause, the case command
 completes after the first match. Using ;& in place of ;; causes
 execution to continue with the list associated with the next
 pattern list. Using ;;& in place of ;; causes the shell to test
 the next pattern list in the statement, if any, and execute any
 associated list if the match succeeds, continuing the case
 statement execution as if the pattern list had not matched. The
 exit status is zero if no pattern matches.
 Otherwise, it is the exit status of the last command executed in
 the last list executed.
 if list; then list; [ elif list; then list; ] ... [ else list; ] fi
 The if list is executed. If its exit status is zero, the then
 list is executed. Otherwise, each elif list is executed in
 turn, and if its exit status is zero, the corresponding then
 list is executed and the command completes. Otherwise, the else
 list is executed, if present. The exit status is the exit
 status of the last command executed, or zero if no condition
 tested true.
 while list-1; do list-2; done
 until list-1; do list-2; done
 The while command continuously executes the list list-2 as long
 as the last command in the list list-1 returns an exit status of
 zero. The until command is identical to the while command,
 except that the test is negated: list-2 is executed as long as
 the last command in list-1 returns a non-zero exit status. The
 exit status of the while and until commands is the exit status
 of the last command executed in list-2, or zero if none was
 executed.
 Coprocesses
 A coprocess is a shell command preceded by the coproc reserved word. A
 coprocess is executed asynchronously in a subshell, as if the command
 had been terminated with the & control operator, with a two-way pipe
 established between the executing shell and the coprocess.
 The syntax for a coprocess is:
 coproc [NAME] command [redirections]
 This creates a coprocess named NAME. command may be either a simple
 command or a compound command (see above). NAME is a shell variable
 name. If NAME is not supplied, the default name is COPROC.
 The recommended form to use for a coprocess is
 coproc NAME { command [redirections]; }
 This form is preferred because simple commands result in the coprocess
 always being named COPROC, and it is simpler to use and more complete
 than the other compound commands.
 If command is a compound command, NAME is optional. The word following
 coproc determines whether that word is interpreted as a variable name:
 it is interpreted as NAME if it is not a reserved word that introduces
 a compound command. If command is a simple command, NAME is not
 allowed; this is to avoid confusion between NAME and the first word of
 the simple command.
 When the coprocess is executed, the shell creates an array variable
 (see Arrays below) named NAME in the context of the executing shell.
 The standard output of command is connected via a pipe to a file
 descriptor in the executing shell, and that file descriptor is assigned
 to NAME[0]. The standard input of command is connected via a pipe to a
 file descriptor in the executing shell, and that file descriptor is
 assigned to NAME[1]. This pipe is established before any redirections
 specified by the command (see REDIRECTION below). The file descriptors
 can be utilized as arguments to shell commands and redirections using
 standard word expansions. Other than those created to execute command
 and process substitutions, the file descriptors are not available in
 subshells.
 The process ID of the shell spawned to execute the coprocess is
 available as the value of the variable NAME_PID. The wait builtin may
 be used to wait for the coprocess to terminate.
 Since the coprocess is created as an asynchronous command, the coproc
 command always returns success. The return status of a coprocess is
 the exit status of command.
 Shell Function Definitions
 A shell function is an object that is called like a simple command and
 executes a compound command with a new set of positional parameters.
 Shell functions are declared as follows:
 fname () compound-command [redirection]
 function fname [()] compound-command [redirection]
 This defines a function named fname. The reserved word function
 is optional. If the function reserved word is supplied, the
 parentheses are optional. The body of the function is the
 compound command compound-command (see Compound Commands above).
 That command is usually a list of commands between { and }, but
 may be any command listed under Compound Commands above. If the
 function reserved word is used, but the parentheses are not
 supplied, the braces are recommended. compound-command is
 executed whenever fname is specified as the name of a simple
 command. When in posix mode, fname must be a valid shell name
 and may not be the name of one of the POSIX special builtins.
 In default mode, a function name can be any unquoted shell word
 that does not contain $.
 Any redirections (see REDIRECTION below) specified when a function is
 defined are performed when the function is executed.
 The exit status of a function definition is zero unless a syntax error
 occurs or a readonly function with the same name already exists. When
 executed, the exit status of a function is the exit status of the last
 command executed in the body. (See FUNCTIONS below.)

COMMENTS

 In a non-interactive shell, or an interactive shell in which the
 interactive_comments option to the shopt builtin is enabled (see SHELL
 BUILTIN COMMANDS below), a word beginning with # introduces a comment.
 A word begins at the beginning of a line, after unquoted whitespace, or
 after an operator. The comment causes that word and all remaining
 characters on that line to be ignored. An interactive shell without
 the interactive_comments option enabled does not allow comments. The
 interactive_comments option is enabled by default in interactive
 shells.

QUOTING

 Quoting is used to remove the special meaning of certain characters or
 words to the shell. Quoting can be used to disable special treatment
 for special characters, to prevent reserved words from being recognized
 as such, and to prevent parameter expansion.
 Each of the metacharacters listed above under DEFINITIONS has special
 meaning to the shell and must be quoted if it is to represent itself.
 When the command history expansion facilities are being used (see
 HISTORY EXPANSION below), the history expansion character, usually !,
 must be quoted to prevent history expansion.
 There are four quoting mechanisms: the escape character, single quotes,
 double quotes, and dollar-single quotes.
 A non-quoted backslash (\) is the escape character. It preserves the
 literal value of the next character that follows, removing any special
 meaning it has, with the exception of <newline>. If a \<newline> pair
 appears, and the backslash is not itself quoted, the \<newline> is
 treated as a line continuation (that is, it is removed from the input
 stream and effectively ignored).
 Enclosing characters in single quotes preserves the literal value of
 each character within the quotes. A single quote may not occur between
 single quotes, even when preceded by a backslash.
 Enclosing characters in double quotes preserves the literal value of
 all characters within the quotes, with the exception of $, `, \, and,
 when history expansion is enabled, !. When the shell is in posix mode,
 the ! has no special meaning within double quotes, even when history
 expansion is enabled. The characters $ and ` retain their special
 meaning within double quotes. The backslash retains its special
 meaning only when followed by one of the following characters: $, `, ",
 \, or <newline>. Backslashes preceding characters without a special
 meaning are left unmodified.
 A double quote may be quoted within double quotes by preceding it with
 a backslash. If enabled, history expansion will be performed unless an
 ! appearing in double quotes is escaped using a backslash. The
 backslash preceding the ! is not removed.
 The special parameters * and @ have special meaning when in double
 quotes (see PARAMETERS below).
 Character sequences of the form $'string' are treated as a special
 variant of single quotes. The sequence expands to string, with
 backslash-escaped characters in string replaced as specified by the
 ANSI C standard. Backslash escape sequences, if present, are decoded
 as follows:
 \a alert (bell)
 \b backspace
 \e
 \E an escape character
 \f form feed
 \n new line
 \r carriage return
 \t horizontal tab
 \v vertical tab
 \\ backslash
 \' single quote
 \" double quote
 \? question mark
 \nnn The eight-bit character whose value is the octal value
 nnn (one to three octal digits).
 \xHH The eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal
 value HH (one or two hex digits).
 \uHHHH The Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the
 hexadecimal value HHHH (one to four hex digits).
 \UHHHHHHHH
 The Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the
 hexadecimal value HHHHHHHH (one to eight hex digits).
 \cx A control-x character.
 The expanded result is single-quoted, as if the dollar sign had not
 been present.
 Translating Strings
 A double-quoted string preceded by a dollar sign ($"string") causes the
 string to be translated according to the current locale. The gettext
 infrastructure performs the lookup and translation, using the
 LC_MESSAGES, TEXTDOMAINDIR, and TEXTDOMAIN shell variables. If the
 current locale is C or POSIX, if there are no translations available,
 or if the string is not translated, the dollar sign is ignored, and the
 string is treated as double-quoted as described above. This is a form
 of double quoting, so the string remains double-quoted by default,
 whether or not it is translated and replaced. If the
 noexpand_translation option is enabled using the shopt builtin,
 translated strings are single-quoted instead of double-quoted. See the
 description of shopt below under SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS.

PARAMETERS

 A parameter is an entity that stores values. It can be a name, a
 number, or one of the special characters listed below under Special
 Parameters. A variable is a parameter denoted by a name. A variable
 has a value and zero or more attributes. Attributes are assigned using
 the declare builtin command (see declare below in SHELL BUILTIN
 COMMANDS). The export and readonly builtins assign specific
 attributes.
 A parameter is set if it has been assigned a value. The null string is
 a valid value. Once a variable is set, it may be unset only by using
 the unset builtin command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 A variable is assigned to using a statement of the form
 name=[value]
 If value is not given, the variable is assigned the null string. All
 values undergo tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion,
 command substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote removal (see
 EXPANSION below). If the variable has its integer attribute set, then
 value is evaluated as an arithmetic expression even if the $((...))
 expansion is not used (see Arithmetic Expansion below). Word splitting
 and pathname expansion are not performed. Assignment statements may
 also appear as arguments to the alias, declare, typeset, export,
 readonly, and local builtin commands (declaration commands). When in
 posix mode, these builtins may appear in a command after one or more
 instances of the command builtin and retain these assignment statement
 properties.
 In the context where an assignment statement is assigning a value to a
 shell variable or array index, the "+=" operator appends to or adds to
 the variable's previous value. This includes arguments to declaration
 commands such as declare that accept assignment statements. When "+="
 is applied to a variable for which the integer attribute has been set,
 the variable's current value and value are each evaluated as arithmetic
 expressions, and the sum of the results is assigned as the variable's
 value. The current value is usually an integer constant, but may be an
 expression. When "+=" is applied to an array variable using compound
 assignment (see Arrays below), the variable's value is not unset (as it
 is when using "="), and new values are appended to the array beginning
 at one greater than the array's maximum index (for indexed arrays) or
 added as additional key-value pairs in an associative array. When
 applied to a string-valued variable, value is expanded and appended to
 the variable's value.
 A variable can be assigned the nameref attribute using the -n option to
 the declare or local builtin commands (see the descriptions of declare
 and local below) to create a nameref, or a reference to another
 variable. This allows variables to be manipulated indirectly.
 Whenever the nameref variable is referenced, assigned to, unset, or has
 its attributes modified (other than using or changing the nameref
 attribute itself), the operation is actually performed on the variable
 specified by the nameref variable's value. A nameref is commonly used
 within shell functions to refer to a variable whose name is passed as
 an argument to the function. For instance, if a variable name is
 passed to a shell function as its first argument, running
 declare -n ref=1ドル
 inside the function creates a local nameref variable ref whose value is
 the variable name passed as the first argument. References and
 assignments to ref, and changes to its attributes, are treated as
 references, assignments, and attribute modifications to the variable
 whose name was passed as 1ドル. If the control variable in a for loop has
 the nameref attribute, the list of words can be a list of shell
 variables, and a name reference is established for each word in the
 list, in turn, when the loop is executed. Array variables cannot be
 given the nameref attribute. However, nameref variables can reference
 array variables and subscripted array variables. Namerefs can be unset
 using the -n option to the unset builtin. Otherwise, if unset is
 executed with the name of a nameref variable as an argument, the
 variable referenced by the nameref variable is unset.
 When the shell starts, it reads its environment and creates a shell
 variable from each environment variable that has a valid name, as
 described below (see ENVIRONMENT).
 Positional Parameters
 A positional parameter is a parameter denoted by one or more digits,
 other than the single digit 0. Positional parameters are assigned from
 the shell's arguments when it is invoked, and may be reassigned using
 the set builtin command. Positional parameters may not be assigned to
 with assignment statements. The positional parameters are temporarily
 replaced when a shell function is executed (see FUNCTIONS below).
 When a positional parameter consisting of more than a single digit is
 expanded, it must be enclosed in braces (see EXPANSION below). Without
 braces, a digit following $ can only refer to one of the first nine
 positional parameters (1ドル-9ドル) or the special parameter 0ドル (see the next
 section).
 Special Parameters
 The shell treats several parameters specially. These parameters may
 only be referenced; assignment to them is not allowed. Special
 parameters are denoted by one of the following characters.
 * ($*) Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one.
 When the expansion is not within double quotes, each positional
 parameter expands to a separate word. In contexts where word
 expansions are performed, those words are subject to further
 word splitting and pathname expansion. When the expansion
 occurs within double quotes, it expands to a single word with
 the value of each parameter separated by the first character of
 the IFS variable. That is, "$*" is equivalent to "1ドルc2ドルc...",
 where c is the first character of the value of the IFS variable.
 If IFS is unset, the parameters are separated by spaces. If IFS
 is null, the parameters are joined without intervening
 separators.
 @ ($@) Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one.
 In contexts where word splitting is performed, this expands each
 positional parameter to a separate word; if not within double
 quotes, these words are subject to word splitting. In contexts
 where word splitting is not performed, such as the value portion
 of an assignment statement, this expands to a single word with
 each positional parameter separated by a space. When the
 expansion occurs within double quotes, and word splitting is
 performed, each parameter expands to a separate word. That is,
 "$@" is equivalent to "1ドル" "2ドル" ... If the double-quoted
 expansion occurs within a word, the expansion of the first
 parameter is joined with the expansion of the beginning part of
 the original word, and the expansion of the last parameter is
 joined with the expansion of the last part of the original word.
 When there are no positional parameters, "$@" and $@ expand to
 nothing (i.e., they are removed).
 # ($#) Expands to the number of positional parameters in decimal.
 ? ($?) Expands to the exit status of the most recently executed
 command.
 - ($-) Expands to the current option flags as specified upon
 invocation, by the set builtin command, or those set by the
 shell itself (such as the -i option).
 $ ($$) Expands to the process ID of the shell. In a subshell, it
 expands to the process ID of the parent shell, not the subshell.
 ! ($!)Expands to the process ID of the job most recently placed
 into the background, whether executed as an asynchronous command
 or using the bg builtin (see JOB CONTROL below).
 0 (0ドル) Expands to the name of the shell or shell script. This is
 set at shell initialization. If bash is invoked with a file of
 commands, 0ドル is set to the name of that file. If bash is
 started with the -c option, then 0ドル is set to the first argument
 after the string to be executed, if one is present. Otherwise,
 it is set to the filename used to invoke bash, as given by
 argument zero.
 Shell Variables
 The shell sets following variables:
 _ ($_, an underscore) This has a number of meanings depending on
 context. At shell startup, _ is set to the pathname used to
 invoke the shell or shell script being executed as passed in the
 environment or argument list. Subsequently, it expands to the
 last argument to the previous simple command executed in the
 foreground, after expansion. It is also set to the full
 pathname used to invoke each command executed and placed in the
 environment exported to that command. When checking mail, $_
 expands to the name of the mail file currently being checked.
 BASH Expands to the full filename used to invoke this instance of
 bash.
 BASHOPTS
 A colon-separated list of enabled shell options. Each word in
 the list is a valid argument for the -s option to the shopt
 builtin command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below). The options
 appearing in BASHOPTS are those reported as on by shopt. If
 this variable is in the environment when bash starts up, the
 shell enables each option in the list before reading any startup
 files. If this variable is exported, child shells will enable
 each option in the list. This variable is read-only.
 BASHPID
 Expands to the process ID of the current bash process. This
 differs from $$ under certain circumstances, such as subshells
 that do not require bash to be re-initialized. Assignments to
 BASHPID have no effect. If BASHPID is unset, it loses its
 special properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 BASH_ALIASES
 An associative array variable whose members correspond to the
 internal list of aliases as maintained by the alias builtin.
 Elements added to this array appear in the alias list; however,
 unsetting array elements currently does not remove aliases from
 the alias list. If BASH_ALIASES is unset, it loses its special
 properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 BASH_ARGC
 An array variable whose values are the number of parameters in
 each frame of the current bash execution call stack. The number
 of parameters to the current subroutine (shell function or
 script executed with . or source) is at the top of the stack.
 When a subroutine is executed, the number of parameters passed
 is pushed onto BASH_ARGC. The shell sets BASH_ARGC only when in
 extended debugging mode (see the description of the extdebug
 option to the shopt builtin below). Setting extdebug after the
 shell has started to execute a script, or referencing this
 variable when extdebug is not set, may result in inconsistent
 values. Assignments to BASH_ARGC have no effect, and it may not
 be unset.
 BASH_ARGV
 An array variable containing all of the parameters in the
 current bash execution call stack. The final parameter of the
 last subroutine call is at the top of the stack; the first
 parameter of the initial call is at the bottom. When a
 subroutine is executed, the shell pushes the supplied parameters
 onto BASH_ARGV. The shell sets BASH_ARGV only when in extended
 debugging mode (see the description of the extdebug option to
 the shopt builtin below). Setting extdebug after the shell has
 started to execute a script, or referencing this variable when
 extdebug is not set, may result in inconsistent values.
 Assignments to BASH_ARGV have no effect, and it may not be
 unset.
 BASH_ARGV0
 When referenced, this variable expands to the name of the shell
 or shell script (identical to 0ドル; see the description of special
 parameter 0 above). Assigning a value to BASH_ARGV0 sets 0ドル to
 the same value. If BASH_ARGV0 is unset, it loses its special
 properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 BASH_CMDS
 An associative array variable whose members correspond to the
 internal hash table of commands as maintained by the hash
 builtin. Adding elements to this array makes them appear in the
 hash table; however, unsetting array elements currently does not
 remove command names from the hash table. If BASH_CMDS is
 unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is
 subsequently reset.
 BASH_COMMAND
 Expands to the command currently being executed or about to be
 executed, unless the shell is executing a command as the result
 of a trap, in which case it is the command executing at the time
 of the trap. If BASH_COMMAND is unset, it loses its special
 properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 BASH_EXECUTION_STRING
 The command argument to the -c invocation option.
 BASH_LINENO
 An array variable whose members are the line numbers in source
 files where each corresponding member of FUNCNAME was invoked.
 ${BASH_LINENO[$i]} is the line number in the source file
 (${BASH_SOURCE[$i+1]}) where ${FUNCNAME[$i]} was called (or
 ${BASH_LINENO[$i-1]} if referenced within another shell
 function). Use LINENO to obtain the current line number.
 Assignments to BASH_LINENO have no effect, and it may not be
 unset.
 BASH_LOADABLES_PATH
 A colon-separated list of directories in which the enable
 command looks for dynamically loadable builtins.
 BASH_MONOSECONDS
 Each time this variable is referenced, it expands to the value
 returned by the system's monotonic clock, if one is available.
 If there is no monotonic clock, this is equivalent to
 EPOCHSECONDS. If BASH_MONOSECONDS is unset, it loses its
 special properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 BASH_REMATCH
 An array variable whose members are assigned by the =~ binary
 operator to the [[ conditional command. The element with index
 0 is the portion of the string matching the entire regular
 expression. The element with index n is the portion of the
 string matching the nth parenthesized subexpression.
 BASH_SOURCE
 An array variable whose members are the source filenames where
 the corresponding shell function names in the FUNCNAME array
 variable are defined. The shell function ${FUNCNAME[$i]} is
 defined in the file ${BASH_SOURCE[$i]} and called from
 ${BASH_SOURCE[$i+1]}. Assignments to BASH_SOURCE have no
 effect, and it may not be unset.
 BASH_SUBSHELL
 Incremented by one within each subshell or subshell environment
 when the shell begins executing in that environment. The
 initial value is 0. If BASH_SUBSHELL is unset, it loses its
 special properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 BASH_TRAPSIG
 Set to the signal number corresponding to the trap action being
 executed during its execution. See the description of trap
 under SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below for information about signal
 numbers and trap execution.
 BASH_VERSINFO
 A readonly array variable whose members hold version information
 for this instance of bash. The values assigned to the array
 members are as follows:
 BASH_VERSINFO[0] The major version number (the release).
 BASH_VERSINFO[1] The minor version number (the version).
 BASH_VERSINFO[2] The patch level.
 BASH_VERSINFO[3] The build version.
 BASH_VERSINFO[4] The release status (e.g., beta).
 BASH_VERSINFO[5] The value of MACHTYPE.
 BASH_VERSION
 Expands to a string describing the version of this instance of
 bash (e.g., 5.2.37(3)-release).
 COMP_CWORD
 An index into ${COMP_WORDS} of the word containing the current
 cursor position. This variable is available only in shell
 functions invoked by the programmable completion facilities (see
 Programmable Completion below).
 COMP_KEY
 The key (or final key of a key sequence) used to invoke the
 current completion function. This variable is available only in
 shell functions and external commands invoked by the
 programmable completion facilities (see Programmable Completion
 below).
 COMP_LINE
 The current command line. This variable is available only in
 shell functions and external commands invoked by the
 programmable completion facilities (see Programmable Completion
 below).
 COMP_POINT
 The index of the current cursor position relative to the
 beginning of the current command. If the current cursor
 position is at the end of the current command, the value of this
 variable is equal to ${#COMP_LINE}. This variable is available
 only in shell functions and external commands invoked by the
 programmable completion facilities (see Programmable Completion
 below).
 COMP_TYPE
 Set to an integer value corresponding to the type of attempted
 completion that caused a completion function to be called: TAB,
 for normal completion, ?, for listing completions after
 successive tabs, !, for listing alternatives on partial word
 completion, @, to list completions if the word is not
 unmodified, or %, for menu completion. This variable is
 available only in shell functions and external commands invoked
 by the programmable completion facilities (see Programmable
 Completion below).
 COMP_WORDBREAKS
 The set of characters that the readline library treats as word
 separators when performing word completion. If COMP_WORDBREAKS
 is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is
 subsequently reset.
 COMP_WORDS
 An array variable (see Arrays below) consisting of the
 individual words in the current command line. The line is split
 into words as readline would split it, using COMP_WORDBREAKS as
 described above. This variable is available only in shell
 functions invoked by the programmable completion facilities (see
 Programmable Completion below).
 COPROC An array variable (see Arrays below) created to hold the file
 descriptors for output from and input to an unnamed coprocess
 (see Coprocesses above).
 DIRSTACK
 An array variable (see Arrays below) containing the current
 contents of the directory stack. Directories appear in the
 stack in the order they are displayed by the dirs builtin.
 Assigning to members of this array variable may be used to
 modify directories already in the stack, but the pushd and popd
 builtins must be used to add and remove directories. Assigning
 to this variable does not change the current directory. If
 DIRSTACK is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it
 is subsequently reset.
 EPOCHREALTIME
 Each time this parameter is referenced, it expands to the number
 of seconds since the Unix Epoch (see time(3) ) as a floating-
 point value with micro-second granularity. Assignments to
 EPOCHREALTIME are ignored. If EPOCHREALTIME is unset, it loses
 its special properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 EPOCHSECONDS
 Each time this parameter is referenced, it expands to the number
 of seconds since the Unix Epoch (see time(3) ). Assignments to
 EPOCHSECONDS are ignored. If EPOCHSECONDS is unset, it loses
 its special properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 EUID Expands to the effective user ID of the current user,
 initialized at shell startup. This variable is readonly.
 FUNCNAME
 An array variable containing the names of all shell functions
 currently in the execution call stack. The element with index 0
 is the name of any currently-executing shell function. The
 bottom-most element (the one with the highest index) is "main".
 This variable exists only when a shell function is executing.
 Assignments to FUNCNAME have no effect. If FUNCNAME is unset,
 it loses its special properties, even if it is subsequently
 reset.
 This variable can be used with BASH_LINENO and BASH_SOURCE.
 Each element of FUNCNAME has corresponding elements in
 BASH_LINENO and BASH_SOURCE to describe the call stack. For
 instance, ${FUNCNAME[$i]} was called from the file
 ${BASH_SOURCE[$i+1]} at line number ${BASH_LINENO[$i]}. The
 caller builtin displays the current call stack using this
 information.
 GROUPS An array variable containing the list of groups of which the
 current user is a member. Assignments to GROUPS have no effect.
 If GROUPS is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it
 is subsequently reset.
 HISTCMD
 The history number, or index in the history list, of the current
 command. Assignments to HISTCMD have no effect. If HISTCMD is
 unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is
 subsequently reset.
 HOSTNAME
 Automatically set to the name of the current host.
 HOSTTYPE
 Automatically set to a string that uniquely describes the type
 of machine on which bash is executing. The default is system-
 dependent.
 LINENO Each time this parameter is referenced, the shell substitutes a
 decimal number representing the current sequential line number
 (starting with 1) within a script or function. When not in a
 script or function, the value substituted is not guaranteed to
 be meaningful. If LINENO is unset, it loses its special
 properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 MACHTYPE
 Automatically set to a string that fully describes the system
 type on which bash is executing, in the standard GNU cpu-
 company-system format. The default is system-dependent.
 MAPFILE
 An array variable (see Arrays below) created to hold the text
 read by the mapfile builtin when no variable name is supplied.
 OLDPWD The previous working directory as set by the cd command.
 OPTARG The value of the last option argument processed by the getopts
 builtin command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 OPTIND The index of the next argument to be processed by the getopts
 builtin command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 OSTYPE Automatically set to a string that describes the operating
 system on which bash is executing. The default is system-
 dependent.
 PIPESTATUS
 An array variable (see Arrays below) containing a list of exit
 status values from the commands in the most-recently-executed
 foreground pipeline, which may consist of only a simple command
 (see SHELL GRAMMAR above). Bash sets PIPESTATUS after executing
 multi-element pipelines, timed and negated pipelines, simple
 commands, subshells created with the ( operator, the [[ and ((
 compound commands, and after error conditions that result in the
 shell aborting command execution.
 PPID The process ID of the shell's parent. This variable is
 readonly.
 PWD The current working directory as set by the cd command.
 RANDOM Each time this parameter is referenced, it expands to a random
 integer between 0 and 32767. Assigning a value to RANDOM
 initializes (seeds) the sequence of random numbers. Seeding the
 random number generator with the same constant value produces
 the same sequence of values. If RANDOM is unset, it loses its
 special properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 READLINE_ARGUMENT
 Any numeric argument given to a readline command that was
 defined using "bind -x" (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below) when
 it was invoked.
 READLINE_LINE
 The contents of the readline line buffer, for use with "bind -x"
 (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 READLINE_MARK
 The position of the mark (saved insertion point) in the readline
 line buffer, for use with "bind -x" (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS
 below). The characters between the insertion point and the mark
 are often called the region.
 READLINE_POINT
 The position of the insertion point in the readline line buffer,
 for use with "bind -x" (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 REPLY Set to the line of input read by the read builtin command when
 no arguments are supplied.
 SECONDS
 Each time this parameter is referenced, it expands to the number
 of seconds since shell invocation. If a value is assigned to
 SECONDS, the value returned upon subsequent references is the
 number of seconds since the assignment plus the value assigned.
 The number of seconds at shell invocation and the current time
 are always determined by querying the system clock at one-second
 resolution. If SECONDS is unset, it loses its special
 properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 SHELLOPTS
 A colon-separated list of enabled shell options. Each word in
 the list is a valid argument for the -o option to the set
 builtin command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below). The options
 appearing in SHELLOPTS are those reported as on by set -o. If
 this variable is in the environment when bash starts up, the
 shell enables each option in the list before reading any startup
 files. If this variable is exported, child shells will enable
 each option in the list. This variable is read-only.
 SHLVL Incremented by one each time an instance of bash is started.
 SRANDOM
 Each time it is referenced, this variable expands to a 32-bit
 pseudo-random number. The random number generator is not linear
 on systems that support /dev/urandom or arc4random(3) , so each
 returned number has no relationship to the numbers preceding it.
 The random number generator cannot be seeded, so assignments to
 this variable have no effect. If SRANDOM is unset, it loses its
 special properties, even if it is subsequently reset.
 UID Expands to the user ID of the current user, initialized at shell
 startup. This variable is readonly.
 The shell uses the following variables. In some cases, bash assigns a
 default value to a variable; these cases are noted below.
 BASH_COMPAT
 The value is used to set the shell's compatibility level. See
 SHELL COMPATIBILITY MODE below for a description of the various
 compatibility levels and their effects. The value may be a
 decimal number (e.g., 4.2) or an integer (e.g., 42)
 corresponding to the desired compatibility level. If
 BASH_COMPAT is unset or set to the empty string, the
 compatibility level is set to the default for the current
 version. If BASH_COMPAT is set to a value that is not one of
 the valid compatibility levels, the shell prints an error
 message and sets the compatibility level to the default for the
 current version. A subset of the valid values correspond to the
 compatibility levels described below under SHELL COMPATIBILITY
 MODE. For example, 4.2 and 42 are valid values that correspond
 to the compat42 shopt option and set the compatibility level to
 42. The current version is also a valid value.
 BASH_ENV
 If this parameter is set when bash is executing a shell script,
 its expanded value is interpreted as a filename containing
 commands to initialize the shell before it reads and executes
 commands from the script. The value of BASH_ENV is subjected to
 parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic
 expansion before being interpreted as a filename. PATH is not
 used to search for the resultant filename.
 BASH_XTRACEFD
 If set to an integer corresponding to a valid file descriptor,
 bash writes the trace output generated when "set -x" is enabled
 to that file descriptor, instead of the standard error. The
 file descriptor is closed when BASH_XTRACEFD is unset or
 assigned a new value. Unsetting BASH_XTRACEFD or assigning it
 the empty string causes the trace output to be sent to the
 standard error. Note that setting BASH_XTRACEFD to 2 (the
 standard error file descriptor) and then unsetting it will
 result in the standard error being closed.
 CDPATH The search path for the cd command. This is a colon-separated
 list of directories where the shell looks for directories
 specified as arguments to the cd command. A sample value is
 ".:~:/usr".
 CHILD_MAX
 Set the number of exited child status values for the shell to
 remember. Bash will not allow this value to be decreased below
 a POSIX-mandated minimum, and there is a maximum value
 (currently 8192) that this may not exceed. The minimum value is
 system-dependent.
 COLUMNS
 Used by the select compound command to determine the terminal
 width when printing selection lists. Automatically set if the
 checkwinsize option is enabled or in an interactive shell upon
 receipt of a SIGWINCH.
 COMPREPLY
 An array variable from which bash reads the possible completions
 generated by a shell function invoked by the programmable
 completion facility (see Programmable Completion below). Each
 array element contains one possible completion.
 EMACS If bash finds this variable in the environment when the shell
 starts with value "t", it assumes that the shell is running in
 an Emacs shell buffer and disables line editing.
 ENV Expanded and executed similarly to BASH_ENV (see INVOCATION
 above) when an interactive shell is invoked in posix mode.
 EXECIGNORE
 A colon-separated list of shell patterns (see Pattern Matching)
 defining the set of filenames to be ignored by command search
 using PATH. Files whose full pathnames match one of these
 patterns are not considered executable files for the purposes of
 completion and command execution via PATH lookup. This does not
 affect the behavior of the [, test, and [[ commands. Full
 pathnames in the command hash table are not subject to
 EXECIGNORE. Use this variable to ignore shared library files
 that have the executable bit set, but are not executable files.
 The pattern matching honors the setting of the extglob shell
 option.
 FCEDIT The default editor for the fc builtin command.
 FIGNORE
 A colon-separated list of suffixes to ignore when performing
 filename completion (see READLINE below). A filename whose
 suffix matches one of the entries in FIGNORE is excluded from
 the list of matched filenames. A sample value is ".o:~".
 FUNCNEST
 If set to a numeric value greater than 0, defines a maximum
 function nesting level. Function invocations that exceed this
 nesting level cause the current command to abort.
 GLOBIGNORE
 A colon-separated list of patterns defining the set of file
 names to be ignored by pathname expansion. If a file name
 matched by a pathname expansion pattern also matches one of the
 patterns in GLOBIGNORE, it is removed from the list of matches.
 The pattern matching honors the setting of the extglob shell
 option.
 GLOBSORT
 Controls how the results of pathname expansion are sorted. The
 value of this variable specifies the sort criteria and sort
 order for the results of pathname expansion. If this variable
 is unset or set to the null string, pathname expansion uses the
 historical behavior of sorting by name, in ascending
 lexicographic order as determined by the LC_COLLATE shell
 variable.
 If set, a valid value begins with an optional +, which is
 ignored, or -, which reverses the sort order from ascending to
 descending, followed by a sort specifier. The valid sort
 specifiers are name, numeric, size, mtime, atime, ctime, and
 blocks, which sort the files on name, names in numeric rather
 than lexicographic order, file size, modification time, access
 time, inode change time, and number of blocks, respectively. If
 any of the non-name keys compare as equal (e.g., if two files
 are the same size), sorting uses the name as a secondary sort
 key.
 For example, a value of -mtime sorts the results in descending
 order by modification time (newest first).
 The numeric specifier treats names consisting solely of digits
 as numbers and sorts them using their numeric value (so "2"
 sorts before "10", for example). When using numeric, names
 containing non-digits sort after all the all-digit names and are
 sorted by name using the traditional behavior.
 A sort specifier of nosort disables sorting completely; bash
 returns the results in the order they are read from the file
 system, ignoring any leading -.
 If the sort specifier is missing, it defaults to name, so a
 value of + is equivalent to the null string, and a value of -
 sorts by name in descending order. Any invalid value restores
 the historical sorting behavior.
 HISTCONTROL
 A colon-separated list of values controlling how commands are
 saved on the history list. If the list of values includes
 ignorespace, lines which begin with a space character are not
 saved in the history list. A value of ignoredups causes lines
 matching the previous history entry not to be saved. A value of
 ignoreboth is shorthand for ignorespace and ignoredups. A value
 of erasedups causes all previous lines matching the current line
 to be removed from the history list before that line is saved.
 Any value not in the above list is ignored. If HISTCONTROL is
 unset, or does not include a valid value, bash saves all lines
 read by the shell parser on the history list, subject to the
 value of HISTIGNORE. If the first line of a multi-line compound
 command was saved, the second and subsequent lines are not
 tested, and are added to the history regardless of the value of
 HISTCONTROL. If the first line was not saved, the second and
 subsequent lines of the command are not saved either.
 HISTFILE
 The name of the file in which command history is saved (see
 HISTORY below). Bash assigns a default value of
 ~/.bash_history. If HISTFILE is unset or null, the shell does
 not save the command history when it exits.
 HISTFILESIZE
 The maximum number of lines contained in the history file. When
 this variable is assigned a value, the history file is
 truncated, if necessary, to contain no more than the number of
 history entries that total no more than that number of lines by
 removing the oldest entries. If the history list contains
 multi-line entries, the history file may contain more lines than
 this maximum to avoid leaving partial history entries. The
 history file is also truncated to this size after writing it
 when a shell exits or by the history builtin. If the value is
 0, the history file is truncated to zero size. Non-numeric
 values and numeric values less than zero inhibit truncation.
 The shell sets the default value to the value of HISTSIZE after
 reading any startup files.
 HISTIGNORE
 A colon-separated list of patterns used to decide which command
 lines should be saved on the history list. If a command line
 matches one of the patterns in the value of HISTIGNORE, it is
 not saved on the history list. Each pattern is anchored at the
 beginning of the line and must match the complete line (bash
 does not implicitly append a "*"). Each pattern is tested
 against the line after the checks specified by HISTCONTROL are
 applied. In addition to the normal shell pattern matching
 characters, "&" matches the previous history line. A backslash
 escapes the "&"; the backslash is removed before attempting a
 match. If the first line of a multi-line compound command was
 saved, the second and subsequent lines are not tested, and are
 added to the history regardless of the value of HISTIGNORE. If
 the first line was not saved, the second and subsequent lines of
 the command are not saved either. The pattern matching honors
 the setting of the extglob shell option.
 HISTIGNORE subsumes some of the function of HISTCONTROL. A
 pattern of "&" is identical to "ignoredups", and a pattern of "[
 ]*" is identical to "ignorespace". Combining these two
 patterns, separating them with a colon, provides the
 functionality of "ignoreboth".
 HISTSIZE
 The number of commands to remember in the command history (see
 HISTORY below). If the value is 0, commands are not saved in
 the history list. Numeric values less than zero result in every
 command being saved on the history list (there is no limit).
 The shell sets the default value to 500 after reading any
 startup files.
 HISTTIMEFORMAT
 If this variable is set and not null, its value is used as a
 format string for strftime(3)  to print the time stamp associated
 with each history entry displayed by the history builtin. If
 this variable is set, the shell writes time stamps to the
 history file so they may be preserved across shell sessions.
 This uses the history comment character to distinguish
 timestamps from other history lines.
 HOME The home directory of the current user; the default argument for
 the cd builtin command. The value of this variable is also used
 when performing tilde expansion.
 HOSTFILE
 Contains the name of a file in the same format as /etc/hosts
 that should be read when the shell needs to complete a hostname.
 The list of possible hostname completions may be changed while
 the shell is running; the next time hostname completion is
 attempted after the value is changed, bash adds the contents of
 the new file to the existing list. If HOSTFILE is set, but has
 no value, or does not name a readable file, bash attempts to
 read /etc/hosts to obtain the list of possible hostname
 completions. When HOSTFILE is unset, bash clears the hostname
 list.
 IFS The Internal Field Separator that is used for word splitting
 after expansion and to split lines into words with the read
 builtin command. Word splitting is described below under
 EXPANSION. The default value is "<space><tab><newline>".
 IGNOREEOF
 Controls the action of an interactive shell on receipt of an EOF
 character as the sole input. If set, the value is the number of
 consecutive EOF characters which must be typed as the first
 characters on an input line before bash exits. If the variable
 is set but does not have a numeric value, or the value is null,
 the default value is 10. If it is unset, EOF signifies the end
 of input to the shell.
 INPUTRC
 The filename for the readline startup file, overriding the
 default of ~/.inputrc (see READLINE below).
 INSIDE_EMACS
 If this variable appears in the environment when the shell
 starts, bash assumes that it is running inside an Emacs shell
 buffer and may disable line editing, depending on the value of
 TERM.
 LANG Used to determine the locale category for any category not
 specifically selected with a variable starting with LC_.
 LC_ALL This variable overrides the value of LANG and any other LC_
 variable specifying a locale category.
 LC_COLLATE
 This variable determines the collation order used when sorting
 the results of pathname expansion, and determines the behavior
 of range expressions, equivalence classes, and collating
 sequences within pathname expansion and pattern matching.
 LC_CTYPE
 This variable determines the interpretation of characters and
 the behavior of character classes within pathname expansion and
 pattern matching.
 LC_MESSAGES
 This variable determines the locale used to translate double-
 quoted strings preceded by a $.
 LC_NUMERIC
 This variable determines the locale category used for number
 formatting.
 LC_TIME
 This variable determines the locale category used for data and
 time formatting.
 LINES Used by the select compound command to determine the column
 length for printing selection lists. Automatically set if the
 checkwinsize option is enabled or in an interactive shell upon
 receipt of a SIGWINCH.
 MAIL If the value is set to a file or directory name and the MAILPATH
 variable is not set, bash informs the user of the arrival of
 mail in the specified file or Maildir-format directory.
 MAILCHECK
 Specifies how often (in seconds) bash checks for mail. The
 default is 60 seconds. When it is time to check for mail, the
 shell does so before displaying the primary prompt. If this
 variable is unset, or set to a value that is not a number
 greater than or equal to zero, the shell disables mail checking.
 MAILPATH
 A colon-separated list of filenames to be checked for mail. The
 message to be printed when mail arrives in a particular file may
 be specified by separating the filename from the message with a
 "?". When used in the text of the message, $_ expands to the
 name of the current mailfile. For example:
 MAILPATH='/var/mail/bfox?"You have mail":~/shell-mail?"$_ has mail!"'
 Bash can be configured to supply a default value for this
 variable (there is no value by default), but the location of the
 user mail files that it uses is system dependent (e.g.,
 /var/mail/$USER).
 OPTERR If set to the value 1, bash displays error messages generated by
 the getopts builtin command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 OPTERR is initialized to 1 each time the shell is invoked or a
 shell script is executed.
 PATH The search path for commands. It is a colon-separated list of
 directories in which the shell looks for commands (see COMMAND
 EXECUTION below). A zero-length (null) directory name in the
 value of PATH indicates the current directory. A null directory
 name may appear as two adjacent colons, or as an initial or
 trailing colon. The default path is system-dependent, and is
 set by the administrator who installs bash. A common value is
 /usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:
 /usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin
 POSIXLY_CORRECT
 If this variable is in the environment when bash starts, the
 shell enters posix mode before reading the startup files, as if
 the --posix invocation option had been supplied. If it is set
 while the shell is running, bash enables posix mode, as if the
 command "set -o posix" had been executed. When the shell enters
 posix mode, it sets this variable if it was not already set.
 PROMPT_COMMAND
 If this variable is set, and is an array, the value of each set
 element is executed as a command prior to issuing each primary
 prompt. If this is set but not an array variable, its value is
 used as a command to execute instead.
 PROMPT_DIRTRIM
 If set to a number greater than zero, the value is used as the
 number of trailing directory components to retain when expanding
 the \w and \W prompt string escapes (see PROMPTING below).
 Characters removed are replaced with an ellipsis.
 PS0 The value of this parameter is expanded (see PROMPTING below)
 and displayed by interactive shells after reading a command and
 before the command is executed.
 PS1 The value of this parameter is expanded (see PROMPTING below)
 and used as the primary prompt string. The default value is
 "\s-\v\$ ".
 PS2 The value of this parameter is expanded as with PS1 and used as
 the secondary prompt string. The default is "> ".
 PS3 The value of this parameter is used as the prompt for the select
 command (see SHELL GRAMMAR above).
 PS4 The value of this parameter is expanded as with PS1 and the
 value is printed before each command bash displays during an
 execution trace. The first character of the expanded value of
 PS4 is replicated multiple times, as necessary, to indicate
 multiple levels of indirection. The default is "+ ".
 SHELL This variable expands to the full pathname to the shell. If it
 is not set when the shell starts, bash assigns to it the full
 pathname of the current user's login shell.
 TIMEFORMAT
 The value of this parameter is used as a format string
 specifying how the timing information for pipelines prefixed
 with the time reserved word should be displayed. The %
 character introduces an escape sequence that is expanded to a
 time value or other information. The escape sequences and their
 meanings are as follows; the brackets denote optional portions.
 %% A literal %.
 %[p][l]R The elapsed time in seconds.
 %[p][l]U The number of CPU seconds spent in user mode.
 %[p][l]S The number of CPU seconds spent in system mode.
 %P The CPU percentage, computed as (%U + %S) / %R.
 The optional p is a digit specifying the precision, the number
 of fractional digits after a decimal point. A value of 0 causes
 no decimal point or fraction to be output. time prints at most
 six digits after the decimal point; values of p greater than 6
 are changed to 6. If p is not specified, time prints three
 digits after the decimal point.
 The optional l specifies a longer format, including minutes, of
 the form MMmSS.FFs. The value of p determines whether or not
 the fraction is included.
 If this variable is not set, bash acts as if it had the value
 $'\nreal\t%3lR\nuser\t%3lU\nsys\t%3lS'. If the value is null,
 bash does not display any timing information. A trailing
 newline is added when the format string is displayed.
 TMOUT If set to a value greater than zero, the read builtin uses the
 value as its default timeout. The select command terminates if
 input does not arrive after TMOUT seconds when input is coming
 from a terminal. In an interactive shell, the value is
 interpreted as the number of seconds to wait for a line of input
 after issuing the primary prompt. Bash terminates after waiting
 for that number of seconds if a complete line of input does not
 arrive.
 TMPDIR If set, bash uses its value as the name of a directory in which
 bash creates temporary files for the shell's use.
 auto_resume
 This variable controls how the shell interacts with the user and
 job control. If this variable is set, simple commands
 consisting of only a single word, without redirections, are
 treated as candidates for resumption of an existing stopped job.
 There is no ambiguity allowed; if there is more than one job
 beginning with or containing the word, this selects the most
 recently accessed job. The name of a stopped job, in this
 context, is the command line used to start it, as displayed by
 jobs. If set to the value exact, the word must match the name
 of a stopped job exactly; if set to substring, the word needs to
 match a substring of the name of a stopped job. The substring
 value provides functionality analogous to the %? job identifier
 (see JOB CONTROL below). If set to any other value (e.g.,
 prefix), the word must be a prefix of a stopped job's name; this
 provides functionality analogous to the %string job identifier.
 histchars
 The two or three characters which control history expansion,
 quick substitution, and tokenization (see HISTORY EXPANSION
 below). The first character is the history expansion character,
 the character which begins a history expansion, normally "!".
 The second character is the quick substitution character,
 normally "^". When it appears as the first character on the
 line, history substitution repeats the previous command,
 replacing one string with another. The optional third character
 is the history comment character, normally "#", which indicates
 that the remainder of the line is a comment when it appears as
 the first character of a word. The history comment character
 disables history substitution for the remaining words on the
 line. It does not necessarily cause the shell parser to treat
 the rest of the line as a comment.
 Arrays
 Bash provides one-dimensional indexed and associative array variables.
 Any variable may be used as an indexed array; the declare builtin
 explicitly declares an array. There is no maximum limit on the size of
 an array, nor any requirement that members be indexed or assigned
 contiguously. Indexed arrays are referenced using arithmetic
 expressions that must expand to an integer (see ARITHMETIC EVALUATION
 below) and are zero-based; associative arrays are referenced using
 arbitrary strings. Unless otherwise noted, indexed array indices must
 be non-negative integers.
 The shell performs parameter and variable expansion, arithmetic
 expansion, command substitution, and quote removal on indexed array
 subscripts. Since this can potentially result in empty strings,
 subscript indexing treats those as expressions that evaluate to 0.
 The shell performs tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion,
 arithmetic expansion, command substitution, and quote removal on
 associative array subscripts. Empty strings cannot be used as
 associative array keys.
 Bash automatically creates an indexed array if any variable is assigned
 to using the syntax
 name[subscript]=value .
 The subscript is treated as an arithmetic expression that must evaluate
 to a number greater than or equal to zero. To explicitly declare an
 indexed array, use
 declare -a name
 (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 declare -a name[subscript]
 is also accepted; the subscript is ignored.
 Associative arrays are created using
 declare -A name
 .
 Attributes may be specified for an array variable using the declare and
 readonly builtins. Each attribute applies to all members of an array.
 Arrays are assigned using compound assignments of the form name=(value1
 ... valuen), where each value may be of the form [subscript]=string.
 Indexed array assignments do not require anything but string. Each
 value in the list is expanded using the shell expansions described
 below under EXPANSION, but values that are valid variable assignments
 including the brackets and subscript do not undergo brace expansion and
 word splitting, as with individual variable assignments.
 When assigning to indexed arrays, if the optional brackets and
 subscript are supplied, that index is assigned to; otherwise the index
 of the element assigned is the last index assigned to by the statement
 plus one. Indexing starts at zero.
 When assigning to an associative array, the words in a compound
 assignment may be either assignment statements, for which the subscript
 is required, or a list of words that is interpreted as a sequence of
 alternating keys and values: name=( key1 value1 key2 value2 ...).
 These are treated identically to name=( [key1]=value1 [key2]=value2
 ...). The first word in the list determines how the remaining words
 are interpreted; all assignments in a list must be of the same type.
 When using key/value pairs, the keys may not be missing or empty; a
 final missing value is treated like the empty string.
 This syntax is also accepted by the declare builtin. Individual array
 elements may be assigned to using the name[subscript]=value syntax
 introduced above.
 When assigning to an indexed array, if name is subscripted by a
 negative number, that number is interpreted as relative to one greater
 than the maximum index of name, so negative indices count back from the
 end of the array, and an index of -1 references the last element.
 The "+=" operator appends to an array variable when assigning using the
 compound assignment syntax; see PARAMETERS above.
 An array element is referenced using ${name[subscript]}. The braces
 are required to avoid conflicts with pathname expansion. If subscript
 is @ or *, the word expands to all members of name, unless noted in the
 description of a builtin or word expansion. These subscripts differ
 only when the word appears within double quotes. If the word is
 double-quoted, ${name[*]} expands to a single word with the value of
 each array member separated by the first character of the IFS special
 variable, and ${name[@]} expands each element of name to a separate
 word. When there are no array members, ${name[@]} expands to nothing.
 If the double-quoted expansion occurs within a word, the expansion of
 the first parameter is joined with the beginning part of the expansion
 of the original word, and the expansion of the last parameter is joined
 with the last part of the expansion of the original word. This is
 analogous to the expansion of the special parameters * and @ (see
 Special Parameters above).
 ${#name[subscript]} expands to the length of ${name[subscript]}. If
 subscript is * or @, the expansion is the number of elements in the
 array.
 If the subscript used to reference an element of an indexed array
 evaluates to a number less than zero, it is interpreted as relative to
 one greater than the maximum index of the array, so negative indices
 count back from the end of the array, and an index of -1 references the
 last element.
 Referencing an array variable without a subscript is equivalent to
 referencing the array with a subscript of 0. Any reference to a
 variable using a valid subscript is valid; bash creates an array if
 necessary.
 An array variable is considered set if a subscript has been assigned a
 value. The null string is a valid value.
 It is possible to obtain the keys (indices) of an array as well as the
 values. ${!name[@]} and ${!name[*]} expand to the indices assigned in
 array variable name. The treatment when in double quotes is similar to
 the expansion of the special parameters @ and * within double quotes.
 The unset builtin is used to destroy arrays. unset name[subscript]
 unsets the array element at index subscript, for both indexed and
 associative arrays. Negative subscripts to indexed arrays are
 interpreted as described above. Unsetting the last element of an array
 variable does not unset the variable. unset name, where name is an
 array, removes the entire array. unset name[subscript] behaves
 differently depending on whether name is an indexed or associative
 array when subscript is * or @. If name is an associative array, this
 unsets the element with subscript * or @. If name is an indexed array,
 unset removes all of the elements but does not remove the array itself.
 When using a variable name with a subscript as an argument to a
 command, such as with unset, without using the word expansion syntax
 described above, (e.g., unset a[4]), the argument is subject to
 pathname expansion. Quote the argument if pathname expansion is not
 desired (e.g., unset 'a[4]').
 The declare, local, and readonly builtins each accept a -a option to
 specify an indexed array and a -A option to specify an associative
 array. If both options are supplied, -A takes precedence. The read
 builtin accepts a -a option to assign a list of words read from the
 standard input to an array. The set and declare builtins display array
 values in a way that allows them to be reused as assignments. Other
 builtins accept array name arguments as well (e.g., mapfile); see the
 descriptions of individual builtins below for details. The shell
 provides a number of builtin array variables.

EXPANSION

 Expansion is performed on the command line after it has been split into
 words. The shell performs these expansions: brace expansion, tilde
 expansion, parameter and variable expansion, command substitution,
 arithmetic expansion, word splitting, pathname expansion, and quote
 removal.
 The order of expansions is: brace expansion; tilde expansion, parameter
 and variable expansion, arithmetic expansion, and command substitution
 (done in a left-to-right fashion); word splitting; pathname expansion;
 and quote removal.
 On systems that can support it, there is an additional expansion
 available: process substitution. This is performed at the same time as
 tilde, parameter, variable, and arithmetic expansion and command
 substitution.
 Quote removal is always performed last. It removes quote characters
 present in the original word, not ones resulting from one of the other
 expansions, unless they have been quoted themselves.
 Only brace expansion, word splitting, and pathname expansion can
 increase the number of words of the expansion; other expansions expand
 a single word to a single word. The only exceptions to this are the
 expansions of "$@" and "${name[@]}", and, in most cases, $* and
 ${name[*]} as explained above (see PARAMETERS).
 Brace Expansion
 Brace expansion is a mechanism to generate arbitrary strings sharing a
 common prefix and suffix, either of which can be empty. This mechanism
 is similar to pathname expansion, but the filenames generated need not
 exist. Patterns to be brace expanded are formed from an optional
 preamble, followed by either a series of comma-separated strings or a
 sequence expression between a pair of braces, followed by an optional
 postscript. The preamble is prefixed to each string contained within
 the braces, and the postscript is then appended to each resulting
 string, expanding left to right.
 Brace expansions may be nested. The results of each expanded string
 are not sorted; brace expansion preserves left to right order. For
 example, a{d,c,b}e expands into "ade ace abe".
 A sequence expression takes the form x..y[..incr], where x and y are
 either integers or single letters, and incr, an optional increment, is
 an integer. When integers are supplied, the expression expands to each
 number between x and y, inclusive. If either x or y begins with a
 zero, each generated term will contain the same number of digits, zero-
 padding where necessary. When letters are supplied, the expression
 expands to each character lexicographically between x and y, inclusive,
 using the C locale. Note that both x and y must be of the same type
 (integer or letter). When the increment is supplied, it is used as the
 difference between each term. The default increment is 1 or -1 as
 appropriate.
 Brace expansion is performed before any other expansions, and any
 characters special to other expansions are preserved in the result. It
 is strictly textual. Bash does not apply any syntactic interpretation
 to the context of the expansion or the text between the braces.
 A correctly-formed brace expansion must contain unquoted opening and
 closing braces, and at least one unquoted comma or a valid sequence
 expression. Any incorrectly formed brace expansion is left unchanged.
 A "{" or Q , may be quoted with a backslash to prevent its being
 considered part of a brace expression. To avoid conflicts with
 parameter expansion, the string "${" is not considered eligible for
 brace expansion, and inhibits brace expansion until the closing "}".
 This construct is typically used as shorthand when the common prefix of
 the strings to be generated is longer than in the above example:
 mkdir /usr/local/src/bash/{old,new,dist,bugs}
 or
 chown root /usr/{ucb/{ex,edit},lib/{ex?.?*,how_ex}}
 Brace expansion introduces a slight incompatibility with historical
 versions of sh. sh does not treat opening or closing braces specially
 when they appear as part of a word, and preserves them in the output.
 Bash removes braces from words as a consequence of brace expansion.
 For example, a word entered to sh as "file{1,2}" appears identically in
 the output. Bash outputs that word as "file1 file2" after brace
 expansion. Start bash with the +B option or disable brace expansion
 with the +B option to the set command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS
 below) for strict sh compatibility.
 Tilde Expansion
 If a word begins with an unquoted tilde character ("~"), all of the
 characters preceding the first unquoted slash (or all characters, if
 there is no unquoted slash) are considered a tilde-prefix. If none of
 the characters in the tilde-prefix are quoted, the characters in the
 tilde-prefix following the tilde are treated as a possible login name.
 If this login name is the null string, the tilde is replaced with the
 value of the shell parameter HOME. If HOME is unset, the tilde expands
 to the home directory of the user executing the shell instead.
 Otherwise, the tilde-prefix is replaced with the home directory
 associated with the specified login name.
 If the tilde-prefix is a "~+", the value of the shell variable PWD
 replaces the tilde-prefix. If the tilde-prefix is a "~-", the shell
 substitutes the value of the shell variable OLDPWD, if it is set. If
 the characters following the tilde in the tilde-prefix consist of a
 number N, optionally prefixed by a "+" or a "-", the tilde-prefix is
 replaced with the corresponding element from the directory stack, as it
 would be displayed by the dirs builtin invoked with the characters
 following the tilde in the tilde-prefix as an argument. If the
 characters following the tilde in the tilde-prefix consist of a number
 without a leading "+" or "-", tilde expansion assumes "+".
 The results of tilde expansion are treated as if they were quoted, so
 the replacement is not subject to word splitting and pathname
 expansion.
 If the login name is invalid, or the tilde expansion fails, the tilde-
 prefix is unchanged.
 Bash checks each variable assignment for unquoted tilde-prefixes
 immediately following a : or the first =, and performs tilde expansion
 in these cases. Consequently, one may use filenames with tildes in
 assignments to PATH, MAILPATH, and CDPATH, and the shell assigns the
 expanded value.
 Bash also performs tilde expansion on words satisfying the conditions
 of variable assignments (as described above under PARAMETERS) when they
 appear as arguments to simple commands. Bash does not do this, except
 for the declaration commands listed above, when in posix mode.
 Parameter Expansion
 The "$" character introduces parameter expansion, command substitution,
 or arithmetic expansion. The parameter name or symbol to be expanded
 may be enclosed in braces, which are optional but serve to protect the
 variable to be expanded from characters immediately following it which
 could be interpreted as part of the name.
 When braces are used, the matching ending brace is the first "}" not
 escaped by a backslash or within a quoted string, and not within an
 embedded arithmetic expansion, command substitution, or parameter
 expansion.
 The basic form of parameter expansion is
 ${parameter}
 which substitutes the value of parameter. The braces are required when
 parameter is a positional parameter with more than one digit, or when
 parameter is followed by a character which is not to be interpreted as
 part of its name. The parameter is a shell parameter as described
 above PARAMETERS) or an array reference (Arrays).
 If the first character of parameter is an exclamation point (!), and
 parameter is not a nameref, it introduces a level of indirection. Bash
 uses the value formed by expanding the rest of parameter as the new
 parameter; this new parameter is then expanded and that value is used
 in the rest of the expansion, rather than the expansion of the original
 parameter. This is known as indirect expansion. The value is subject
 to tilde expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, and
 arithmetic expansion. If parameter is a nameref, this expands to the
 name of the parameter referenced by parameter instead of performing the
 complete indirect expansion, for compatibility. The exceptions to this
 are the expansions of ${!prefix*} and ${!name[@]} described below. The
 exclamation point must immediately follow the left brace in order to
 introduce indirection.
 In each of the cases below, word is subject to tilde expansion,
 parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion.
 When not performing substring expansion, using the forms documented
 below (e.g., :-), bash tests for a parameter that is unset or null.
 Omitting the colon tests only for a parameter that is unset.
 ${parameter:-word}
 Use Default Values. If parameter is unset or null, the
 expansion of word is substituted. Otherwise, the value of
 parameter is substituted.
 ${parameter:=word}
 Assign Default Values. If parameter is unset or null, the
 expansion of word is assigned to parameter, and the expansion is
 the final value of parameter. Positional parameters and special
 parameters may not be assigned in this way.
 ${parameter:?word}
 Display Error if Null or Unset. If parameter is null or unset,
 the shell writes the expansion of word (or a message to that
 effect if word is not present) to the standard error and, if it
 is not interactive, exits with a non-zero status. An
 interactive shell does not exit, but does not execute the
 command associated with the expansion. Otherwise, the value of
 parameter is substituted.
 ${parameter:+word}
 Use Alternate Value. If parameter is null or unset, nothing is
 substituted, otherwise the expansion of word is substituted.
 The value of parameter is not used.
 ${parameter:offset}
 ${parameter:offset:length}
 Substring Expansion. Expands to up to length characters of the
 value of parameter starting at the character specified by
 offset. If parameter is @ or *, an indexed array subscripted by
 @ or *, or an associative array name, the results differ as
 described below. If :length is omitted (the first form above),
 this expands to the substring of the value of parameter starting
 at the character specified by offset and extending to the end of
 the value. If offset is omitted, it is treated as 0. If length
 is omitted, but the colon after offset is present, it is treated
 as 0. length and offset are arithmetic expressions (see
 ARITHMETIC EVALUATION below).
 If offset evaluates to a number less than zero, the value is
 used as an offset in characters from the end of the value of
 parameter. If length evaluates to a number less than zero, it
 is interpreted as an offset in characters from the end of the
 value of parameter rather than a number of characters, and the
 expansion is the characters between offset and that result.
 Note that a negative offset must be separated from the colon by
 at least one space to avoid being confused with the :-
 expansion.
 If parameter is @ or *, the result is length positional
 parameters beginning at offset. A negative offset is taken
 relative to one greater than the greatest positional parameter,
 so an offset of -1 evaluates to the last positional parameter
 (or 0 if there are no positional parameters). It is an
 expansion error if length evaluates to a number less than zero.
 If parameter is an indexed array name subscripted by @ or *, the
 result is the length members of the array beginning with
 ${parameter[offset]}. A negative offset is taken relative to
 one greater than the maximum index of the specified array. It
 is an expansion error if length evaluates to a number less than
 zero.
 Substring expansion applied to an associative array produces
 undefined results.
 Substring indexing is zero-based unless the positional
 parameters are used, in which case the indexing starts at 1 by
 default. If offset is 0, and the positional parameters are
 used, 0ドル is prefixed to the list.
 ${!prefix*}
 ${!prefix@}
 Names matching prefix. Expands to the names of variables whose
 names begin with prefix, separated by the first character of the
 IFS special variable. When @ is used and the expansion appears
 within double quotes, each variable name expands to a separate
 word.
 ${!name[@]}
 ${!name[*]}
 List of array keys. If name is an array variable, expands to
 the list of array indices (keys) assigned in name. If name is
 not an array, expands to 0 if name is set and null otherwise.
 When @ is used and the expansion appears within double quotes,
 each key expands to a separate word.
 ${#parameter}
 Parameter length. Substitutes the length in characters of the
 expanded value of parameter. If parameter is * or @, the value
 substituted is the number of positional parameters. If
 parameter is an array name subscripted by * or @, the value
 substituted is the number of elements in the array. If
 parameter is an indexed array name subscripted by a negative
 number, that number is interpreted as relative to one greater
 than the maximum index of parameter, so negative indices count
 back from the end of the array, and an index of -1 references
 the last element.
 ${parameter#word}
 ${parameter##word}
 Remove matching prefix pattern. The word is expanded to produce
 a pattern just as in pathname expansion, and matched against the
 expanded value of parameter using the rules described under
 Pattern Matching below. If the pattern matches the beginning of
 the value of parameter, then the result of the expansion is the
 expanded value of parameter with the shortest matching pattern
 (the "#" case) or the longest matching pattern (the "##" case)
 deleted. If parameter is @ or *, the pattern removal operation
 is applied to each positional parameter in turn, and the
 expansion is the resultant list. If parameter is an array
 variable subscripted with @ or *, the pattern removal operation
 is applied to each member of the array in turn, and the
 expansion is the resultant list.
 ${parameter%word}
 ${parameter%%word}
 Remove matching suffix pattern. The word is expanded to produce
 a pattern just as in pathname expansion, and matched against the
 expanded value of parameter using the rules described under
 Pattern Matching below. If the pattern matches a trailing
 portion of the expanded value of parameter, then the result of
 the expansion is the expanded value of parameter with the
 shortest matching pattern (the "%" case) or the longest matching
 pattern (the "%%" case) deleted. If parameter is @ or *, the
 pattern removal operation is applied to each positional
 parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. If
 parameter is an array variable subscripted with @ or *, the
 pattern removal operation is applied to each member of the array
 in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list.
 ${parameter/pattern/string}
 ${parameter//pattern/string}
 ${parameter/#pattern/string}
 ${parameter/%pattern/string}
 Pattern substitution. The pattern is expanded to produce a
 pattern and matched against the expanded value of parameter as
 described under Pattern Matching below. The longest match of
 pattern in the expanded value is replaced with string. string
 undergoes tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion,
 arithmetic expansion, command and process substitution, and
 quote removal.
 In the first form above, only the first match is replaced. If
 there are two slashes separating parameter and pattern (the
 second form above), all matches of pattern are replaced with
 string. If pattern is preceded by # (the third form above), it
 must match at the beginning of the expanded value of parameter.
 If pattern is preceded by % (the fourth form above), it must
 match at the end of the expanded value of parameter.
 If the expansion of string is null, matches of pattern are
 deleted and the / following pattern may be omitted.
 If the patsub_replacement shell option is enabled using shopt,
 any unquoted instances of & in string are replaced with the
 matching portion of pattern.
 Quoting any part of string inhibits replacement in the expansion
 of the quoted portion, including replacement strings stored in
 shell variables. Backslash escapes & in string; the backslash
 is removed in order to permit a literal & in the replacement
 string. Backslash can also be used to escape a backslash; \\
 results in a literal backslash in the replacement. Users should
 take care if string is double-quoted to avoid unwanted
 interactions between the backslash and double-quoting, since
 backslash has special meaning within double quotes. Pattern
 substitution performs the check for unquoted & after expanding
 string; shell programmers should quote any occurrences of & they
 want to be taken literally in the replacement and ensure any
 instances of & they want to be replaced are unquoted.
 Like the pattern removal operators, double quotes surrounding
 the replacement string quote the expanded characters, while
 double quotes enclosing the entire parameter substitution do
 not, since the expansion is performed in a context that doesn't
 take any enclosing double quotes into account.
 If the nocasematch shell option is enabled, the match is
 performed without regard to the case of alphabetic characters.
 If parameter is @ or *, the substitution operation is applied to
 each positional parameter in turn, and the expansion is the
 resultant list. If parameter is an array variable subscripted
 with @ or *, the substitution operation is applied to each
 member of the array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant
 list.
 ${parameter^pattern}
 ${parameter^^pattern}
 ${parameter,pattern}
 ${parameter,,pattern}
 Case modification. This expansion modifies the case of
 alphabetic characters in parameter. First, the pattern is
 expanded to produce a pattern as described below under Pattern
 Matching. Bash then examines characters in the expanded value
 of parameter against pattern as described below. If a character
 matches the pattern, its case is converted. The pattern should
 not attempt to match more than one character.
 Using "^" converts lowercase letters matching pattern to
 uppercase; "," converts matching uppercase letters to lowercase.
 The ^ and , variants examine the first character in the expanded
 value and convert its case if it matches pattern; the ^^ and ,,
 variants examine all characters in the expanded value and
 convert each one that matches pattern. If pattern is omitted,
 it is treated like a ?, which matches every character.
 If parameter is @ or *, the case modification operation is
 applied to each positional parameter in turn, and the expansion
 is the resultant list. If parameter is an array variable
 subscripted with @ or *, the case modification operation is
 applied to each member of the array in turn, and the expansion
 is the resultant list.
 ${parameter@operator}
 Parameter transformation. The expansion is either a
 transformation of the value of parameter or information about
 parameter itself, depending on the value of operator. Each
 operator is a single letter:
 U The expansion is a string that is the value of parameter
 with lowercase alphabetic characters converted to
 uppercase.
 u The expansion is a string that is the value of parameter
 with the first character converted to uppercase, if it is
 alphabetic.
 L The expansion is a string that is the value of parameter
 with uppercase alphabetic characters converted to
 lowercase.
 Q The expansion is a string that is the value of parameter
 quoted in a format that can be reused as input.
 E The expansion is a string that is the value of parameter
 with backslash escape sequences expanded as with the
 $'...' quoting mechanism.
 P The expansion is a string that is the result of expanding
 the value of parameter as if it were a prompt string (see
 PROMPTING below).
 A The expansion is a string in the form of an assignment
 statement or declare command that, if evaluated,
 recreates parameter with its attributes and value.
 K Produces a possibly-quoted version of the value of
 parameter, except that it prints the values of indexed
 and associative arrays as a sequence of quoted key-value
 pairs (see Arrays above). The keys and values are quoted
 in a format that can be reused as input.
 a The expansion is a string consisting of flag values
 representing parameter's attributes.
 k Like the K transformation, but expands the keys and
 values of indexed and associative arrays to separate
 words after word splitting.
 If parameter is @ or *, the operation is applied to each
 positional parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant
 list. If parameter is an array variable subscripted with @ or
 *, the operation is applied to each member of the array in turn,
 and the expansion is the resultant list.
 The result of the expansion is subject to word splitting and
 pathname expansion as described below.
 Command Substitution
 Command substitution allows the output of a command to replace the
 command itself. There are two standard forms:
 $(command)
 or (deprecated)
 `command`.
 Bash performs the expansion by executing command in a subshell
 environment and replacing the command substitution with the standard
 output of the command, with any trailing newlines deleted. Embedded
 newlines are not deleted, but they may be removed during word
 splitting. The command substitution $(cat file) can be replaced by the
 equivalent but faster $(< file).
 With the old-style backquote form of substitution, backslash retains
 its literal meaning except when followed by $, `, or \. The first
 backquote not preceded by a backslash terminates the command
 substitution. When using the $(command) form, all characters between
 the parentheses make up the command; none are treated specially.
 There is an alternate form of command substitution:
 ${c command;}
 which executes command in the current execution environment and
 captures its output, again with trailing newlines removed.
 The character c following the open brace must be a space, tab, newline,
 or |, and the close brace must be in a position where a reserved word
 may appear (i.e., preceded by a command terminator such as semicolon).
 Bash allows the close brace to be joined to the remaining characters in
 the word without being followed by a shell metacharacter as a reserved
 word would usually require.
 Any side effects of command take effect immediately in the current
 execution environment and persist in the current environment after the
 command completes (e.g., the exit builtin exits the shell).
 This type of command substitution superficially resembles executing an
 unnamed shell function: local variables are created as when a shell
 function is executing, and the return builtin forces command to
 complete; however, the rest of the execution environment, including the
 positional parameters, is shared with the caller.
 If the first character following the open brace is a |, the construct
 expands to the value of the REPLY shell variable after command
 executes, without removing any trailing newlines, and the standard
 output of command remains the same as in the calling shell. Bash
 creates REPLY as an initially-unset local variable when command
 executes, and restores REPLY to the value it had before the command
 substitution after command completes, as with any local variable.
 Command substitutions may be nested. To nest when using the backquoted
 form, escape the inner backquotes with backslashes.
 If the substitution appears within double quotes, bash does not perform
 word splitting and pathname expansion on the results.
 Arithmetic Expansion
 Arithmetic expansion evaluates an arithmetic expression and substitutes
 the result. The format for arithmetic expansion is:
 $((expression))
 The expression undergoes the same expansions as if it were within
 double quotes, but unescaped double quote characters in expression are
 not treated specially and are removed. All tokens in the expression
 undergo parameter and variable expansion, command substitution, and
 quote removal. The result is treated as the arithmetic expression to
 be evaluated. Since the way Bash handles double quotes can potentially
 result in empty strings, arithmetic expansion treats those as
 expressions that evaluate to 0. Arithmetic expansions may be nested.
 The evaluation is performed according to the rules listed below under
 ARITHMETIC EVALUATION. If expression is invalid, bash prints a message
 to standard error indicating failure, does not perform the
 substitution, and does not execute the command associated with the
 expansion.
 Process Substitution
 Process substitution allows a process's input or output to be referred
 to using a filename. It takes the form of <(list) or >(list). The
 process list is run asynchronously, and its input or output appears as
 a filename. This filename is passed as an argument to the current
 command as the result of the expansion.
 If the >(list) form is used, writing to the file provides input for
 list. If the <(list) form is used, reading the file obtains the output
 of list. No space may appear between the < or > and the left
 parenthesis, otherwise the construct would be interpreted as a
 redirection.
 Process substitution is supported on systems that support named pipes
 (FIFOs) or the /dev/fd method of naming open files.
 When available, process substitution is performed simultaneously with
 parameter and variable expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic
 expansion.
 Word Splitting
 The shell scans the results of parameter expansion, command
 substitution, and arithmetic expansion that did not occur within double
 quotes for word splitting. Words that were not expanded are not split.
 The shell treats each character of IFS as a delimiter, and splits the
 results of the other expansions into words using these characters as
 field terminators.
 An IFS whitespace character is whitespace as defined above (see
 Definitions) that appears in the value of IFS. Space, tab, and newline
 are always considered IFS whitespace, even if they don't appear in the
 locale's space category.
 If IFS is unset, field splitting acts as if its value were
 <space><tab><newline>, and treats these characters as IFS whitespace.
 If the value of IFS is null, no word splitting occurs, but implicit
 null arguments (see below) are still removed.
 Word splitting begins by removing sequences of IFS whitespace
 characters from the beginning and end of the results of the previous
 expansions, then splits the remaining words.
 If the value of IFS consists solely of IFS whitespace, any sequence of
 IFS whitespace characters delimits a field, so a field consists of
 characters that are not unquoted IFS whitespace, and null fields result
 only from quoting.
 If IFS contains a non-whitespace character, then any character in the
 value of IFS that is not IFS whitespace, along with any adjacent IFS
 whitespace characters, delimits a field. This means that adjacent non-
 IFS-whitespace delimiters produce a null field. A sequence of IFS
 whitespace characters also delimits a field.
 Explicit null arguments ("" or '') are retained and passed to commands
 as empty strings. Unquoted implicit null arguments, resulting from the
 expansion of parameters that have no values, are removed. Expanding a
 parameter with no value within double quotes produces a null field,
 which is retained and passed to a command as an empty string.
 When a quoted null argument appears as part of a word whose expansion
 is non-null, word splitting removes the null argument portion, leaving
 the non-null expansion. That is, the word "-d''" becomes "-d" after
 word splitting and null argument removal.
 Pathname Expansion
 After word splitting, unless the -f option has been set, bash scans
 each word for the characters *, ?, and [. If one of these characters
 appears, and is not quoted, then the word is regarded as a pattern, and
 replaced with a sorted list of filenames matching the pattern (see
 Pattern Matching below) subject to the value of the GLOBSORT shell
 variable.
 If no matching filenames are found, and the shell option nullglob is
 not enabled, the word is left unchanged. If the nullglob option is
 set, and no matches are found, the word is removed. If the failglob
 shell option is set, and no matches are found, bash prints an error
 message and does not execute the command. If the shell option
 nocaseglob is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the
 case of alphabetic characters.
 When a pattern is used for pathname expansion, the character "." at the
 start of a name or immediately following a slash must be matched
 explicitly, unless the shell option dotglob is set. In order to match
 the filenames . and .., the pattern must begin with "." (for example,
 ".?"), even if dotglob is set. If the globskipdots shell option is
 enabled, the filenames . and .. never match, even if the pattern begins
 with a ".". When not matching pathnames, the "." character is not
 treated specially.
 When matching a pathname, the slash character must always be matched
 explicitly by a slash in the pattern, but in other matching contexts it
 can be matched by a special pattern character as described below under
 Pattern Matching.
 See the description of shopt below under SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS for a
 description of the nocaseglob, nullglob, globskipdots, failglob, and
 dotglob shell options.
 The GLOBIGNORE shell variable may be used to restrict the set of file
 names matching a pattern. If GLOBIGNORE is set, each matching file
 name that also matches one of the patterns in GLOBIGNORE is removed
 from the list of matches. If the nocaseglob option is set, the
 matching against the patterns in GLOBIGNORE is performed without regard
 to case. The filenames . and .. are always ignored when GLOBIGNORE is
 set and not null. However, setting GLOBIGNORE to a non-null value has
 the effect of enabling the dotglob shell option, so all other filenames
 beginning with a "." match. To get the old behavior of ignoring
 filenames beginning with a ".", make ".*" one of the patterns in
 GLOBIGNORE. The dotglob option is disabled when GLOBIGNORE is unset.
 The GLOBIGNORE pattern matching honors the setting of the extglob shell
 option.
 The value of the GLOBSORT shell variable controls how the results of
 pathname expansion are sorted, as described above under Shell
 Variables.
 Pattern Matching
 Any character that appears in a pattern, other than the special pattern
 characters described below, matches itself. The NUL character may not
 occur in a pattern. A backslash escapes the following character; the
 escaping backslash is discarded when matching. The special pattern
 characters must be quoted if they are to be matched literally.
 The special pattern characters have the following meanings:
 * Matches any string, including the null string. When the
 globstar shell option is enabled, and * is used in a
 pathname expansion context, two adjacent *s used as a
 single pattern match all files and zero or more
 directories and subdirectories. If followed by a /, two
 adjacent *s match only directories and subdirectories.
 ? Matches any single character.
 [...] Matches any one of the characters enclosed between the
 brackets. This is known as a bracket expression and
 matches a single character. A pair of characters
 separated by a hyphen denotes a range expression; any
 character that falls between those two characters,
 inclusive, using the current locale's collating sequence
 and character set, matches. If the first character
 following the [ is a ! or a ^ then any character not
 within the range matches. To match a -, include it as
 the first or last character in the set. To match a ],
 include it as the first character in the set.
 The sorting order of characters in range expressions, and
 the characters included in the range, are determined by
 the current locale and the values of the LC_COLLATE or
 LC_ALL shell variables, if set. To obtain the
 traditional interpretation of range expressions, where
 [a-d] is equivalent to [abcd], set the value of the
 LC_COLLATE or LC_ALL shell variables to C, or enable the
 globasciiranges shell option.
 Within a bracket expression, character classes can be
 specified using the syntax [:class:], where class is one
 of the following classes defined in the POSIX standard:
 alnum alpha ascii blank cntrl digit graph lower print
 punct space upper word xdigit
 A character class matches any character belonging to that
 class. The word character class matches letters, digits,
 and the character _.
 Within a bracket expression, an equivalence class can be
 specified using the syntax [=c=], which matches all
 characters with the same collation weight (as defined by
 the current locale) as the character c.
 Within a bracket expression, the syntax [.symbol.]
 matches the collating symbol symbol.
 If the extglob shell option is enabled using the shopt builtin, the
 shell recognizes several extended pattern matching operators. In the
 following description, a pattern-list is a list of one or more patterns
 separated by a |. Composite patterns may be formed using one or more
 of the following sub-patterns:
 ?(pattern-list)
 Matches zero or one occurrence of the given patterns.
 *(pattern-list)
 Matches zero or more occurrences of the given patterns.
 +(pattern-list)
 Matches one or more occurrences of the given patterns.
 @(pattern-list)
 Matches one of the given patterns.
 !(pattern-list)
 Matches anything except one of the given patterns.
 The extglob option changes the behavior of the parser, since the
 parentheses are normally treated as operators with syntactic meaning.
 To ensure that extended matching patterns are parsed correctly, make
 sure that extglob is enabled before parsing constructs containing the
 patterns, including shell functions and command substitutions.
 When matching filenames, the dotglob shell option determines the set of
 filenames that are tested: when dotglob is enabled, the set of
 filenames includes all files beginning with ".", but . and .. must be
 matched by a pattern or sub-pattern that begins with a dot; when it is
 disabled, the set does not include any filenames beginning with "."
 unless the pattern or sub-pattern begins with a ".". If the
 globskipdots shell option is enabled, the filenames . and .. never
 appear in the set. As above, "." only has a special meaning when
 matching filenames.
 Complicated extended pattern matching against long strings is slow,
 especially when the patterns contain alternations and the strings
 contain multiple matches. Using separate matches against shorter
 strings, or using arrays of strings instead of a single long string,
 may be faster.
 Quote Removal
 After the preceding expansions, all unquoted occurrences of the
 characters \, ', and " that did not result from one of the above
 expansions are removed.

REDIRECTION

 Before a command is executed, its input and output may be redirected
 using a special notation interpreted by the shell. Redirection allows
 commands' file handles to be duplicated, opened, closed, made to refer
 to different files, and can change the files the command reads from and
 writes to. When used with the exec builtin, redirections modify file
 handles in the current shell execution environment. The following
 redirection operators may precede or appear anywhere within a simple
 command or may follow a command. Redirections are processed in the
 order they appear, from left to right.
 Each redirection that may be preceded by a file descriptor number may
 instead be preceded by a word of the form {varname}. In this case, for
 each redirection operator except >&- and <&-, the shell allocates a
 file descriptor greater than or equal to 10 and assigns it to varname.
 If {varname} precedes >&- or <&-, the value of varname defines the file
 descriptor to close. If {varname} is supplied, the redirection
 persists beyond the scope of the command, which allows the shell
 programmer to manage the file descriptor's lifetime manually without
 using the exec builtin. The varredir_close shell option manages this
 behavior.
 In the following descriptions, if the file descriptor number is
 omitted, and the first character of the redirection operator is "<",
 the redirection refers to the standard input (file descriptor 0). If
 the first character of the redirection operator is ">", the redirection
 refers to the standard output (file descriptor 1).
 The word following the redirection operator in the following
 descriptions, unless otherwise noted, is subjected to brace expansion,
 tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion, command
 substitution, arithmetic expansion, quote removal, pathname expansion,
 and word splitting. If it expands to more than one word, bash reports
 an error.
 The order of redirections is significant. For example, the command
 ls > dirlist 2>&1
 directs both standard output and standard error to the file dirlist,
 while the command
 ls 2>&1 > dirlist
 directs only the standard output to file dirlist, because the standard
 error was directed to the standard output before the standard output
 was redirected to dirlist.
 Bash handles several filenames specially when they are used in
 redirections, as described in the following table. If the operating
 system on which bash is running provides these special files, bash uses
 them; otherwise it emulates them internally with the behavior described
 below.
 /dev/fd/fd
 If fd is a valid integer, duplicate file descriptor fd.
 /dev/stdin
 File descriptor 0 is duplicated.
 /dev/stdout
 File descriptor 1 is duplicated.
 /dev/stderr
 File descriptor 2 is duplicated.
 /dev/tcp/host/port
 If host is a valid hostname or Internet address, and port
 is an integer port number or service name, bash attempts
 to open the corresponding TCP socket.
 /dev/udp/host/port
 If host is a valid hostname or Internet address, and port
 is an integer port number or service name, bash attempts
 to open the corresponding UDP socket.
 A failure to open or create a file causes the redirection to fail.
 Redirections using file descriptors greater than 9 should be used with
 care, as they may conflict with file descriptors the shell uses
 internally.
 Redirecting Input
 Redirecting input opens the file whose name results from the expansion
 of word for reading on file descriptor n, or the standard input (file
 descriptor 0) if n is not specified.
 The general format for redirecting input is:
 [n]<word
 Redirecting Output
 Redirecting output opens the file whose name results from the expansion
 of word for writing on file descriptor n, or the standard output (file
 descriptor 1) if n is not specified. If the file does not exist it is
 created; if it does exist it is truncated to zero size.
 The general format for redirecting output is:
 [n]>word
 If the redirection operator is >, and the noclobber option to the set
 builtin command has been enabled, the redirection fails if the file
 whose name results from the expansion of word exists and is a regular
 file. If the redirection operator is >|, or the redirection operator
 is > and the noclobber option to the set builtin is not enabled, bash
 attempts the redirection even if the file named by word exists.
 Appending Redirected Output
 Redirecting output in this fashion opens the file whose name results
 from the expansion of word for appending on file descriptor n, or the
 standard output (file descriptor 1) if n is not specified. If the file
 does not exist it is created.
 The general format for appending output is:
 [n]>>word
 Redirecting Standard Output and Standard Error
 This construct redirects both the standard output (file descriptor 1)
 and the standard error output (file descriptor 2) to the file whose
 name is the expansion of word.
 There are two formats for redirecting standard output and standard
 error:
 &>word
 and
 >&word
 Of the two forms, the first is preferred. This is semantically
 equivalent to
 >word 2>&1
 When using the second form, word may not expand to a number or -. If
 it does, other redirection operators apply (see Duplicating File
 Descriptors below) for compatibility reasons.
 Appending Standard Output and Standard Error
 This construct appends both the standard output (file descriptor 1) and
 the standard error output (file descriptor 2) to the file whose name is
 the expansion of word.
 The format for appending standard output and standard error is:
 &>>word
 This is semantically equivalent to
 >>word 2>&1
 (see Duplicating File Descriptors below).
 Here Documents
 This type of redirection instructs the shell to read input from the
 current source until it reads a line containing only delimiter (with no
 trailing blanks). All of the lines read up to that point then become
 the standard input (or file descriptor n if n is specified) for a
 command.
 The format of here-documents is:
 [n]<<[-]word
 here-document
 delimiter
 The shell does not perform parameter and variable expansion, command
 substitution, arithmetic expansion, or pathname expansion on word.
 If any part of word is quoted, the delimiter is the result of quote
 removal on word, and the lines in the here-document are not expanded.
 If word is unquoted, the delimiter is word itself, and the here-
 document text is treated similarly to a double-quoted string: all lines
 of the here-document are subjected to parameter expansion, command
 substitution, and arithmetic expansion, the character sequence
 \<newline> is treated literally, and \ must be used to quote the
 characters \, $, and `; however, double quote characters have no
 special meaning.
 If the redirection operator is <<-, then the shell strips all leading
 tab characters from input lines and the line containing delimiter.
 This allows here-documents within shell scripts to be indented in a
 natural fashion.
 If the delimiter is not quoted, the \<newline> sequence is treated as a
 line continuation: the two lines are joined and the backslash-newline
 is removed. This happens while reading the here-document, before the
 check for the ending delimiter, so joined lines can form the end
 delimiter.
 Here Strings
 A variant of here documents, the format is:
 [n]<<<word
 The word undergoes tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion,
 command substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote removal.
 Pathname expansion and word splitting are not performed. The result is
 supplied as a single string, with a newline appended, to the command on
 its standard input (or file descriptor n if n is specified).
 Duplicating File Descriptors
 The redirection operator
 [n]<&word
 is used to duplicate input file descriptors. If word expands to one or
 more digits, file descriptor n is made to be a copy of that file
 descriptor. It is a redirection error if the digits in word do not
 specify a file descriptor open for input. If word evaluates to -, file
 descriptor n is closed. If n is not specified, this uses the standard
 input (file descriptor 0).
 The operator
 [n]>&word
 is used similarly to duplicate output file descriptors. If n is not
 specified, this uses the standard output (file descriptor 1). It is a
 redirection error if the digits in word do not specify a file
 descriptor open for output. If word evaluates to -, file descriptor n
 is closed. As a special case, if n is omitted, and word does not
 expand to one or more digits or -, this redirects the standard output
 and standard error as described previously.
 Moving File Descriptors
 The redirection operator
 [n]<&digit-
 moves the file descriptor digit to file descriptor n, or the standard
 input (file descriptor 0) if n is not specified. digit is closed after
 being duplicated to n.
 Similarly, the redirection operator
 [n]>&digit-
 moves the file descriptor digit to file descriptor n, or the standard
 output (file descriptor 1) if n is not specified.
 Opening File Descriptors for Reading and Writing
 The redirection operator
 [n]<>word
 opens the file whose name is the expansion of word for both reading and
 writing on file descriptor n, or on file descriptor 0 if n is not
 specified. If the file does not exist, it is created.

ALIASES

 Aliases allow a string to be substituted for a word that is in a
 position in the input where it can be the first word of a simple
 command. Aliases have names and corresponding values that are set and
 unset using the alias and unalias builtin commands (see SHELL BUILTIN
 COMMANDS below).
 If the shell reads an unquoted word in the right position, it checks
 the word to see if it matches an alias name. If it matches, the shell
 replaces the word with the alias value, and reads that value as if it
 had been read instead of the word. The shell doesn't look at any
 characters following the word before attempting alias substitution.
 The characters /, $, `, and = and any of the shell metacharacters or
 quoting characters listed above may not appear in an alias name. The
 replacement text may contain any valid shell input, including shell
 metacharacters. The first word of the replacement text is tested for
 aliases, but a word that is identical to an alias being expanded is not
 expanded a second time. This means that one may alias ls to ls -F, for
 instance, and bash does not try to recursively expand the replacement
 text.
 If the last character of the alias value is a blank, the shell checks
 the next command word following the alias for alias expansion.
 Aliases are created and listed with the alias command, and removed with
 the unalias command.
 There is no mechanism for using arguments in the replacement text. If
 arguments are needed, use a shell function (see FUNCTIONS below)
 instead.
 Aliases are not expanded when the shell is not interactive, unless the
 expand_aliases shell option is set using shopt (see the description of
 shopt under SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 The rules concerning the definition and use of aliases are somewhat
 confusing. Bash always reads at least one complete line of input, and
 all lines that make up a compound command, before executing any of the
 commands on that line or the compound command. Aliases are expanded
 when a command is read, not when it is executed. Therefore, an alias
 definition appearing on the same line as another command does not take
 effect until the shell reads the next line of input, and an alias
 definition in a compound command does not take effect until the shell
 parses and executes the entire compound command. The commands
 following the alias definition on that line, or in the rest of a
 compound command, are not affected by the new alias. This behavior is
 also an issue when functions are executed. Aliases are expanded when a
 function definition is read, not when the function is executed, because
 a function definition is itself a command. As a consequence, aliases
 defined in a function are not available until after that function is
 executed. To be safe, always put alias definitions on a separate line,
 and do not use alias in compound commands.
 For almost every purpose, shell functions are preferable to aliases.

FUNCTIONS

 A shell function, defined as described above under SHELL GRAMMAR,
 stores a series of commands for later execution. When the name of a
 shell function is used as a simple command name, the shell executes the
 list of commands associated with that function name. Functions are
 executed in the context of the calling shell; there is no new process
 created to interpret them (contrast this with the execution of a shell
 script).
 When a function is executed, the arguments to the function become the
 positional parameters during its execution. The special parameter # is
 updated to reflect the new positional parameters. Special parameter 0
 is unchanged. The first element of the FUNCNAME variable is set to the
 name of the function while the function is executing.
 All other aspects of the shell execution environment are identical
 between a function and its caller with these exceptions: the DEBUG and
 RETURN traps (see the description of the trap builtin under SHELL
 BUILTIN COMMANDS below) are not inherited unless the function has been
 given the trace attribute (see the description of the declare builtin
 below) or the -o functrace shell option has been enabled with the set
 builtin (in which case all functions inherit the DEBUG and RETURN
 traps), and the ERR trap is not inherited unless the -o errtrace shell
 option has been enabled.
 Variables local to the function are declared with the local builtin
 command (local variables). Ordinarily, variables and their values are
 shared between the function and its caller. If a variable is declared
 local, the variable's visible scope is restricted to that function and
 its children (including the functions it calls).
 In the following description, the current scope is a currently-
 executing function. Previous scopes consist of that function's caller
 and so on, back to the "global" scope, where the shell is not executing
 any shell function. A local variable at the current scope is a
 variable declared using the local or declare builtins in the function
 that is currently executing.
 Local variables "shadow" variables with the same name declared at
 previous scopes. For instance, a local variable declared in a function
 hides variables with the same name declared at previous scopes,
 including global variables: references and assignments refer to the
 local variable, leaving the variables at previous scopes unmodified.
 When the function returns, the global variable is once again visible.
 The shell uses dynamic scoping to control a variable's visibility
 within functions. With dynamic scoping, visible variables and their
 values are a result of the sequence of function calls that caused
 execution to reach the current function. The value of a variable that
 a function sees depends on its value within its caller, if any, whether
 that caller is the global scope or another shell function. This is
 also the value that a local variable declaration shadows, and the value
 that is restored when the function returns.
 For example, if a variable var is declared as local in function func1,
 and func1 calls another function func2, references to var made from
 within func2 resolve to the local variable var from func1, shadowing
 any global variable named var.
 The unset builtin also acts using the same dynamic scope: if a variable
 is local to the current scope, unset unsets it; otherwise the unset
 will refer to the variable found in any calling scope as described
 above. If a variable at the current local scope is unset, it remains
 so (appearing as unset) until it is reset in that scope or until the
 function returns. Once the function returns, any instance of the
 variable at a previous scope becomes visible. If the unset acts on a
 variable at a previous scope, any instance of a variable with that name
 that had been shadowed becomes visible (see below how the
 localvar_unset shell option changes this behavior).
 The FUNCNEST variable, if set to a numeric value greater than 0,
 defines a maximum function nesting level. Function invocations that
 exceed the limit cause the entire command to abort.
 If the builtin command return is executed in a function, the function
 completes and execution resumes with the next command after the
 function call. If return is supplied a numeric argument, that is the
 function's return status; otherwise the function's return status is the
 exit status of the last command executed before the return. Any
 command associated with the RETURN trap is executed before execution
 resumes. When a function completes, the values of the positional
 parameters and the special parameter # are restored to the values they
 had prior to the function's execution.
 The -f option to the declare or typeset builtin commands lists function
 names and definitions. The -F option to declare or typeset lists the
 function names only (and optionally the source file and line number, if
 the extdebug shell option is enabled). Functions may be exported so
 that child shell processes (those created when executing a separate
 shell invocation) automatically have them defined with the -f option to
 the export builtin. The -f option to the unset builtin deletes a
 function definition.
 Functions may be recursive. The FUNCNEST variable may be used to limit
 the depth of the function call stack and restrict the number of
 function invocations. By default, bash imposes no limit on the number
 of recursive calls.

ARITHMETIC EVALUATION

 The shell allows arithmetic expressions to be evaluated, under certain
 circumstances (see the let and declare builtin commands, the ((
 compound command, the arithmetic for command, the [[ conditional
 command, and Arithmetic Expansion).
 Evaluation is done in the largest fixed-width integers available, with
 no check for overflow, though division by 0 is trapped and flagged as
 an error. The operators and their precedence, associativity, and
 values are the same as in the C language. The following list of
 operators is grouped into levels of equal-precedence operators. The
 levels are listed in order of decreasing precedence.
 id++ id--
 variable post-increment and post-decrement
 ++id --id
 variable pre-increment and pre-decrement
 - + unary minus and plus
 ! ~ logical and bitwise negation
 ** exponentiation
 * / % multiplication, division, remainder
 + - addition, subtraction
 << >> left and right bitwise shifts
 <= >= < >
 comparison
 == != equality and inequality
 & bitwise AND
 ^ bitwise exclusive OR
 | bitwise OR
 && logical AND
 || logical OR
 expr?expr:expr
 conditional operator
 = *= /= %= += -= <<= >>= &= ^= |=
 assignment
 expr1 , expr2
 comma
 Shell variables are allowed as operands; parameter expansion is
 performed before the expression is evaluated. Within an expression,
 shell variables may also be referenced by name without using the
 parameter expansion syntax. This means you can use "x", where x is a
 shell variable name, in an arithmetic expression, and the shell will
 evaluate its value as an expression and use the result. A shell
 variable that is null or unset evaluates to 0 when referenced by name
 in an expression.
 The value of a variable is evaluated as an arithmetic expression when
 it is referenced, or when a variable which has been given the integer
 attribute using declare -i is assigned a value. A null value evaluates
 to 0. A shell variable need not have its integer attribute turned on
 to be used in an expression.
 Integer constants follow the C language definition, without suffixes or
 character constants. Constants with a leading 0 are interpreted as
 octal numbers. A leading 0x or 0X denotes hexadecimal. Otherwise,
 numbers take the form [base#]n, where the optional base is a decimal
 number between 2 and 64 representing the arithmetic base, and n is a
 number in that base. If base# is omitted, then base 10 is used. When
 specifying n, if a non-digit is required, the digits greater than 9 are
 represented by the lowercase letters, the uppercase letters, @, and _,
 in that order. If base is less than or equal to 36, lowercase and
 uppercase letters may be used interchangeably to represent numbers
 between 10 and 35.
 Operators are evaluated in precedence order. Sub-expressions in
 parentheses are evaluated first and may override the precedence rules
 above.

CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS

 Conditional expressions are used by the [[ compound command and the
 test and [ builtin commands to test file attributes and perform string
 and arithmetic comparisons. The test and [ commands determine their
 behavior based on the number of arguments; see the descriptions of
 those commands for any other command-specific actions.
 Expressions are formed from the unary or binary primaries listed below.
 Unary expressions are often used to examine the status of a file or
 shell variable. Binary operators are used for string, numeric, and
 file attribute comparisons.
 Bash handles several filenames specially when they are used in
 expressions. If the operating system on which bash is running provides
 these special files, bash will use them; otherwise it will emulate them
 internally with this behavior: If any file argument to one of the
 primaries is of the form /dev/fd/n, then bash checks file descriptor n.
 If the file argument to one of the primaries is one of /dev/stdin,
 /dev/stdout, or /dev/stderr, bash checks file descriptor 0, 1, or 2,
 respectively.
 Unless otherwise specified, primaries that operate on files follow
 symbolic links and operate on the target of the link, rather than the
 link itself.
 When used with [[, or when the shell is in posix mode, the < and >
 operators sort lexicographically using the current locale. When the
 shell is not in posix mode, the test command sorts using ASCII
 ordering.
 -a file
 True if file exists.
 -b file
 True if file exists and is a block special file.
 -c file
 True if file exists and is a character special file.
 -d file
 True if file exists and is a directory.
 -e file
 True if file exists.
 -f file
 True if file exists and is a regular file.
 -g file
 True if file exists and is set-group-id.
 -h file
 True if file exists and is a symbolic link.
 -k file
 True if file exists and its "sticky" bit is set.
 -p file
 True if file exists and is a named pipe (FIFO).
 -r file
 True if file exists and is readable.
 -s file
 True if file exists and has a size greater than zero.
 -t fd True if file descriptor fd is open and refers to a terminal.
 -u file
 True if file exists and its set-user-id bit is set.
 -w file
 True if file exists and is writable.
 -x file
 True if file exists and is executable.
 -G file
 True if file exists and is owned by the effective group id.
 -L file
 True if file exists and is a symbolic link.
 -N file
 True if file exists and has been modified since it was last
 accessed.
 -O file
 True if file exists and is owned by the effective user id.
 -S file
 True if file exists and is a socket.
 -o optname
 True if the shell option optname is enabled. See the list of
 options under the description of the -o option to the set
 builtin below.
 -v varname
 True if the shell variable varname is set (has been assigned a
 value). If varname is an indexed array variable name
 subscripted by @ or *, this returns true if the array has any
 set elements. If varname is an associative array variable name
 subscripted by @ or *, this returns true if an element with that
 key is set.
 -R varname
 True if the shell variable varname is set and is a name
 reference.
 -z string
 True if the length of string is zero.
 string
 -n string
 True if the length of string is non-zero.
 string1 == string2
 string1 = string2
 True if the strings are equal. = should be used with the test
 command for POSIX conformance. When used with the [[ command,
 this performs pattern matching as described above (Compound
 Commands).
 string1 != string2
 True if the strings are not equal.
 string1 < string2
 True if string1 sorts before string2 lexicographically.
 string1 > string2
 True if string1 sorts after string2 lexicographically.
 file1 -ef file2
 True if file1 and file2 refer to the same device and inode
 numbers.
 file1 -nt file2
 True if file1 is newer (according to modification date) than
 file2, or if file1 exists and file2 does not.
 file1 -ot file2
 True if file1 is older than file2, or if file2 exists and file1
 does not.
 arg1 OP arg2
 OP is one of -eq, -ne, -lt, -le, -gt, or -ge. These arithmetic
 binary operators return true if arg1 is equal to, not equal to,
 less than, less than or equal to, greater than, or greater than
 or equal to arg2, respectively. arg1 and arg2 may be positive
 or negative integers. When used with the [[ command, arg1 and
 arg2 are evaluated as arithmetic expressions (see ARITHMETIC
 EVALUATION above). Since the expansions the [[ command performs
 on arg1 and arg2 can potentially result in empty strings,
 arithmetic expression evaluation treats those as expressions
 that evaluate to 0.

SIMPLE COMMAND EXPANSION

 When the shell executes a simple command, it performs the following
 expansions, assignments, and redirections, from left to right, in the
 following order.
 1. The words that the parser has marked as variable assignments
 (those preceding the command name) and redirections are saved
 for later processing.
 2. The words that are not variable assignments or redirections are
 expanded. If any words remain after expansion, the first word
 is taken to be the name of the command and the remaining words
 are the arguments.
 3. Redirections are performed as described above under REDIRECTION.
 4. The text after the = in each variable assignment undergoes tilde
 expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic
 expansion, and quote removal before being assigned to the
 variable.
 If no command name results, the variable assignments affect the current
 shell environment. In the case of such a command (one that consists
 only of assignment statements and redirections), assignment statements
 are performed before redirections. Otherwise, the variables are added
 to the environment of the executed command and do not affect the
 current shell environment. If any of the assignments attempts to
 assign a value to a readonly variable, an error occurs, and the command
 exits with a non-zero status.
 If no command name results, redirections are performed, but do not
 affect the current shell environment. A redirection error causes the
 command to exit with a non-zero status.
 If there is a command name left after expansion, execution proceeds as
 described below. Otherwise, the command exits. If one of the
 expansions contained a command substitution, the exit status of the
 command is the exit status of the last command substitution performed.
 If there were no command substitutions, the command exits with a zero
 status.

COMMAND EXECUTION

 After a command has been split into words, if it results in a simple
 command and an optional list of arguments, the shell performs the
 following actions.
 If the command name contains no slashes, the shell attempts to locate
 it. If there exists a shell function by that name, that function is
 invoked as described above in FUNCTIONS. If the name does not match a
 function, the shell searches for it in the list of shell builtins. If
 a match is found, that builtin is invoked.
 If the name is neither a shell function nor a builtin, and contains no
 slashes, bash searches each element of the PATH for a directory
 containing an executable file by that name. Bash uses a hash table to
 remember the full pathnames of executable files (see hash under SHELL
 BUILTIN COMMANDS below). Bash performs a full search of the
 directories in PATH only if the command is not found in the hash table.
 If the search is unsuccessful, the shell searches for a defined shell
 function named command_not_found_handle. If that function exists, it
 is invoked in a separate execution environment with the original
 command and the original command's arguments as its arguments, and the
 function's exit status becomes the exit status of that subshell. If
 that function is not defined, the shell prints an error message and
 returns an exit status of 127.
 If the search is successful, or if the command name contains one or
 more slashes, the shell executes the named program in a separate
 execution environment. Argument 0 is set to the name given, and the
 remaining arguments to the command are set to the arguments given, if
 any.
 If this execution fails because the file is not in executable format,
 and the file is not a directory, it is assumed to be a shell script, a
 file containing shell commands, and the shell creates a new instance of
 itself to execute it. Bash tries to determine whether the file is a
 text file or a binary, and will not execute files it determines to be
 binaries. This subshell reinitializes itself, so that the effect is as
 if a new shell had been invoked to handle the script, with the
 exception that the locations of commands remembered by the parent (see
 hash below under SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS are retained by the child.
 If the program is a file beginning with #!, the remainder of the first
 line specifies an interpreter for the program. The shell executes the
 specified interpreter on operating systems that do not handle this
 executable format themselves. The arguments to the interpreter consist
 of a single optional argument following the interpreter name on the
 first line of the program, followed by the name of the program,
 followed by the command arguments, if any.

COMMAND EXECUTION ENVIRONMENT

 The shell has an execution environment, which consists of the
 following:
 o Open files inherited by the shell at invocation, as modified by
 redirections supplied to the exec builtin.
 o The current working directory as set by cd, pushd, or popd, or
 inherited by the shell at invocation.
 o The file creation mode mask as set by umask or inherited from
 the shell's parent.
 o Current traps set by trap.
 o Shell parameters that are set by variable assignment or with set
 or inherited from the shell's parent in the environment.
 o Shell functions defined during execution or inherited from the
 shell's parent in the environment.
 o Options enabled at invocation (either by default or with
 command-line arguments) or by set.
 o Options enabled by shopt.
 o Shell aliases defined with alias.
 o Various process IDs, including those of background jobs, the
 value of $$, and the value of PPID.
 When a simple command other than a builtin or shell function is to be
 executed, it is invoked in a separate execution environment that
 consists of the following. Unless otherwise noted, the values are
 inherited from the shell.
 o The shell's open files, plus any modifications and additions
 specified by redirections to the command.
 o The current working directory.
 o The file creation mode mask.
 o Shell variables and functions marked for export, along with
 variables exported for the command, passed in the environment.
 o Traps caught by the shell are reset to the values inherited from
 the shell's parent, and traps ignored by the shell are ignored.
 A command invoked in this separate environment cannot affect the
 shell's execution environment.
 A subshell is a copy of the shell process.
 Command substitution, commands grouped with parentheses, and
 asynchronous commands are invoked in a subshell environment that is a
 duplicate of the shell environment, except that traps caught by the
 shell are reset to the values that the shell inherited from its parent
 at invocation. Builtin commands that are invoked as part of a
 pipeline, except possibly in the last element depending on the value of
 the lastpipe shell option, are also executed in a subshell environment.
 Changes made to the subshell environment cannot affect the shell's
 execution environment.
 When the shell is in posix mode, subshells spawned to execute command
 substitutions inherit the value of the -e option from their parent
 shell. When not in posix mode, bash clears the -e option in such
 subshells. See the description of the inherit_errexit shell option
 below for how to control this behavior when not in posix mode.
 If a command is followed by a & and job control is not active, the
 default standard input for the command is the empty file /dev/null.
 Otherwise, the invoked command inherits the file descriptors of the
 calling shell as modified by redirections.

ENVIRONMENT

 When a program is invoked it is given an array of strings called the
 environment. This is a list of name-value pairs, of the form
 name=value.
 The shell provides several ways to manipulate the environment. On
 invocation, the shell scans its own environment and creates a parameter
 for each name found, automatically marking it for export to child
 processes. Executed commands inherit the environment. The export,
 declare -x, and unset commands modify the environment by adding and
 deleting parameters and functions. If the value of a parameter in the
 environment is modified, the new value automatically becomes part of
 the environment, replacing the old. The environment inherited by any
 executed command consists of the shell's initial environment, whose
 values may be modified in the shell, less any pairs removed by the
 unset or export -n commands, plus any additions via the export and
 declare -x commands.
 If any parameter assignments, as described above in PARAMETERS, appear
 before a simple command, the variable assignments are part of that
 command's environment for as long as it executes. These assignment
 statements affect only the environment seen by that command. If these
 assignments precede a call to a shell function, the variables are local
 to the function and exported to that function's children.
 If the -k option is set (see the set builtin command below), then all
 parameter assignments are placed in the environment for a command, not
 just those that precede the command name.
 When bash invokes an external command, the variable _ is set to the
 full pathname of the command and passed to that command in its
 environment.

EXIT STATUS

 The exit status of an executed command is the value returned by the
 waitpid system call or equivalent function. Exit statuses fall between
 0 and 255, though, as explained below, the shell may use values above
 125 specially. Exit statuses from shell builtins and compound commands
 are also limited to this range. Under certain circumstances, the shell
 will use special values to indicate specific failure modes.
 For the shell's purposes, a command which exits with a zero exit status
 has succeeded. So while an exit status of zero indicates success, a
 non-zero exit status indicates failure.
 When a command terminates on a fatal signal N, bash uses the value of
 128+N as the exit status.
 If a command is not found, the child process created to execute it
 returns a status of 127. If a command is found but is not executable,
 the return status is 126.
 If a command fails because of an error during expansion or redirection,
 the exit status is greater than zero.
 Shell builtin commands return a status of 0 (true) if successful, and
 non-zero (false) if an error occurs while they execute. All builtins
 return an exit status of 2 to indicate incorrect usage, generally
 invalid options or missing arguments.
 The exit status of the last command is available in the special
 parameter $?.
 Bash itself returns the exit status of the last command executed,
 unless a syntax error occurs, in which case it exits with a non-zero
 value. See also the exit builtin command below.

SIGNALS

 When bash is interactive, in the absence of any traps, it ignores
 SIGTERM (so that kill 0 does not kill an interactive shell), and
 catches and handles SIGINT (so that the wait builtin is interruptible).
 When bash receives SIGINT, it breaks out of any executing loops. In
 all cases, bash ignores SIGQUIT. If job control is in effect, bash
 ignores SIGTTIN, SIGTTOU, and SIGTSTP.
 The trap builtin modifies the shell's signal handling, as described
 below.
 Non-builtin commands bash executes have signal handlers set to the
 values inherited by the shell from its parent, unless trap sets them to
 be ignored, in which case the child process will ignore them as well.
 When job control is not in effect, asynchronous commands ignore SIGINT
 and SIGQUIT in addition to these inherited handlers. Commands run as a
 result of command substitution ignore the keyboard-generated job
 control signals SIGTTIN, SIGTTOU, and SIGTSTP.
 The shell exits by default upon receipt of a SIGHUP. Before exiting,
 an interactive shell resends the SIGHUP to all jobs, running or
 stopped. The shell sends SIGCONT to stopped jobs to ensure that they
 receive the SIGHUP (see JOB CONTROL below for more information about
 running and stopped jobs). To prevent the shell from sending the
 signal to a particular job, remove it from the jobs table with the
 disown builtin (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below) or mark it not to
 receive SIGHUP using disown -h.
 If the huponexit shell option has been set using shopt, bash sends a
 SIGHUP to all jobs when an interactive login shell exits.
 If bash is waiting for a command to complete and receives a signal for
 which a trap has been set, it will not execute the trap until the
 command completes. If bash is waiting for an asynchronous command via
 the wait builtin, and it receives a signal for which a trap has been
 set, the wait builtin will return immediately with an exit status
 greater than 128, immediately after which the shell executes the trap.
 When job control is not enabled, and bash is waiting for a foreground
 command to complete, the shell receives keyboard-generated signals such
 as SIGINT (usually generated by ^C) that users commonly intend to send
 to that command. This happens because the shell and the command are in
 the same process group as the terminal, and ^C sends SIGINT to all
 processes in that process group. Since bash does not enable job
 control by default when the shell is not interactive, this scenario is
 most common in non-interactive shells.
 When job control is enabled, and bash is waiting for a foreground
 command to complete, the shell does not receive keyboard-generated
 signals, because it is not in the same process group as the terminal.
 This scenario is most common in interactive shells, where bash attempts
 to enable job control by default. See JOB CONTROL below for more
 information about process groups.
 When job control is not enabled, and bash receives SIGINT while waiting
 for a foreground command, it waits until that foreground command
 terminates and then decides what to do about the SIGINT:
 1. If the command terminates due to the SIGINT, bash concludes that
 the user meant to send the SIGINT to the shell as well, and acts
 on the SIGINT (e.g., by running a SIGINT trap, exiting a non-
 interactive shell, or returning to the top level to read a new
 command).
 2. If the command does not terminate due to SIGINT, the program
 handled the SIGINT itself and did not treat it as a fatal
 signal. In that case, bash does not treat SIGINT as a fatal
 signal, either, instead assuming that the SIGINT was used as
 part of the program's normal operation (e.g., emacs uses it to
 abort editing commands) or deliberately discarded. However,
 bash will run any trap set on SIGINT, as it does with any other
 trapped signal it receives while it is waiting for the
 foreground command to complete, for compatibility.
 When job control is enabled, bash does not receive keyboard-generated
 signals such as SIGINT while it is waiting for a foreground command.
 An interactive shell does not pay attention to the SIGINT, even if the
 foreground command terminates as a result, other than noting its exit
 status. If the shell is not interactive, and the foreground command
 terminates due to the SIGINT, bash pretends it received the SIGINT
 itself (scenario 1 above), for compatibility.

JOB CONTROL

 Job control refers to the ability to selectively stop (suspend) the
 execution of processes and continue (resume) their execution at a later
 point. A user typically employs this facility via an interactive
 interface supplied jointly by the operating system kernel's terminal
 driver and bash.
 The shell associates a job with each pipeline. It keeps a table of
 currently executing jobs, which the jobs command will display. Each
 job has a job number, which jobs displays between brackets. Job
 numbers start at 1. When bash starts a job asynchronously (in the
 background), it prints a line that looks like:
 [1] 25647
 indicating that this job is job number 1 and that the process ID of the
 last process in the pipeline associated with this job is 25647. All of
 the processes in a single pipeline are members of the same job. Bash
 uses the job abstraction as the basis for job control.
 To facilitate the implementation of the user interface to job control,
 each process has a process group ID, and the operating system maintains
 the notion of a current terminal process group ID. This terminal
 process group ID is associated with the controlling terminal.
 Processes that have the same process group ID are said to be part of
 the same process group. Members of the foreground process group
 (processes whose process group ID is equal to the current terminal
 process group ID) receive keyboard-generated signals such as SIGINT.
 Processes in the foreground process group are said to be foreground
 processes. Background processes are those whose process group ID
 differs from the controlling terminal's; such processes are immune to
 keyboard-generated signals. Only foreground processes are allowed to
 read from or, if the user so specifies with "stty tostop", write to the
 controlling terminal. The system sends a SIGTTIN (SIGTTOU) signal to
 background processes which attempt to read from (write to when "tostop"
 is in effect) the terminal, which, unless caught, suspends the process.
 If the operating system on which bash is running supports job control,
 bash contains facilities to use it. Typing the suspend character
 (typically ^Z, Control-Z) while a process is running stops that process
 and returns control to bash. Typing the delayed suspend character
 (typically ^Y, Control-Y) causes the process stop when it attempts to
 read input from the terminal, and returns control to bash. The user
 then manipulates the state of this job, using the bg command to
 continue it in the background, the fg command to continue it in the
 foreground, or the kill command to kill it. The suspend character
 takes effect immediately, and has the additional side effect of
 discarding any pending output and typeahead. To force a background
 process to stop, or stop a process that's not associated with the
 current terminal session, send it the SIGSTOP signal using kill.
 There are a number of ways to refer to a job in the shell. The %
 character introduces a job specification (jobspec).
 Job number n may be referred to as %n. A job may also be referred to
 using a prefix of the name used to start it, or using a substring that
 appears in its command line. For example, %ce refers to a job whose
 command name begins with ce. Using %?ce, on the other hand, refers to
 any job containing the string ce in its command line. If the prefix or
 substring matches more than one job, bash reports an error.
 The symbols %% and %+ refer to the shell's notion of the current job.
 A single % (with no accompanying job specification) also refers to the
 current job. %- refers to the previous job. When a job starts in the
 background, a job stops while in the foreground, or a job is resumed in
 the background, it becomes the current job. The job that was the
 current job becomes the previous job. When the current job terminates,
 the previous job becomes the current job. If there is only a single
 job, %+ and %- can both be used to refer to that job. In output
 pertaining to jobs (e.g., the output of the jobs command), the current
 job is always marked with a +, and the previous job with a -.
 Simply naming a job can be used to bring it into the foreground: %1 is
 a synonym for "fg %1", bringing job 1 from the background into the
 foreground. Similarly, "%1 &" resumes job 1 in the background,
 equivalent to "bg %1".
 The shell learns immediately whenever a job changes state. Normally,
 bash waits until it is about to print a prompt before notifying the
 user about changes in a job's status so as to not interrupt any other
 output, though it will notify of changes in a job's status after a
 foreground command in a list completes, before executing the next
 command in the list. If the -b option to the set builtin command is
 enabled, bash reports status changes immediately. Bash executes any
 trap on SIGCHLD for each child that terminates.
 When a job terminates and bash notifies the user about it, bash removes
 the job from the table. It will not appear in jobs output, but wait
 will report its exit status, as long as it's supplied the process ID
 associated with the job as an argument. When the table is empty, job
 numbers start over at 1.
 If a user attempts to exit bash while jobs are stopped (or, if the
 checkjobs shell option has been enabled using the shopt builtin,
 running), the shell prints a warning message, and, if the checkjobs
 option is enabled, lists the jobs and their statuses. The jobs command
 may then be used to inspect their status. If the user immediately
 attempts to exit again, without an intervening command, bash does not
 print another warning, and terminates any stopped jobs.
 When the shell is waiting for a job or process using the wait builtin,
 and job control is enabled, wait will return when the job changes
 state. The -f option causes wait to wait until the job or process
 terminates before returning.

PROMPTING

 When executing interactively, bash displays the primary prompt PS1 when
 it is ready to read a command, and the secondary prompt PS2 when it
 needs more input to complete a command.
 Bash examines the value of the array variable PROMPT_COMMAND just
 before printing each primary prompt. If any elements in PROMPT_COMMAND
 are set and non-null, Bash executes each value, in numeric order, just
 as if it had been typed on the command line. Bash displays PS0 after
 it reads a command but before executing it.
 Bash displays PS4 as described above before tracing each command when
 the -x option is enabled.
 Bash allows the prompt strings PS0, PS1, PS2, and PS4, to be customized
 by inserting a number of backslash-escaped special characters that are
 decoded as follows:
 \a An ASCII bell character (07).
 \d The date in "Weekday Month Date" format (e.g., "Tue May
 26").
 \D{format}
 The format is passed to strftime(3)  and the result is
 inserted into the prompt string; an empty format results
 in a locale-specific time representation. The braces are
 required.
 \e An ASCII escape character (033).
 \h The hostname up to the first ".".
 \H The hostname.
 \j The number of jobs currently managed by the shell.
 \l The basename of the shell's terminal device name (e.g.,
 "ttys0").
 \n A newline.
 \r A carriage return.
 \s The name of the shell: the basename of 0ドル (the portion
 following the final slash).
 \t The current time in 24-hour HH:MM:SS format.
 \T The current time in 12-hour HH:MM:SS format.
 \@ The current time in 12-hour am/pm format.
 \A The current time in 24-hour HH:MM format.
 \u The username of the current user.
 \v The bash version (e.g., 2.00).
 \V The bash release, version + patch level (e.g., 2.00.0)
 \w The value of the PWD shell variable ($PWD), with $HOME
 abbreviated with a tilde (uses the value of the
 PROMPT_DIRTRIM variable).
 \W The basename of $PWD, with $HOME abbreviated with a
 tilde.
 \! The history number of this command.
 \# The command number of this command.
 \$ If the effective UID is 0, a #, otherwise a $.
 \nnn The character corresponding to the octal number nnn.
 \\ A backslash.
 \[ Begin a sequence of non-printing characters, which could
 be used to embed a terminal control sequence into the
 prompt.
 \] End a sequence of non-printing characters.
 The command number and the history number are usually different: the
 history number of a command is its position in the history list, which
 may include commands restored from the history file (see HISTORY
 below), while the command number is the position in the sequence of
 commands executed during the current shell session. After the string
 is decoded, it is expanded via parameter expansion, command
 substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote removal, subject to the
 value of the promptvars shell option (see the description of the shopt
 command under SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below). This can have unwanted
 side effects if escaped portions of the string appear within command
 substitution or contain characters special to word expansion.

READLINE

 This is the library that handles reading input when using an
 interactive shell, unless the --noediting option is supplied at shell
 invocation. Line editing is also used when using the -e option to the
 read builtin. By default, the line editing commands are similar to
 those of emacs; a vi-style line editing interface is also available.
 Line editing can be enabled at any time using the -o emacs or -o vi
 options to the set builtin (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below). To turn
 off line editing after the shell is running, use the +o emacs or +o vi
 options to the set builtin.
 Readline Notation
 This section uses Emacs-style editing concepts and uses its notation
 for keystrokes. Control keys are denoted by C-key, e.g., C-n means
 Control-N. Similarly, meta keys are denoted by M-key, so M-x means
 Meta-X. The Meta key is often labeled "Alt" or "Option".
 On keyboards without a Meta key, M-x means ESC x, i.e., press and
 release the Escape key, then press and release the x key, in sequence.
 This makes ESC the meta prefix. The combination M-C-x means ESC
 Control-x: press and release the Escape key, then press and hold the
 Control key while pressing the x key, then release both.
 On some keyboards, the Meta key modifier produces characters with the
 eighth bit (0200) set. You can use the enable-meta-key variable to
 control whether or not it does this, if the keyboard allows it. On
 many others, the terminal or terminal emulator converts the metafied
 key to a key sequence beginning with ESC as described in the preceding
 paragraph.
 If your Meta key produces a key sequence with the ESC meta prefix, you
 can make M-key key bindings you specify (see Readline Key Bindings
 below) do the same thing by setting the force-meta-prefix variable.
 Readline commands may be given numeric arguments, which normally act as
 a repeat count. Sometimes, however, it is the sign of the argument
 that is significant. Passing a negative argument to a command that
 acts in the forward direction (e.g., kill-line) makes that command act
 in a backward direction. Commands whose behavior with arguments
 deviates from this are noted below.
 The point is the current cursor position, and mark refers to a saved
 cursor position. The text between the point and mark is referred to as
 the region. Readline has the concept of an active region: when the
 region is active, readline redisplay highlights the region using the
 value of the active-region-start-color variable. The
 enable-active-region variable turns this on and off. Several commands
 set the region to active; those are noted below.
 When a command is described as killing text, the text deleted is saved
 for possible future retrieval (yanking). The killed text is saved in a
 kill ring. Consecutive kills accumulate the deleted text into one
 unit, which can be yanked all at once. Commands which do not kill text
 separate the chunks of text on the kill ring.
 Readline Initialization
 Readline is customized by putting commands in an initialization file
 (the inputrc file). The name of this file is taken from the value of
 the INPUTRC shell variable. If that variable is unset, the default is
 ~/.inputrc. If that file does not exist or cannot be read, readline
 looks for /etc/inputrc. When a program that uses the readline library
 starts up, readline reads the initialization file and sets the key
 bindings and variables found there, before reading any user input.
 There are only a few basic constructs allowed in the inputrc file.
 Blank lines are ignored. Lines beginning with a # are comments. Lines
 beginning with a $ indicate conditional constructs. Other lines denote
 key bindings and variable settings.
 The default key-bindings in this section may be changed using key
 binding commands in the inputrc file. Programs that use the readline
 library, including bash, may add their own commands and bindings.
 For example, placing
 M-Control-u: universal-argument
 or
 C-Meta-u: universal-argument
 into the inputrc would make M-C-u execute the readline command
 universal-argument.
 Key bindings may contain the following symbolic character names: DEL,
 ESC, ESCAPE, LFD, NEWLINE, RET, RETURN, RUBOUT (a destructive
 backspace), SPACE, SPC, and TAB.
 In addition to command names, readline allows keys to be bound to a
 string that is inserted when the key is pressed (a macro). The
 difference between a macro and a command is that a macro is enclosed in
 single or double quotes.
 Readline Key Bindings
 The syntax for controlling key bindings in the inputrc file is simple.
 All that is required is the name of the command or the text of a macro
 and a key sequence to which it should be bound. The key sequence may
 be specified in one of two ways: as a symbolic key name, possibly with
 Meta- or Control- prefixes, or as a key sequence composed of one or
 more characters enclosed in double quotes. The key sequence and name
 are separated by a colon. There can be no whitespace between the name
 and the colon.
 When using the form keyname:function-name or macro, keyname is the name
 of a key spelled out in English. For example:
 Control-u: universal-argument
 Meta-Rubout: backward-kill-word
 Control-o: "> output"
 In the above example, C-u is bound to the function universal-argument,
 M-DEL is bound to the function backward-kill-word, and C-o is bound to
 run the macro expressed on the right hand side (that is, to insert the
 text "> output" into the line).
 In the second form, "keyseq":function-name or macro, keyseq differs
 from keyname above in that strings denoting an entire key sequence may
 be specified by placing the sequence within double quotes. Some GNU
 Emacs style key escapes can be used, as in the following example, but
 none of the symbolic character names are recognized.
 "\C-u": universal-argument
 "\C-x\C-r": re-read-init-file
 "\e[11~": "Function Key 1"
 In this example, C-u is again bound to the function universal-argument.
 C-x C-r is bound to the function re-read-init-file, and ESC [ 1 1 ~ is
 bound to insert the text "Function Key 1".
 The full set of GNU Emacs style escape sequences available when
 specifying key sequences is
 \C- A control prefix.
 \M- Adding the meta prefix or converting the following
 character to a meta character, as described below under
 force-meta-prefix.
 \e An escape character.
 \\ Backslash.
 \" Literal ", a double quote.
 \' Literal ', a single quote.
 In addition to the GNU Emacs style escape sequences, a second set of
 backslash escapes is available:
 \a alert (bell)
 \b backspace
 \d delete
 \f form feed
 \n newline
 \r carriage return
 \t horizontal tab
 \v vertical tab
 \nnn The eight-bit character whose value is the octal value
 nnn (one to three digits).
 \xHH The eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal
 value HH (one or two hex digits).
 When entering the text of a macro, single or double quotes must be used
 to indicate a macro definition. Unquoted text is assumed to be a
 function name. The backslash escapes described above are expanded in
 the macro body. Backslash quotes any other character in the macro
 text, including " and '.
 Bash will display or modify the current readline key bindings with the
 bind builtin command. The -o emacs or -o vi options to the set builtin
 (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below) change the editing mode during
 interactive use.
 Readline Variables
 Readline has variables that can be used to further customize its
 behavior. A variable may be set in the inputrc file with a statement
 of the form
 set variable-name value
 or using the bind builtin command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 Except where noted, readline variables can take the values On or Off
 (without regard to case). Unrecognized variable names are ignored.
 When readline reads a variable value, empty or null values, "on" (case-
 insensitive), and "1" are equivalent to On. All other values are
 equivalent to Off.
 The bind -V command lists the current readline variable names and
 values (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
 The variables and their default values are:
 active-region-start-color
 A string variable that controls the text color and background
 when displaying the text in the active region (see the
 description of enable-active-region below). This string must
 not take up any physical character positions on the display, so
 it should consist only of terminal escape sequences. It is
 output to the terminal before displaying the text in the active
 region. This variable is reset to the default value whenever
 the terminal type changes. The default value is the string that
 puts the terminal in standout mode, as obtained from the
 terminal's terminfo description. A sample value might be
 "\e[01;33m".
 active-region-end-color
 A string variable that "undoes" the effects of
 active-region-start-color and restores "normal" terminal display
 appearance after displaying text in the active region. This
 string must not take up any physical character positions on the
 display, so it should consist only of terminal escape sequences.
 It is output to the terminal after displaying the text in the
 active region. This variable is reset to the default value
 whenever the terminal type changes. The default value is the
 string that restores the terminal from standout mode, as
 obtained from the terminal's terminfo description. A sample
 value might be "\e[0m".
 bell-style (audible)
 Controls what happens when readline wants to ring the terminal
 bell. If set to none, readline never rings the bell. If set to
 visible, readline uses a visible bell if one is available. If
 set to audible, readline attempts to ring the terminal's bell.
 bind-tty-special-chars (On)
 If set to On, readline attempts to bind the control characters
 that are treated specially by the kernel's terminal driver to
 their readline equivalents. These override the default readline
 bindings described here. Type "stty -a" at a bash prompt to see
 your current terminal settings, including the special control
 characters (usually cchars).
 blink-matching-paren (Off)
 If set to On, readline attempts to briefly move the cursor to an
 opening parenthesis when a closing parenthesis is inserted.
 colored-completion-prefix (Off)
 If set to On, when listing completions, readline displays the
 common prefix of the set of possible completions using a
 different color. The color definitions are taken from the value
 of the LS_COLORS environment variable. If there is a color
 definition in $LS_COLORS for the custom suffix ".readline-
 colored-completion-prefix", readline uses this color for the
 common prefix instead of its default.
 colored-stats (Off)
 If set to On, readline displays possible completions using
 different colors to indicate their file type. The color
 definitions are taken from the value of the LS_COLORS
 environment variable.
 comment-begin ("#")
 The string that the readline insert-comment command inserts.
 This command is bound to M-# in emacs mode and to # in vi
 command mode.
 completion-display-width (-1)
 The number of screen columns used to display possible matches
 when performing completion. The value is ignored if it is less
 than 0 or greater than the terminal screen width. A value of 0
 causes matches to be displayed one per line. The default value
 is -1.
 completion-ignore-case (Off)
 If set to On, readline performs filename matching and completion
 in a case-insensitive fashion.
 completion-map-case (Off)
 If set to On, and completion-ignore-case is enabled, readline
 treats hyphens (-) and underscores (_) as equivalent when
 performing case-insensitive filename matching and completion.
 completion-prefix-display-length (0)
 The maximum length in characters of the common prefix of a list
 of possible completions that is displayed without modification.
 When set to a value greater than zero, readline replaces common
 prefixes longer than this value with an ellipsis when displaying
 possible completions. If a completion begins with a period, and
 eadline is completing filenames, it uses three underscores
 instead of an ellipsis.
 completion-query-items (100)
 This determines when the user is queried about viewing the
 number of possible completions generated by the
 possible-completions command. It may be set to any integer
 value greater than or equal to zero. If the number of possible
 completions is greater than or equal to the value of this
 variable, readline asks whether or not the user wishes to view
 them; otherwise readline simply lists them on the terminal. A
 zero value means readline should never ask; negative values are
 treated as zero.
 convert-meta (On)
 If set to On, readline converts characters it reads that have
 the eighth bit set to an ASCII key sequence by clearing the
 eighth bit and prefixing it with an escape character (converting
 the character to have the meta prefix). The default is On, but
 readline sets it to Off if the locale contains characters whose
 encodings may include bytes with the eighth bit set. This
 variable is dependent on the LC_CTYPE locale category, and may
 change if the locale changes. This variable also affects key
 bindings; see the description of force-meta-prefix below.
 disable-completion (Off)
 If set to On, readline inhibits word completion. Completion
 characters are inserted into the line as if they had been mapped
 to self-insert.
 echo-control-characters (On)
 When set to On, on operating systems that indicate they support
 it, readline echoes a character corresponding to a signal
 generated from the keyboard.
 editing-mode (emacs)
 Controls whether readline uses a set of key bindings similar to
 Emacs or vi. editing-mode can be set to either emacs or vi.
 emacs-mode-string (@)
 If the show-mode-in-prompt variable is enabled, this string is
 displayed immediately before the last line of the primary prompt
 when emacs editing mode is active. The value is expanded like a
 key binding, so the standard set of meta- and control- prefixes
 and backslash escape sequences is available. The 1円 and 2円
 escapes begin and end sequences of non-printing characters,
 which can be used to embed a terminal control sequence into the
 mode string.
 enable-active-region (On)
 When this variable is set to On, readline allows certain
 commands to designate the region as active. When the region is
 active, readline highlights the text in the region using the
 value of the active-region-start-color variable, which defaults
 to the string that enables the terminal's standout mode. The
 active region shows the text inserted by bracketed-paste and any
 matching text found by incremental and non-incremental history
 searches.
 enable-bracketed-paste (On)
 When set to On, readline configures the terminal to insert each
 paste into the editing buffer as a single string of characters,
 instead of treating each character as if it had been read from
 the keyboard. This is called bracketed-paste mode; it prevents
 readline from executing any editing commands bound to key
 sequences appearing in the pasted text.
 enable-keypad (Off)
 When set to On, readline tries to enable the application keypad
 when it is called. Some systems need this to enable the arrow
 keys.
 enable-meta-key (On)
 When set to On, readline tries to enable any meta modifier key
 the terminal claims to support. On many terminals, the Meta key
 is used to send eight-bit characters; this variable checks for
 the terminal capability that indicates the terminal can enable
 and disable a mode that sets the eighth bit of a character
 (0200) if the Meta key is held down when the character is typed
 (a meta character).
 expand-tilde (Off)
 If set to On, readline performs tilde expansion when it attempts
 word completion.
 force-meta-prefix (Off)
 If set to On, readline modifies its behavior when binding key
 sequences containing \M- or Meta- (see Key Bindings above) by
 converting a key sequence of the form \M-C or Meta-C to the two-
 character sequence ESC C (adding the meta prefix). If
 force-meta-prefix is set to Off (the default), readline uses the
 value of the convert-meta variable to determine whether to
 perform this conversion: if convert-meta is On, readline
 performs the conversion described above; if it is Off, readline
 converts C to a meta character by setting the eighth bit (0200).
 history-preserve-point (Off)
 If set to On, the history code attempts to place point at the
 same location on each history line retrieved with previous-
 history or next-history.
 history-size (unset)
 Set the maximum number of history entries saved in the history
 list. If set to zero, any existing history entries are deleted
 and no new entries are saved. If set to a value less than zero,
 the number of history entries is not limited. By default, bash
 sets the maximum number of history entries to the value of the
 HISTSIZE shell variable. Setting history-size to a non-numeric
 value will set the maximum number of history entries to 500.
 horizontal-scroll-mode (Off)
 Setting this variable to On makes readline use a single line for
 display, scrolling the input horizontally on a single screen
 line when it becomes longer than the screen width rather than
 wrapping to a new line. This setting is automatically enabled
 for terminals of height 1.
 input-meta (Off)
 If set to On, readline enables eight-bit input (that is, it does
 not clear the eighth bit in the characters it reads), regardless
 of what the terminal claims it can support. The default is Off,
 but readline sets it to On if the locale contains characters
 whose encodings may include bytes with the eighth bit set. This
 variable is dependent on the LC_CTYPE locale category, and its
 value may change if the locale changes. The name meta-flag is a
 synonym for input-meta.
 isearch-terminators ("C-[C-j")
 The string of characters that should terminate an incremental
 search without subsequently executing the character as a
 command. If this variable has not been given a value, the
 characters ESC and C-j terminate an incremental search.
 keymap (emacs)
 Set the current readline keymap. The set of valid keymap names
 is emacs, emacs-standard, emacs-meta, emacs-ctlx, vi,
 vi-command, and vi-insert. vi is equivalent to vi-command;
 emacs is equivalent to emacs-standard. The default value is
 emacs; the value of editing-mode also affects the default
 keymap.
 keyseq-timeout (500)
 Specifies the duration readline will wait for a character when
 reading an ambiguous key sequence (one that can form a complete
 key sequence using the input read so far, or can take additional
 input to complete a longer key sequence). If readline does not
 receive any input within the timeout, it uses the shorter but
 complete key sequence. The value is specified in milliseconds,
 so a value of 1000 means that readline will wait one second for
 additional input. If this variable is set to a value less than
 or equal to zero, or to a non-numeric value, readline waits
 until another key is pressed to decide which key sequence to
 complete.
 mark-directories (On)
 If set to On, completed directory names have a slash appended.
 mark-modified-lines (Off)
 If set to On, readline displays history lines that have been
 modified with a preceding asterisk (*).
 mark-symlinked-directories (Off)
 If set to On, completed names which are symbolic links to
 directories have a slash appended, subject to the value of
 mark-directories.
 match-hidden-files (On)
 This variable, when set to On, forces readline to match files
 whose names begin with a "." (hidden files) when performing
 filename completion. If set to Off, the user must include the
 leading "." in the filename to be completed.
 menu-complete-display-prefix (Off)
 If set to On, menu completion displays the common prefix of the
 list of possible completions (which may be empty) before cycling
 through the list.
 output-meta (Off)
 If set to On, readline displays characters with the eighth bit
 set directly rather than as a meta-prefixed escape sequence.
 The default is Off, but readline sets it to On if the locale
 contains characters whose encodings may include bytes with the
 eighth bit set. This variable is dependent on the LC_CTYPE
 locale category, and its value may change if the locale changes.
 page-completions (On)
 If set to On, readline uses an internal pager resembling more(1) 
 to display a screenful of possible completions at a time.
 prefer-visible-bell
 See bell-style.
 print-completions-horizontally (Off)
 If set to On, readline displays completions with matches sorted
 horizontally in alphabetical order, rather than down the screen.
 revert-all-at-newline (Off)
 If set to On, readline will undo all changes to history lines
 before returning when executing accept-line. By default,
 history lines may be modified and retain individual undo lists
 across calls to readline.
 search-ignore-case (Off)
 If set to On, readline performs incremental and non-incremental
 history list searches in a case-insensitive fashion.
 show-all-if-ambiguous (Off)
 This alters the default behavior of the completion functions.
 If set to On, words which have more than one possible completion
 cause the matches to be listed immediately instead of ringing
 the bell.
 show-all-if-unmodified (Off)
 This alters the default behavior of the completion functions in
 a fashion similar to show-all-if-ambiguous. If set to On, words
 which have more than one possible completion without any
 possible partial completion (the possible completions don't
 share a common prefix) cause the matches to be listed
 immediately instead of ringing the bell.
 show-mode-in-prompt (Off)
 If set to On, add a string to the beginning of the prompt
 indicating the editing mode: emacs, vi command, or vi insertion.
 The mode strings are user-settable (e.g., emacs-mode-string).
 skip-completed-text (Off)
 If set to On, this alters the default completion behavior when
 inserting a single match into the line. It's only active when
 performing completion in the middle of a word. If enabled,
 readline does not insert characters from the completion that
 match characters after point in the word being completed, so
 portions of the word following the cursor are not duplicated.
 vi-cmd-mode-string ((cmd))
 If the show-mode-in-prompt variable is enabled, this string is
 displayed immediately before the last line of the primary prompt
 when vi editing mode is active and in command mode. The value
 is expanded like a key binding, so the standard set of meta- and
 control- prefixes and backslash escape sequences is available.
 The 1円 and 2円 escapes begin and end sequences of non-printing
 characters, which can be used to embed a terminal control
 sequence into the mode string.
 vi-ins-mode-string ((ins))
 If the show-mode-in-prompt variable is enabled, this string is
 displayed immediately before the last line of the primary prompt
 when vi editing mode is active and in insertion mode. The value
 is expanded like a key binding, so the standard set of meta- and
 control- prefixes and backslash escape sequences is available.
 The 1円 and 2円 escapes begin and end sequences of non-printing
 characters, which can be used to embed a terminal control
 sequence into the mode string.
 visible-stats (Off)
 If set to On, a character denoting a file's type as reported by
 stat(2)  is appended to the filename when listing possible
 completions.
 Readline Conditional Constructs
 Readline implements a facility similar in spirit to the conditional
 compilation features of the C preprocessor which allows key bindings
 and variable settings to be performed as the result of tests. There
 are four parser directives available.
 $if The $if construct allows bindings to be made based on the
 editing mode, the terminal being used, or the application using
 readline. The text of the test, after any comparison operator,
 extends to the end of the line; unless otherwise noted, no
 characters are required to isolate it.
 mode The mode= form of the $if directive is used to test
 whether readline is in emacs or vi mode. This may be
 used in conjunction with the set keymap command, for
 instance, to set bindings in the emacs-standard and
 emacs-ctlx keymaps only if readline is starting out in
 emacs mode.
 term The term= form may be used to include terminal-specific
 key bindings, perhaps to bind the key sequences output by
 the terminal's function keys. The word on the right side
 of the = is tested against both the full name of the
 terminal and the portion of the terminal name before the
 first -. This allows xterm to match both xterm and
 xterm-256color, for instance.
 version
 The version test may be used to perform comparisons
 against specific readline versions. The version expands
 to the current readline version. The set of comparison
 operators includes =, (and ==), !=, <=, >=, <, and >.
 The version number supplied on the right side of the
 operator consists of a major version number, an optional
 decimal point, and an optional minor version (e.g., 7.1).
 If the minor version is omitted, it defaults to 0. The
 operator may be separated from the string version and
 from the version number argument by whitespace.
 application
 The application construct is used to include application-
 specific settings. Each program using the readline
 library sets the application name, and an initialization
 file can test for a particular value. This could be used
 to bind key sequences to functions useful for a specific
 program. For instance, the following command adds a key
 sequence that quotes the current or previous word in
 bash:
 $if Bash
 # Quote the current or previous word
 "\C-xq": "\eb\"\ef\""
 $endif
 variable
 The variable construct provides simple equality tests for
 readline variables and values. The permitted comparison
 operators are =, ==, and !=. The variable name must be
 separated from the comparison operator by whitespace; the
 operator may be separated from the value on the right
 hand side by whitespace. String and boolean variables
 may be tested. Boolean variables must be tested against
 the values on and off.
 $else Commands in this branch of the $if directive are executed if the
 test fails.
 $endif This command, as seen in the previous example, terminates an $if
 command.
 $include
 This directive takes a single filename as an argument and reads
 commands and key bindings from that file. For example, the
 following directive would read /etc/inputrc:
 $include /etc/inputrc
 Searching
 Readline provides commands for searching through the command history
 (see HISTORY below) for lines containing a specified string. There are
 two search modes: incremental and non-incremental.
 Incremental searches begin before the user has finished typing the
 search string. As each character of the search string is typed,
 readline displays the next entry from the history matching the string
 typed so far. An incremental search requires only as many characters
 as needed to find the desired history entry. When using emacs editing
 mode, type C-r to search backward in the history for a particular
 string. Typing C-s searches forward through the history. The
 characters present in the value of the isearch-terminators variable are
 used to terminate an incremental search. If that variable has not been
 assigned a value, ESC and C-j terminate an incremental search. C-g
 aborts an incremental search and restores the original line. When the
 search is terminated, the history entry containing the search string
 becomes the current line.
 To find other matching entries in the history list, type C-r or C-s as
 appropriate. This searches backward or forward in the history for the
 next entry matching the search string typed so far. Any other key
 sequence bound to a readline command terminates the search and executes
 that command. For instance, a newline terminates the search and
 accepts the line, thereby executing the command from the history list.
 A movement command will terminate the search, make the last line found
 the current line, and begin editing.
 Readline remembers the last incremental search string. If two C-rs are
 typed without any intervening characters defining a new search string,
 readline uses any remembered search string.
 Non-incremental searches read the entire search string before starting
 to search for matching history entries. The search string may be typed
 by the user or be part of the contents of the current line.
 Readline Command Names
 The following is a list of the names of the commands and the default
 key sequences to which they are bound. Command names without an
 accompanying key sequence are unbound by default.
 In the following descriptions, point refers to the current cursor
 position, and mark refers to a cursor position saved by the set-mark
 command. The text between the point and mark is referred to as the
 region. Readline has the concept of an active region: when the region
 is active, readline redisplay highlights the region using the value of
 the active-region-start-color variable. The enable-active-region
 readline variable turns this on and off. Several commands set the
 region to active; those are noted below.
 Commands for Moving
 beginning-of-line (C-a)
 Move to the start of the current line. This may also be bound
 to the Home key on some keyboards.
 end-of-line (C-e)
 Move to the end of the line. This may also be bound to the End
 key on some keyboards.
 forward-char (C-f)
 Move forward a character. This may also be bound to the right
 arrow key on some keyboards.
 backward-char (C-b)
 Move back a character. This may also be bound to the left arrow
 key on some keyboards.
 forward-word (M-f)
 Move forward to the end of the next word. Words are composed of
 alphanumeric characters (letters and digits).
 backward-word (M-b)
 Move back to the start of the current or previous word. Words
 are composed of alphanumeric characters (letters and digits).
 shell-forward-word (M-C-f)
 Move forward to the end of the next word. Words are delimited
 by non-quoted shell metacharacters.
 shell-backward-word (M-C-b)
 Move back to the start of the current or previous word. Words
 are delimited by non-quoted shell metacharacters.
 previous-screen-line
 Attempt to move point to the same physical screen column on the
 previous physical screen line. This will not have the desired
 effect if the current readline line does not take up more than
 one physical line or if point is not greater than the length of
 the prompt plus the screen width.
 next-screen-line
 Attempt to move point to the same physical screen column on the
 next physical screen line. This will not have the desired
 effect if the current readline line does not take up more than
 one physical line or if the length of the current readline line
 is not greater than the length of the prompt plus the screen
 width.
 clear-display (M-C-l)
 Clear the screen and, if possible, the terminal's scrollback
 buffer, then redraw the current line, leaving the current line
 at the top of the screen.
 clear-screen (C-l)
 Clear the screen, then redraw the current line, leaving the
 current line at the top of the screen. With a numeric argument,
 refresh the current line without clearing the screen.
 redraw-current-line
 Refresh the current line.
 Commands for Manipulating the History
 accept-line (Newline, Return)
 Accept the line regardless of where the cursor is. If this line
 is non-empty, add it to the history list according to the state
 of the HISTCONTROL and HISTIGNORE variables. If the line is a
 modified history line, restore the history line to its original
 state.
 previous-history (C-p)
 Fetch the previous command from the history list, moving back in
 the list. This may also be bound to the up arrow key on some
 keyboards.
 next-history (C-n)
 Fetch the next command from the history list, moving forward in
 the list. This may also be bound to the down arrow key on some
 keyboards.
 beginning-of-history (M-<)
 Move to the first line in the history.
 end-of-history (M->)
 Move to the end of the input history, i.e., the line currently
 being entered.
 operate-and-get-next (C-o)
 Accept the current line for execution as if a newline had been
 entered, and fetch the next line relative to the current line
 from the history for editing. A numeric argument, if supplied,
 specifies the history entry to use instead of the current line.
 fetch-history
 With a numeric argument, fetch that entry from the history list
 and make it the current line. Without an argument, move back to
 the first entry in the history list.
 reverse-search-history (C-r)
 Search backward starting at the current line and moving "up"
 through the history as necessary. This is an incremental
 search. This command sets the region to the matched text and
 activates the region.
 forward-search-history (C-s)
 Search forward starting at the current line and moving "down"
 through the history as necessary. This is an incremental
 search. This command sets the region to the matched text and
 activates the region.
 non-incremental-reverse-search-history (M-p)
 Search backward through the history starting at the current line
 using a non-incremental search for a string supplied by the
 user. The search string may match anywhere in a history line.
 non-incremental-forward-search-history (M-n)
 Search forward through the history using a non-incremental
 search for a string supplied by the user. The search string may
 match anywhere in a history line.
 history-search-backward
 Search backward through the history for the string of characters
 between the start of the current line and the point. The search
 string must match at the beginning of a history line. This is a
 non-incremental search. This may be bound to the Page Up key on
 some keyboards.
 history-search-forward
 Search forward through the history for the string of characters
 between the start of the current line and the point. The search
 string must match at the beginning of a history line. This is a
 non-incremental search. This may be bound to the Page Down key
 on some keyboards.
 history-substring-search-backward
 Search backward through the history for the string of characters
 between the start of the current line and the point. The search
 string may match anywhere in a history line. This is a non-
 incremental search.
 history-substring-search-forward
 Search forward through the history for the string of characters
 between the start of the current line and the point. The search
 string may match anywhere in a history line. This is a non-
 incremental search.
 yank-nth-arg (M-C-y)
 Insert the first argument to the previous command (usually the
 second word on the previous line) at point. With an argument n,
 insert the nth word from the previous command (the words in the
 previous command begin with word 0). A negative argument
 inserts the nth word from the end of the previous command. Once
 the argument n is computed, this uses the history expansion
 facilities to extract the nth word, as if the "!n" history
 expansion had been specified.
 yank-last-arg (M-., M-_)
 Insert the last argument to the previous command (the last word
 of the previous history entry). With a numeric argument, behave
 exactly like yank-nth-arg. Successive calls to yank-last-arg
 move back through the history list, inserting the last word (or
 the word specified by the argument to the first call) of each
 line in turn. Any numeric argument supplied to these successive
 calls determines the direction to move through the history. A
 negative argument switches the direction through the history
 (back or forward). This uses the history expansion facilities
 to extract the last word, as if the "!$" history expansion had
 been specified.
 shell-expand-line (M-C-e)
 Expand the line by performing shell word expansions. This
 performs alias and history expansion, $'string' and $"string"
 quoting, tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion,
 arithmetic expansion, command and process substitution, word
 splitting, and quote removal. An explicit argument suppresses
 command and process substitution. See HISTORY EXPANSION below
 for a description of history expansion.
 history-expand-line (M-^)
 Perform history expansion on the current line. See HISTORY
 EXPANSION below for a description of history expansion.
 magic-space
 Perform history expansion on the current line and insert a
 space. See HISTORY EXPANSION below for a description of history
 expansion.
 alias-expand-line
 Perform alias expansion on the current line. See ALIASES above
 for a description of alias expansion.
 history-and-alias-expand-line
 Perform history and alias expansion on the current line.
 insert-last-argument (M-., M-_)
 A synonym for yank-last-arg.
 edit-and-execute-command (C-x C-e)
 Invoke an editor on the current command line, and execute the
 result as shell commands. Bash attempts to invoke $VISUAL,
 $EDITOR, and emacs as the editor, in that order.
 Commands for Changing Text
 end-of-file (usually C-d)
 The character indicating end-of-file as set, for example, by
 stty(1) . If this character is read when there are no characters
 on the line, and point is at the beginning of the line, readline
 interprets it as the end of input and returns EOF.
 delete-char (C-d)
 Delete the character at point. If this function is bound to the
 same character as the tty EOF character, as C-d commonly is, see
 above for the effects. This may also be bound to the Delete key
 on some keyboards.
 backward-delete-char (Rubout)
 Delete the character behind the cursor. When given a numeric
 argument, save the deleted text on the kill ring.
 forward-backward-delete-char
 Delete the character under the cursor, unless the cursor is at
 the end of the line, in which case the character behind the
 cursor is deleted.
 quoted-insert (C-q, C-v)
 Add the next character typed to the line verbatim. This is how
 to insert characters like C-q, for example.
 tab-insert (C-v TAB)
 Insert a tab character.
 self-insert (a, b, A, 1, !, ...)
 Insert the character typed.
 bracketed-paste-begin
 This function is intended to be bound to the "bracketed paste"
 escape sequence sent by some terminals, and such a binding is
 assigned by default. It allows readline to insert the pasted
 text as a single unit without treating each character as if it
 had been read from the keyboard. The pasted characters are
 inserted as if each one was bound to self-insert instead of
 executing any editing commands.
 Bracketed paste sets the region to the inserted text and
 activates the region.
 transpose-chars (C-t)
 Drag the character before point forward over the character at
 point, moving point forward as well. If point is at the end of
 the line, then this transposes the two characters before point.
 Negative arguments have no effect.
 transpose-words (M-t)
 Drag the word before point past the word after point, moving
 point past that word as well. If point is at the end of the
 line, this transposes the last two words on the line.
 shell-transpose-words (M-C-t)
 Drag the word before point past the word after point, moving
 point past that word as well. If the insertion point is at the
 end of the line, this transposes the last two words on the line.
 Word boundaries are the same as shell-forward-word and
 shell-backward-word.
 upcase-word (M-u)
 Uppercase the current (or following) word. With a negative
 argument, uppercase the previous word, but do not move point.
 downcase-word (M-l)
 Lowercase the current (or following) word. With a negative
 argument, lowercase the previous word, but do not move point.
 capitalize-word (M-c)
 Capitalize the current (or following) word. With a negative
 argument, capitalize the previous word, but do not move point.
 overwrite-mode
 Toggle overwrite mode. With an explicit positive numeric
 argument, switches to overwrite mode. With an explicit non-
 positive numeric argument, switches to insert mode. This
 command affects only emacs mode; vi mode does overwrite
 differently. Each call to readline() starts in insert mode.
 In overwrite mode, characters bound to self-insert replace the
 text at point rather than pushing the text to the right.
 Characters bound to backward-delete-char replace the character
 before point with a space. By default, this command is unbound,
 but may be bound to the Insert key on some keyboards.
 Killing and Yanking
 kill-line (C-k)
 Kill the text from point to the end of the current line. With a
 negative numeric argument, kill backward from the cursor to the
 beginning of the line.
 backward-kill-line (C-x Rubout)
 Kill backward to the beginning of the current line. With a
 negative numeric argument, kill forward from the cursor to the
 end of the line.
 unix-line-discard (C-u)
 Kill backward from point to the beginning of the line, saving
 the killed text on the kill-ring.
 kill-whole-line
 Kill all characters on the current line, no matter where point
 is.
 kill-word (M-d)
 Kill from point to the end of the current word, or if between
 words, to the end of the next word. Word boundaries are the
 same as those used by forward-word.
 backward-kill-word (M-Rubout)
 Kill the word behind point. Word boundaries are the same as
 those used by backward-word.
 shell-kill-word (M-C-d)
 Kill from point to the end of the current word, or if between
 words, to the end of the next word. Word boundaries are the
 same as those used by shell-forward-word.
 shell-backward-kill-word
 Kill the word behind point. Word boundaries are the same as
 those used by shell-backward-word.
 unix-word-rubout (C-w)
 Kill the word behind point, using white space as a word
 boundary, saving the killed text on the kill-ring.
 unix-filename-rubout
 Kill the word behind point, using white space and the slash
 character as the word boundaries, saving the killed text on the
 kill-ring.
 delete-horizontal-space (M-\)
 Delete all spaces and tabs around point.
 kill-region
 Kill the text in the current region.
 copy-region-as-kill
 Copy the text in the region to the kill buffer, so it can be
 yanked immediately.
 copy-backward-word
 Copy the word before point to the kill buffer. The word
 boundaries are the same as backward-word.
 copy-forward-word
 Copy the word following point to the kill buffer. The word
 boundaries are the same as forward-word.
 yank (C-y)
 Yank the top of the kill ring into the buffer at point.
 yank-pop (M-y)
 Rotate the kill ring, and yank the new top. Only works
 following yank or yank-pop.
 Numeric Arguments
 digit-argument (M-0, M-1, ..., M--)
 Add this digit to the argument already accumulating, or start a
 new argument. M-- starts a negative argument.
 universal-argument
 This is another way to specify an argument. If this command is
 followed by one or more digits, optionally with a leading minus
 sign, those digits define the argument. If the command is
 followed by digits, executing universal-argument again ends the
 numeric argument, but is otherwise ignored. As a special case,
 if this command is immediately followed by a character that is
 neither a digit nor minus sign, the argument count for the next
 command is multiplied by four. The argument count is initially
 one, so executing this function the first time makes the
 argument count four, a second time makes the argument count
 sixteen, and so on.
 Completing
 complete (TAB)
 Attempt to perform completion on the text before point. Bash
 attempts completion by first checking for any programmable
 completions for the command word (see Programmable Completion
 below), otherwise treating the text as a variable (if the text
 begins with $), username (if the text begins with ~), hostname
 (if the text begins with @), or command (including aliases,
 functions, and builtins) in turn. If none of these produces a
 match, it falls back to filename completion.
 possible-completions (M-?)
 List the possible completions of the text before point. When
 displaying completions, readline sets the number of columns used
 for display to the value of completion-display-width, the value
 of the shell variable COLUMNS, or the screen width, in that
 order.
 insert-completions (M-*)
 Insert all completions of the text before point that would have
 been generated by possible-completions, separated by a space.
 menu-complete
 Similar to complete, but replaces the word to be completed with
 a single match from the list of possible completions.
 Repeatedly executing menu-complete steps through the list of
 possible completions, inserting each match in turn. At the end
 of the list of completions, menu-complete rings the bell
 (subject to the setting of bell-style) and restores the original
 text. An argument of n moves n positions forward in the list of
 matches; a negative argument moves backward through the list.
 This command is intended to be bound to TAB, but is unbound by
 default.
 menu-complete-backward
 Identical to menu-complete, but moves backward through the list
 of possible completions, as if menu-complete had been given a
 negative argument. This command is unbound by default.
 export-completions
 Perform completion on the word before point as described above
 and write the list of possible completions to readline's output
 stream using the following format, writing information on
 separate lines:
 o the number of matches N;
 o the word being completed;
 o S:E, where S and E are the start and end offsets of the
 word in the readline line buffer; then
 o each match, one per line
 If there are no matches, the first line will be "0", and this
 command does not print any output after the S:E. If there is
 only a single match, this prints a single line containing it.
 If there is more than one match, this prints the common prefix
 of the matches, which may be empty, on the first line after the
 S:E, then the matches on subsequent lines. In this case, N will
 include the first line with the common prefix.
 The user or application should be able to accommodate the
 possibility of a blank line. The intent is that the user or
 application reads N lines after the line containing S:E to
 obtain the match list. This command is unbound by default.
 delete-char-or-list
 Deletes the character under the cursor if not at the beginning
 or end of the line (like delete-char). At the end of the line,
 it behaves identically to possible-completions. This command is
 unbound by default.
 complete-filename (M-/)
 Attempt filename completion on the text before point.
 possible-filename-completions (C-x /)
 List the possible completions of the text before point, treating
 it as a filename.
 complete-username (M-~)
 Attempt completion on the text before point, treating it as a
 username.
 possible-username-completions (C-x ~)
 List the possible completions of the text before point, treating
 it as a username.
 complete-variable (M-$)
 Attempt completion on the text before point, treating it as a
 shell variable.
 possible-variable-completions (C-x $)
 List the possible completions of the text before point, treating
 it as a shell variable.
 complete-hostname (M-@)
 Attempt completion on the text before point, treating it as a
 hostname.
 possible-hostname-completions (C-x @)
 List the possible completions of the text before point, treating
 it as a hostname.
 complete-command (M-!)
 Attempt completion on the text before point, treating it as a
 command name. Command completion attempts to match the text
 against aliases, reserved words, shell functions, shell
 builtins, and finally executable filenames, in that order.
 possible-command-completions (C-x !)
 List the possible completions of the text before point, treating
 it as a command name.
 dynamic-complete-history (M-TAB)
 Attempt completion on the text before point, comparing the text
 against history list entries for possible completion matches.
 dabbrev-expand
 Attempt menu completion on the text before point, comparing the
 text against lines from the history list for possible completion
 matches.
 complete-into-braces (M-{)
 Perform filename completion and insert the list of possible
 completions enclosed within braces so the list is available to
 the shell (see Brace Expansion above).
 Keyboard Macros
 start-kbd-macro (C-x ()
 Begin saving the characters typed into the current keyboard
 macro.
 end-kbd-macro (C-x ))
 Stop saving the characters typed into the current keyboard macro
 and store the definition.
 call-last-kbd-macro (C-x e)
 Re-execute the last keyboard macro defined, by making the
 characters in the macro appear as if typed at the keyboard.
 print-last-kbd-macro ()
 Print the last keyboard macro defined in a format suitable for
 the inputrc file.
 Miscellaneous
 re-read-init-file (C-x C-r)
 Read in the contents of the inputrc file, and incorporate any
 bindings or variable assignments found there.
 abort (C-g)
 Abort the current editing command and ring the terminal's bell
 (subject to the setting of bell-style).
 do-lowercase-version (M-A, M-B, M-x, ...)
 If the metafied character x is uppercase, run the command that
 is bound to the corresponding metafied lowercase character. The
 behavior is undefined if x is already lowercase.
 prefix-meta (ESC)
 Metafy the next character typed. ESC f is equivalent to Meta-f.
 undo (C-_, C-x C-u)
 Incremental undo, separately remembered for each line.
 revert-line (M-r)
 Undo all changes made to this line. This is like executing the
 undo command enough times to return the line to its initial
 state.
 tilde-expand (M-&)
 Perform tilde expansion on the current word.
 set-mark (C-@, M-<space>)
 Set the mark to the point. If a numeric argument is supplied,
 set the mark to that position.
 exchange-point-and-mark (C-x C-x)
 Swap the point with the mark. Set the current cursor position
 to the saved position, then set the mark to the old cursor
 position.
 character-search (C-])
 Read a character and move point to the next occurrence of that
 character. A negative argument searches for previous
 occurrences.
 character-search-backward (M-C-])
 Read a character and move point to the previous occurrence of
 that character. A negative argument searches for subsequent
 occurrences.
 skip-csi-sequence
 Read enough characters to consume a multi-key sequence such as
 those defined for keys like Home and End. CSI sequences begin
 with a Control Sequence Indicator (CSI), usually ESC [. If this
 sequence is bound to "\e[", keys producing CSI sequences have no
 effect unless explicitly bound to a readline command, instead of
 inserting stray characters into the editing buffer. This is
 unbound by default, but usually bound to ESC [.
 insert-comment (M-#)
 Without a numeric argument, insert the value of the readline
 comment-begin variable at the beginning of the current line. If
 a numeric argument is supplied, this command acts as a toggle:
 if the characters at the beginning of the line do not match the
 value of comment-begin, insert the value; otherwise delete the
 characters in comment-begin from the beginning of the line. In
 either case, the line is accepted as if a newline had been
 typed. The default value of comment-begin causes this command
 to make the current line a shell comment. If a numeric argument
 causes the comment character to be removed, the line will be
 executed by the shell.
 spell-correct-word (C-x s)
 Perform spelling correction on the current word, treating it as
 a directory or filename, in the same way as the cdspell shell
 option. Word boundaries are the same as those used by
 shell-forward-word.
 glob-complete-word (M-g)
 Treat the word before point as a pattern for pathname expansion,
 with an asterisk implicitly appended, then use the pattern to
 generate a list of matching file names for possible completions.
 glob-expand-word (C-x *)
 Treat the word before point as a pattern for pathname expansion,
 and insert the list of matching file names, replacing the word.
 If a numeric argument is supplied, append a * before pathname
 expansion.
 glob-list-expansions (C-x g)
 Display the list of expansions that would have been generated by
 glob-expand-word and redisplay the line. If a numeric argument
 is supplied, append a * before pathname expansion.
 dump-functions
 Print all of the functions and their key bindings to the
 readline output stream. If a numeric argument is supplied, the
 output is formatted in such a way that it can be made part of an
 inputrc file.
 dump-variables
 Print all of the settable readline variables and their values to
 the readline output stream. If a numeric argument is supplied,
 the output is formatted in such a way that it can be made part
 of an inputrc file.
 dump-macros
 Print all of the readline key sequences bound to macros and the
 strings they output to the readline output stream. If a numeric
 argument is supplied, the output is formatted in such a way that
 it can be made part of an inputrc file.
 execute-named-command (M-x)
 Read a bindable readline command name from the input and execute
 the function to which it's bound, as if the key sequence to
 which it was bound appeared in the input. If this function is
 supplied with a numeric argument, it passes that argument to the
 function it executes.
 display-shell-version (C-x C-v)
 Display version information about the current instance of bash.
 Programmable Completion
 When a user attempts word completion for a command or an argument to a
 command for which a completion specification (a compspec) has been
 defined using the complete builtin (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below),
 readline invokes the programmable completion facilities.
 First, bash identifies the command name. If a compspec has been
 defined for that command, the compspec is used to generate the list of
 possible completions for the word. If the command word is the empty
 string (completion attempted at the beginning of an empty line), bash
 uses any compspec defined with the -E option to complete. The -I
 option to complete indicates that the command word is the first non-
 assignment word on the line, or after a command delimiter such as ; or
 |. This usually indicates command name completion.
 If the command word is a full pathname, bash searches for a compspec
 for the full pathname first. If there is no compspec for the full
 pathname, bash attempts to find a compspec for the portion following
 the final slash. If those searches do not result in a compspec, or if
 there is no compspec for the command word, bash uses any compspec
 defined with the -D option to complete as the default. If there is no
 default compspec, bash performs alias expansion on the command word as
 a final resort, and attempts to find a compspec for the command word
 resulting from any successful expansion.
 If a compspec is not found, bash performs its default completion as
 described above under Completing. Otherwise, once a compspec has been
 found, bash uses it to generate the list of matching words.
 First, bash performs the actions specified by the compspec. This only
 returns matches which are prefixes of the word being completed. When
 the -f or -d option is used for filename or directory name completion,
 bash uses the shell variable FIGNORE to filter the matches.
 Next, programmable completion generates matches specified by a pathname
 expansion pattern supplied as an argument to the -G option. The words
 generated by the pattern need not match the word being completed. Bash
 uses the FIGNORE variable to filter the matches, but does not use the
 GLOBIGNORE shell variable.
 Next, completion considers the string specified as the argument to the
 -W option. The string is first split using the characters in the IFS
 special variable as delimiters. This honors shell quoting within the
 string, in order to provide a mechanism for the words to contain shell
 metacharacters or characters in the value of IFS. Each word is then
 expanded using brace expansion, tilde expansion, parameter and variable
 expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion, as described
 above under EXPANSION. The results are split using the rules described
 above under Word Splitting. The results of the expansion are prefix-
 matched against the word being completed, and the matching words become
 possible completions.
 After these matches have been generated, bash executes any shell
 function or command specified with the -F and -C options. When the
 command or function is invoked, bash assigns values to the COMP_LINE,
 COMP_POINT, COMP_KEY, and COMP_TYPE variables as described above under
 Shell Variables. If a shell function is being invoked, bash also sets
 the COMP_WORDS and COMP_CWORD variables. When the function or command
 is invoked, the first argument (1ドル) is the name of the command whose
 arguments are being completed, the second argument (2ドル) is the word
 being completed, and the third argument (3ドル) is the word preceding the
 word being completed on the current command line. There is no
 filtering of the generated completions against the word being
 completed; the function or command has complete freedom in generating
 the matches and they do not need to match a prefix of the word.
 Any function specified with -F is invoked first. The function may use
 any of the shell facilities, including the compgen and compopt builtins
 described below, to generate the matches. It must put the possible
 completions in the COMPREPLY array variable, one per array element.
 Next, any command specified with the -C option is invoked in an
 environment equivalent to command substitution. It should print a list
 of completions, one per line, to the standard output. Backslash will
 escape a newline, if necessary. These are added to the set of possible
 completions.
 After generating all of the possible completions, bash applies any
 filter specified with the -X option to the completions in the list.
 The filter is a pattern as used for pathname expansion; a & in the
 pattern is replaced with the text of the word being completed. A
 literal & may be escaped with a backslash; the backslash is removed
 before attempting a match. Any completion that matches the pattern is
 removed from the list. A leading ! negates the pattern; in this case
 bash removes any completion that does not match the pattern. If the
 nocasematch shell option is enabled, bash performs the match without
 regard to the case of alphabetic characters.
 Finally, programmable completion adds any prefix and suffix specified
 with the -P and -S options, respectively, to each completion, and
 returns the result to readline as the list of possible completions.
 If the previously-applied actions do not generate any matches, and the
 -o dirnames option was supplied to complete when the compspec was
 defined, bash attempts directory name completion.
 If the -o plusdirs option was supplied to complete when the compspec
 was defined, bash attempts directory name completion and adds any
 matches to the set of possible completions.
 By default, if a compspec is found, whatever it generates is returned
 to the completion code as the full set of possible completions. The
 default bash completions and the readline default of filename
 completion are disabled. If the -o bashdefault option was supplied to
 complete when the compspec was defined, and the compspec generates no
 matches, bash attempts its default completions. If the compspec and,
 if attempted, the default bash completions generate no matches, and the
 -o default option was supplied to complete when the compspec was
 defined, programmable completion performs readline's default
 completion.
 The options supplied to complete and compopt can control how readline
 treats the completions. For instance, the -o fullquote option tells
 readline to quote the matches as if they were filenames. See the
 description of complete below for details.
 When a compspec indicates that it wants directory name completion, the
 programmable completion functions force readline to append a slash to
 completed names which are symbolic links to directories, subject to the
 value of the mark-directories readline variable, regardless of the
 setting of the mark-symlinked-directories readline variable.
 There is some support for dynamically modifying completions. This is
 most useful when used in combination with a default completion
 specified with complete -D. It's possible for shell functions executed
 as completion functions to indicate that completion should be retried
 by returning an exit status of 124. If a shell function returns 124,
 and changes the compspec associated with the command on which
 completion is being attempted (supplied as the first argument when the
 function is executed), programmable completion restarts from the
 beginning, with an attempt to find a new compspec for that command.
 This can be used to build a set of completions dynamically as
 completion is attempted, rather than loading them all at once.
 For instance, assuming that there is a library of compspecs, each kept
 in a file corresponding to the name of the command, the following
 default completion function would load completions dynamically:
 _completion_loader()
 {
 . "/etc/bash_completion.d/1ドル.sh" \
 >/dev/null 2>&1 && return 124
 }
 complete -D -F _completion_loader \
 -o bashdefault -o default

HISTORY

 When the -o history option to the set builtin is enabled, the shell
 provides access to the command history, the list of commands previously
 typed. The value of the HISTSIZE variable is used as the number of
 commands to save in a history list: the shell saves the text of the
 last HISTSIZE commands (default 500). The shell stores each command in
 the history list prior to parameter and variable expansion (see
 EXPANSION above) but after history expansion is performed, subject to
 the values of the shell variables HISTIGNORE and HISTCONTROL.
 On startup, bash initializes the history list by reading history
 entries from the file named by the HISTFILE variable (default
 ~/.bash_history). That file is referred to as the history file. The
 history file is truncated, if necessary, to contain no more than the
 number of history entries specified by the value of the HISTFILESIZE
 variable. If HISTFILESIZE is unset, or set to null, a non-numeric
 value, or a numeric value less than zero, the history file is not
 truncated.
 When the history file is read, lines beginning with the history comment
 character followed immediately by a digit are interpreted as timestamps
 for the following history line. These timestamps are optionally
 displayed depending on the value of the HISTTIMEFORMAT variable. When
 present, history timestamps delimit history entries, making multi-line
 entries possible.
 When a shell with history enabled exits, bash copies the last $HISTSIZE
 entries from the history list to $HISTFILE. If the histappend shell
 option is enabled (see the description of shopt under SHELL BUILTIN
 COMMANDS below), bash appends the entries to the history file,
 otherwise it overwrites the history file. If HISTFILE is unset or
 null, or if the history file is unwritable, the history is not saved.
 After saving the history, bash truncates the history file to contain no
 more than HISTFILESIZE lines as described above.
 If the HISTTIMEFORMAT variable is set, the shell writes the timestamp
 information associated with each history entry to the history file,
 marked with the history comment character, so timestamps are preserved
 across shell sessions. This uses the history comment character to
 distinguish timestamps from other history lines. As above, when using
 HISTTIMEFORMAT, the timestamps delimit multi-line history entries.
 The fc builtin command (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below) will list or
 edit and re-execute a portion of the history list. The history builtin
 can display or modify the history list and manipulate the history file.
 When using command-line editing, search commands are available in each
 editing mode that provide access to the history list.
 The shell allows control over which commands are saved on the history
 list. The HISTCONTROL and HISTIGNORE variables are used to save only a
 subset of the commands entered. If the cmdhist shell option is
 enabled, the shell attempts to save each line of a multi-line command
 in the same history entry, adding semicolons where necessary to
 preserve syntactic correctness. The lithist shell option modifies
 cmdhist by saving the command with embedded newlines instead of
 semicolons. See the description of the shopt builtin below under SHELL
 BUILTIN COMMANDS for information on setting and unsetting shell
 options.

HISTORY EXPANSION

 The shell supports a history expansion feature that is similar to the
 history expansion in csh. This section describes what syntax features
 are available.
 History expansion is enabled by default for interactive shells, and can
 be disabled using the +H option to the set builtin command (see SHELL
 BUILTIN COMMANDS below). Non-interactive shells do not perform history
 expansion by default, but it can be enabled with "set -H".
 History expansions introduce words from the history list into the input
 stream, making it easy to repeat commands, insert the arguments to a
 previous command into the current input line, or fix errors in previous
 commands quickly.
 History expansion is performed immediately after a complete line is
 read, before the shell breaks it into words, and is performed on each
 line individually. The shell attempts to inform the history expansion
 functions about quoting still in effect from previous lines.
 It takes place in two parts. The first is to determine which history
 list entry to use during substitution. The second is to select
 portions of that entry to include into the current one.
 The entry selected from the history is the event, and the portions of
 that entry that are acted upon are words. Various modifiers are
 available to manipulate the selected words. The entry is split into
 words in the same fashion as when reading input, so that several
 metacharacter-separated words surrounded by quotes are considered one
 word. The event designator selects the event, the optional word
 designator selects words from the event, and various optional modifiers
 are available to manipulate the selected words.
 History expansions are introduced by the appearance of the history
 expansion character, which is ! by default. History expansions may
 appear anywhere in the input, but do not nest.
 Only backslash (\) and single quotes can quote the history expansion
 character, but the history expansion character is also treated as
 quoted if it immediately precedes the closing double quote in a double-
 quoted string.
 Several characters inhibit history expansion if found immediately
 following the history expansion character, even if it is unquoted:
 space, tab, newline, carriage return, =, and the other shell
 metacharacters defined above.
 There is a special abbreviation for substitution, active when the quick
 substitution character (described above under histchars) is the first
 character on the line. It selects the previous history list entry,
 using an event designator equivalent to !!, and substitutes one string
 for another in that entry. It is described below under Event
 Designators. This is the only history expansion that does not begin
 with the history expansion character.
 Several shell options settable with the shopt builtin will modify
 history expansion behavior (see the description of the shopt builtin
 below).and If the histverify shell option is enabled, and readline is
 being used, history substitutions are not immediately passed to the
 shell parser. Instead, the expanded line is reloaded into the readline
 editing buffer for further modification. If readline is being used,
 and the histreedit shell option is enabled, a failed history
 substitution is reloaded into the readline editing buffer for
 correction.
 The -p option to the history builtin command shows what a history
 expansion will do before using it. The -s option to the history
 builtin will add commands to the end of the history list without
 actually executing them, so that they are available for subsequent
 recall.
 The shell allows control of the various characters used by the history
 expansion mechanism (see the description of histchars above under Shell
 Variables). The shell uses the history comment character to mark
 history timestamps when writing the history file.
 Event Designators
 An event designator is a reference to an entry in the history list.
 The event designator consists of the portion of the word beginning with
 the history expansion character and ending with the word designator if
 present, or the end of the word. Unless the reference is absolute,
 events are relative to the current position in the history list.
 ! Start a history substitution, except when followed by a blank,
 newline, carriage return, =, or, when the extglob shell option
 is enabled using the shopt builtin, (.
 !n Refer to history list entry n.
 !-n Refer to the current entry minus n.
 !! Refer to the previous entry. This is a synonym for "!-1".
 !string
 Refer to the most recent command preceding the current position
 in the history list starting with string.
 !?string[?]
 Refer to the most recent command preceding the current position
 in the history list containing string. The trailing ? may be
 omitted if string is followed immediately by a newline. If
 string is missing, this uses the string from the most recent
 search; it is an error if there is no previous search string.
 ^string1^string2^
 Quick substitution. Repeat the previous command, replacing
 string1 with string2. Equivalent to "!!:s^string1^string2^"
 (see Modifiers below).
 !# The entire command line typed so far.
 Word Designators
 Word designators are used to select desired words from the event. They
 are optional; if the word designator isn't supplied, the history
 expansion uses the entire event. A : separates the event specification
 from the word designator. It may be omitted if the word designator
 begins with a ^, $, *, -, or %. Words are numbered from the beginning
 of the line, with the first word being denoted by 0 (zero). Words are
 inserted into the current line separated by single spaces.
 0 (zero)
 The zeroth word. For the shell, this is the command word.
 n The nth word.
 ^ The first argument: word 1.
 $ The last word. This is usually the last argument, but will
 expand to the zeroth word if there is only one word in the line.
 % The first word matched by the most recent "?string?" search, if
 the search string begins with a character that is part of a
 word. By default, searches begin at the end of each line and
 proceed to the beginning, so the first word matched is the one
 closest to the end of the line.
 x-y A range of words; "-y" abbreviates "0-y".
 * All of the words but the zeroth. This is a synonym for "1-$".
 It is not an error to use * if there is just one word in the
 event; it expands to the empty string in that case.
 x* Abbreviates x-$.
 x- Abbreviates x-$ like x*, but omits the last word. If x is
 missing, it defaults to 0.
 If a word designator is supplied without an event specification, the
 previous command is used as the event, equivalent to !!.
 Modifiers
 After the optional word designator, the expansion may include a
 sequence of one or more of the following modifiers, each preceded by a
 ":". These modify, or edit, the word or words selected from the
 history event.
 h Remove a trailing pathname component, leaving only the head.
 t Remove all leading pathname components, leaving the tail.
 r Remove a trailing suffix of the form .xxx, leaving the basename.
 e Remove all but the trailing suffix.
 p Print the new command but do not execute it.
 q Quote the substituted words, escaping further substitutions.
 x Quote the substituted words as with q, but break into words at
 blanks and newlines. The q and x modifiers are mutually
 exclusive; expansion uses the last one supplied.
 s/old/new/
 Substitute new for the first occurrence of old in the event
 line. Any character may be used as the delimiter in place of /.
 The final delimiter is optional if it is the last character of
 the event line. A single backslash quotes the delimiter in old
 and new. If & appears in new, it is replaced with old. A
 single backslash quotes the &. If old is null, it is set to the
 last old substituted, or, if no previous history substitutions
 took place, the last string in a !?string[?] search. If new is
 null, each matching old is deleted.
 & Repeat the previous substitution.
 g Cause changes to be applied over the entire event line. This is
 used in conjunction with ":s" (e.g., ":gs/old/new/") or ":&".
 If used with ":s", any delimiter can be used in place of /, and
 the final delimiter is optional if it is the last character of
 the event line. An a may be used as a synonym for g.
 G Apply the following "s" or "&" modifier once to each word in the
 event line.

SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS

 Unless otherwise noted, each builtin command documented in this section
 as accepting options preceded by - accepts -- to signify the end of the
 options. The :, true, false, and test/[ builtins do not accept options
 and do not treat -- specially. The exit, logout, return, break,
 continue, let, and shift builtins accept and process arguments
 beginning with - without requiring --. Other builtins that accept
 arguments but are not specified as accepting options interpret
 arguments beginning with - as invalid options and require -- to prevent
 this interpretation.
 : [arguments]
 No effect; the command does nothing beyond expanding arguments
 and performing any specified redirections. The return status is
 zero.
 . [-p path] filename [arguments]
 source [-p path] filename [arguments]
 The . command (source) reads and execute commands from filename
 in the current shell environment and returns the exit status of
 the last command executed from filename.
 If filename does not contain a slash, . searches for it. If the
 -p option is supplied, . treats path as a colon-separated list
 of directories in which to find filename; otherwise, . uses the
 entries in PATH to find the directory containing filename.
 filename does not need to be executable. When bash is not in
 posix mode, it searches the current directory if filename is not
 found in PATH, but does not search the current directory if -p
 is supplied. If the sourcepath option to the shopt builtin
 command is turned off, . does not search PATH.
 If any arguments are supplied, they become the positional
 parameters when filename is executed. Otherwise the positional
 parameters are unchanged.
 If the -T option is enabled, . inherits any trap on DEBUG; if it
 is not, any DEBUG trap string is saved and restored around the
 call to ., and . unsets the DEBUG trap while it executes. If -T
 is not set, and the sourced file changes the DEBUG trap, the new
 value persists after . completes. The return status is the
 status of the last command executed from filename (0 if no
 commands are executed), and non-zero if filename is not found or
 cannot be read.
 alias [-p] [name[=value] ...]
 With no arguments or with the -p option, alias prints the list
 of aliases in the form alias name=value on standard output.
 When arguments are supplied, define an alias for each name whose
 value is given. A trailing space in value causes the next word
 to be checked for alias substitution when the alias is expanded
 during command parsing. For each name in the argument list for
 which no value is supplied, print the name and value of the
 alias name. alias returns true unless a name is given (without
 a corresponding =value) for which no alias has been defined.
 bg [jobspec ...]
 Resume each suspended job jobspec in the background, as if it
 had been started with &. If jobspec is not present, the shell
 uses its notion of the current job. bg jobspec returns 0 unless
 run when job control is disabled or, when run with job control
 enabled, any specified jobspec was not found or was started
 without job control.
 bind [-m keymap] [-lsvSVX]
 bind [-m keymap] [-q function] [-u function] [-r keyseq]
 bind [-m keymap] -f filename
 bind [-m keymap] -x keyseq[:] shell-command
 bind [-m keymap] keyseq:function-name
 bind [-m keymap] -p|-P [readline-command]
 bind [-m keymap] keyseq:readline-command
 bind readline-command-line
 Display current readline key and function bindings, bind a key
 sequence to a readline function or macro or to a shell command,
 or set a readline variable. Each non-option argument is a key
 binding or command as it would appear in a readline
 initialization file such as .inputrc, but each binding or
 command must be passed as a separate argument; e.g.,
 '"\C-x\C-r": re-read-init-file'. In the following descriptions,
 output available to be re-read is formatted as commands that
 would appear in a readline initialization file or that would be
 supplied as individual arguments to a bind command. Options, if
 supplied, have the following meanings:
 -m keymap
 Use keymap as the keymap to be affected by the subsequent
 bindings. Acceptable keymap names are emacs,
 emacs-standard, emacs-meta, emacs-ctlx, vi, vi-move,
 vi-command, and vi-insert. vi is equivalent to
 vi-command (vi-move is also a synonym); emacs is
 equivalent to emacs-standard.
 -l List the names of all readline functions.
 -p Display readline function names and bindings in such a
 way that they can be used as an argument to a subsequent
 bind command or in a readline initialization file. If
 arguments remain after option processing, bind treats
 them as readline command names and restricts output to
 those names.
 -P List current readline function names and bindings. If
 arguments remain after option processing, bind treats
 them as readline command names and restricts output to
 those names.
 -s Display readline key sequences bound to macros and the
 strings they output in such a way that they can be used
 as an argument to a subsequent bind command or in a
 readline initialization file.
 -S Display readline key sequences bound to macros and the
 strings they output.
 -v Display readline variable names and values in such a way
 that they can be used as an argument to a subsequent bind
 command or in a readline initialization file.
 -V List current readline variable names and values.
 -f filename
 Read key bindings from filename.
 -q function
 Display key sequences that invoke the named readline
 function.
 -u function
 Unbind all key sequences bound to the named readline
 function.
 -r keyseq
 Remove any current binding for keyseq.
 -x keyseq[: ]shell-command
 Cause shell-command to be executed whenever keyseq is
 entered. The separator between keyseq and shell-command
 is either whitespace or a colon optionally followed by
 whitespace. If the separator is whitespace,
 shell-command must be enclosed in double quotes and
 readline expands any of its special backslash-escapes in
 shell-command before saving it. If the separator is a
 colon, any enclosing double quotes are optional, and
 readline does not expand the command string before saving
 it. Since the entire key binding expression must be a
 single argument, it should be enclosed in single quotes.
 When shell-command is executed, the shell sets the
 READLINE_LINE variable to the contents of the readline
 line buffer and the READLINE_POINT and READLINE_MARK
 variables to the current location of the insertion point
 and the saved insertion point (the mark), respectively.
 The shell assigns any numeric argument the user supplied
 to the READLINE_ARGUMENT variable. If there was no
 argument, that variable is not set. If the executed
 command changes the value of any of READLINE_LINE,
 READLINE_POINT, or READLINE_MARK, those new values will
 be reflected in the editing state.
 -X List all key sequences bound to shell commands and the
 associated commands in a format that can be reused as an
 argument to a subsequent bind command.
 The return value is 0 unless an unrecognized option is supplied
 or an error occurred.
 break [n]
 Exit from within a for, while, until, or select loop. If n is
 specified, break exits n enclosing loops. n must be >= 1. If n
 is greater than the number of enclosing loops, all enclosing
 loops are exited. The return value is 0 unless n is not greater
 than or equal to 1.
 builtin shell-builtin [arguments]
 Execute the specified shell builtin shell-builtin, passing it
 arguments, and return its exit status. This is useful when
 defining a function whose name is the same as a shell builtin,
 retaining the functionality of the builtin within the function.
 The cd builtin is commonly redefined this way. The return
 status is false if shell-builtin is not a shell builtin command.
 caller [expr]
 Returns the context of any active subroutine call (a shell
 function or a script executed with the . or source builtins).
 Without expr, caller displays the line number and source
 filename of the current subroutine call. If a non-negative
 integer is supplied as expr, caller displays the line number,
 subroutine name, and source file corresponding to that position
 in the current execution call stack. This extra information may
 be used, for example, to print a stack trace. The current frame
 is frame 0.
 The return value is 0 unless the shell is not executing a
 subroutine call or expr does not correspond to a valid position
 in the call stack.
 cd [-L] [-@] [dir]
 cd -P [-e] [-@] [dir]
 Change the current directory to dir. if dir is not supplied,
 the value of the HOME shell variable is used as dir. The
 variable CDPATH exists, and dir does not begin with a slash (/),
 cd uses it as a search path: the shell searches each directory
 name in CDPATH for dir. Alternative directory names in CDPATH
 are separated by a colon (:). A null directory name in CDPATH
 is the same as the current directory, i.e., ".".
 The -P option causes cd to use the physical directory structure
 by resolving symbolic links while traversing dir and before
 processing instances of .. in dir (see also the -P option to the
 set builtin command).
 The -L option forces cd to follow symbolic links by resolving
 the link after processing instances of .. in dir. If .. appears
 in dir, cd processes it by removing the immediately previous
 pathname component from dir, back to a slash or the beginning of
 dir, and verifying that the portion of dir it has processed to
 that point is still a valid directory name after removing the
 pathname component. If it is not a valid directory name, cd
 returns a non-zero status. If neither -L nor -P is supplied, cd
 behaves as if -L had been supplied.
 If the -e option is supplied with -P, and cd cannot successfully
 determine the current working directory after a successful
 directory change, it returns a non-zero status.
 On systems that support it, the -@ option presents the extended
 attributes associated with a file as a directory.
 An argument of - is converted to $OLDPWD before attempting the
 directory change.
 If cd uses a non-empty directory name from CDPATH, or if - is
 the first argument, and the directory change is successful, cd
 writes the absolute pathname of the new working directory to the
 standard output.
 If the directory change is successful, cd sets the value of the
 PWD environment variable to the new directory name, and sets the
 OLDPWD environment variable to the value of the current working
 directory before the change.
 The return value is true if the directory was successfully
 changed; false otherwise.
 command [-pVv] command [arg ...]
 The command builtin runs command with args suppressing the
 normal shell function lookup for command. Only builtin commands
 or commands found in the PATH named command are executed. If
 the -p option is supplied, the search for command is performed
 using a default value for PATH that is guaranteed to find all of
 the standard utilities.
 If either the -V or -v option is supplied, command prints a
 description of command. The -v option displays a single word
 indicating the command or filename used to invoke command; the
 -V option produces a more verbose description.
 If the -V or -v option is supplied, the exit status is zero if
 command was found, and non-zero if not. If neither option is
 supplied and an error occurred or command cannot be found, the
 exit status is 127. Otherwise, the exit status of the command
 builtin is the exit status of command.
 compgen [-V varname] [option] [word]
 Generate possible completion matches for word according to the
 options, which may be any option accepted by the complete
 builtin with the exceptions of -p, -r, -D, -E, and -I, and write
 the matches to the standard output.
 If the -V option is supplied, compgen stores the generated
 completions into the indexed array variable varname instead of
 writing them to the standard output.
 When using the -F or -C options, the various shell variables set
 by the programmable completion facilities, while available, will
 not have useful values.
 The matches will be generated in the same way as if the
 programmable completion code had generated them directly from a
 completion specification with the same flags. If word is
 specified, only those completions matching word will be
 displayed or stored.
 The return value is true unless an invalid option is supplied,
 or no matches were generated.
 complete [-abcdefgjksuv] [-o comp-option] [-DEI] [-A action]
 [-G globpat] [-W wordlist] [-F function] [-C command]
 [-X filterpat] [-P prefix] [-S suffix] name [name ...]
 complete -pr [-DEI] [name ...]
 Specify how arguments to each name should be completed.
 If the -p option is supplied, or if no options or names are
 supplied, print existing completion specifications in a way that
 allows them to be reused as input. The -r option removes a
 completion specification for each name, or, if no names are
 supplied, all completion specifications.
 The -D option indicates that other supplied options and actions
 should apply to the "default" command completion; that is,
 completion attempted on a command for which no completion has
 previously been defined. The -E option indicates that other
 supplied options and actions should apply to "empty" command
 completion; that is, completion attempted on a blank line. The
 -I option indicates that other supplied options and actions
 should apply to completion on the initial non-assignment word on
 the line, or after a command delimiter such as ; or |, which is
 usually command name completion. If multiple options are
 supplied, the -D option takes precedence over -E, and both take
 precedence over -I. If any of -D, -E, or -I are supplied, any
 other name arguments are ignored; these completions only apply
 to the case specified by the option.
 The process of applying these completion specifications when
 attempting word completion is described above under
 Programmable Completion.
 Other options, if specified, have the following meanings. The
 arguments to the -G, -W, and -X options (and, if necessary, the
 -P and -S options) should be quoted to protect them from
 expansion before the complete builtin is invoked.
 -o comp-option
 The comp-option controls several aspects of the
 compspec's behavior beyond the simple generation of
 completions. comp-option may be one of:
 bashdefault
 Perform the rest of the default bash completions
 if the compspec generates no matches.
 default Use readline's default filename completion if
 the compspec generates no matches.
 dirnames
 Perform directory name completion if the
 compspec generates no matches.
 filenames
 Tell readline that the compspec generates
 filenames, so it can perform any
 filename-specific processing (such as adding a
 slash to directory names, quoting special
 characters, or suppressing trailing spaces).
 This is intended to be used with shell
 functions.
 fullquote
 Tell readline to quote all the completed words
 even if they are not filenames.
 noquote Tell readline not to quote the completed words
 if they are filenames (quoting filenames is the
 default).
 nosort Tell readline not to sort the list of possible
 completions alphabetically.
 nospace Tell readline not to append a space (the
 default) to words completed at the end of the
 line.
 plusdirs
 After generating any matches defined by the
 compspec, attempt directory name completion and
 add any matches to the results of the other
 actions.
 -A action
 The action may be one of the following to generate a
 list of possible completions:
 alias Alias names. May also be specified as -a.
 arrayvar
 Array variable names.
 binding Readline key binding names.
 builtin Names of shell builtin commands. May also be
 specified as -b.
 command Command names. May also be specified as -c.
 directory
 Directory names. May also be specified as -d.
 disabled
 Names of disabled shell builtins.
 enabled Names of enabled shell builtins.
 export Names of exported shell variables. May also be
 specified as -e.
 file File and directory names, similar to readline's
 filename completion. May also be specified as
 -f.
 function
 Names of shell functions.
 group Group names. May also be specified as -g.
 helptopic
 Help topics as accepted by the help builtin.
 hostname
 Hostnames, as taken from the file specified by
 the HOSTFILE shell variable.
 job Job names, if job control is active. May also
 be specified as -j.
 keyword Shell reserved words. May also be specified as
 -k.
 running Names of running jobs, if job control is active.
 service Service names. May also be specified as -s.
 setopt Valid arguments for the -o option to the set
 builtin.
 shopt Shell option names as accepted by the shopt
 builtin.
 signal Signal names.
 stopped Names of stopped jobs, if job control is active.
 user User names. May also be specified as -u.
 variable
 Names of all shell variables. May also be
 specified as -v.
 -C command
 command is executed in a subshell environment, and its
 output is used as the possible completions. Arguments
 are passed as with the -F option.
 -F function
 The shell function function is executed in the current
 shell environment. When the function is executed, the
 first argument (1ドル) is the name of the command whose
 arguments are being completed, the second argument (2ドル)
 is the word being completed, and the third argument (3ドル)
 is the word preceding the word being completed on the
 current command line. When function finishes,
 programmable completion retrieves the possible
 completions from the value of the COMPREPLY array
 variable.
 -G globpat
 Expand the pathname expansion pattern globpat to
 generate the possible completions.
 -P prefix
 Add prefix to the beginning of each possible completion
 after all other options have been applied.
 -S suffix
 Append suffix to each possible completion after all
 other options have been applied.
 -W wordlist
 Split the wordlist using the characters in the IFS
 special variable as delimiters, and expand each
 resulting word. Shell quoting is honored within
 wordlist, in order to provide a mechanism for the words
 to contain shell metacharacters or characters in the
 value of IFS. The possible completions are the members
 of the resultant list which match a prefix of the word
 being completed.
 -X filterpat
 filterpat is a pattern as used for pathname expansion.
 It is applied to the list of possible completions
 generated by the preceding options and arguments, and
 each completion matching filterpat is removed from the
 list. A leading ! in filterpat negates the pattern; in
 this case, any completion not matching filterpat is
 removed.
 The return value is true unless an invalid option is supplied,
 an option other than -p, -r, -D, -E, or -I is supplied without a
 name argument, an attempt is made to remove a completion
 specification for a name for which no specification exists, or
 an error occurs adding a completion specification.
 compopt [-o option] [-DEI] [+o option] [name]
 Modify completion options for each name according to the
 options, or for the currently-executing completion if no names
 are supplied. If no options are supplied, display the
 completion options for each name or the current completion. The
 possible values of option are those valid for the complete
 builtin described above.
 The -D option indicates that other supplied options should apply
 to the "default" command completion; the -E option indicates
 that other supplied options should apply to "empty" command
 completion; and the -I option indicates that other supplied
 options should apply to completion on the initial word on the
 line. These are determined in the same way as the complete
 builtin.
 If multiple options are supplied, the -D option takes precedence
 over -E, and both take precedence over -I.
 The return value is true unless an invalid option is supplied,
 an attempt is made to modify the options for a name for which no
 completion specification exists, or an output error occurs.
 continue [n]
 continue resumes the next iteration of the enclosing for, while,
 until, or select loop. If n is specified, bash resumes the nth
 enclosing loop. n must be >= 1. If n is greater than the
 number of enclosing loops, the shell resumes the last enclosing
 loop (the "top-level" loop). The return value is 0 unless n is
 not greater than or equal to 1.
 declare [-aAfFgiIlnrtux] [-p] [name[=value] ...]
 typeset [-aAfFgiIlnrtux] [-p] [name[=value] ...]
 Declare variables and/or give them attributes. If no names are
 given then display the values of variables or functions. The -p
 option will display the attributes and values of each name.
 When -p is used with name arguments, additional options, other
 than -f and -F, are ignored.
 When -p is supplied without name arguments, declare will display
 the attributes and values of all variables having the attributes
 specified by the additional options. If no other options are
 supplied with -p, declare will display the attributes and values
 of all shell variables. The -f option restricts the display to
 shell functions.
 The -F option inhibits the display of function definitions; only
 the function name and attributes are printed. If the extdebug
 shell option is enabled using shopt, the source file name and
 line number where each name is defined are displayed as well.
 The -F option implies -f.
 The -g option forces variables to be created or modified at the
 global scope, even when declare is executed in a shell function.
 It is ignored when declare is not executed in a shell function.
 The -I option causes local variables to inherit the attributes
 (except the nameref attribute) and value of any existing
 variable with the same name at a surrounding scope. If there is
 no existing variable, the local variable is initially unset.
 The following options can be used to restrict output to
 variables with the specified attribute or to give variables
 attributes:
 -a Each name is an indexed array variable (see Arrays
 above).
 -A Each name is an associative array variable (see Arrays
 above).
 -f Each name refers to a shell function.
 -i The variable is treated as an integer; arithmetic
 evaluation (see ARITHMETIC EVALUATION above) is performed
 when the variable is assigned a value.
 -l When the variable is assigned a value, all upper-case
 characters are converted to lower-case. The upper-case
 attribute is disabled.
 -n Give each name the nameref attribute, making it a name
 reference to another variable. That other variable is
 defined by the value of name. All references,
 assignments, and attribute modifications to name, except
 those using or changing the -n attribute itself, are
 performed on the variable referenced by name's value.
 The nameref attribute cannot be applied to array
 variables.
 -r Make names readonly. These names cannot then be assigned
 values by subsequent assignment statements or unset.
 -t Give each name the trace attribute. Traced functions
 inherit the DEBUG and RETURN traps from the calling
 shell. The trace attribute has no special meaning for
 variables.
 -u When the variable is assigned a value, all lower-case
 characters are converted to upper-case. The lower-case
 attribute is disabled.
 -x Mark each name for export to subsequent commands via the
 environment.
 Using "+" instead of "-" turns off the specified attribute
 instead, with the exceptions that +a and +A may not be used to
 destroy array variables and +r will not remove the readonly
 attribute.
 When used in a function, declare and typeset make each name
 local, as with the local command, unless the -g option is
 supplied. If a variable name is followed by =value, the value
 of the variable is set to value. When using -a or -A and the
 compound assignment syntax to create array variables, additional
 attributes do not take effect until subsequent assignments.
 The return value is 0 unless an invalid option is encountered,
 an attempt is made to define a function using "-f foo=bar", an
 attempt is made to assign a value to a readonly variable, an
 attempt is made to assign a value to an array variable without
 using the compound assignment syntax (see Arrays above), one of
 the names is not a valid shell variable name, an attempt is made
 to turn off readonly status for a readonly variable, an attempt
 is made to turn off array status for an array variable, or an
 attempt is made to display a non-existent function with -f.
 dirs [-clpv] [+n] [-n]
 Without options, display the list of currently remembered
 directories. The default display is on a single line with
 directory names separated by spaces. Directories are added to
 the list with the pushd command; the popd command removes
 entries from the list. The current directory is always the
 first directory in the stack.
 Options, if supplied, have the following meanings:
 -c Clears the directory stack by deleting all of the
 entries.
 -l Produces a listing using full pathnames; the default
 listing format uses a tilde to denote the home directory.
 -p Print the directory stack with one entry per line.
 -v Print the directory stack with one entry per line,
 prefixing each entry with its index in the stack.
 +n Displays the nth entry counting from the left of the list
 shown by dirs when invoked without options, starting with
 zero.
 -n Displays the nth entry counting from the right of the
 list shown by dirs when invoked without options, starting
 with zero.
 The return value is 0 unless an invalid option is supplied or n
 indexes beyond the end of the directory stack.
 disown [-ar] [-h] [id ...]
 Without options, remove each id from the table of active jobs.
 Each id may be a job specification jobspec or a process ID pid;
 if id is a pid, disown uses the job containing pid as jobspec.
 If the -h option is supplied, disown does not remove the jobs
 corresponding to each id from the jobs table, but rather marks
 them so the shell does not send SIGHUP to the job if the shell
 receives a SIGHUP.
 If no id is supplied, the -a option means to remove or mark all
 jobs; the -r option without an id argument removes or marks
 running jobs. If no id is supplied, and neither the -a nor the
 -r option is supplied, disown removes or marks the current job.
 The return value is 0 unless an id does not specify a valid job.
 echo [-neE] [arg ...]
 Output the args, separated by spaces, followed by a newline.
 The return status is 0 unless a write error occurs. If -n is
 specified, the trailing newline is not printed.
 If the -e option is given, echo interprets the following
 backslash-escaped characters. The -E option disables
 interpretation of these escape characters, even on systems where
 they are interpreted by default. The xpg_echo shell option
 determines whether or not echo interprets any options and
 expands these escape characters. echo does not interpret -- to
 mean the end of options.
 echo interprets the following escape sequences:
 \a alert (bell)
 \b backspace
 \c suppress further output
 \e
 \E an escape character
 \f form feed
 \n new line
 \r carriage return
 \t horizontal tab
 \v vertical tab
 \\ backslash
 0円nnn The eight-bit character whose value is the octal value
 nnn (zero to three octal digits).
 \xHH The eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal
 value HH (one or two hex digits).
 \uHHHH The Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the
 hexadecimal value HHHH (one to four hex digits).
 \UHHHHHHHH
 The Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the
 hexadecimal value HHHHHHHH (one to eight hex digits).
 echo writes any unrecognized backslash-escaped characters
 unchanged.
 enable [-a] [-dnps] [-f filename] [name ...]
 Enable and disable builtin shell commands. Disabling a builtin
 allows an executable file which has the same name as a shell
 builtin to be executed without specifying a full pathname, even
 though the shell normally searches for builtins before files.
 If -n is supplied, each name is disabled; otherwise, names are
 enabled. For example, to use the test binary found using PATH
 instead of the shell builtin version, run "enable -n test".
 If no name arguments are supplied, or if the -p option is
 supplied, print a list of shell builtins. With no other option
 arguments, the list consists of all enabled shell builtins. If
 -n is supplied, print only disabled builtins. If -a is
 supplied, the list printed includes all builtins, with an
 indication of whether or not each is enabled. The -s option
 means to restrict the output to the POSIX special builtins.
 The -f option means to load the new builtin command name from
 shared object filename, on systems that support dynamic loading.
 If filename does not contain a slash, Bash will use the value of
 the BASH_LOADABLES_PATH variable as a colon-separated list of
 directories in which to search for filename. The default for
 BASH_LOADABLES_PATH is system-dependent, and may include "." to
 force a search of the current directory. The -d option will
 delete a builtin previously loaded with -f. If -s is used with
 -f, the new builtin becomes a POSIX special builtin.
 If no options are supplied and a name is not a shell builtin,
 enable will attempt to load name from a shared object named
 name, as if the command were "enable -f name name".
 The return value is 0 unless a name is not a shell builtin or
 there is an error loading a new builtin from a shared object.
 eval [arg ...]
 Concatenate the args together into a single command, separating
 them with spaces. Bash then reads and execute this command, and
 returns its exit status as the return status of eval. If there
 are no args, or only null arguments, eval returns 0.
 exec [-cl] [-a name] [command [arguments]]
 If command is specified, it replaces the shell without creating
 a new process. command cannot be a shell builtin or function.
 The arguments become the arguments to command. If the -l option
 is supplied, the shell places a dash at the beginning of the
 zeroth argument passed to command. This is what login(1)  does.
 The -c option causes command to be executed with an empty
 environment. If -a is supplied, the shell passes name as the
 zeroth argument to the executed command.
 If command cannot be executed for some reason, a non-interactive
 shell exits, unless the execfail shell option is enabled. In
 that case, it returns a non-zero status. An interactive shell
 returns a non-zero status if the file cannot be executed. A
 subshell exits unconditionally if exec fails.
 If command is not specified, any redirections take effect in the
 current shell, and the return status is 0. If there is a
 redirection error, the return status is 1.
 exit [n]
 Cause the shell to exit with a status of n. If n is omitted,
 the exit status is that of the last command executed. Any trap
 on EXIT is executed before the shell terminates.
 export [-fn] [name[=value]] ...
 export -p [-f]
 The supplied names are marked for automatic export to the
 environment of subsequently executed commands. If the -f option
 is given, the names refer to functions.
 The -n option unexports, or removes the export attribute, from
 each name. If no names are given, or if only the -p option is
 supplied, export displays a list of names of all exported
 variables on the standard output. Using -p and -f together
 displays exported functions. The -p option displays output in a
 form that may be reused as input.
 export allows the value of a variable to be set when it is
 exported or unexported by following the variable name with
 =value. This sets the value of the variable to value while
 modifying the export attribute. export returns an exit status
 of 0 unless an invalid option is encountered, one of the names
 is not a valid shell variable name, or -f is supplied with a
 name that is not a function.
 false Does nothing; returns a non-zero status.
 fc [-e ename] [-lnr] [first] [last]
 fc -s [pat=rep] [cmd]
 The first form selects a range of commands from first to last
 from the history list and displays or edits and re-executes
 them. First and last may be specified as a string (to locate
 the last command beginning with that string) or as a number (an
 index into the history list, where a negative number is used as
 an offset from the current command number).
 When listing, a first or last of 0 is equivalent to -1 and -0 is
 equivalent to the current command (usually the fc command);
 otherwise 0 is equivalent to -1 and -0 is invalid. If last is
 not specified, it is set to the current command for listing (so
 that "fc -l -10" prints the last 10 commands) and to first
 otherwise. If first is not specified, it is set to the previous
 command for editing and -16 for listing.
 If the -l option is supplied, the commands are listed on the
 standard output. The -n option suppresses the command numbers
 when listing. The -r option reverses the order of the commands.
 Otherwise, fc invokes the editor named by ename on a file
 containing those commands. If ename is not supplied, fc uses
 the value of the FCEDIT variable, and the value of EDITOR if
 FCEDIT is not set. If neither variable is set, fc uses vi. When
 editing is complete, fc reads the file containing the edited
 commands and echoes and executes them.
 In the second form, fc re-executes command after replacing each
 instance of pat with rep. Command is interpreted the same as
 first above.
 A useful alias to use with fc is "r="fc -s"", so that typing "r
 cc" runs the last command beginning with "cc" and typing "r" re-
 executes the last command.
 If the first form is used, the return value is zero unless an
 invalid option is encountered or first or last specify history
 lines out of range. When editing and re-executing a file of
 commands, the return value is the value of the last command
 executed or failure if an error occurs with the temporary file.
 If the second form is used, the return status is that of the re-
 executed command, unless cmd does not specify a valid history
 entry, in which case fc returns a non-zero status.
 fg [jobspec]
 Resume jobspec in the foreground, and make it the current job.
 If jobspec is not present, fg uses the shell's notion of the
 current job. The return value is that of the command placed
 into the foreground, or failure if run when job control is
 disabled or, when run with job control enabled, if jobspec does
 not specify a valid job or jobspec specifies a job that was
 started without job control.
 getopts optstring name [arg ...]
 getopts is used by shell scripts and functions to parse
 positional parameters and obtain options and their arguments.
 optstring contains the option characters to be recognized; if a
 character is followed by a colon, the option is expected to have
 an argument, which should be separated from it by white space.
 The colon and question mark characters may not be used as option
 characters.
 Each time it is invoked, getopts places the next option in the
 shell variable name, initializing name if it does not exist, and
 the index of the next argument to be processed into the variable
 OPTIND. OPTIND is initialized to 1 each time the shell or a
 shell script is invoked. When an option requires an argument,
 getopts places that argument into the variable OPTARG.
 The shell does not reset OPTIND automatically; it must be
 manually reset between multiple calls to getopts within the same
 shell invocation to use a new set of parameters.
 When it reaches the end of options, getopts exits with a return
 value greater than zero. OPTIND is set to the index of the
 first non-option argument, and name is set to ?.
 getopts normally parses the positional parameters, but if more
 arguments are supplied as arg values, getopts parses those
 instead.
 getopts can report errors in two ways. If the first character
 of optstring is a colon, getopts uses silent error reporting.
 In normal operation, getopts prints diagnostic messages when it
 encounters invalid options or missing option arguments. If the
 variable OPTERR is set to 0, getopts does not display any error
 messages, even if the first character of optstring is not a
 colon.
 If getopts detects an invalid option, it places ? into name and,
 if not silent, prints an error message and unsets OPTARG. If
 getopts is silent, it assigns the option character found to
 OPTARG and does not print a diagnostic message.
 If a required argument is not found, and getopts is not silent,
 it sets the value of name to a question mark (?), unsets OPTARG,
 and prints a diagnostic message. If getopts is silent, it sets
 the value of name to a colon (:) and sets OPTARG to the option
 character found.
 getopts returns true if an option, specified or unspecified, is
 found. It returns false if the end of options is encountered or
 an error occurs.
 hash [-lr] [-p filename] [-dt] [name]
 Each time hash is invoked, it remembers the full pathname of the
 command name as determined by searching the directories in
 $PATH. Any previously-remembered pathname associated with name
 is discarded. If the -p option is supplied, hash uses filename
 as the full pathname of the command.
 The -r option causes the shell to forget all remembered
 locations. Assigning to the PATH variable also clears all
 hashed filenames. The -d option causes the shell to forget the
 remembered location of each name.
 If the -t option is supplied, hash prints the full pathname
 corresponding to each name. If multiple name arguments are
 supplied with -t, hash prints the name before the corresponding
 hashed full pathname. The -l option displays output in a format
 that may be reused as input.
 If no arguments are given, or if only -l is supplied, hash
 prints information about remembered commands. The -t, -d, and
 -p options (the options that act on the name arguments) are
 mutually exclusive. Only one will be active. If more than one
 is supplied, -t has higher priority than -p, and both have
 higher priority than -d.
 The return status is zero unless a name is not found or an
 invalid option is supplied.
 help [-dms] [pattern]
 Display helpful information about builtin commands. If pattern
 is specified, help gives detailed help on all commands matching
 pattern as described below; otherwise it displays a list of all
 the builtins and shell compound commands.
 Options, if supplied, have the follow meanings:
 -d Display a short description of each pattern
 -m Display the description of each pattern in a manpage-like
 format
 -s Display only a short usage synopsis for each pattern
 If pattern contains pattern matching characters (see Pattern
 Matching above) it's treated as a shell pattern and help prints
 the description of each help topic matching pattern.
 If not, and pattern exactly matches the name of a help topic,
 help prints the description associated with that topic.
 Otherwise, help performs prefix matching and prints the
 descriptions of all matching help topics.
 The return status is 0 unless no command matches pattern.
 history [n]
 history -c
 history -d offset
 history -d start-end
 history -anrw [filename]
 history -p arg [arg ...]
 history -s arg [arg ...]
 With no options, display the command history list with numbers.
 Entries prefixed with a * have been modified. An argument of n
 lists only the last n entries. If the shell variable
 HISTTIMEFORMAT is set and not null, it is used as a format
 string for strftime(3)  to display the time stamp associated with
 each displayed history entry. If history uses HISTTIMEFORMAT,
 it does not print an intervening space between the formatted
 time stamp and the history entry.
 If filename is supplied, history uses it as the name of the
 history file; if not, it uses the value of HISTFILE. If
 filename is not supplied and HISTFILE is unset or null, the -a,
 -n, -r, and -w options have no effect.
 Options, if supplied, have the following meanings:
 -c Clear the history list by deleting all the entries. This
 can be used with the other options to replace the history
 list.
 -d offset
 Delete the history entry at position offset. If offset
 is negative, it is interpreted as relative to one greater
 than the last history position, so negative indices count
 back from the end of the history, and an index of -1
 refers to the current history -d command.
 -d start-end
 Delete the range of history entries between positions
 start and end, inclusive. Positive and negative values
 for start and end are interpreted as described above.
 -a Append the "new" history lines to the history file.
 These are history lines entered since the beginning of
 the current bash session, but not already appended to the
 history file.
 -n Read the history lines not already read from the history
 file and add them to the current history list. These are
 lines appended to the history file since the beginning of
 the current bash session.
 -r Read the history file and append its contents to the
 current history list.
 -w Write the current history list to the history file,
 overwriting the history file.
 -p Perform history substitution on the following args and
 display the result on the standard output, without
 storing the results in the history list. Each arg must
 be quoted to disable normal history expansion.
 -s Store the args in the history list as a single entry.
 The last command in the history list is removed before
 adding the args.
 If the HISTTIMEFORMAT variable is set, history writes the time
 stamp information associated with each history entry to the
 history file, marked with the history comment character as
 described above. When the history file is read, lines beginning
 with the history comment character followed immediately by a
 digit are interpreted as timestamps for the following history
 entry.
 The return value is 0 unless an invalid option is encountered,
 an error occurs while reading or writing the history file, an
 invalid offset or range is supplied as an argument to -d, or the
 history expansion supplied as an argument to -p fails.
 jobs [-lnprs] [ jobspec ... ]
 jobs -x command [ args ... ]
 The first form lists the active jobs. The options have the
 following meanings:
 -l List process IDs in addition to the normal information.
 -n Display information only about jobs that have changed
 status since the user was last notified of their status.
 -p List only the process ID of the job's process group
 leader.
 -r Display only running jobs.
 -s Display only stopped jobs.
 If jobspec is supplied, jobs restricts output to information
 about that job. The return status is 0 unless an invalid option
 is encountered or an invalid jobspec is supplied.
 If the -x option is supplied, jobs replaces any jobspec found in
 command or args with the corresponding process group ID, and
 executes command, passing it args, returning its exit status.
 kill [-s sigspec | -n signum | -sigspec] id [ ... ]
 kill -l|-L [sigspec | exit_status]
 Send the signal specified by sigspec or signum to the processes
 named by each id. Each id may be a job specification jobspec or
 a process ID pid. sigspec is either a case-insensitive signal
 name such as SIGKILL (with or without the SIG prefix) or a
 signal number; signum is a signal number. If sigspec is not
 supplied, then kill sends SIGTERM.
 The -l option lists the signal names. If any arguments are
 supplied when -l is given, kill lists the names of the signals
 corresponding to the arguments, and the return status is 0. The
 exit_status argument to -l is a number specifying either a
 signal number or the exit status of a process terminated by a
 signal; if it is supplied, kill prints the name of the signal
 that caused the process to terminate. kill assumes that process
 exit statuses are greater than 128; anything less than that is a
 signal number. The -L option is equivalent to -l.
 kill returns true if at least one signal was successfully sent,
 or false if an error occurs or an invalid option is encountered.
 let arg [arg ...]
 Each arg is evaluated as an arithmetic expression (see
 ARITHMETIC EVALUATION above). If the last arg evaluates to 0,
 let returns 1; otherwise let returns 0.
 local [option] [name[=value] ... | - ]
 For each argument, create a local variable named name and assign
 it value. The option can be any of the options accepted by
 declare. When local is used within a function, it causes the
 variable name to have a visible scope restricted to that
 function and its children. It is an error to use local when not
 within a function.
 If name is -, it makes the set of shell options local to the
 function in which local is invoked: any shell options changed
 using the set builtin inside the function after the call to
 local are restored to their original values when the function
 returns. The restore is performed as if a series of set
 commands were executed to restore the values that were in place
 before the function.
 With no operands, local writes a list of local variables to the
 standard output.
 The return status is 0 unless local is used outside a function,
 an invalid name is supplied, or name is a readonly variable.
 logout [n]
 Exit a login shell, returning a status of n to the shell's
 parent.
 mapfile [-d delim] [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count] [-t] [-u fd] [-C
 callback] [-c quantum] [array]
 readarray [-d delim] [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count] [-t] [-u fd] [-C
 callback] [-c quantum] [array]
 Read lines from the standard input, or from file descriptor fd
 if the -u option is supplied, into the indexed array variable
 array. The variable MAPFILE is the default array. Options, if
 supplied, have the following meanings:
 -d Use the first character of delim to terminate each input
 line, rather than newline. If delim is the empty string,
 mapfile will terminate a line when it reads a NUL
 character.
 -n Copy at most count lines. If count is 0, copy all lines.
 -O Begin assigning to array at index origin. The default
 index is 0.
 -s Discard the first count lines read.
 -t Remove a trailing delim (default newline) from each line
 read.
 -u Read lines from file descriptor fd instead of the
 standard input.
 -C Evaluate callback each time quantum lines are read. The
 -c option specifies quantum.
 -c Specify the number of lines read between each call to
 callback.
 If -C is specified without -c, the default quantum is 5000.
 When callback is evaluated, it is supplied the index of the next
 array element to be assigned and the line to be assigned to that
 element as additional arguments. callback is evaluated after
 the line is read but before the array element is assigned.
 If not supplied with an explicit origin, mapfile will clear
 array before assigning to it.
 mapfile returns zero unless an invalid option or option argument
 is supplied, array is invalid or unassignable, or if array is
 not an indexed array.
 popd [-n] [+n] [-n]
 Remove entries from the directory stack. The elements are
 numbered from 0 starting at the first directory listed by dirs,
 so popd is equivalent to "popd +0." With no arguments, popd
 removes the top directory from the stack, and changes to the new
 top directory. Arguments, if supplied, have the following
 meanings:
 -n Suppress the normal change of directory when removing
 directories from the stack, only manipulate the stack.
 +n Remove the nth entry counting from the left of the list
 shown by dirs, starting with zero, from the stack. For
 example: "popd +0" removes the first directory, "popd +1"
 the second.
 -n Remove the nth entry counting from the right of the list
 shown by dirs, starting with zero. For example: "popd
 -0" removes the last directory, "popd -1" the next to
 last.
 If the top element of the directory stack is modified, and the
 -n option was not supplied, popd uses the cd builtin to change
 to the directory at the top of the stack. If the cd fails, popd
 returns a non-zero value.
 Otherwise, popd returns false if an invalid option is supplied,
 the directory stack is empty, or n specifies a non-existent
 directory stack entry.
 If the popd command is successful, bash runs dirs to show the
 final contents of the directory stack, and the return status is
 0.
 printf [-v var] format [arguments]
 Write the formatted arguments to the standard output under the
 control of the format. The -v option assigns the output to the
 variable var rather than printing it to the standard output.
 The format is a character string which contains three types of
 objects: plain characters, which are simply copied to standard
 output, character escape sequences, which are converted and
 copied to the standard output, and format specifications, each
 of which causes printing of the next successive argument. In
 addition to the standard printf(3)  format characters
 cCsSndiouxXeEfFgGaA, printf interprets the following additional
 format specifiers:
 %b causes printf to expand backslash escape sequences in the
 corresponding argument in the same way as echo -e.
 %q causes printf to output the corresponding argument in a
 format that can be reused as shell input. %q and %Q use
 the $'' quoting style if any characters in the argument
 string require it, and backslash quoting otherwise. If
 the format string uses the printf alternate form, these
 two formats quote the argument string using single
 quotes.
 %Q like %q, but applies any supplied precision to the
 argument before quoting it.
 %(datefmt)T
 causes printf to output the date-time string resulting
 from using datefmt as a format string for strftime(3) .
 The corresponding argument is an integer representing the
 number of seconds since the epoch. This format specifier
 recognizes two special argument values: -1 represents the
 current time, and -2 represents the time the shell was
 invoked. If no argument is specified, conversion behaves
 as if -1 had been supplied. This is an exception to the
 usual printf behavior.
 The %b, %q, and %T format specifiers all use the field width and
 precision arguments from the format specification and write that
 many bytes from (or use that wide a field for) the expanded
 argument, which usually contains more characters than the
 original.
 The %n format specifier accepts a corresponding argument that is
 treated as a shell variable name.
 The %s and %c format specifiers accept an l (long) modifier,
 which forces them to convert the argument string to a wide-
 character string and apply any supplied field width and
 precision in terms of characters, not bytes. The %S and %C
 format specifiers are equivalent to %ls and %lc, respectively.
 Arguments to non-string format specifiers are treated as C
 constants, except that a leading plus or minus sign is allowed,
 and if the leading character is a single or double quote, the
 value is the numeric value of the following character, using the
 current locale.
 The format is reused as necessary to consume all of the
 arguments. If the format requires more arguments than are
 supplied, the extra format specifications behave as if a zero
 value or null string, as appropriate, had been supplied. The
 return value is zero on success, non-zero if an invalid option
 is supplied or a write or assignment error occurs.
 pushd [-n] [+n] [-n]
 pushd [-n] [dir]
 Add a directory to the top of the directory stack, or rotate the
 stack, making the new top of the stack the current working
 directory. With no arguments, pushd exchanges the top two
 elements of the directory stack. Arguments, if supplied, have
 the following meanings:
 -n Suppress the normal change of directory when rotating or
 adding directories to the stack, only manipulate the
 stack.
 +n Rotate the stack so that the nth directory (counting from
 the left of the list shown by dirs, starting with zero)
 is at the top.
 -n Rotates the stack so that the nth directory (counting
 from the right of the list shown by dirs, starting with
 zero) is at the top.
 dir Adds dir to the directory stack at the top.
 After the stack has been modified, if the -n option was not
 supplied, pushd uses the cd builtin to change to the directory
 at the top of the stack. If the cd fails, pushd returns a non-
 zero value.
 Otherwise, if no arguments are supplied, pushd returns zero
 unless the directory stack is empty. When rotating the
 directory stack, pushd returns zero unless the directory stack
 is empty or n specifies a non-existent directory stack element.
 If the pushd command is successful, bash runs dirs to show the
 final contents of the directory stack.
 pwd [-LP]
 Print the absolute pathname of the current working directory.
 The pathname printed contains no symbolic links if the -P option
 is supplied or the -o physical option to the set builtin command
 is enabled. If the -L option is used, the pathname printed may
 contain symbolic links. The return status is 0 unless an error
 occurs while reading the name of the current directory or an
 invalid option is supplied.
 read [-Eers] [-a aname] [-d delim] [-i text] [-n nchars] [-N nchars]
 [-p prompt] [-t timeout] [-u fd] [name ...]
 Read one line from the standard input, or from the file
 descriptor fd supplied as an argument to the -u option, split it
 into words as described above under Word Splitting, and assign
 the first word to the first name, the second word to the second
 name, and so on. If there are more words than names, the
 remaining words and their intervening delimiters are assigned to
 the last name. If there are fewer words read from the input
 stream than names, the remaining names are assigned empty
 values. The characters in the value of the IFS variable are
 used to split the line into words using the same rules the shell
 uses for expansion (described above under Word Splitting). The
 backslash character (\) removes any special meaning for the next
 character read and is used for line continuation.
 Options, if supplied, have the following meanings:
 -a aname
 The words are assigned to sequential indices of the array
 variable aname, starting at 0. aname is unset before any
 new values are assigned. Other name arguments are
 ignored.
 -d delim
 The first character of delim terminates the input line,
 rather than newline. If delim is the empty string, read
 will terminate a line when it reads a NUL character.
 -e If the standard input is coming from a terminal, read
 uses readline (see READLINE above) to obtain the line.
 Readline uses the current (or default, if line editing
 was not previously active) editing settings, but uses
 readline's default filename completion.
 -E If the standard input is coming from a terminal, read
 uses readline (see READLINE above) to obtain the line.
 Readline uses the current (or default, if line editing
 was not previously active) editing settings, but uses
 bash's default completion, including programmable
 completion.
 -i text
 If readline is being used to read the line, read places
 text into the editing buffer before editing begins.
 -n nchars
 read returns after reading nchars characters rather than
 waiting for a complete line of input, unless it
 encounters EOF or read times out, but honors a delimiter
 if it reads fewer than nchars characters before the
 delimiter.
 -N nchars
 read returns after reading exactly nchars characters
 rather than waiting for a complete line of input, unless
 it encounters EOF or read times out. Any delimiter
 characters in the input are not treated specially and do
 not cause read to return until it has read nchars
 characters. The result is not split on the characters in
 IFS; the intent is that the variable is assigned exactly
 the characters read (with the exception of backslash; see
 the -r option below).
 -p prompt
 Display prompt on standard error, without a trailing
 newline, before attempting to read any input, but only if
 input is coming from a terminal.
 -r Backslash does not act as an escape character. The
 backslash is considered to be part of the line. In
 particular, a backslash-newline pair may not then be used
 as a line continuation.
 -s Silent mode. If input is coming from a terminal,
 characters are not echoed.
 -t timeout
 Cause read to time out and return failure if it does not
 read a complete line of input (or a specified number of
 characters) within timeout seconds. timeout may be a
 decimal number with a fractional portion following the
 decimal point. This option is only effective if read is
 reading input from a terminal, pipe, or other special
 file; it has no effect when reading from regular files.
 If read times out, it saves any partial input read into
 the specified variable name, and the exit status is
 greater than 128. If timeout is 0, read returns
 immediately, without trying to read any data. In this
 case, the exit status is 0 if input is available on the
 specified file descriptor, or the read will return EOF,
 non-zero otherwise.
 -u fd Read input from file descriptor fd instead of the
 standard input.
 Other than the case where delim is the empty string, read
 ignores any NUL characters in the input.
 If no names are supplied, read assigns the line read, without
 the ending delimiter but otherwise unmodified, to the variable
 REPLY.
 The exit status is zero, unless end-of-file is encountered, read
 times out (in which case the status is greater than 128), a
 variable assignment error (such as assigning to a readonly
 variable) occurs, or an invalid file descriptor is supplied as
 the argument to -u.
 readonly [-aAf] [-p] [name[=word] ...]
 The given names are marked readonly; the values of these names
 may not be changed by subsequent assignment or unset. If the -f
 option is supplied, each name refers to a shell function. The
 -a option restricts the variables to indexed arrays; the -A
 option restricts the variables to associative arrays. If both
 options are supplied, -A takes precedence. If no name arguments
 are supplied, or if the -p option is supplied, print a list of
 all readonly names. The other options may be used to restrict
 the output to a subset of the set of readonly names. The -p
 option displays output in a format that may be reused as input.
 readonly allows the value of a variable to be set at the same
 time the readonly attribute is changed by following the variable
 name with =value. This sets the value of the variable is to
 value while modifying the readonly attribute.
 The return status is 0 unless an invalid option is encountered,
 one of the names is not a valid shell variable name, or -f is
 supplied with a name that is not a function.
 return [n]
 Stop executing a shell function or sourced file and return the
 value specified by n to its caller. If n is omitted, the return
 status is that of the last command executed. If return is
 executed by a trap handler, the last command used to determine
 the status is the last command executed before the trap handler.
 If return is executed during a DEBUG trap, the last command used
 to determine the status is the last command executed by the trap
 handler before return was invoked.
 When return is used to terminate execution of a script being
 executed by the . (source) command, it causes the shell to stop
 executing that script and return either n or the exit status of
 the last command executed within the script as the exit status
 of the script. If n is supplied, the return value is its least
 significant 8 bits.
 Any command associated with the RETURN trap is executed before
 execution resumes after the function or script.
 The return status is non-zero if return is supplied a non-
 numeric argument, or is used outside a function and not during
 execution of a script by . or source.
 set [-abefhkmnptuvxBCEHPT] [-o option-name] [--] [-] [arg ...]
 set [+abefhkmnptuvxBCEHPT] [+o option-name] [--] [-] [arg ...]
 set -o
 set +o Without options, display the name and value of each shell
 variable in a format that can be reused as input for setting or
 resetting the currently-set variables. Read-only variables
 cannot be reset. In posix mode, only shell variables are
 listed. The output is sorted according to the current locale.
 When options are specified, they set or unset shell attributes.
 Any arguments remaining after option processing are treated as
 values for the positional parameters and are assigned, in order,
 to 1ドル, 2ドル, ..., $n. Options, if specified, have the following
 meanings:
 -a Each variable or function that is created or modified is
 given the export attribute and marked for export to the
 environment of subsequent commands.
 -b Report the status of terminated background jobs
 immediately, rather than before the next primary prompt
 or after a foreground command terminates. This is
 effective only when job control is enabled.
 -e Exit immediately if a pipeline (which may consist of a
 single simple command), a list, or a compound command
 (see SHELL GRAMMAR above), exits with a non-zero status.
 The shell does not exit if the command that fails is
 part of the command list immediately following a while
 or until reserved word, part of the test following the
 if or elif reserved words, part of any command executed
 in a && or || list except the command following the
 final && or ||, any command in a pipeline but the last
 (subject to the state of the pipefail shell option), or
 if the command's return value is being inverted with !.
 If a compound command other than a subshell returns a
 non-zero status because a command failed while -e was
 being ignored, the shell does not exit. A trap on ERR,
 if set, is executed before the shell exits. This option
 applies to the shell environment and each subshell
 environment separately (see COMMAND EXECUTION
 ENVIRONMENT above), and may cause subshells to exit
 before executing all the commands in the subshell.
 If a compound command or shell function executes in a
 context where -e is being ignored, none of the commands
 executed within the compound command or function body
 will be affected by the -e setting, even if -e is set
 and a command returns a failure status. If a compound
 command or shell function sets -e while executing in a
 context where -e is ignored, that setting will not have
 any effect until the compound command or the command
 containing the function call completes.
 -f Disable pathname expansion.
 -h Remember the location of commands as they are looked up
 for execution. This is enabled by default.
 -k All arguments in the form of assignment statements are
 placed in the environment for a command, not just those
 that precede the command name.
 -m Monitor mode. Job control is enabled. This option is
 on by default for interactive shells on systems that
 support it (see JOB CONTROL above). All processes run
 in a separate process group. When a background job
 completes, the shell prints a line containing its exit
 status.
 -n Read commands but do not execute them. This may be used
 to check a shell script for syntax errors. This is
 ignored by interactive shells.
 -o option-name
 The option-name can be one of the following:
 allexport
 Same as -a.
 braceexpand
 Same as -B.
 emacs Use an emacs-style command line editing
 interface. This is enabled by default when the
 shell is interactive, unless the shell is
 started with the --noediting option. This also
 affects the editing interface used for read -e.
 errexit Same as -e.
 errtrace
 Same as -E.
 functrace
 Same as -T.
 hashall Same as -h.
 histexpand
 Same as -H.
 history Enable command history, as described above under
 HISTORY. This option is on by default in
 interactive shells.
 ignoreeof
 The effect is as if the shell command
 "IGNOREEOF=10" had been executed (see Shell
 Variables above).
 keyword Same as -k.
 monitor Same as -m.
 noclobber
 Same as -C.
 noexec Same as -n.
 noglob Same as -f.
 nolog Currently ignored.
 notify Same as -b.
 nounset Same as -u.
 onecmd Same as -t.
 physical
 Same as -P.
 pipefail
 If set, the return value of a pipeline is the
 value of the last (rightmost) command to exit
 with a non-zero status, or zero if all commands
 in the pipeline exit successfully. This option
 is disabled by default.
 posix Enable posix mode; change the behavior of bash
 where the default operation differs from the
 POSIX standard to match the standard. See SEE
 ALSO below for a reference to a document that
 details how posix mode affects bash's behavior.
 privileged
 Same as -p.
 verbose Same as -v.
 vi Use a vi-style command line editing interface.
 This also affects the editing interface used for
 read -e.
 xtrace Same as -x.
 If -o is supplied with no option-name, set prints the
 current shell option settings. If +o is supplied with
 no option-name, set prints a series of set commands to
 recreate the current option settings on the standard
 output.
 -p Turn on privileged mode. In this mode, the shell does
 not read the $ENV and $BASH_ENV files, shell functions
 are not inherited from the environment, and the
 SHELLOPTS, BASHOPTS, CDPATH, and GLOBIGNORE variables,
 if they appear in the environment, are ignored. If the
 shell is started with the effective user (group) id not
 equal to the real user (group) id, and the -p option is
 not supplied, these actions are taken and the effective
 user id is set to the real user id. If the -p option is
 supplied at startup, the effective user id is not reset.
 Turning this option off causes the effective user and
 group ids to be set to the real user and group ids.
 -r Enable restricted shell mode. This option cannot be
 unset once it has been set.
 -t Exit after reading and executing one command.
 -u Treat unset variables and parameters other than the
 special parameters "@" and "*", or array variables
 subscripted with "@" or "*", as an error when performing
 parameter expansion. If expansion is attempted on an
 unset variable or parameter, the shell prints an error
 message, and, if not interactive, exits with a non-zero
 status.
 -v Print shell input lines as they are read.
 -x After expanding each simple command, for command, case
 command, select command, or arithmetic for command,
 display the expanded value of PS4, followed by the
 command and its expanded arguments or associated word
 list, to the standard error.
 -B The shell performs brace expansion (see Brace Expansion
 above). This is on by default.
 -C If set, bash does not overwrite an existing file with
 the >, >&, and <> redirection operators. Using the
 redirection operator >| instead of > will override this
 and force the creation of an output file.
 -E If set, any trap on ERR is inherited by shell functions,
 command substitutions, and commands executed in a
 subshell environment. The ERR trap is normally not
 inherited in such cases.
 -H Enable ! style history substitution. This option is on
 by default when the shell is interactive.
 -P If set, the shell does not resolve symbolic links when
 executing commands such as cd that change the current
 working directory. It uses the physical directory
 structure instead. By default, bash follows the logical
 chain of directories when performing commands which
 change the current directory.
 -T If set, any traps on DEBUG and RETURN are inherited by
 shell functions, command substitutions, and commands
 executed in a subshell environment. The DEBUG and
 RETURN traps are normally not inherited in such cases.
 -- If no arguments follow this option, unset the positional
 parameters. Otherwise, set the positional parameters to
 the args, even if some of them begin with a -.
 - Signal the end of options, and assign all remaining args
 to the positional parameters. The -x and -v options are
 turned off. If there are no args, the positional
 parameters remain unchanged.
 The options are off by default unless otherwise noted. Using +
 rather than - causes these options to be turned off. The
 options can also be specified as arguments to an invocation of
 the shell. The current set of options may be found in $-. The
 return status is always zero unless an invalid option is
 encountered.
 shift [n]
 Rename positional parameters from n+1 ... to 1ドル .... Parameters
 represented by the numbers $# down to $#-n+1 are unset. n must
 be a non-negative number less than or equal to $#. If n is 0,
 no parameters are changed. If n is not given, it is assumed to
 be 1. If n is greater than $#, the positional parameters are
 not changed. The return status is greater than zero if n is
 greater than $# or less than zero; otherwise 0.
 shopt [-pqsu] [-o] [optname ...]
 Toggle the values of settings controlling optional shell
 behavior. The settings can be either those listed below, or, if
 the -o option is used, those available with the -o option to the
 set builtin command.
 With no options, or with the -p option, display a list of all
 settable options, with an indication of whether or not each is
 set; if any optnames are supplied, the output is restricted to
 those options. The -p option displays output in a form that may
 be reused as input.
 Other options have the following meanings:
 -s Enable (set) each optname.
 -u Disable (unset) each optname.
 -q Suppresses normal output (quiet mode); the return status
 indicates whether the optname is set or unset. If
 multiple optname arguments are supplied with -q, the
 return status is zero if all optnames are enabled; non-
 zero otherwise.
 -o Restricts the values of optname to be those defined for
 the -o option to the set builtin.
 If either -s or -u is used with no optname arguments, shopt
 shows only those options which are set or unset, respectively.
 Unless otherwise noted, the shopt options are disabled (unset)
 by default.
 The return status when listing options is zero if all optnames
 are enabled, non-zero otherwise. When setting or unsetting
 options, the return status is zero unless an optname is not a
 valid shell option.
 The list of shopt options is:
 array_expand_once
 If set, the shell suppresses multiple evaluation of
 associative and indexed array subscripts during
 arithmetic expression evaluation, while executing
 builtins that can perform variable assignments, and
 while executing builtins that perform array
 dereferencing.
 assoc_expand_once
 Deprecated; a synonym for array_expand_once.
 autocd If set, a command name that is the name of a directory
 is executed as if it were the argument to the cd
 command. This option is only used by interactive
 shells.
 bash_source_fullpath
 If set, filenames added to the BASH_SOURCE array
 variable are converted to full pathnames (see Shell
 Variables above).
 cdable_vars
 If set, an argument to the cd builtin command that is
 not a directory is assumed to be the name of a variable
 whose value is the directory to change to.
 cdspell If set, the cd command attempts to correct minor errors
 in the spelling of a directory component. Minor errors
 include transposed characters, a missing character, and
 one extra character. If cd corrects the directory name,
 it prints the corrected filename, and the command
 proceeds. This option is only used by interactive
 shells.
 checkhash
 If set, bash checks that a command found in the hash
 table exists before trying to execute it. If a hashed
 command no longer exists, bash performs a normal path
 search.
 checkjobs
 If set, bash lists the status of any stopped and running
 jobs before exiting an interactive shell. If any jobs
 are running, bash defers the exit until a second exit is
 attempted without an intervening command (see JOB
 CONTROL above). The shell always postpones exiting if
 any jobs are stopped.
 checkwinsize
 If set, bash checks the window size after each external
 (non-builtin) command and, if necessary, updates the
 values of LINES and COLUMNS, using the file descriptor
 associated with the standard error if it is a terminal.
 This option is enabled by default.
 cmdhist If set, bash attempts to save all lines of a multiple-
 line command in the same history entry. This allows
 easy re-editing of multi-line commands. This option is
 enabled by default, but only has an effect if command
 history is enabled, as described above under HISTORY.
 compat31
 compat32
 compat40
 compat41
 compat42
 compat43
 compat44
 These control aspects of the shell's compatibility mode
 (see SHELL COMPATIBILITY MODE below).
 complete_fullquote
 If set, bash quotes all shell metacharacters in
 filenames and directory names when performing
 completion. If not set, bash removes metacharacters
 such as the dollar sign from the set of characters that
 will be quoted in completed filenames when these
 metacharacters appear in shell variable references in
 words to be completed. This means that dollar signs in
 variable names that expand to directories will not be
 quoted; however, any dollar signs appearing in filenames
 will not be quoted, either. This is active only when
 bash is using backslashes to quote completed filenames.
 This variable is set by default, which is the default
 bash behavior in versions through 4.2.
 direxpand
 If set, bash replaces directory names with the results
 of word expansion when performing filename completion.
 This changes the contents of the readline editing
 buffer. If not set, bash attempts to preserve what the
 user typed.
 dirspell
 If set, bash attempts spelling correction on directory
 names during word completion if the directory name
 initially supplied does not exist.
 dotglob If set, bash includes filenames beginning with a "." in
 the results of pathname expansion. The filenames . and
 .. must always be matched explicitly, even if dotglob is
 set.
 execfail
 If set, a non-interactive shell will not exit if it
 cannot execute the file specified as an argument to the
 exec builtin. An interactive shell does not exit if
 exec fails.
 expand_aliases
 If set, aliases are expanded as described above under
 ALIASES. This option is enabled by default for
 interactive shells.
 extdebug
 If set at shell invocation, or in a shell startup file,
 arrange to execute the debugger profile before the shell
 starts, identical to the --debugger option. If set
 after invocation, behavior intended for use by debuggers
 is enabled:
 1. The -F option to the declare builtin displays the
 source file name and line number corresponding to
 each function name supplied as an argument.
 2. If the command run by the DEBUG trap returns a
 non-zero value, the next command is skipped and
 not executed.
 3. If the command run by the DEBUG trap returns a
 value of 2, and the shell is executing in a
 subroutine (a shell function or a shell script
 executed by the . or source builtins), the shell
 simulates a call to return.
 4. BASH_ARGC and BASH_ARGV are updated as described
 in their descriptions above).
 5. Function tracing is enabled: command
 substitution, shell functions, and subshells
 invoked with ( command ) inherit the DEBUG and
 RETURN traps.
 6. Error tracing is enabled: command substitution,
 shell functions, and subshells invoked with (
 command ) inherit the ERR trap.
 extglob If set, enable the extended pattern matching features
 described above under Pathname Expansion.
 extquote
 If set, $'string' and $"string" quoting is performed
 within ${parameter} expansions enclosed in double
 quotes. This option is enabled by default.
 failglob
 If set, patterns which fail to match filenames during
 pathname expansion result in an expansion error.
 force_fignore
 If set, the suffixes specified by the FIGNORE shell
 variable cause words to be ignored when performing word
 completion even if the ignored words are the only
 possible completions. See Shell Variables above for a
 description of FIGNORE. This option is enabled by
 default.
 globasciiranges
 If set, range expressions used in pattern matching
 bracket expressions (see Pattern Matching above) behave
 as if in the traditional C locale when performing
 comparisons. That is, pattern matching does not take
 the current locale's collating sequence into account, so
 b will not collate between A and B, and upper-case and
 lower-case ASCII characters will collate together.
 globskipdots
 If set, pathname expansion will never match the
 filenames . and .., even if the pattern begins with a
 ".". This option is enabled by default.
 globstar
 If set, the pattern ** used in a pathname expansion
 context will match all files and zero or more
 directories and subdirectories. If the pattern is
 followed by a /, only directories and subdirectories
 match.
 gnu_errfmt
 If set, shell error messages are written in the standard
 GNU error message format.
 histappend
 If set, the history list is appended to the file named
 by the value of the HISTFILE variable when the shell
 exits, rather than overwriting the file.
 histreedit
 If set, and readline is being used, the user is given
 the opportunity to re-edit a failed history
 substitution.
 histverify
 If set, and readline is being used, the results of
 history substitution are not immediately passed to the
 shell parser. Instead, the resulting line is loaded
 into the readline editing buffer, allowing further
 modification.
 hostcomplete
 If set, and readline is being used, bash will attempt to
 perform hostname completion when a word containing a @
 is being completed (see Completing under READLINE
 above). This is enabled by default.
 huponexit
 If set, bash will send SIGHUP to all jobs when an
 interactive login shell exits.
 inherit_errexit
 If set, command substitution inherits the value of the
 errexit option, instead of unsetting it in the subshell
 environment. This option is enabled when posix mode is
 enabled.
 interactive_comments
 In an interactive shell, a word beginning with # causes
 that word and all remaining characters on that line to
 be ignored, as in a non-interactive shell (see COMMENTS
 above). This option is enabled by default.
 lastpipe
 If set, and job control is not active, the shell runs
 the last command of a pipeline not executed in the
 background in the current shell environment.
 lithist If set, and the cmdhist option is enabled, multi-line
 commands are saved to the history with embedded newlines
 rather than using semicolon separators where possible.
 localvar_inherit
 If set, local variables inherit the value and attributes
 of a variable of the same name that exists at a previous
 scope before any new value is assigned. The nameref
 attribute is not inherited.
 localvar_unset
 If set, calling unset on local variables in previous
 function scopes marks them so subsequent lookups find
 them unset until that function returns. This is
 identical to the behavior of unsetting local variables
 at the current function scope.
 login_shell
 The shell sets this option if it is started as a login
 shell (see INVOCATION above). The value may not be
 changed.
 mailwarn
 If set, and a file that bash is checking for mail has
 been accessed since the last time it was checked, bash
 displays the message "The mail in mailfile has been
 read".
 no_empty_cmd_completion
 If set, and readline is being used, bash does not search
 PATH for possible completions when completion is
 attempted on an empty line.
 nocaseglob
 If set, bash matches filenames in a case-insensitive
 fashion when performing pathname expansion (see Pathname
 Expansion above).
 nocasematch
 If set, bash matches patterns in a case-insensitive
 fashion when performing matching while executing case or
 [[ conditional commands, when performing pattern
 substitution word expansions, or when filtering possible
 completions as part of programmable completion.
 noexpand_translation
 If set, bash encloses the translated results of $"..."
 quoting in single quotes instead of double quotes. If
 the string is not translated, this has no effect.
 nullglob
 If set, pathname expansion patterns which match no files
 (see Pathname Expansion above) expand to nothing and are
 removed, rather than expanding to themselves.
 patsub_replacement
 If set, bash expands occurrences of & in the replacement
 string of pattern substitution to the text matched by
 the pattern, as described under Parameter Expansion
 above. This option is enabled by default.
 progcomp
 If set, enable the programmable completion facilities
 (see Programmable Completion above). This option is
 enabled by default.
 progcomp_alias
 If set, and programmable completion is enabled, bash
 treats a command name that doesn't have any completions
 as a possible alias and attempts alias expansion. If it
 has an alias, bash attempts programmable completion
 using the command word resulting from the expanded
 alias.
 promptvars
 If set, prompt strings undergo parameter expansion,
 command substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote
 removal after being expanded as described in PROMPTING
 above. This option is enabled by default.
 restricted_shell
 The shell sets this option if it is started in
 restricted mode (see RESTRICTED SHELL below). The value
 may not be changed. This is not reset when the startup
 files are executed, allowing the startup files to
 discover whether or not a shell is restricted.
 shift_verbose
 If set, the shift builtin prints an error message when
 the shift count exceeds the number of positional
 parameters.
 sourcepath
 If set, the . (source) builtin uses the value of PATH to
 find the directory containing the file supplied as an
 argument when the -p option is not supplied. This
 option is enabled by default.
 varredir_close
 If set, the shell automatically closes file descriptors
 assigned using the {varname} redirection syntax (see
 REDIRECTION above) instead of leaving them open when the
 command completes.
 xpg_echo
 If set, the echo builtin expands backslash-escape
 sequences by default. If the posix shell option is also
 enabled, echo does not interpret any options.
 suspend [-f]
 Suspend the execution of this shell until it receives a SIGCONT
 signal. A login shell, or a shell without job control enabled,
 cannot be suspended; the -f option will override this and force
 the suspension. The return status is 0 unless the shell is a
 login shell or job control is not enabled and -f is not
 supplied.
 test expr
 [ expr ]
 Return a status of 0 (true) or 1 (false) depending on the
 evaluation of the conditional expression expr. Each operator
 and operand must be a separate argument. Expressions are
 composed of the primaries described above under CONDITIONAL
 EXPRESSIONS. test does not accept any options, nor does it
 accept and ignore an argument of -- as signifying the end of
 options.
 Expressions may be combined using the following operators,
 listed in decreasing order of precedence. The evaluation
 depends on the number of arguments; see below. test uses
 operator precedence when there are five or more arguments.
 ! expr True if expr is false.
 ( expr )
 Returns the value of expr. This may be used to override
 normal operator precedence.
 expr1 -a expr2
 True if both expr1 and expr2 are true.
 expr1 -o expr2
 True if either expr1 or expr2 is true.
 test and [ evaluate conditional expressions using a set of rules
 based on the number of arguments.
 0 arguments
 The expression is false.
 1 argument
 The expression is true if and only if the argument is not
 null.
 2 arguments
 If the first argument is !, the expression is true if and
 only if the second argument is null. If the first
 argument is one of the unary conditional operators listed
 above under CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS, the expression is
 true if the unary test is true. If the first argument is
 not a valid unary conditional operator, the expression is
 false.
 3 arguments
 The following conditions are applied in the order listed.
 If the second argument is one of the binary conditional
 operators listed above under CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS, the
 result of the expression is the result of the binary test
 using the first and third arguments as operands. The -a
 and -o operators are considered binary operators when
 there are three arguments. If the first argument is !,
 the value is the negation of the two-argument test using
 the second and third arguments. If the first argument is
 exactly ( and the third argument is exactly ), the result
 is the one-argument test of the second argument.
 Otherwise, the expression is false.
 4 arguments
 The following conditions are applied in the order listed.
 If the first argument is !, the result is the negation of
 the three-argument expression composed of the remaining
 arguments. If the first argument is exactly ( and the
 fourth argument is exactly ), the result is the two-
 argument test of the second and third arguments.
 Otherwise, the expression is parsed and evaluated
 according to precedence using the rules listed above.
 5 or more arguments
 The expression is parsed and evaluated according to
 precedence using the rules listed above.
 When the shell is in posix mode, or if the expression is part of
 the [[ command, the < and > operators sort using the current
 locale. If the shell is not in posix mode, the test and [
 commands sort lexicographically using ASCII ordering.
 The historical operator-precedence parsing with 4 or more
 arguments can lead to ambiguities when it encounters strings
 that look like primaries. The POSIX standard has deprecated the
 -a and -o primaries and enclosing expressions within
 parentheses. Scripts should no longer use them. It's much more
 reliable to restrict test invocations to a single primary, and
 to replace uses of -a and -o with the shell's && and || list
 operators.
 times Print the accumulated user and system times for the shell and
 for processes run from the shell. The return status is 0.
 trap [-lpP] [[action] sigspec ...]
 The action is a command that is read and executed when the shell
 receives any of the signals sigspec. If action is absent (and
 there is a single sigspec) or -, each specified sigspec is reset
 to the value it had when the shell was started. If action is
 the null string the signal specified by each sigspec is ignored
 by the shell and by the commands it invokes.
 If no arguments are supplied, trap displays the actions
 associated with each trapped signal as a set of trap commands
 that can be reused as shell input to restore the current signal
 dispositions. If -p is given, and action is not present, then
 trap displays the actions associated with each sigspec or, if
 none are supplied, for all trapped signals, as a set of trap
 commands that can be reused as shell input to restore the
 current signal dispositions. The -P option behaves similarly,
 but displays only the actions associated with each sigspec
 argument. -P requires at least one sigspec argument. The -P or
 -p options may be used in a subshell environment (e.g., command
 substitution) and, as long as they are used before trap is used
 to change a signal's handling, will display the state of its
 parent's traps.
 The -l option prints a list of signal names and their
 corresponding numbers. Each sigspec is either a signal name
 defined in <signal.h>, or a signal number. Signal names are
 case insensitive and the SIG prefix is optional. If -l is
 supplied with no sigspec arguments, it prints a list of valid
 signal names.
 If a sigspec is EXIT (0), action is executed on exit from the
 shell. If a sigspec is DEBUG, action is executed before every
 simple command, for command, case command, select command, ((
 arithmetic command, [[ conditional command, arithmetic for
 command, and before the first command executes in a shell
 function (see SHELL GRAMMAR above). Refer to the description of
 the extdebug shell option (see shopt above) for details of its
 effect on the DEBUG trap. If a sigspec is RETURN, action is
 executed each time a shell function or a script executed with
 the . or source builtins finishes executing.
 If a sigspec is ERR, action is executed whenever a pipeline
 (which may consist of a single simple command), a list, or a
 compound command returns a non-zero exit status, subject to the
 following conditions. The ERR trap is not executed if the
 failed command is part of the command list immediately following
 a while or until reserved word, part of the test in an if
 statement, part of a command executed in a && or || list except
 the command following the final && or ||, any command in a
 pipeline but the last (subject to the state of the pipefail
 shell option), or if the command's return value is being
 inverted using !. These are the same conditions obeyed by the
 errexit (-e) option.
 When the shell is not interactive, signals ignored upon entry to
 the shell cannot be trapped or reset. Interactive shells permit
 trapping signals ignored on entry. Trapped signals that are not
 being ignored are reset to their original values in a subshell
 or subshell environment when one is created. The return status
 is false if any sigspec is invalid; otherwise trap returns true.
 true Does nothing, returns a 0 status.
 type [-aftpP] name [name ...]
 Indicate how each name would be interpreted if used as a command
 name.
 If the -t option is used, type prints a string which is one of
 alias, keyword, function, builtin, or file if name is an alias,
 shell reserved word, function, builtin, or executable file,
 respectively. If the name is not found, type prints nothing and
 returns a non-zero exit status.
 If the -p option is used, type either returns the pathname of
 the executable file that would be found by searching $PATH for
 name or nothing if "type -t name" would not return file. The -P
 option forces a PATH search for each name, even if "type -t
 name" would not return file. If name is present in the table of
 hashed commands, -p and -P print the hashed value, which is not
 necessarily the file that appears first in PATH.
 If the -a option is used, type prints all of the places that
 contain a command named name. This includes aliases, reserved
 words, functions, and builtins, but the path search options (-p
 and -P) can be supplied to restrict the output to executable
 files. type does not consult the table of hashed commands when
 using -a with -p, and only performs a PATH search for name.
 The -f option suppresses shell function lookup, as with the
 command builtin. type returns true if all of the arguments are
 found, false if any are not found.
 ulimit [-HS] -a
 ulimit [-HS] [-bcdefiklmnpqrstuvxPRT [limit]]
 Provides control over the resources available to the shell and
 to processes it starts, on systems that allow such control.
 The -H and -S options specify whether the hard or soft limit is
 set for the given resource. A hard limit cannot be increased by
 a non-root user once it is set; a soft limit may be increased up
 to the value of the hard limit. If neither -H nor -S is
 specified, ulimit sets both the soft and hard limits.
 The value of limit can be a number in the unit specified for the
 resource or one of the special values hard, soft, or unlimited,
 which stand for the current hard limit, the current soft limit,
 and no limit, respectively. If limit is omitted, ulimit prints
 the current value of the soft limit of the resource, unless the
 -H option is given. When more than one resource is specified,
 the limit name and unit, if appropriate, are printed before the
 value. Other options are interpreted as follows:
 -a Report all current limits; no limits are set.
 -b The maximum socket buffer size.
 -c The maximum size of core files created.
 -d The maximum size of a process's data segment.
 -e The maximum scheduling priority ("nice").
 -f The maximum size of files written by the shell and its
 children.
 -i The maximum number of pending signals.
 -k The maximum number of kqueues that may be allocated.
 -l The maximum size that may be locked into memory.
 -m The maximum resident set size (many systems do not honor
 this limit).
 -n The maximum number of open file descriptors (most systems
 do not allow this value to be set).
 -p The pipe size in 512-byte blocks (this may not be set).
 -q The maximum number of bytes in POSIX message queues.
 -r The maximum real-time scheduling priority.
 -s The maximum stack size.
 -t The maximum amount of cpu time in seconds.
 -u The maximum number of processes available to a single
 user.
 -v The maximum amount of virtual memory available to the
 shell and, on some systems, to its children.
 -x The maximum number of file locks.
 -P The maximum number of pseudoterminals.
 -R The maximum time a real-time process can run before
 blocking, in microseconds.
 -T The maximum number of threads.
 If limit is supplied, and the -a option is not used, limit is
 the new value of the specified resource. If no option is
 supplied, then -f is assumed.
 Values are in 1024-byte increments, except for -t, which is in
 seconds; -R, which is in microseconds; -p, which is in units of
 512-byte blocks; -P, -T, -b, -k, -n, and -u, which are unscaled
 values; and, when in posix mode, -c and -f, which are in
 512-byte increments. The return status is 0 unless an invalid
 option or argument is supplied, or an error occurs while setting
 a new limit.
 umask [-p] [-S] [mode]
 Set the user file-creation mask to mode. If mode begins with a
 digit, it is interpreted as an octal number; otherwise it is
 interpreted as a symbolic mode mask similar to that accepted by
 chmod(1) . If mode is omitted, umask prints the current value of
 the mask. The -S option without a mode argument prints the mask
 in a symbolic format; the default output is an octal number. If
 the -p option is supplied, and mode is omitted, the output is in
 a form that may be reused as input. The return status is zero
 if the mode was successfully changed or if no mode argument was
 supplied, and non-zero otherwise.
 unalias [-a] [name ...]
 Remove each name from the list of defined aliases. If -a is
 supplied, remove all alias definitions. The return value is
 true unless a supplied name is not a defined alias.
 unset [-fv] [-n] [name ...]
 For each name, remove the corresponding variable or function.
 If the -v option is given, each name refers to a shell variable,
 and that variable is removed. If -f is specified, each name
 refers to a shell function, and the function definition is
 removed. If the -n option is supplied, and name is a variable
 with the nameref attribute, name will be unset rather than the
 variable it references. -n has no effect if the -f option is
 supplied. Read-only variables and functions may not be unset.
 When variables or functions are removed, they are also removed
 from the environment passed to subsequent commands. If no
 options are supplied, each name refers to a variable; if there
 is no variable by that name, a function with that name, if any,
 is unset. Some shell variables may not be unset. If any of
 BASH_ALIASES, BASH_ARGV0, BASH_CMDS, BASH_COMMAND,
 BASH_SUBSHELL, BASHPID, COMP_WORDBREAKS, DIRSTACK,
 EPOCHREALTIME, EPOCHSECONDS, FUNCNAME, GROUPS, HISTCMD, LINENO,
 RANDOM, SECONDS, or SRANDOM are unset, they lose their special
 properties, even if they are subsequently reset. The exit
 status is true unless a name is readonly or may not be unset.
 wait [-fn] [-p varname] [id ...]
 Wait for each specified child process id and return the
 termination status of the last id. Each id may be a process ID
 pid or a job specification jobspec; if a jobspec is supplied,
 wait waits for all processes in the job.
 If no options or ids are supplied, wait waits for all running
 background jobs and the last-executed process substitution, if
 its process id is the same as $!, and the return status is zero.
 If the -n option is supplied, wait waits for any one of the
 given ids or, if no ids are supplied, any job or process
 substitution, to complete and returns its exit status. If none
 of the supplied ids is a child of the shell, or if no ids are
 supplied and the shell has no unwaited-for children, the exit
 status is 127.
 If the -p option is supplied, wait assigns the process or job
 identifier of the job for which the exit status is returned to
 the variable varname named by the option argument. The
 variable, which cannot be readonly, will be unset initially,
 before any assignment. This is useful only when used with the
 -n option.
 Supplying the -f option, when job control is enabled, forces
 wait to wait for each id to terminate before returning its
 status, instead of returning when it changes status.
 If none of the ids specify one of the shell's active child
 processes, the return status is 127. If wait is interrupted by
 a signal, any varname will remain unset, and the return status
 will be greater than 128, as described under SIGNALS above.
 Otherwise, the return status is the exit status of the last id.

SHELL COMPATIBILITY MODE

 Bash-4.0 introduced the concept of a shell compatibility level,
 specified as a set of options to the shopt builtin (compat31, compat32,
 compat40, compat41, and so on). There is only one current
 compatibility level -- each option is mutually exclusive. The
 compatibility level is intended to allow users to select behavior from
 previous versions that is incompatible with newer versions while they
 migrate scripts to use current features and behavior. It's intended to
 be a temporary solution.
 This section does not mention behavior that is standard for a
 particular version (e.g., setting compat32 means that quoting the right
 hand side of the regexp matching operator quotes special regexp
 characters in the word, which is default behavior in bash-3.2 and
 subsequent versions).
 If a user enables, say, compat32, it may affect the behavior of other
 compatibility levels up to and including the current compatibility
 level. The idea is that each compatibility level controls behavior
 that changed in that version of bash, but that behavior may have been
 present in earlier versions. For instance, the change to use locale-
 based comparisons with the [[ command came in bash-4.1, and earlier
 versions used ASCII-based comparisons, so enabling compat32 will enable
 ASCII-based comparisons as well. That granularity may not be
 sufficient for all uses, and as a result users should employ
 compatibility levels carefully. Read the documentation for a
 particular feature to find out the current behavior.
 Bash-4.3 introduced a new shell variable: BASH_COMPAT. The value
 assigned to this variable (a decimal version number like 4.2, or an
 integer corresponding to the compatNN option, like 42) determines the
 compatibility level.
 Starting with bash-4.4, bash began deprecating older compatibility
 levels. Eventually, the options will be removed in favor of
 BASH_COMPAT.
 Bash-5.0 was the final version for which there was an individual shopt
 option for the previous version. BASH_COMPAT is the only mechanism to
 control the compatibility level in versions newer than bash-5.0.
 The following table describes the behavior changes controlled by each
 compatibility level setting. The compatNN tag is used as shorthand for
 setting the compatibility level to NN using one of the following
 mechanisms. For versions prior to bash-5.0, the compatibility level
 may be set using the corresponding compatNN shopt option. For bash-4.3
 and later versions, the BASH_COMPAT variable is preferred, and it is
 required for bash-5.1 and later versions.
 compat31
 o Quoting the rhs of the [[ command's regexp matching
 operator (=~) has no special effect.
 compat32
 o The < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider
 the current locale when comparing strings; they use ASCII
 ordering.
 compat40
 o The < and > operators to the [[ command do not consider
 the current locale when comparing strings; they use ASCII
 ordering. Bash versions prior to bash-4.1 use ASCII
 collation and strcmp(3) ; bash-4.1 and later use the
 current locale's collation sequence and strcoll(3) .
 compat41
 o In posix mode, time may be followed by options and still
 be recognized as a reserved word (this is POSIX
 interpretation 267).
 o In posix mode, the parser requires that an even number of
 single quotes occur in the word portion of a double-
 quoted parameter expansion and treats them specially, so
 that characters within the single quotes are considered
 quoted (this is POSIX interpretation 221).
 compat42
 o The replacement string in double-quoted pattern
 substitution does not undergo quote removal, as it does
 in versions after bash-4.2.
 o In posix mode, single quotes are considered special when
 expanding the word portion of a double-quoted parameter
 expansion and can be used to quote a closing brace or
 other special character (this is part of POSIX
 interpretation 221); in later versions, single quotes are
 not special within double-quoted word expansions.
 compat43
 o Word expansion errors are considered non-fatal errors
 that cause the current command to fail, even in posix
 mode (the default behavior is to make them fatal errors
 that cause the shell to exit).
 o When executing a shell function, the loop state
 (while/until/etc.) is not reset, so break or continue in
 that function will break or continue loops in the calling
 context. Bash-4.4 and later reset the loop state to
 prevent this.
 compat44
 o The shell sets up the values used by BASH_ARGV and
 BASH_ARGC so they can expand to the shell's positional
 parameters even if extended debugging mode is not
 enabled.
 o A subshell inherits loops from its parent context, so
 break or continue will cause the subshell to exit.
 Bash-5.0 and later reset the loop state to prevent the
 exit
 o Variable assignments preceding builtins like export and
 readonly that set attributes continue to affect variables
 with the same name in the calling environment even if the
 shell is not in posix mode.
 compat50
 o Bash-5.1 changed the way $RANDOM is generated to
 introduce slightly more randomness. If the shell
 compatibility level is set to 50 or lower, it reverts to
 the method from bash-5.0 and previous versions, so
 seeding the random number generator by assigning a value
 to RANDOM will produce the same sequence as in bash-5.0.
 o If the command hash table is empty, bash versions prior
 to bash-5.1 printed an informational message to that
 effect, even when producing output that can be reused as
 input. Bash-5.1 suppresses that message when the -l
 option is supplied.
 compat51
 o The unset builtin treats attempts to unset array
 subscripts @ and * differently depending on whether the
 array is indexed or associative, and differently than in
 previous versions.
 o Arithmetic commands ( ((...)) ) and the expressions in an
 arithmetic for statement can be expanded more than once.
 o Expressions used as arguments to arithmetic operators in
 the [[ conditional command can be expanded more than
 once.
 o The expressions in substring parameter brace expansion
 can be expanded more than once.
 o The expressions in the $((...)) word expansion can be
 expanded more than once.
 o Arithmetic expressions used as indexed array subscripts
 can be expanded more than once.
 o test -v, when given an argument of A[@], where A is an
 existing associative array, will return true if the array
 has any set elements. Bash-5.2 will look for and report
 on a key named @.
 o The ${parameter[:]=value} word expansion will return
 value, before any variable-specific transformations have
 been performed (e.g., converting to lowercase). Bash-5.2
 will return the final value assigned to the variable.
 o Parsing command substitutions will behave as if extended
 globbing (see the description of the shopt builtin above)
 is enabled, so that parsing a command substitution
 containing an extglob pattern (say, as part of a shell
 function) will not fail. This assumes the intent is to
 enable extglob before the command is executed and word
 expansions are performed. It will fail at word expansion
 time if extglob hasn't been enabled by the time the
 command is executed.
 compat52
 o The test builtin uses its historical algorithm to parse
 parenthesized subexpressions when given five or more
 arguments.
 o If the -p or -P option is supplied to the bind builtin,
 bind treats any arguments remaining after option
 processing as bindable command names, and displays any
 key sequences bound to those commands, instead of
 treating the arguments as key sequences to bind.

RESTRICTED SHELL

 If bash is started with the name rbash, or the -r option is supplied at
 invocation, the shell becomes restricted. A restricted shell is used
 to set up an environment more controlled than the standard shell. It
 behaves identically to bash with the exception that the following are
 disallowed or not performed:
 o Changing directories with cd.
 o Setting or unsetting the values of SHELL, PATH, HISTFILE, ENV,
 or BASH_ENV.
 o Specifying command names containing /.
 o Specifying a filename containing a / as an argument to the .
 builtin command.
 o Using the -p option to the . builtin command to specify a
 search path.
 o Specifying a filename containing a slash as an argument to the
 history builtin command.
 o Specifying a filename containing a slash as an argument to the
 -p option to the hash builtin command.
 o Importing function definitions from the shell environment at
 startup.
 o Parsing the values of BASHOPTS and SHELLOPTS from the shell
 environment at startup.
 o Redirecting output using the >, >|, <>, >&, &>, and >>
 redirection operators.
 o Using the exec builtin command to replace the shell with another
 command.
 o Adding or deleting builtin commands with the -f and -d options
 to the enable builtin command.
 o Using the enable builtin command to enable disabled shell
 builtins.
 o Specifying the -p option to the command builtin command.
 o Turning off restricted mode with set +r or shopt -u
 restricted_shell.
 These restrictions are enforced after any startup files are read.
 When a command that is found to be a shell script is executed (see
 COMMAND EXECUTION above), rbash turns off any restrictions in the shell
 spawned to execute the script.

SEE ALSO

 Bash Reference Manual, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey
 The Gnu Readline Library, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey
 The Gnu History Library, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey
 Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) Part 2: Shell and
 Utilities, IEEE --
 http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9799919799/ 
 http://tiswww.case.edu/~chet/bash/POSIX  -- a description of posix mode
 sh(1) , ksh(1) , csh(1) 
 emacs(1) , vi(1) 
 readline(3) 

FILES

 /bin/bash
 The bash executable
 /etc/profile
 The systemwide initialization file, executed for login shells
 ~/.bash_profile
 The personal initialization file, executed for login shells
 ~/.bashrc
 The individual per-interactive-shell startup file
 ~/.bash_logout
 The individual login shell cleanup file, executed when a login
 shell exits
 ~/.bash_history
 The default value of HISTFILE, the file in which bash saves the
 command history
 ~/.inputrc
 Individual readline initialization file

AUTHORS

 Brian Fox, Free Software Foundation
 bfox@gnu.org
 Chet Ramey, Case Western Reserve University
 chet.ramey@case.edu

BUG REPORTS

 If you find a bug in bash, you should report it. But first, you should
 make sure that it really is a bug, and that it appears in the latest
 version of bash. The latest version is always available from
 ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/  and
 http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/bash.git/snapshot/bash-master.tar.gz .
 Once you have determined that a bug actually exists, use the bashbug
 command to submit a bug report. If you have a fix, you are encouraged
 to mail that as well! You may send suggestions and "philosophical" bug
 reports to bug-bash@gnu.org or post them to the Usenet newsgroup
 gnu.bash.bug.
 ALL bug reports should include:
 The version number of bash
 The hardware and operating system
 The compiler used to compile
 A description of the bug behavior
 A short script or "recipe" which exercises the bug
 bashbug inserts the first three items automatically into the template
 it provides for filing a bug report.
 Comments and bug reports concerning this manual page should be directed
 to chet.ramey@case.edu.

BUGS

 It's too big and too slow.
 There are some subtle differences between bash and traditional versions
 of sh, mostly because of the POSIX specification.
 Aliases are confusing in some uses.
 Shell builtin commands and functions are not stoppable/restartable.
 Compound commands and command lists of the form "a ; b ; c" are not
 handled gracefully when combined with process suspension. When a
 process is stopped, the shell immediately executes the next command in
 the list or breaks out of any existing loops. It suffices to enclose
 the command in parentheses to force it into a subshell, which may be
 stopped as a unit, or to start the command in the background and
 immediately bring it into the foreground.
 Array variables may not (yet) be exported.
GNU Bash 5.3 2025 April 7 bash(1)

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