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Bourne shell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Command-line interpreter for operating systems

Not to be confused with theBourne-Again Shell.
Bourne shell
Bourne shell interaction onVersion 7 Unix
Original authorStephen Bourne
DeveloperBell Telephone Laboratories
Initial release1979; 47 years ago (1979)
Operating systemUnix
TypeUnix shell
License[under discussion]

TheBourne shell (sh) is ashellcommand-line interpreter for computeroperating systems. It first appeared onVersion 7 Unix, as its defaultshell.Unix-like systems continue to have/bin/sh—which will be the Bourne shell, or asymbolic link orhard link to a compatible shell—even when other shells are used by most users.

The Bourne shell was once standard on all brandedUnix systems, although historicallyBSD-based systems had many scripts written incsh. As the basis ofPOSIXsh syntax, Bourne shell scripts can typically be run withBash ordash onLinux or other Unix-like systems; Bash itself is afree clone of Bourne.

History

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Version 7 Unix: the original Bourne shellmanual page.PDP-11 simulation withSIMH

Origins

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Work on the Bourne shell initially started in 1976.[1] Developed byStephen Bourne atBell Labs, it was a replacement for theThompson shell, whose executable file had the same name—sh. The Bourne shell was also preceded by theMashey shell. Bourne was released in 1979 in theVersion 7 Unix release distributed to colleges and universities. Although it is used as an interactive command interpreter, it was also intended as ascripting language and contains most of the features that are commonly considered to produce structured programs.

It gained popularity with the publication ofThe Unix Programming Environment byBrian Kernighan andRob Pike—the first commercially published book that presented the shell as a programming language in a tutorial form.[citation needed]

Some of the primary goals of the shell were:[2]

Features of the original version

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Features of the Version 7 UNIX Bourne shell include:

  • Scripts can be invoked as commands by using their filename
  • May be used interactively or non-interactively
  • Allows both synchronous and asynchronous execution of commands
  • Supports input and output redirection and pipelines
  • Provides a set of built-in commands
  • Provides flow control constructs and quotation facilities.
  • Typeless variables
  • Provides local and global variable scope
  • Scripts do not require compilation before execution
  • Does not have a goto facility, so code restructuring may be necessary
  • Command substitution usingbackquotes:`command`.
  • Here documents using<< to embed a block of input text within a script.
  • for ~ do ~ done loops, in particular the use of$* to loop over arguments, as well asfor ~ in ~ do ~ done loops for iterating over lists.
  • case ~ in ~ esac selection mechanism, primarily intended to assistargument parsing.
  • sh provided support for environment variables using keyword parameters and exportable variables.
  • Contains strong provisions for controlling input and output and in itsexpression matching facilities.

The Bourne shell also was the first to feature the convention of usingfile descriptor2> forerror messages, allowing much greater programmatic control during scripting by keeping error messages separate from data.

Stephen Bourne's coding style was influenced by his experience with theALGOL 68C compiler[3] that he had been working on atCambridge University. In addition to the style in which the program was written, Bourne reused portions ofALGOL 68'sif ~then ~elif ~then ~else ~fi,case ~in ~esac andfor/while ~do ~od" (usingdone instead ofod) clauses in the commonUnix Bourne shell syntax. Moreover, – although the v7 shell is written inC – Bourne took advantage of somemacros[4] to give the Csource code an ALGOL 68 flavor. These macros (along with thefinger command distributed in Unix version4.2BSD) inspired theInternational Obfuscated C Code Contest (IOCCC).[5]

Features introduced after 1979

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Over the years, the Bourne shell was enhanced at AT&T. The various variants are thus called like the respective AT&T Unix version it was released with (some important variants being Version7, System III, SVR2, SVR3, SVR4). As the shell was never versioned, the only way to identify it was testing its features.[6]

Features of the Bourne shell versions since 1979 include:[7]

  • Built-intest command – System III shell (1981)
  • # as comment character – System III shell (1981)
  • Colon in parameter substitutions "${parameter:=word}" – System III shell (1981)
  • continue with argument – System III shell (1981)
  • cat <<-EOF for indented here documents – System III shell (1981)
  • Functions and thereturn builtin – SVR2 shell (1984)
  • Built-insunset,echo,type – SVR2 shell (1984)
  • Source code de-ALGOL68-ized – SVR2 shell (1984)
  • Modern "$@" – SVR3 shell (1986)
  • Built-ingetopts – SVR3 shell (1986)
  • Cleaned up parameter handling allows recursively callable functions – SVR3 shell (1986)
  • 8-bit clean – SVR3 shell (1986)
  • Job control – SVR4 shell (1989)
  • Multi-byte support – SVR4 shell (1989)

Variants

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DMERT shell

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Duplex Multi-Environment Real-Time (DMERT) is a hybrid time-sharing/real-time operating system developed in the 1970s at Bell Labs Indian Hill location inNaperville, Illinois uses a 1978 snapshot of Bourne Shell "VERSION sys137 DATE 1978 Oct 12 22:39:57".[citation needed] The DMERT shell runs on3B21D computers still in use in the telecommunications industry.[citation needed]

Korn shell

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Main article:Korn shell
Interaction withpdksh inOpenBSD (default shell)

The Korn shell (ksh) written byDavid Korn based on the original Bourne Shell source code,[8] was a middle road between the Bourne shell and theC shell. Its syntax was chiefly drawn from the Bourne shell, while itsjob control features resembled those of the C shell. The functionality of the original Korn Shell (known as ksh88 from the year of its introduction) was used as a basis for thePOSIX shell standard. A newer version, ksh93, has been open source since 2000 and is used on someLinux distributions. A clone of ksh88 known aspdksh is the default shell in OpenBSD.

Schily Bourne Shell

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Jörg Schilling's Schily-Tools includes three Bourne Shell derivatives.[9]

Relationship to other shells

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C shell

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Main article:C shell

Bill Joy, the author of the C shell, criticized the Bourne shell as being unfriendly for interactive use,[10] a task for which Stephen Bourne himself acknowledged C shell's superiority. Bourne stated, however, that his shell was superior for scripting and was available on any Unix system,[11] andTom Christiansen also criticized C shell as being unsuitable for scripting and programming.[12]

Almquist shells

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Main article:Almquist shell

Due to copyright issues surrounding the Bourne Shell as it was used in historicCSRG BSD releases, Kenneth Almquist developed a clone of the Bourne Shell, known by some as the Almquist shell and available under theBSD license, which is in use today on some BSD descendants and in low-memory situations. The Almquist Shell was ported to Linux, and the port renamed theDebian Almquist shell, or dash. This shell provides faster execution of standardsh (and POSIX-standardsh, in modern descendants) scripts with a smallermemory footprint than its counterpart, Bash. Its use tends to exposebashisms – bash-centric assumptions made in scripts meant to run on sh.

Other shells

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See also

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References

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  1. ^https://www.bsdcan.org/2015/schedule/events/612.en.html Stephen Bourne Keynote for BSDCan 2015
  2. ^"The A-Z of Programming Languages: Bourne shell, or sh".computerworld.com.au. Archived fromthe original on 11 January 2010. Retrieved6 March 2009.
  3. ^McIlroy, M. D. (1987).A Research Unix reader: annotated excerpts from the Programmer's Manual, 1971–1986(PDF) (Technical report). CSTR. Bell Labs. 139.Archived(PDF) from the original on 4 May 2014.
  4. ^Bourne, Steve (12 January 1979)."mac.h – Macros used by Bourne to structure C like Algol68C".AT&T Corporation. Retrieved9 September 2006.
  5. ^Landon Curt Noll; Simon Cooper; Peter Seebach & Leonid A. Broukhis (2004)."The IOCCC FAQ – Q/A: How did the IOCCC get started?". ioccc.org. Retrieved9 September 2006.
  6. ^"what shell is this".www.in-ulm.de.
  7. ^"traditional Bourne shell family / history and development".www.in-ulm.de.
  8. ^Korn, David G. (26 October 1994),"ksh - An Extensible High Level Language",Proceedings of the USENIX 1994 Very High Level Languages Symposium, USENIX Association, retrieved5 February 2015,Instead of inventing a new script language, we built a form entry system by modifying the Bourne shell, adding built-in commands as necessary.
  9. ^"Schily Bourne Shell - A modern enhanced and POSIX compliant Bourne Shell source maintained by Jörg Schilling".codeberg.org. Retrieved3 December 2025.
  10. ^An Introduction to the C shellArchived 13 July 2018 at theWayback Machine byBill Joy.[page needed]
  11. ^Bourne, Stephen R. (October 1983)."The Unix Shell".BYTE. p. 187. Retrieved30 January 2015.
  12. ^Tom Christiansen (28 September 1995)."Csh Programming Considered Harmful". Retrieved17 February 2014.

External links

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Wikibooks has a book on the topic of:Bourne Shell Scripting


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