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This document describes global shell options, which look like this:
shopt --set strict_backslash # YSH style
shopt --set ysh:upgrade # A whole group of options
set -o errexit # Bourne shell style
They can affect parsing or execution, and are used to gradually turn the OSH into the YSH.
For example, YSH doesn't have word splitting on whitespace. Instead, it use Simple Word Evaluation. (Blog: Oil Doesn't Require Quoting Everywhere). (Until 2023, YSH was called the "Oil language".)
This isn't the only use for options, but it's an important one.
When you run bin/osh
, the option groups strict:all
and ysh:upgrade
are
"canned settings" that relieve you of having to know about dozens of shell
options.
Running bin/ysh
is equivalent to using shopt --set ysh:all
in bin/osh
.
Let's look at three examples.
If you put this line at the top of your shell script, it will still run under other shells, but OSH will act as sort of a "runtime linter":
# Abort on more errors, but fixes will still be compatible
shopt -s strict:all 2>/dev/null || true
If you want to upgrade a script, and don't care about running under other shells, use this:
# Start enabling YSH syntax and semantics
shopt --set ysh:upgrade
This second line may break a few things, but is designed to be an easy upgrade. See What Breaks When You Upgrade to YSH.
If you're writing a new script, you can use bin/ysh
to get all
enhancements. Typically you use a shebang line like this:
#!/usr/bin/env ysh
That's all most users need to know. For more details, see the wiki page: Gradually Upgrading Shell to Oil.
There are several different ways of using shell options.
YSH has long flags for readability, which are preferred:
shopt --set errexit
shopt --unset errexit
It also allows scoped options:
shopt --unset errexit {
false # non-zero status ignored
ls /bad
}
false # original setting restored
For compatibility, these styles works in YSH:
set -e # abort script on non-zero exit exit code
set +e # turn it off
set -o errexit # a more readable version of the above
set +o errexit
Bash-style option with shopt
:
shopt -s nullglob # turn it on
shopt -u nullglob # turn it off
You typically invoke the shopt
builtin at the top of a script, but you
can also set options at the command line:
osh -O errexit -c 'shopt -p -o' # turn on Bourne option
osh +O errexit -c 'shopt -p -o' # turn off Bourne option
osh -O strict_tilde -c 'shopt -p' # turn on YSH option
osh +O strict_tilde -c 'shopt -p' # turn off YSH option
Shell has many ways to do this, like:
set -o # print all Bourne shell options
shopt -p # print all bash options
shopt -p nullglob failglob # print selected options
shopt -p ysh:upgrade # print options in the given group
TODO: YSH should enable shopt --print
for all options. It should have a flat
list.
Option groups like ysh:upgrade
are baked into the interpreter. What follows
is an informal list of kinds of options, which are different categorization:
parse_*
: Change parsing.
parse_at
, parse_equals
.parse_backticks
, parse_backslash
,
parse_dollar
.strict_*
: Fail at runtime instead of ignoring the bug like bash.
${#s}
on invalid unicode is a runtime error.~typo
is a runtime error.simple_*
: Break things to improve style.
simple_eval_builtin
, simple_echo
.simple_word_eval
is the most aggressiveThese options produce more programming errors. Importantly, the resulting program is still compatible with other shells.
For example, shopt -s strict_array
produces runtime errors when you confuse
strings and arrays. After you fix these problems, your program will still run
correctly under bash
.
In contrast, if you set shopt -s simple_word_eval
(an option that doesn't
start with strict_
), the semantics of your program have changed, and you can
no longer run it under other shells. It's considered an "YSH option": by
setting it, you're using parts of YSH.
Options that affect parsing start with parse_
. For example, shopt -s parse_at
enables splicing with the @
character:
var words = :| ale bean |
write -- @words
# =>
# ale
# bean
and inline function calls:
write -- @[split('ale bean')]
# =>
# ale
# bean
As another example, shopt --set parse_brace
takes over the { }
characters.
Specifically, it does three things:
cd
to take a block (discussed in a Zulip
thread)if
, case
, for
, and while/until
, use curly brace
delimiters instead of then/fi
, do/done
, etc. See below.foo{
is
an error. It has to be echo foo\{
or echo 'foo{'
.
{pea,coco}nut
Here's idiomatic YSH syntax after parse_brace
:
cd /tmp {
echo $PWD
}
if test -d foo {
echo 'dir'
} elif test -f foo {
echo 'file'
} else {
echo 'neither'
}
# Single line statements are supported:
if test -d / { echo 'dir' } else { echo 'nope' }
while true {
echo hi
break
}
# Loop over words
for x in ale bean *.sh {
echo $x
}
# Replace 'in' with {, and 'esac' with }
case $x {
*.py)
echo python
;;
*.sh)
echo shell
;;
}
What's the motivation for this? Mainly familiarity: I hear a lot of feedback that nobody can remember how to write if statements in shell. See The Simplest Explanation of Oil.
simple_echo
. Changes the flags accepted by the echo
builtin, and style of flag parsing.
See the Builtins > echo
below.simple_word_eval
. Word evaluation consists of one stage rather than three:
TODO: copy examples from spec tests
echo $dir/*.py
command_sub_errexit
. A error in a command sub can cause the parent
shell to exit fatally. Also see inherit_errexit
and strict_errexit
.strict_arith
. Strings that don't look like integers cause a fatal error in
arithmetic expressions.
strict_argv
. Empty argv
arrays are disallowed (because there's no
practical use for them). For example, the second statement in x=''; $x
results in a fatal error.
strict_array
. No implicit conversions between string an array. In other
words, turning this on gives you a "real" array type.
strict_control_flow
. break
and continue
outside of a loop are fatal
errors.
simple_eval_builtin
. The eval
builtin takes exactly one argument. It
doesn't concatenate its arguments with spaces, or accept zero arguments.
strict_word_eval
. More word evaluation errors are fatal.
${s: -1}
and ${s: 1 : -1}
result in a fatal error. (NOTE: In array slices, negative start indices are
allowed, but negative lengths are always fatal, regardless of
strict_word_eval
.)${#s}
) and slices.For options affecting exit codes, see the error handling doc.
See the Chapter on Global Shell Options in the reference.
Options are technically globals, but YSH controls them in 2 ways:
shopt --unset errexit { false }