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Comment: 'command' also looks for builtins
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Comment: I just reread one of my old scripts that loops PATH. I remembered that I had to use $PATH$IFS to make bash not ignore : at the end of PATH; end $IFS makes the '' from the previous edit unnecessary
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The POSIX shell specifies a builtin called {{{command}}} which can be used for this purpose: | POSIX specifies a shell builtin called `command` which can be used for this purpose: |
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In BASH, there are a couple more builtins that may also be used: `hash` and `type`. Here's an example using `hash`: | |
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However, {{{command}}} also returns true for shell builtins. If you want to absolutely check PATH, the only POSIX way is to iterate over it: | {{{ # Bash if hash qwerty 2>/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi }}} Or, if you prefer `type`: {{{ # Bash # type -P forces a PATH search, skipping builtins and so on if type -P qwerty >/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi }}} KornShell and zsh have `whence` instead: {{{ # ksh/zsh if whence -p qwerty >/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi }}} The `command` builtin also returns true for shell builtins (unlike `type -P`). If you absolutely must check only PATH, the only POSIX way is to iterate over it: |
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[ $# -eq 1 ] && [ "$1" ] || return | [ "$#" = 1 ] && [ "$1" ] || return 2 |
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for dir in $PATH; do [ -x "$dir/$1" ] && return |
for dir in $PATH$IFS; do [ -x "${dir:-.}/$1" ] && return |
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Note that the function defined above uses parentheses around the body rather than the normal curly braces. This makes the body run in a subshell, and is the reason we don't need to undo `set -f` or [[IFS]]. | |
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In BASH, there are a couple more builtins that may also be used: {{{hash}}} and {{{type}}}. Here's an example using {{{hash}}}: {{{ # Bash if hash qwerty 2>/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi }}} Or, if you prefer {{{type}}}: {{{ # Bash if type -P qwerty >/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi }}} KornShell has {{{whence}}} instead: {{{ # ksh if whence -p qwerty >/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi }}} If these builtins are not available (because you're in a Bourne shell, or whatever), then you may have to rely on the external command {{{which}}} (which is often a csh script, although sometimes a compiled binary). Unfortunately, {{{which}}} may not set a useful exit code, and it may not even write errors to stderr. In those cases, one must parse its output. {{{ # Bourne. Last resort -- using which(1) tmpval=`LC_ALL=C which qwerty 2>&1` if test $rc -ne 0; then # FOR NOW, we'll assume that if this machine's which(1) sets a nonzero # exit status, that it actually failed. I've yet to see any case where # which(1) sets an erroneous failure -- just erroneous "successes". echo "qwerty is not installed. Please install it." else case "$tmpval" in *no\ *\ in\ *|*not\ found*|'') echo "qwerty is not installed. Please install it." ;; *) echo "Congratulations -- it seems you have qwerty (in $tmpval)." ;; esac fi }}} Note that `which(1)`'s output when a command is not found is ''not'' consistent across platforms. On HP-UX 10.20, for example, it prints {{{no qwerty in /path /path /path ...}}}; on OpenBSD 4.1, it prints {{{qwerty: Command not found.}}}; on Debian (3.1 and 4.0 at least) and SuSE, it prints nothing at all; on Red Hat 5.2, it prints {{{which: no qwerty in (/path:/path:...)}}}; on Red Hat 6.2, it writes the same message, but on standard error instead of standard output; and on Gentoo, it writes something on stderr. So our best portable solution is to match the words `no` and `in`, or the phrase `not found`, in the combined stdout + stderr and pray. Note to the person who tried to put a function in this FAQ as a legacy Bourne shell example: legacy Bourne shells ''don't have functions'', at all. POSIX shells have them, but the syntax is: {{{ foo() { commands } }}} You may ''not'' use the word `function`, and you may ''especially not'' use the combination of the word `function` and the `()` symbols. No shell but bash accepts that. Also see BashPitfalls. The approach used in `configure` scripts is usually to iterate over the components of `$PATH` and explicitly test for the presence of the command in each directory. The fact that this is ''preferred'' over `which` should tell you how unreliable `which` is. Here's a ''simplified'' version of such a test: |
The iterative approach is also used in `configure` scripts. Here's a ''simplified'' version of such a test: |
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if test $found = no; then | if test "$found" = no; then |
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Real `configure` scripts are generally much more complicated than this, since they may deal with systems where `$PATH` is not delimited by colons; or systems where executable programs may have optional extensions like `.EXE`; or `$PATH` variables that have the current working directory included in them as an empty string; etc. If you're interested in such things, I suggest reading an actual GNU autoconf-generated `configure` script. They're far too large and complicated to include in this FAQ. | |
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Real `configure` scripts are generally much more complicated than this, since they may deal with systems where `$PATH` is not delimited by colons; or systems where executable programs may have optional extensions like `.EXE`; or `$PATH` variables that have the current working directory included in them as an empty string; etc. If you're interested in such things, I suggest reading an actual GNU autoconf-generated `configure` script. They're far too large and complicated to include in this FAQ. | The command `which` (which is often a csh script, although sometimes a compiled binary) is '''not reliable''' for this purpose. `which` may not set a useful exit code, and it may not even write errors to stderr. Therefore, in order to have a prayer of successfully using it, one must parse its output (wherever that output may be written). {{{ # Bourne. Last resort -- using which(1) tmpval=`LC_ALL=C which qwerty 2>&1` if test "$?" -ne 0; then # FOR NOW, we'll assume that if this machine's which(1) sets a nonzero # exit status, that it actually failed. I've yet to see any case where # which(1) sets an erroneous failure -- just erroneous "successes". echo "qwerty is not installed. Please install it." else # which returned 0, but that doesn't mean it succeeded. Look for known error strings. case "$tmpval" in *no\ *\ in\ *|*not\ found*|'') echo "qwerty is not installed. Please install it." ;; *) echo "Congratulations -- it seems you have qwerty (in $tmpval)." ;; esac fi }}} Note that `which(1)`'s output when a command is not found is ''not'' consistent across platforms. On HP-UX 10.20, for example, it prints {{{no qwerty in /path /path /path ...}}}; on OpenBSD 4.1, it prints {{{qwerty: Command not found.}}}; on Debian (3.1 through 5.0 at least) and SuSE, it prints nothing at all; on Red Hat 5.2, it prints {{{which: no qwerty in (/path:/path:...)}}}; on Red Hat 6.2, it writes the same message, but on standard error instead of standard output; and on Gentoo, it writes something on stderr. We '''strongly recommend''' not using `which`. Use one of the builtins or the iterative approaches instead. |
How can I determine whether a command exists anywhere in my PATH?
POSIX specifies a shell builtin called command which can be used for this purpose:
# POSIX if command -v qwerty >/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi
In BASH, there are a couple more builtins that may also be used: hash and type. Here's an example using hash:
# Bash if hash qwerty 2>/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi
Or, if you prefer type:
# Bash # type -P forces a PATH search, skipping builtins and so on if type -P qwerty >/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi
KornShell and zsh have whence instead:
# ksh/zsh if whence -p qwerty >/dev/null; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi
The command builtin also returns true for shell builtins (unlike type -P). If you absolutely must check only PATH, the only POSIX way is to iterate over it:
# POSIX IsInPath () ( [ "$#" = 1 ] && [ "$1" ] || return 2 set -f; IFS=: for dir in $PATH$IFS; do [ -x "${dir:-.}/$1" ] && return done return 1 ) if IsInPath qwerty; then echo qwerty exists else echo qwerty does not exist fi
Note that the function defined above uses parentheses around the body rather than the normal curly braces. This makes the body run in a subshell, and is the reason we don't need to undo set -f or IFS.
The iterative approach is also used in configure scripts. Here's a simplified version of such a test:
# Bourne save_IFS=$IFS IFS=: found=no for dir in $PATH; do if test -x "$dir/qwerty"; then echo "qwerty is installed (in $dir)" found=yes break fi done IFS=$save_IFS if test "$found" = no; then echo "qwerty is not installed" fi
Real configure scripts are generally much more complicated than this, since they may deal with systems where $PATH is not delimited by colons; or systems where executable programs may have optional extensions like .EXE; or $PATH variables that have the current working directory included in them as an empty string; etc. If you're interested in such things, I suggest reading an actual GNU autoconf-generated configure script. They're far too large and complicated to include in this FAQ.
The command which (which is often a csh script, although sometimes a compiled binary) is not reliable for this purpose. which may not set a useful exit code, and it may not even write errors to stderr. Therefore, in order to have a prayer of successfully using it, one must parse its output (wherever that output may be written).
# Bourne. Last resort -- using which(1) tmpval=`LC_ALL=C which qwerty 2>&1` if test "$?" -ne 0; then # FOR NOW, we'll assume that if this machine's which(1) sets a nonzero # exit status, that it actually failed. I've yet to see any case where # which(1) sets an erroneous failure -- just erroneous "successes". echo "qwerty is not installed. Please install it." else # which returned 0, but that doesn't mean it succeeded. Look for known error strings. case "$tmpval" in *no\ *\ in\ *|*not\ found*|'') echo "qwerty is not installed. Please install it." ;; *) echo "Congratulations -- it seems you have qwerty (in $tmpval)." ;; esac fi
Note that which(1)'s output when a command is not found is not consistent across platforms. On HP-UX 10.20, for example, it prints no qwerty in /path /path /path ...; on OpenBSD 4.1, it prints qwerty: Command not found.; on Debian (3.1 through 5.0 at least) and SuSE, it prints nothing at all; on Red Hat 5.2, it prints which: no qwerty in (/path:/path:...); on Red Hat 6.2, it writes the same message, but on standard error instead of standard output; and on Gentoo, it writes something on stderr.
We strongly recommend not using which. Use one of the builtins or the iterative approaches instead.