There are probably various changes you want to make to the shell's behaviour. All shells have `startup' files, containing commands which are executed as soon as the shell starts. Like many others, zsh allows each user to have their own startup files. In this chapter, I discuss the sorts of things you might want to put there. This will serve as an introduction to what the shell does; by the end, you should have an inkling of many of the things which will be discussed in more detail later on and why they are interesting. Sometimes you will find out more than you want to know, such as how zsh differs from other shells you're not going to use. Explaining the differences here saves me having to lie about how the shell works and correcting it later on: most people will simply want to know how the shell normally works, and note that there are other ways of doing it.
First, you need to know what is meant by an interactive and a login
shell. Basically, the shell is just there to take a list of commands and
run them; it doesn't really care whether the commands are in a file, or
typed in at the terminal. In the second case, when you are typing at a
prompt and waiting for each command to run, the shell is interactive;
in the other case, when the shell is reading commands from a file, it is,
consequently, non-interactive. A list of commands used in this second
way --- typically by typing something like zsh filename
, although there
are shortcuts --- is called a script, as if the shell was acting in a
play when it read from it (and shells can be real hams when it comes to
playacting). When you start up a script from the keyboard, there are
actually two zsh's around: the interactive one you're typing at, which is
waiting for another, non-interactive one to finish running the script.
Almost nothing that happens in the second one affects the first; they are
different copies of zsh.
Remember that when I give examples for you to type, I often show them as they would appear in a script, without prompts in front. What you actually see on the screen if you type them in will have a lot more in front.
When you first log into the computer, the shell you are presented with
is interactive, but it is also a login shell. If you type `zsh
', it
starts up a new interactive shell: because you didn't give it the name
of a file with commands in, it assumes you are going to type them
interactively. Now you've got two interactive shells at once, one
waiting for the other: it doesn't sound all that useful, but there are
times when you are going to make some radical changes to the shell's
settings temporarily, and the easiest thing to do is to start another
shell, do what you want to do, and exit back to the original, unaltered,
shell --- so it's not as stupid as it sounds.
However, that second shell will not be a login shell. How does zsh know
the difference? Well, the programme that logs you in after you type your
password (called, predictably, login), actually sticks a `-
' in
front of the name of the shell, which zsh recognises. The other way of
making a shell a login shell is to run it yourself with the option -l
;
typing `zsh -l
' will start a zsh that also thinks it's a login shell,
and later I'll explain how to turn on options within the shell, which you
can do with the login option too. Otherwise, any zsh you start yourself
will not be a login shell. If you are using X-Windows, and have a terminal
emulator such as xterm running a shell, that is probably not a login shell.
However, it's actually possible to get xterm to start a login shell by
giving it the option -ls
, so if you type `xterm -ls &
', you will
get a window running a login shell (the &
means the shell in the first
window doesn't wait for it to finish).
The first main difference between a login shell and any other interactive
shell is the one to do with startup files, described below. The other one
is what you do when you're finished. With a login shell you can type
`logout
' to exit the shell; with another you type `exit
'. However,
`exit
' works for all shells, interactive, non-interactive, login,
whatever, so a lot of people just use that. In fact, the only difference
is that `logout
' will tell you `not login shell
' if you use it
anywhere else and fail to exit. The command `bye
' is identical to
`exit
', only shorter and less standard. So my advice is just to use
`exit
'.
As somebody pointed out to me recently, login shells don't have to be interactive. You can always start a shell in the two ways that make it a login shell; the ways that make it an interactive shell or not are independent. In fact, some start-up scripts for windowing systems run a non-interactive login shell to incorporate definitions from the appropriate login scripts before executing the commands to start the windowing session.
Telling if the shell you are looking at is interactive is usually easy: if there's a prompt, it's interactive. As you may have gathered, telling if it's a login shell is more involved because you don't always know how the shell was started or if the option got changed. If you want to know, you can type the following (one line at a time if you like, see below),
if [[ -o login ]]; then print yes else print no fiwhich will print `yes' or `no' according to whether it's a login shell or not; the syntax will be explained as we go along. There are shorter ways of doing it, but this illustrates the commonest shell syntax for testing things, something you probably often want to do in a startup file. What you're testing goes inside the `
[[ ... ]]
'; in this case, the
-o
tells the shell to test an option, here login
. The next line
says what to do if the test succeeded; the line after the `else
' what
to do if the test failed. This syntax is virtually identical to ksh; in
this guide, I will not give exhaustive details on the tests you can
perform, since there are many of them, but just show some of the most
useful. As always, see the manual --- in this case, `Conditional
Expressions' in the zshmisc
manual pages.
Although you usually know when a shell is interactive, in fact you can test
that in exactly the same way, too: just use `[[ -o interactive ]]
'.
This is one option you can't change within the shell; if you turn off
reading from the keyboard, where is the shell supposed to read from? But
you can at least test it.
Aside for beginners in shell programming: maybe the semicolon looks a bit
funny; that's because the `then
' is really a separate command. The
semicolon is just instead of putting it on a new line; the two are
interchangeable. In fact, I could have written,
if [[ -o login ]]; then; print yes; else; print no; fiwhich does exactly the same thing. I could even have missed out the semicolons after `
then
' and `else
', because the shell knows that
a command must come after each of those --- though the semicolon or newline
before the then
is often important, because the shell does not
know a command has to come next, and might mix up the then
with the
arguments of the command after the `if
': it may look odd, but the
`[[
... ]]
' is actually a command. So you will see various
ways of dividing up the lines in shell programmes. You might also like to
know that print
is one of the builtin commands referred to before; in
other words, the whole of that chunk of programme is executed by the shell
itself. If you're using a newish version of the shell, you will notice
that zsh tells you what it's waiting for, i.e. a `then
' or an
`else
' clause --- see the explanation of $PS2
below for more on
this. Finally, the spaces I put before the `print
' commands were
simply to make it look prettier; any number of spaces can appear before,
after, or between commands and arguments, as long as there's at least one
between ordinary words (the semicolon is recognised as special, so you
don't need one before that, though it's harmless if you do put one in).
Second aside for users of sh: you may remember that tests in sh used a
single pair of brackets, `if [ ... ]; then ...
', or equivalently as a
command called test, `if test ...; then ...
'. The Korn shell was
deliberately made to be different, and zsh follows that. The reason is
that `[[
' is treated specially, which allows the shell to do some extra
checks and allows more natural syntax. For example, you may know that in
sh it's dangerous to test a parameter which may be empty: `[ $var = foo ]'
will fail if $var
is empty, because in that case the word is missed out
and the shell never knows it was supposed to be there; with `[[
... ]]
', this is quite safe because the shell is aware there's a
word before the `=
', even if it's empty. Also, you can use `&&
'
and `||
' to mean logical `and' and `or', which agrees with the usual
UNIX/C convention; in sh, they would have been taken as starting a new
command, not as part of the test, and you have to use the less clear
`-a
' and `-o
'. Actually, zsh provides the old form of test for
backward compatibility, but things will work a lot more smoothly if you
don't use it.
Now here's a list of the startup files and when they're run. You'll see
they fall into two classes: those in the /etc
directory, which are put
there by the system administrator and are run for all users, and those in
your home directory, which zsh, like many shells, allows you to abbreviate
to a `~
'. It's possible that the latter files are somewhere else; type
`print $ZDOTDIR
' and if you get something other than a blank line, or
an error message telling you the parameter isn't set, it's telling you a
directory other than `~
' where your startup files live. If $ZDOTDIR
(another parameter) is not already set, you won't want to set it without a
good reason.
/etc/zshenv
~/.zshenv
/etc/zprofile
~/.zprofile
/etc/zshrc
~/.zshrc
/etc/zlogin
~/.zlogin
Now you know what login and interactive shells are, this should be
straightforward. You may wonder why there are both ~/.zprofile
and
~/.zlogin
, when they are both for login shells: the answer is the
obvious one, that one is run before, one after ~/.zshrc
. This is
historical; Bourne-type shells run /etc/profile
, and csh-type shells
run ~/.login
, and zsh tries to cover the bases with its own startup
files.
The complication is hinted at by the `see below'. The file
/etc/zshenv
, as it says, is always run at the start of any zsh.
However, if the option NO_RCS
is set (or, equivalently, the RCS
option is unset: I'll talk about options shortly, since they are important
in startup files), none of the others are run. The most common way of
setting this option is with a flag on the command line: if you start the
shell as `zsh -f
', the option becomes set, so only /etc/zshenv
is
run and the others are skipped. Often, scripts do this as a way of trying
to get a basic shell with no frills, as I'll describe below; but if
something is set in /etc/zshenv
, there's no way to avoid it. This
leads to the First Law of Zsh Administration: put as little as possible in
the file /etc/zshenv
, as every single zsh which starts up has to read
it. In particular, if the script assumes that only the basic options are
set and /etc/zshenv
has altered them, it might well not work. So, at
the absolute least, you should probably surround any option settings in
/etc/zshenv
with
if [[ ! -o norcs ]]; then ... <commands to run if NO_RCS is not set, such as setting options> ... fiand your users will be eternally grateful. Settings for interactive shells, such as prompts, have no business in
/etc/zshenv
unless you
really insist that all users have them as defaults for every single
shell. Script writers who want to get round problems with options being
changed in /etc/zshenv
should put `emulate zsh
' at the top of the
script.
There are two files run at the end: ~/.zlogout
and /etc/zlogout
, in
that order. As their names suggest, they are counterparts of the
zlogin
files, and therefore are only run for login shells --- though
you can trick the shell by setting the login
option. Note that whether
you use exit
, bye
or logout
to leave the shell does not affect
whether these files are run: I wasn't lying (this time) when I said that
the error message was the only difference between exit
and logout
.
If you want to run a file at the end of any other type of shell, you can
do it another way:
TRAPEXIT() { # commands to run here, e.g. if you # always want to run .zlogout: if [[ ! -o login ]]; then # don't do this in a login shell # because it happens anyway . ~/.zlogout fi }If you put that in
.zshrc
, it will force .zlogout
to be run at the
end of all interactive shells. Traps will be mentioned later, but this is
rather a one-off; it's really just a hack to get commands run at the
end of the shell. I won't talk about logout files, however, since there's
little that's standard to put in them; some people make them clear the
screen to remove sensitive information with the `clear
' command. Other
than that, you might need to tidy a few files up when you exit.
It's time to talk about options, since I've mentioned them several times.
Each option describes one particular shell behaviour; they are all Boolean,
i.e. can either be on or off, with no other state. They have short names
and in the documentation and this guide they are written in uppercase with
underscores separating the bits (except in actual code, where I'll write
them in the short form). However, neither of those is necessary. In fact,
NO_RCS
and norcs
and __N_o_R_c_S__
mean the same thing and are
all accepted by the shell.
The second thing is that an option with `no
' in front just means the
opposite of the option without. I could also have written the test `[[
! -o norcs ]]
' as `[[ -o rcs ]]
'; the `!
' means `not', as in C.
You can only have one `no
'; `nonorcs
' is meaningless.
Unfortunately, there is an option `NOMATCH
' which has `no
' as part
of its basic name, so in this case the opposite really is `NO_NOMATCH
';
NOTIFY
, of course, is also a full name in its own right.
The usual way to set and unset options is with the commands setopt
and unsetopt which take a string of option names. Some options also
have flags, like the `-f
' for NO_RCS
, which these commands also
accept, but it's much clearer to use the full name and the extra time and
space is negligible. The command `set -o
' is equivalent to setopt
;
this comes from ksh. Note that set
with no `-o
' does something
else --- that sets the positional parameters, which is zsh's way of passing
arguments to scripts and functions.
Almost everybody sets some options in their startup files. Since you want
them in every interactive shell, at the least, the choice is between
putting them in ~/.zshrc
or ~/.zshenv
. The choice really depends
on how you use non-interactive shells. They can be started up in unexpected
places. For example, if you use Emacs and run commands from inside it,
such as grep, that will start a non-interactive shell, and may require
some options. My rule of thumb is to put as many options as possible into
~/.zshrc
, and transfer them to ~/.zshenv
if I find I need them
there. Some purists object to setting options in ~/.zshenv
at all,
since it affects scripts; but, as I've already hinted, you have to work a
bit harder to make sure scripts are unaffected by that sort of thing
anyway. In the following, I just assume they are going to be in
~/.zshrc
.
One more thing you'll need to know about in order to write startup files is parameters, also known as variables. These are mostly like variables in other programming languages. Simple parameters can be stored like this (an assignment):
foo='This is a parameter.'Note two things: first, there are no spaces around the `
=
'. If there
was a space before, zsh would think `foo
' was the name of a command to
execute; if there was a space after it, it would assign an empty string to
the parameter foo
. Second, note the use of quotes to stop the spaces
inside the string having the same effect. Single quotes, as here, are the
nuclear option of quotes: everything up to another single quote is treated
as a simple string --- newlines, equal signs, unprintable characters, the
lot, in this example all would be assigned to the variable; for example,
foo='This is a parameter. This is still the same parameter.'So they're the best thing to use until you know what you're doing with double quotes, which have extra effects. Sometimes you don't need them, for example,
foo=onewordbecause there's nothing in `
oneword
' to confuse the shell; but you
could still put quotes there anyway.
Users of csh should note that you don't use `set
' to set parameters.
This is important because there is a set
command, but it works
differently --- if you try `set var="this wont't work"
', you won't
get an error but you won't set the parameter, either. Type `print
$1
' to see what you did set instead.
To get back what was stored in a parameter, you use the name somewhere on
the command line with a `$
' tacked on the front --- this is called an
expansion, or to be more precise, since there are other types of
expansion, a parameter expansion. For example, after
the first assignment above.
print -- '$foo is "'$foo'"'gives
$foo is "This is a parameter."so you can see what I meant about the effect of single quotes. Note the asymmetry --- there is no `
$
' when assigning the parameter, but there
is a `$
' in front to have it expanded it into the command line. You
may find the word `substitution' used instead of `expansion' sometimes;
I'll try and stick with the terminology in the manual.
Two more things while we're at it. First, why did I put `-
-
' after
the print
? That's because print, like many UNIX commands, can take
options after it which begin with a `-
'. `-
-
' says that there
are no more options; so if what you're trying to print begins with a
`-
', it will still print out. Actually, in this case you can see it
doesn't, so you're safe; but it's a good habit to get into, and I wish I
had. As always in zsh, there are exceptions; for example, if you use the
-R
option to print before the `-
-
', it only recognizes
BSD-style options, which means it doesn't understand `-
-
'. Indeed,
zsh programmers can be quite lax about standards and often use the old,
but now non-standard, single `-
' to show there are no more options.
Currently, this works even after -R
.
The next point is that I didn't put spaces between the single quotes and
the $foo
and it was still expanded --- expansion happens anywhere the
parameter is not quoted; it doesn't have to be on its own, just separated
from anything which might make it look like a different parameter. This is
one of those things that can help make shell scripts look so barbaric.
As well as defining your own parameters, there are also a number which the
shell sets itself, and some others which have a special effect when you set
them. All the above still applies, though. For the rest of this guide,
I will indicate parameters with the `$
' stuck in front, to remind you
what they are, but you should remember that the `$
' is missing when you
set them, or, indeed, any time when you're referring to the name of the
parameter instead of its value.
There is a special type of parameter called an array which zsh
inherited from both ksh and csh. This is a slightly shaky marriage, since
some of the things those two shells do with them are not compatible, and
zsh has elements of both, so you need to be careful if you've used arrays
in either. The option KSH_ARRAYS
is something you can set to make them
behave more like they do in ksh, but a lot of zsh users write functions and
scripts assuming it isn't set, so it can be dangerous.
Unlike normal parameters (known as scalars), arrays have more than one
word in them. In the examples above, we made the parameter $foo
get a
string with spaces in, but the spaces weren't significant. If we'd done
foo=(This is a parameter.)(note the absence of quotes), it would have created an array. Again, there must be no space between the `
=
' and the `(', though
inside the parentheses spaces separate words just like they do on a command
line. The difference isn't obvious if you try and print it --- it looks
just the same --- but now try this:
print -- ${foo[4]}and you get `
parameter.
'. The array stores the words separately, and
you can retrieve them separately by putting the number of the element of the
array in square brackets. Note also the braces `{...}
' --- zsh doesn't
always require them, but they make things much clearer when things get
complicated, and it's never wrong to put them in: you could have said
`${foo}
' when you wanted to print out the complete parameter, and it
would be treated identically to `$foo
'. The braces simply screen off
the expansion from whatever else might be lying around to confuse the
shell. It's useful too in expressions like `${foo}s
' to keep the
`s
' from being part of the parameter name; and, finally, with
KSH_ARRAYS
set, the braces are compulsory, though unfortunately arrays
are indexed from 0 in that case.
You can use quotes when defining arrays; as before, this protects against the shell thinking the spaces are between different elements of the array. Try:
foo=('first element' 'second element') print -- ${foo[2]}
Arrays are useful when the shell needs to keep a whole series of different things together, so we'll meet some you may want to put in a startup file. Users of ksh will have noticed that things are a bit different in zsh, but for now I'll just assume you're using the normal zsh way of doing things.
At the last count there were over 130 options and several dozen parameters
which are special to the shell, and many of them deal with things I won't
talk about till much later. But as a guide to get you started, and an
indication of what's to come, here are some options and parameters you
might want to think about setting in ~/.zshrc
.
SH_WORD_SPLIT
and others
I've already mentioned that zsh works differently from ksh, its nearest
standard relative, and that some of these differences can be confusing to
new users, for example the use of arrays. Some options like KSH_ARRAYS
exist to allow you to have things work the ksh way. Most of these are
fairly finnicky, but one catches out a lot of people. Above, I said that
after
foo='This is a parameter.'then
$foo
would be treated as one word. In traditional Bourne-like
shells including sh, ksh and bash, however, the shell will split $foo
on any spaces it finds. So if you run a command
command $foothen in zsh the command gets a single argument `
This is a parameter.
',
but in the other shells it gets the first argument `This
', the second
argument `is
', and so on. If you like this, or are so used to it it
would be confusing to change, you should set the option SH_WORD_SPLIT
in your ~/.zshrc
. Most experienced zsh users use arrays when they want
word splitting, since as I explained you have control over what is split
and what is not; that's why SH_WORD_SPLIT
is not set by default.
Users of other shells just get used to putting things in double quotes,
command "$foo"which, unlike single quotes, allow the `
$
' to remain special, and have
the side effect that whatever is in quotes will remain a single word
(though there's an exception to that, too: the parameter $@
).
There are a lot of other options doing similar things to keep users of
standard shells happy. Many of them simply turn features off, because the
other shell doesn't have them and hence unexpected things might happen, or
simply tweak a feature which is a little different or doesn't usually
matter. Currently such options include NO_BANG_HIST
, BSD_ECHO
(sh
only), IGNORE_BRACES
, INTERACTIVE_COMMENTS
, KSH_OPTION_PRINT
,
NO_MULTIOS
, POSIX_BUILTINS
, PROMPT_BANG
,
SINGLE_LINE_ZLE
(I've written them how they would appear as an argument
to setopt
to put the option the way the other shell expects, so some
have `NO_
' in front). Most people probably won't change those unless
they notice something isn't working how they expect.
Some others have more noticeable effects. Here are a few of the ones most likely to make you scratch your head if you're changing from another Bourne-like shell.
BARE_GLOB_QUAL
, GLOB_SUBST
, SH_FILE_EXPANSION
,
SH_GLOB
, KSH_GLOB
These are all to do with how pattern matching works. You probably already
know that the pattern `*.c
' will be expanded into all the files in the
current directory ending in `.c
'. Simple uses like this are the same in
all shells, and the way filenames are expanded is often referred to as
`globbing' for historical reasons (apparently it stood for `global
replacement'), hence the name of some of these options.
However, zsh and ksh differ over more complicated patterns. For example,
to match either file foo.c
or file bar.c
, in ksh you would say
@(foo|bar).c
. The usual zsh way of doing things is (foo|bar).c
.
To turn on the ksh way of doing things, set the option KSH_GLOB
; to
turn off the zsh way, set the options SH_GLOB
and
NO_BARE_GLOB_QUAL
. The last of those turns off qualifiers, a very
powerful way of selecting files by type (for example, directories or
executable files) instead of by name which I'll talk about in
chapter 5.
The other two need a bit more explanation. Try this:
foo='*' print $fooIn zsh, you usually get a `
*
' printed, while in ksh the `*
' is
expanded to all the files in the directory, just as if you had typed
`print *
'. This is a little like SH_WORD_SPLIT
, in that ksh
is pretending that the value of $foo
appears on the command line
just as if you typed it, while zsh is using what you assigned to
foo
without allowing it to be changed any more. To allow the
word to be expanded in zsh, too, you can set the option GLOB_SUBST
.
As with SH_WORD_SPLIT
, the way around the ksh behaviour if you don't
want the value changed is to use double quotes: "$foo"
.
You are less likely to have to worry about SH_FILE_EXPANSION
. It
determines when the shell expands things like ~/.zshrc
to the
full path, e.g. /home/user2/pws/.zshrc
. In the case of zsh, this
is usually done quite late, after most other forms of expansion such as
parameter expansion. That means if you set GLOB_SUBST
and do
foo='~/.zshrc' print $fooyou would normally see the full path, starting with a `
/
'. If you
also set SH_FILE_EXPANSION
, however, the `~
' is tested
much earlier, before $foo
is replaced when there isn't one yet, so
that `~/.zshrc
' would be printed. This (with both options) is the
way ksh works. It also means I lied when I said ksh treats $foo
exactly as if its value had been typed, because if you type print
~/.zshrc
the `~
' does get expanded. So you see how convenient lying
is.
NOMATCH
, BAD_PATTERN
These also relate to patterns which produce file names, but in this case they determine what happens when the pattern doesn't match a file for some reason. There are two possible reasons: either no file happened to match, or you didn't use a proper pattern. In both cases, zsh, unlike ksh, prints an error message. For example,
% print nosuchfile* zsh: no matches found: nosuchfile* % print [- zsh: bad pattern: [-(Remember the `
%
' lines are what you type, with a prompt in front
which comes from the shell.) You can see there are two different error
messages: you can stop the first by setting NO_NOMATCH
, and the second
by setting NO_BAD_PATTERN
. In both cases, that makes the shell print
out what you originally type without any expansion when there are no
matching files.
BG_NICE
, NOTIFY
All UNIX shells allow you to start a background job by putting `&
'
at the end of the line; then the shell doesn't wait for the job to finish,
so you can type something else. In zsh, such jobs are usually run at a
lower priority (a `higher nice value' in UNIX-speak), so that they don't
use so much of the processor's time as foreground jobs (all the others,
without the `&
') do. This is so that jobs like editing or using the
shell don't get slowed down, which can be highly annoying. You can turn
this feature off by setting NO_BG_NICE
.
When a background job finishes, zsh usually tells you immediately by
printing a message, which interrupts whatever you're doing. You can
stop this by setting NO_NOTIFY
. Actually, this is an option in
most versions of ksh, too, but it's a little less annoying in zsh
because if it happens while you're typing something else to the shell,
the shell will reprint the line you were on as far as you've got.
For example:
% sleep 3 & [1] 40366 % print The quick brown [1] + 40366 done sleep 3 % print The quick brownThe command sleep simply does nothing for however many seconds you tell it, but here it did it in the background (zsh printed a message to tell you). After you typed for three seconds, the job exited, and with
NOTIFY
set it printed out another message: the `done
' is the
key thing, as it tells you the job has finished. But zsh was smart
enough to know the display was messed up, so it reprinted the line you
were editing, and you can continue. If you were already running another
programme in the foreground, however, that wouldn't know that zsh had
printed the message, so the display would still be messed up.
HUP
Signals are the way of persuading a job to do something it doesn't want to,
such as die; when you type ^C
, it sends a signal (called SIGINT
in
this case) to the job. In zsh, if you have a background job running when
the shell exits, the shell will assume you want that to be killed; in this
case it is sent a particular signal called `SIGHUP
' which stands for
`hangup' (as in telephone, not as in Woody Allen) and is the UNIX
equivalent of `time to go home'. If you often start jobs that should go on
even when the shell has exited, then you can set the option NO_HUP
, and
background jobs will be left alone.
KSH_ARRAYS
I've already mentioned this, but here are the details.
Suppose you have defined an array arr
, for example with
arr=(foo bar)although the syntax in ksh, which zsh also allows, is
set -A arr foo barIn zsh,
$arr
gives out the whole array; in ksh it just produces
the first element. In zsh, ${arr[1]}
refers to the first element
of the array, i.e. foo
, while in ksh the first element is referred
to as ${arr[0]}
so that ${arr[1]}
gives you bar
. Finally,
in zsh you can get away with $arr[1]
to refer to an element, while
ksh insists on the braces. By setting KSH_ARRAYS
, zsh will switch
to the ksh way of doing things. This is one option you need to be
particularly careful about when writing functions and scripts.
FUNCTION_ARG_ZERO
Shell functions are a useful way of specifying a set of commands to be run by the shell. Here's a simple example:
% fn() { print My name is $0; } % fn My name is fnNote the special syntax: the `
()
' appears after a function name to
say you are defining one, then a set of commands appears between the
`{ ... }
'. When you type the name of the function, those commands
are executed. If you know the programming language C, the syntax will be
pretty familiar, although note that the `()
' is a bit of a delusion:
you might think you would put arguments to the function in there, but you
can't, it must always appear simply as `()
'. If you don't know C, it
doesn't matter; nothing from C really applies in detail, it's just a
superficial resemblance.
In this case, zsh printed the special parameter `$0
' (`argument
zero') and, as you see, that turned into the name of the function. Now
$0
outside a function means the name of the shell, or the name of
the script for a non-interactive shell, so if you type `print $0
'
it will probably say `zsh
'. In most versions of ksh, this is
$0
's only use; it doesn't change in functions, and `fn' would print
`ksh'. To get this behaviour, you can set NO_FUNCTION_ARG_ZERO
.
There's probably no reason why you would want to, but zsh functions quite
often test their own name, so this is one reason why they might not
work.
There's another difference when defining functions, irrespective of
FUNCTION_ARG_ZERO
: in zsh, you can get away without the final `;
'
before the end of the definition of fn
, because it knows the `}
'
must finish the last command as well as the function; but ksh is not so
forgiving here. Lots of syntactic know-alls will probably be able to tell
you why that's a good thing, but fortunately I can't.
KSH_AUTOLOAD
There's an easy way of loading functions built into both ksh and zsh. Instead of putting them all together in a big startup file, you can put a single line in that,
autoload fnand the function `
fn
' will only be loaded when you run it by typing its
name as a command. The shell needs to know where the function is stored.
This is done by a special parameter called $fpath
, an array which is a
list of directories; it will search all the directories for a file called
fn
, and use that as the function definition. If you want to try this
you can type `autoload fn; fpath=(. $fpath)
' and write a file called
fn
in the current directory.
Unfortunately ksh and zsh disagree a bit about what should be in that
file. The normal zsh way of doing things is just putting the body of the
function there. So if the file fn
is autoloadable and contains,
# this is a simple function print My name is $0then typing `
fn
' will have exactly the same effect as the function
fn
above, printing `My name is fn
'. Zsh users tend to like this
because the function is written the same way as a script; if instead you
had typed zsh fn
, to call the file as a script with a new copy of zsh
of its own, it would have worked the same way. The first line is a
comment; it's ignored, and in zsh not even autoloaded when the function is
run, so it's not only much clearer to add explanatory contents, it also
doesn't use any more memory either. It uses more disk space, of course,
but nowadays even home PCs come with the sort of disk size which allows you
a little indulgence with legibility.
However, ksh does things differently, and here the file fn
needs to
contain
fn() { # this is a simple function print My name is $0 }in other words, exactly what you would type to define the function. The advantage of this form is that you can put other things in the file, which will then be run straight away and forgotten about, such as defining things that
fn
may need to use but which don't need to be redefined every
single time you run fn
. The option to force zsh to work the ksh way
here is called KSH_AUTOLOAD
. (If you wanted to try the second example,
you would need to type `unfunction fn; autoload fn
' to remove the
function from memory and mark it for autoloading again.)
Actually, zsh is a little bit cleverer. If the option KSH_AUTOLOAD
is
not set, but the file contains just a function definition in the ksh form
and nothing else (like the last one above, in fact), then zsh assumes that
it needs to run the function just loaded straight away. The other
possibility would be that you wanted to define a function which did nothing
other than define a function of the same name, which is assumed to be
unlikely --- and if you really want to do that, you will need to trick zsh
by putting a do-nothing command in the same file, such as a `:
' on the
last line.
A final complication --- sorry, but this one actually happens --- is that sometimes in zsh you want to define not just the function to be called, but some others to help it along. Then you need to do this:
fn() { # this is the function after which the file is named } helper() { # goodness knows what this does } fn "$@" # this actually calls the function the first time, # with any arguments passed (see the subsection # `Function Parameters' in the section `Functions' # of the next chapter for the "$@").That last non-comment line is unnecessary with
KSH_AUTOLOAD
. The
functions supplied with zsh assume that KSH_AUTOLOAD
is not set,
however, so you shouldn't turn it on unless you need to. You could just
make fn
into the whole body, as usual, and define helper
inside
that; the problem is that helper
would be redefined each time you
executed fn
, which is inefficient. A better way of avoiding the
problem would be to define helper as a completely separate function, itself
autoloaded: in both zsh and ksh, it makes no difference whether a function
is defined inside another function or outside it, unlike (say) Pascal or
Scheme.
LOCAL_OPTIONS
, LOCAL_TRAPS
These two options also refer to functions, and here the ksh way of doing
things is usually preferable, so many people set at least LOCAL_OPTIONS
in a lot of their functions. The first versions of zsh didn't have these,
which is why you need to turn them on by hand.
If LOCAL_OPTIONS
is set in a function (or was already set before the
function, and not unset inside it), then any options which are
changed inside the function will be put back the way they were when the
function finishes. So
fn() { setopt localoptions kshglob ... }allows you to use a function with the ksh globbing syntax, but will make sure that the option
KSH_GLOB
is restored to whatever it was before
when the function exits. This works even if the function was interrupted
by typing ^C
. Note that LOCAL_OPTIONS
will itself be restored
to the way it was.
The option LOCAL_TRAPS
, which first appeared in version 3.1.6, is for a
similar reason but refers to (guess what) traps, which are a way of
stopping signals sent to the shell, for example by typing ^C
to cancel
something (SIGINT
, short for `signal interrupt'), or ^Z
to suspend it
temporarily (SIGTSTP
, `signal terminal stop'), or SIGHUP
which
we've already met, and so on. To do something of your own when the shell
gets a ^C
, you can do
trap 'print I caught a SIGINT' INTand the set of commands in quotes will be run when the
^C
arrives (you
can even try it without running anything). If the string is empty (just
'
'
with nothing inside), the signal will be ignored; typing ^C
has no effect. To put it back to normal, the command is `trap - INT
'.
Traps are most useful in functions, where you may temporarily (say) not
want things to stop when you hit ^C
, or you may want to clear up
something before returning from the function. So now you can guess what
LOCAL_TRAPS
does; with
fn() { setopt localoptions localtraps trap '' INT ... }the shell will ignore
^C
's to the end of the function, but then put
back the trap that was there before, or remove it completely if there was
none. Traps are described in more detail in chapter 3.
There is a very convenient shorthand for making options and traps local, as
well as for setting the others to their standard values: put `emulate -L
zsh
' at the start of a function. This sets the option values back to the
ones set when zsh starts, but with LOCAL_OPTIONS
and LOCAL_TRAPS
set too, so you now know exactly how things are going to work for the rest
of the function, whatever options are set in the outside world. In fact,
this only changes the options which affect normal programming; you can set
every option which it makes sense to set to its standard value with
`emulate -RL zsh
' (it doesn't, for example, make sense to change
options like login
at this point). Furthermore, you can make the shell
behave as much like ksh as it knows how to by doing `emulate -L ksh
',
with or without the -R
.
The -L
option to emulate
actually only appears in versions from
3.0.6 and 3.1.6. Before that you needed
emulate zsh setopt localoptionssince
localtraps
didn't exist, and indeed doesn't exist in 3.0.6 either.
PROMPT_PERCENT
, PROMPT_SUBST
As promised, setting prompts will be discussed later, but for now there are
two ways of getting information into prompts, such as the parameter $PS1
which determines the usual prompt at the start of a new command line. One
is by using percent escapes, which means a `%
' followed by another
character, maybe with a number between the two. For example, the default
zsh prompt is `%m%#
'. The first percent escape turns into the name of
the host computer, the second usually turns into a `%
', but a `#
'
for the superuser. However, ksh doesn't have these, so you can turn them
off by setting NO_PROMPT_PERCENT
.
The usual ksh way of doing things, on the other hand, is by putting
parameters in the prompt to be substituted. To get zsh to do this, you
have to set PROMPT_SUBST
. Then assigning
PS1='${PWD}% 'is another way of putting the name of the current directory (`
$PWD
' is
presumably named after the command `pwd' to `print working directory') into
the prompt. Note the single quotes, so that this happens when the prompt
is shown, not when it is assigned. If they weren't there, or were double
quotes, then the $PWD
would be expanded to the directory when the
assignment took place, probably your home directory, and wouldn't change to
reflect the directory you were actually in. Of course, you need the quotes
for the space, too, else it just gets swallowed up when the assignment is
executed.
As there is potentially much more information available in parameters than
the fixed number of predefined percent escapes, you may wish to set
PROMPT_SUBST
anyway. Furthermore, you can get the output of commands
into prompts since other forms of expansion are done on them, not just that
of parameters; in fact, prompts with PROMPT_SUBST
are expanded pretty
much the same as a string inside double quotes every time the prompt is
displayed.
RM_STAR_SILENT
Everybody at some time or another deletes more files than they mean to (and that's a gross understatement); my favourite is:
rm *>oThat `
>
' should be a `.', but I still had the shift key pressed. This
removes all files, echoing the output (there isn't any) into a file `o'.
Delightfully, the empty file `o' is not removed. (Don't try this at home.)
There is a protection mechanism built into zsh to stop you deleting all the
files in a directory by accident. If zsh finds that the command is
`rm
', and there is a `*
' on the command line (there may be other
stuff as well), then it will ask you if you really want to delete all those
files. You can turn this off by setting RM_STAR_SILENT
.
Overreliance on this option is a bad idea; it's only a last line of
defence.
SH_OPTION_LETTERS
Many options also have single letters to stand for them; you can set an
option in this way by, for example, `set -f
', which sets NO_RCS
.
However, even where sh, ksh and zsh share options, not all have the same
letters. This option allows the single letter options to be more like
those in sh and ksh. Look them up in the manual if you want to know, but I
already recommended that you use the full names for options anyway.
SH_WORD_SPLIT
I've already talked about this, see above, but it's mentioned here so you don't forget it, since it's an important difference.
Starting zsh as ksh
Finally on the subject of compatibility, you might like to know that as
well as `emulate
' there is another way of forcing zsh to behave as much
like sh or ksh as possible. This is by actually calling zsh under the name
ksh. You don't need to rename zsh, you can make a link from the name zsh
to the name ksh, which will be enough to convince it.
There is an easier way when you are doing this from within zsh itself.
The parameter $ARGV0
is special; it is the value which will be passed as
the first argument of a command which is run by the shell. Normally this
is the name of the command, but it doesn't have to be since the command
only finds out what it is after it has already been run. You can use it to
trick a programme into thinking its name is different. So
ARGV0=ksh zshwill start a copy of zsh that tries to make itself like ksh. Note this doesn't work unless you're already in zsh, as the
$ARGV0
won't be
special.
I haven't mentioned putting a parameter assignment before a command name,
but that simply assigns the parameter (strictly an environment variable in
this case) for the duration of the command; the value $ARGV0
won't be
set after that command (the ksh-like zsh) finishes, as you can easily test
with print
. While I'm here, I should mention a few of its other
features. First, the parameter is automatically exported to the
environment, meaning it's available for other programmes started by zsh
(including, in this case, the new zsh) --- see the section on environment
variables below. Second, this doesn't do what you might expect:
FOO=bar print $FOObecause of the order of expansion: the command line and its parameters are expanded before execution, giving whatever value
$FOO
had before,
probably none, then FOO=bar is put into the environment, and then the
command is executed but doesn't use the new value of $FOO
.
As well as old ksh users, there are some options available to make old csh
and tcsh users feel more at home. As you will already have noticed, the
syntax is very different, so you are never going to feel completely at home
and it might be best just to remember the fact. But here is a brief list.
The last, CSH_NULL_GLOB
, is actually quite useful.
CSH_JUNKIE_HISTORY
Zsh has the old csh mechanism for referring to words on a previous
command line using a `!
'; it's less used, now the editor is more
powerful, but is still a convenient shorthand for extracting short
bits from the previous line. This mechanism is sometimes called
bang-history, since busy people sometimes like to say `!
' as
`bang'. This option affects how a single `!
' works. For example,
% print foo bar % print open closed % print !-2:1 !:2In the last line, `
!-2
' means two entries ago, i.e. the line
`print foo bar
'. The `:1
' chooses the first word after
the command, i.e. `foo
'. In the second expression, no number is
given after the `!
'. Usually zsh interprets that to mean that the
same item just selected, in this case -2, should be used. With
CSH_JUNKIE_HISTORY
set, it refers instead to the last command.
Note that if you hadn't given that -2, it would refer to the last
command in any case, although the explicit way of referring to the
last command is `!!
' --- you have to use that if there are no
`:
' bits following. In summary, zsh usually gives you `print
foo bar
'; with CSH_JUNKIE_HISTORY
you get `print foo closed
'.
There's another option controlling this, BANG_HIST
. If you unset that,
the mechanism won't work at all. There's also a parameter, $histchars
.
The first character is the main history expansion character, normally
`!
' of course; the second is for rapid substitutions (normally `^
'
--- use of this is described below); the third is the character introducing
comments, normally `#
'. Changing the third character is definitely not
recommended. There's little real reason to change any.
CSH_JUNKIE_LOOPS
Normal zsh loops look something like this,
while true; do print Never-ending story donewhich just prints the message over and over (type it line-by-line at the prompt, if you like, then
^C
to stop it). With
CSH_JUNKIE_LOOPS
set, you can instead do
while true print Never-ending story endwhich will, of course, make your zsh code unlike most other people's, so for most users it's best to learn the proper syntax.
CSH_NULL_GLOB
This is another of the family of options like NO_NOMATCH
, already
mentioned. In this case, if you have a command line consisting of
a set of patterns, at least one of them must match at least one
file, or an error is caused; any that don't match are removed from the
command line. The default is that all of them have to match. There
is one final member of this set of options, NULL_GLOB
: all
non-matching patterns are removed from the command line, no error is
caused. As a summary, suppose you enter the command `print file1*
file2*
' and the directory contains just the file file1.c
.
NO_NOMATCH
set, any patterns which don't match
are left alone, so `file1.c file2*
' is printed.
CSH_NULL_GLOB
set, file1*
matched, so file2*
is silently removed; `file1.c
' is reported. If that had
not been there, an error would have been reported.
NULL_GLOB
set, any patterns which don't match
are removed, so again `file1.c
' is printed, but in this
case if that had not been there a blank line would have been
printed, with no error.
CSH_NULL_GLOB
is good thing to have set since it can keep you on the
straight and narrow without too many unwanted error messages, so this time
it's not just for csh junkies.
CSH_JUNKIE_QUOTES
Here just for completeness. Csh and friends don't allow multiline quotes, as zsh does; if you don't finish a pair of quotes before a new line, csh will complain. This option makes zsh do the same. But multi-line quotes are very useful and very common in zsh scripts and functions; this is only for people whose minds have been really screwed up by using csh.
The name `history mechanism' refers to the fact that zsh keeps a `history' of the commands you have typed. There are three ways of getting these back; all these use the same set of command lines, but the mechanisms for getting at them are rather different. For some reason, items in the history list (a complete line of input typed and executed at once) have become known as `events'.
Editing the history directly
First, you can use the editor; usually hitting up-arrow will take you to
the previous line, and down-arrow takes you back. This is usually the
easiest way, since you can see exactly what you're doing. I will say a
great deal more about the editor in chapter 4; the first thing
to know is that its basic commands work either like emacs, or like vi,
so if you know one of those, you can start editing lines straight away.
The shell tries to guess whether to use emacs or vi from the environment
variables $VISUAL
or $EDITOR
, in that order; these traditionally
hold the name of your preferred editor for programmes which need you to
edit text. In the old days, $VISUAL
was a full-screen editor and
$EDITOR
a line editor, like ed
of blessed memory, but the
distinction is now very blurred. If either contains the string vi
,
the line editor will start in vi mode, else it will start in emacs mode.
If you're in the wrong mode, `bindkey -e
' in ~/.zshrc
takes you
to emacs mode and `bindkey -v
' to vi mode. For vi users, the thing
to remember is that you start in insert mode, so type `ESC
' to be
able to enter vi commands.
`Bang'-history
Second, you can use the csh-style `bang-history' mechanism (unless you have
set the option NO_BANG_HIST
); the `bang' is the exclamation mark, `!',
also known as `pling' or `shriek' (or factorial, but that's another story).
Thus `!!
' retrieves the last command line and executes it; `!-2
'
retrieves the second last. You can select words: `!!:1
' picks the
first word after the command of the last command (if you were paying
attention above, you will note you just need one `!
' in that case);
0
after colon would pick the command word itself; `*
' picks all
arguments after the command; `$
' picks the last word. You can even
have ranges: `!!:1-3
' picks those three words, and things like
`!!:3-$
' work too.
After the word selector, you can have a second set of colons and then some
special commands called modifiers --- these can be very useful to
remember, since they can be applied to parameters and file patterns to, so
here's some more details. The `:t
' (tail) modifier picks the last part
of a filename, everything after the last slash; conversely, `:h
' (head)
picks everything before that. So with a history entry,
% print /usr/bin/cat /usr/bin/cat % print !!:t print cat catNote two things: first, the bang-history mechanism always prints what it's about to execute. Secondly, you don't need the word selector; the shell can tell that the `
:t
' is a modifier, and assumes you want it applied
to the entire previous command. (Be careful here, since actually the
:t
will reduce the expression to everything after the last slash in
any word, which is a little unexpected.)
With parameters:
% foo=/usr/bin/cat % print ${foo:h} /usr/bin(you can usually omit the `
{
' and `}
', but it's clearer and safer
with them). And finally with files --- this won't work if you set
NO_BARE_GLOB_QUAL
for sh-like behaviour:
% print /usr/bin/cat(:t) catwhere you need the parentheses to tell the shell the `
:t
' isn't just
part of the file name.
For a complete list, see the zshexpn
manual, or the section
Modifiers
in the printed or Info versions of the manual, but here are a
few more of the most useful. `:r
' removes the suffix of a file, turning
file.c
into file
; `:l
' and `:u
' make the word(s) all
lowercase or all uppercase; `:s/foo/bar/
' substitutes the first
occurrence of foo
with bar
in the word(s); `:gs/foo/bar
'
substitutes all occurrences (the `g
' stands for global); `:&
'
repeats the last such substitution, even if you did it on a previous line;
`:g&
' also works. So
% print this is this line this is this line % !!:s/this/that/ print that is this line that is this line % print this is no longer this line this is no longer this line % !!:g& print that is no longer that line that is no longer that lineFinally, there is a shortcut:
^old^new^
is exactly equivalent
to !!:s/old/new/
; you can even put another modifier after it. The
`^
' is actually the second character of $histchars
mentioned
above. You can miss out the last `^
' if there's nothing else to follow
it. By the way, you can put modifiers together, but each one needs the
colon with it: :t:r
applied to `dir/file.c
' produces `file
',
and repeated applications of :h
get you shorter and shorter paths.
Before we leave bang-history, note the option HIST_VERIFY
. If that's
set, then after a substitution the line appears again with the changes,
instead of being immediately printed and executed. As you just have to
type <RET>
to execute it, this is a useful trick to save you executing
the wrong thing, which can easily happen with complicated bang-history
lines; I have this set myself.
And one last tip: the shell's expansion and completion, which I will
enthuse about at length later on, allows you to expand bang-history
references straight away by hitting TAB
immediately after you've typed
the complete reference, and you can usually type control together with
slash (on some keyboards, you are restricted to ^Xu
) to put it back the
way it was if you don't like the result --- this is part of the editor's
`undo' feature.
Ksh-style history commands
The third form of history uses the fc
builtin. It's the most
cumbersome: you have to tell the command which complete lines to
execute, and may be given a chance to edit them first (but using an
external editor, not in the shell). You probably won't use it that way,
but there are three things which are actually controlled by fc
which
you might use: first, the `r
' command repeats the last command
(ignoring r
's), which is a bit like `!!
'. Secondly, the command
called `history
' is also really fc
in disguise. It gives you a list
of recent commands. They have numbers next to them; you can use these with
bang-history instead of using negative numbers to count backward in the way I
originally explained, the advantage being they don't change as you enter
more commands. You can give ranges of numbers to history
, the first
number for where to start listing, and the second where to stop: a
particular example is `history 1
', which lists all commands (even if
the first command it still remembers is higher than 1; it just silently
omits all those). The third use of fc
is for reading and writing your
history so you can keep it between sessions.
In fact, the shell is able to read and write history without being told.
You need to tell it where to save the history, however, and for that you
have to set the parameter $HISTFILE
to the name of the file you want to
use (a common choice is `~/.history
'). Next, you need to set the
parameter $SAVEHIST
to the number of lines of your history you want
saved. When these two are set, the shell will read $HISTSIZE
lines from
$HISTFILE
at the start of an interactive session, and save the last
$SAVEHIST
lines you executed at the end of the session. For it to read
or write in the middle, you will either need to set one of the options
described below (INC_APPEND_HISTORY
and SHARE_HISTORY
), or use the
fc
command: fc -R
and fc -W
read and write the history
respectively, while fc -A
appends it to the the file (although pruning
it if it's longer than $SAVEHIST
); fc -WI
and fc -AI
are
similar, but the I
means only write out events since the last time
history was written.
There is a third parameter $HISTSIZE
, which determines the number
of lines the shell will keep within one session; except for special
reasons which I won't talk about, you should set $SAVEHIST
to be no more
than $HISTSIZE
, though it can be less. The default value for
$HISTSIZE
is 30, which is a bit stingy for the memory and disk space of
today's computers; zsh users often use anything up to 1000. So a simple
set of parameters to set in .zshrc
is
HISTSIZE=1000 SAVEHIST=1000 HISTFILE=~/.historyand that is enough to get things working. Note that you must set
$SAVEHIST
and $HISTFILE
for automatic reading and writing of history
lines to work.
There are also many options affecting history; these increased
substantially with version 3.1.6, which provided for the first time
INC_APPEND_HISTORY
, SHARE_HISTORY
, HIST_EXPIRE_DUPS_FIRST
,
HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS
, HIST_SAVE_NO_DUPS
and HIST_NO_FUNCTIONS
.
I have already described BANG_HIST
, CSH_JUNKIE_HISTORY
and
HIST_VERIFY
and I won't talk about them again.
APPEND_HISTORY
, INC_APPEND_HISTORY
, SHARE_HISTORY
Normally, when it writes a history file, zsh just overwrites everything
that's there. APPEND_HISTORY
allows it to append the new history to
the old. The shell will make an effort not to write out lines which should
be there already; this can get complicated if you have lots of zshs running
in different windows at once. This option is a good one for most people to
use. INC_APPEND_HISTORY
means that instead of doing this when the
shell exits, each line is added to the history in this way as it is
executed; this means, for example, that if you start up a zsh inside the
main shell its history will look like that of the main shell, which is
quite useful. It also means the ordering of commands from different shells
running at the same time is much more logical --- basically just the order
they were executed --- so for 3.1.6 and higher this option is recommended.
SHARE_HISTORY
takes this one stage further: as each line is added,
the history file is checked to see if anything was written out by another
shell, and if so it is included in the history of the current shell too.
This means that zsh's running in different windows but on the same host (or
more generally with the same home directory) share the same history. Note
that zsh tries not to confuse you by having unexpected history entries pop
up: if you use !
-style history, the commands from other session don't
appear in the history list until you explicitly type the history
command to display them, so that you can be sure what command you are
actually reexecuting. The Korn shell always behaves as if
SHARE_HISTORY
is set, presumably because it doesn't store history
internally.
EXTENDED_HISTORY
This makes the format of the history entry more complicated: in addition to
just the command, it saves the time when the command was started and how
long it ran for. The history
command takes three options which use
this: history -d
prints the start time of the command; history -f
prints that as well as the date; history -D
(which you can combine with
-f
or -d
) prints the command's elapsed time. The date format can
be changed with -E
for European (day.month.year) and
-i
for international (year-month-day) formats. The main
reasons why you wouldn't want to set this would be shortage of disk
space, or because you wanted your history file to be read by another shell.
HIST_IGNORE_DUPS
, HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS
,
HIST_EXPIRE_DUPS_FIRST
, HIST_SAVE_NO_DUPS
, HIST_FIND_NO_DUPS
These options give ways of dealing with the duplicate lines that often
appear in the history. The simplest is HIST_IGNORE_DUPS
, which tells
the shell not to store a history line if it's the same as the previous one,
thus collapsing a lot of repeated commands down to one; this is a very good
option to have set. It does nothing when duplicate lines are not adjacent,
so for example alternating pairs of commands will always be stored. The
next two options can help here: HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS
simply removes
copies of lines still in the history list, keeping the newly added one,
while HIST_EXPIRE_DUPS_FIRST
is more subtle: it preferentially removes
duplicates when the history fills up, but does nothing until then.
HIST_SAVE_NO_DUPS
means that whatever options are set for the current
session, the shell is not to save duplicated lines more than once; and
HIST_FIND_NO_DUPS
means that even if duplicate lines have been saved,
searches backwards with editor commands don't show them more than once.
HIST_ALLOW_CLOBBER
, HIST_REDUCE_BLANKS
These allow the history mechanism to make changes to lines as
they are entered. The first affects output redirections,
where you use the symbol >
to redirect the output of a command
or set of commands to a named file, or use >
>
to append the output
to that file. If you have the NO_CLOBBER
option set, then
touch newfile echo hello >newfilefails, because the `
touch
' command has created newfile
and
NO_CLOBBER
won't let you overwrite (clobber) it in the next line.
With HIST_ALLOW_CLOBBER
, the second line appears in the history as
echo hello >|newfilewhere the
>|
overrides NO_CLOBBER
. So to get round the
NO_CLOBBER
you can just go back to the previous line and
execute it without editing it.
The second option, HIST_REDUCE_BLANKS
, will tidy up the line when it is
entered into the history by removing any excess blanks that mean nothing to
the shell. This can also mean that the line becomes a duplicate of a
previous one even if it would not have been in its untidied form. It is
smart enough not to remove blanks which are important, i.e. are quoted.
HIST_IGNORE_SPACE
, HIST_NO_STORE
, HIST_NO_FUNCTIONS
These three options allow you to say that certain lines shouldn't go into
the history at all. HIST_IGNORE_SPACE
means that lines which begin
with a space don't go into the history; the idea is that you deliberately
type a space, which is not otherwise significant to the shell, before
entering any line you want to be forgotten immediately afterwards.
In zsh 4.0.1 this is implemented so that you can always recall the
immediately preceding line for editing, even if it had a space; but when
the next line is executed and entered into the history, the line beginning
with the space is forgotten.
HIST_NO_STORE
tells the shell not to store history
or fc
commands. while HIST_NO_FUNCTIONS
tells it not to store function
definitions as these, though usually infrequent, can be tiresomely long. A
function definition is anything beginning `function funcname {...
' or
`funcname () { ...
'.
NO_HIST_BEEP
Finally, HIST_BEEP
is used in the editor: if you try to scroll
up or down beyond the end of the history list, the shell will beep.
It is on by default, so use NO_HIST_BEEP
to turn it off.
Most people have some definitions in .zshrc
for altering the prompt
you see at the start of each line. I've already mentioned
PROMPT_PERCENT
(set by default) and PROMPT_SUBST
(unset by
default); I'll assume here you haven't changed these settings, and point
out some of the possibilities with prompt escapes, sequences that
start with a `%
'. If you get really sophisticated, you might
need to turn on PROMPT_SUBST
.
The main prompt is in a parameter called either $PS1
or $PROMPT
or
$prompt
; the reason for having all these names is historical --- they
come from different shells --- so I'll just stick with the shortest. There
is also $RPS1
, which prints a prompt at the right of the screen. The
point of this is that it automatically disappears if you type so far along
the line that you run into it, so it can help make the best use of space
for showing long things like directories.
$PS2
is shown when the shell is waiting for some more input, i.e. it
knows that what you have typed so far isn't a complete line: it may contain
the start of a quoted expression, but not the end, or the start of some
syntactic structure which is not yet finished. Usually you will keep it
different from $PS1
, but all the same escapes are understood in all
five prompts.
$PS3
is shown within a loop started by the shell's select
mechanism, when the shell wants you to input a choice: see the zshmisc
manual page as I won't say much about that.
$PS4
is useful in debugging: there is an option XTRACE
which causes
the shell to print out lines about to be executed, preceded by $PS4
.
Only from version 3.1.6 has it started to be substituted in the same way as
the other prompts, though this turns out to be very useful --- see
`Location in script or function' in the following list.
Here are some of the things you might want to include in your prompts.
Note that you can try this out before you alter the prompt by using
`print -P
': this expands strings just are as they are in prompts.
You will probably need to put the string in single quotes.
The time
Zsh allows you lots of different ways of putting the time into
your prompt with percent escapes. The simplest are %t
and %T
,
the time in 12 and 24 hour formats, and %*
, the same as %T
but with seconds; you can also have the date as (e.g.) `Wed 22
'
using %w
, as `9/22/99
' (US format) using %W, or as
`99-09-22
' (International format) using %D. However, there is
another way of using %D to get many more possibilities: a following
string in braces, `%D{...}
' can contain a completely different
set of percent escapes all of which refer to elements of the time
and date. On most systems, the documentation for the strftime
function will tell you what these are. zsh has a few of its own,
given in the zshmisc
manual page in the PROMPT EXPANSION
section. For example, I use %D{%L:%M}
which gives the time in hours
and minutes, with the hours as a single digit for 1 to 9; it looks more
homely to my unsophisticated eyes.
You can have more fun by using the
`%
(numX.true.false)' syntax,
where X is one of t
or T
. For t
, if the
time in minutes is the same as num (default zero), then true
is used as the text for this section of the prompt, while false is
used otherwise. T
does the same for hours. Hence
PS1='%(t.Ding!.%D{%L:%M})%# 'prints the message `
Ding!
' at zero minutes past the hour, and
a more conventional time otherwise. The `%#
' is the standard
sequence which prints a `#
' if you are the superuser (root),
or a `%
' for everyone else, which occurs in a lot of people's
prompts. Likewise, you could use `%
(30t.Dong!.
...' for
a message at half past the hour.
The current directory
The sequence `%~
' prints out the directory, with any
home or named directories (see below) shortened to the form
starting with ~
; the sequence `%/
' doesn't do that shortening,
so usually `%~
' is better. Directories can be long, and there are
various ways to deal with it. First, if you are using a windowing
system you can put the directory in the title bar, rather than anywhere
inside the window. Second, you can use $RPS1
which disappears when
you type near it. Third, you can pick segments out of `%~
' or
`%/
' by giving them a number after the `%
': for example,
`%1~
' just picks out the last segment of the path to the current
directory.
The fourth way gives you the most control. Prompts or parts of
prompts, not just bits showing the directory, can be truncated to any
length you choose. To truncate a path on the left, use something like
`%10<
...<%~
'. That works like this: the `%<
<
' is the
basic form for truncation. The 10 after the `%
' says that anything
following is limited to 10 characters, and the characters `...' are to
be displayed whenever the prompt would otherwise be longer than that (you
can leave this empty). This applies to anything following, so now the
%~
can't be longer than 10 characters, otherwise it will be truncated
(to 7 characters, once the `...
' has been printed). You can turn
off truncation with `%<
<
', i.e. no number after the `%
';
truncation then applies to the entire region between where it was
turned on and where it was turned off (this has changed from older versions
of zsh, where it just applied to individual `%
' constructs).
What are you waiting for?
The prompt $PS2
appears when the shell is waiting for you to finish
entering something, and it's useful to know what the shell is waiting for.
The sequence `%_
' shows this. It's part of the default $PS2
, which
is `%_>
'. Hence, if you type `if true; then
' and <RET>
, the
prompt will say `then>
'. You can also use it in the trace prompt,
$PS4
, to show the same information about what is being executed in a
script or function, though as there is usually enough information there (as
described next) it's not part of the default. In this case, a number after
the `%
' will limit the depth shown, so with `%1_
' only the most
recent thing will be mentioned.
Location in script or function
The default $PS4
contains `%N
' and `%i
', which tell you the
name of the most recently started function, script, or sourced file,
and the line number being executed inside it; they are not very useful
in other prompts. However, `%i
' in $PS1
will tell you the
current interactive line number, which zsh keeps track of, though
doesn't usually show you; the parameter $LINENO
contains the same
information.
Another point to bear about `%i
' in mind is that the line number
shown applies to the version of a function first read in, not how it
appears with the `functions
' command, which is tidied up. If you
use autoloaded functions, however, the file containing the function will
usually be what you want to alter, so this shouldn't be a problem when
debugging.
Remember, the $PS4
display only happens when the
XTRACE
option is set; as options may be local to functions, and
always are to scripts, you will often need to put an explicit
`setopt xtrace
' at the top of whatever you are debugging.
Alternatively, you can use `typeset -ft
funcname' to turn on
tracing for that function (something I only just discovered); use
`typeset +ft
funcname' to turn it off again.
Other bits and pieces
There are many other percent escapes described in the zshmisc
manual page, mostly straightforward. For example, `%h
' shows
you the history entry number, useful if you are using bang-history;
`%m
' shows you the current host name up to any dot; `%n
' shows
the username.
There are two other features I happen to use myself. First, it's
sometimes convenient to know when the last command failed. Every
command returns a status, which is a number: zero for success, some
other number for some type of failure. You can get this from the
parameter `$?
' or `$status
' (again, they refer to the same
thing). It's also available in the prompt as `%?
', and there's
also one of the so-called `ternary' expressions with parentheses I
described for time, which pick different strings depending on a test.
Here the test is, reasonably enough, `%
(?...
'. Putting
these two together, you can get a message which is only displayed
when the exit status is non-zero; I've put an extra set of parentheses
around the number just to make it clearer, where the `)'
needs to be turned into `%
)' to stop it marking the end
of the group:
PS1='%(?..(%?%))%# '
It's also sometimes convenient to know if you're in a subshell, that is
if you've started another shell within the main one by typing
`zsh
'. You can do this by using another ternary expression:
PS1='%(2L.+.)%# 'This checks the parameter
SHLVL
, which is incremented every time
a new zsh starts, so if there was already one running (which would
have set SHLVL
to 1), it will now be 2; and if SHLVL
is at
least 2, an extra `+
' is printed in front of the prompt, otherwise
nothing. If you're using a windowing system, you may need to turn
the 2 into 3 as there may be a zsh already running when you first log
in, so that the shells in the windows have SHLVL
set to 2 already.
This depends a good deal on how your windowing system is set up; finding
out more is left as an exercise for the reader.
Colours
Many terminals can now display colours, and it is quite useful to be able to put these into prompts to distinguish those from the surrounding text. I often find a programme has just dumped a whole load of output on my terminal and it's not obvious where it starts. Being able to find the prompt just before helps a lot.
Colors, like bold or underlined text, use escape sequences which don't move
the cursor. The golden rule for inserting any such escape sequences into
prompts is to surround them with `%{
' at the start and `%}
' at the
end. Otherwise, the shell will be confused about the length of the line.
This affects what happens when the line editor needs to redraw the line,
and also changes the position of the right prompt $RPS1
, if you use
that. You don't need that with the special sequences %B
and %b
,
which start and stop bold text, because the shell already knows what to do
with those; it's only random characters which you happen to know don't move
the cursor, though the shell doesn't, that cause the problem.
In the case of colours, there is a shell function colors
supplied with
the standard distribution to help you. When loaded and run, it defines
associative array parameters $fg
and $bg
which you use to extract
the escape sequences for given colours, for example
${fg[red]}${bg[yellow]}
produces the sequences for red text on a yellow
background. So for example,
PS1="%{${bg[white]}${fg[red]}%}%(?..(%?%))\ %{${fg[yellow]}${bg[black]}%}%# "produces a red-on-white `
(1)
' if the previous programme exited with
status 1, but nothing if it exited with status 0, followed by a
yellow-on-black `%
' or `#
' if you are the superuser. Note the
use of the double quotes here to force the parameters to be expanded
straight away --- the escape sequences are fixed, so they don't need to
be re-extracted from the parameters every time the prompt is shown.
Even if your terminal does support colour, there's no guarantee all the
possibilities work, although the basic ANSI colour scheme is fairly
standard. The colours understood are: cyan, white, yellow, magenta,
black, blue, red, grey, green. You can also used `default', which puts the
terminal back how it was to begin with. In addition, you can use the basic
colours with the parameters $bg_bold
and $fg_bold
for bold
varieties of the colours and $bg_no_bold
and $fg_no_bold
to switch
explicitly back to non-bold.
Themes
There are also a set of themes provided as functions to set up your
prompt to various predefined possibilities. These make use of the colours
set up as described above. See the zshcontrib
manual page for how
to do this (search for `prompt themes').
As already mentioned, `~/
' at the start of a filename expands to your
home directory. More generally, `~
user/
' allows you to refer
to the home directory of any other user. Furthermore, zsh lets you define
your own named directories which use this syntax. The basic idea is simple,
since any parameter can be a named directory:
dir=/tmp/mydir print ~dirprints `/tmp/mydir'. So far, this isn't any different from using the parameter as
$dir
. The difference comes if you use the `%~
'
construct, described above, in your prompt. Then when you change into
that directory, instead of seeing the message `/tmp/mydir
', you will
see the abbreviation `~dir
'.
The shell will not register the name of the directory until you force it to
by using `~dir
' yourself at least once. You can do the following in
your .zshrc
:
dir=/tmp/mydir bin=~/myprogs/bin : ~dir ~binwhere `
:
' is a command that does nothing --- but its arguments are
checked for parameters and so on in the usual way, so that the shell can
put dir
and bin
into its list of named directories. A more simple
way of doing this is to set the option AUTO_NAME_DIRS
; then any
parameter created which refers to a directory will automatically be
turned into a name. The directory must have an absolute path, i.e. its
expanded value, after turning any `~
's at the start into full paths,
must begin with a `/
'. The parameter $PWD
, which shows the
current directory, is protected from being turned into ~PWD
, since that
would tell you nothing.
Here are a few more random options you might want to set in your
.zshrc
.
NO_BEEP
Normally zsh will beep if it doesn't like something. This can get
extremely annoying; `setopt nobeep
' will turn it off. I refer to this
informally as the OPEN_PLAN_OFFICE_NO_VIGILANTE_ATTACKS
option.
AUTO_CD
If this option is set, and you type something with no arguments which isn't
a command, zsh will check to see if it's actually a directory. If it is,
the shell will change to that directory. So `./bin
' on its own is
equivalent to `cd ./bin
', as long as the directory `./bin
' really
exists. This is particularly useful in the form `..
', which changes to
the parent directory.
CD_ABLE_VARS
This is another way of saving typing when changing directory, though only
one character. If a directory doesn't exist when you try to change to it,
zsh will try and find a parameter of that name and use that instead. You
can also have a `/
' and other bits after the parameter. So `cd
foo/dir
', if there is no directory `foo
' but there is a parameter
$foo
, becomes equivalent to `cd $foo/dir
'.
EXTENDED_GLOB
Patterns, to match the name of files and other things, can be very
sophisticated in zsh, but to get the most out of them you need to use this
option, as otherwise certain features are not enabled, so that people used
to simpler patterns (maybe just `*
', `?
' and `[...]
') are not
confused by strange happenings. I'll say much more about zsh's pattern
features, but this is to remind you that you need this option if you're
doing anything clever with `~
', `#
', `^
' or globbing flags ---
and also to remind you that those characters can have strange effects if
you have the option set.
MULTIOS
I mentioned above that to get zsh to behave like ksh you needed to set
NO_MULTIOS
, but I didn't say what the MULTIOS
option did. It has
two different effects for output and input.
First, for output. Here it's an alternative to the tee
programme.
I've mentioned once, but haven't described in detail, that you could use
>filename
to tell the shell to send output into a file with a given
name instead of to the terminal. With MULTIOS
set, you can have more
than one of those redirections on the command line:
echo foo >file1 >file2Here, `
foo
' will be written to both the named files; zsh copies the
output. The pipe mechanism, which I'll describe better in
chapter 3, is a sort of redirection into another programme
instead of into a file: MULTIOS
affects this as well:
echo foo >file1 | sed 's/foo/bar/'Here, `
foo
' is again written to file1
, but is also sent into the
pipe to the programme sed
(`stream editor') which substitutes `foo
'
into `bar
' and (since there is no output redirection in this part)
prints it to the terminal.
Note that the second example above has several times been reported as a bug, often in a form like:
some_command 2>&1 >/dev/null | sed 's/foo/bar/'The intention here is presumably to send standard error to standard output (the `
2>&1
', a very commonly used shell hieroglyphic), and
not send standard output anywhere (the `>/dev/null
'). (If you
haven't met the concept of `standard error', it's just another output
channel which goes to the same place as normal output unless you
redirect it; it's used, for example to send error messages to the
terminal even if your output is going somewhere else.) In this example,
too, the MULTIOS
feature forces the original standard output to go
to the pipe. You can see this happening if we put in a version of
`some_command
':
{ echo foo error >&2; echo foo not error; } 2>&1 >/dev/null | sed 's/foo/bar/'where you can consider the stuff inside the `
{...}
' as a black box
that sends the message `foo error' to standard error, and `foo not
error' to standard output. With MULTIOS
, however, the result is
error bar not error barbecause both have been sent into the pipe. Without
MULTIOS
you get
the expected result,
error baras any other Bourne-style shell would produce. There
On input, MULTIOS
arranges for a series of files to be read in order.
This time it's a bit like using the programme cat
, which combines all
the files listed after it. In other words,
cat file1 file2 | myprog(where
myprog
is some programme that reads all the files sent to it as
input) can be replaced by
myprog <file1 <file2which does the same thing. Once again, a pipe counts as a redirection, and the pipe is read from first, before any files listed after a `
<
':
echo then this >testfile echo this first | cat <testfile
CORRECT
, CORRECT_ALL
If you have CORRECT
set, the shell will check all the commands you type
and if they don't exist, but there is one with a similar name, it will ask
you if you meant that one instead. You can type `n
' for no, don't
correct, just go ahead; `y
' for yes, correct it then go ahead; `a
'
for abort, don't do anything; `e
' for edit, return to the editor to
edit the same line again. Users of the new completion system should note
this is not the same correction you get there: it's just simple correction
of commands.
CORRECT_ALL
applies to all the words on the line. It's a little less
useful, because currently the shell has to assume that they are supposed to
be filenames, and will try to correct them if they don't exist as such, but
of course many of the arguments to a command are not filenames. If
particular commands generate too many attempts to correct their arguments,
you can turn this off by putting `nocorrect
' in front of the command
name. An alias is a very good way of doing this, as described next.
An alias is used like a command, but it expands into some other text which is itself used as a command. For example,
alias foo='print I said foo' fooprints (guess what) `
I said foo
'. Note the syntax for definition ---
you need the `=
', and you need to make sure the whole alias is treated
by the shell as one word; you can give a whole list of aliases to the same
`alias
' command. You may be able to think of some aliases you want
to define in your startup files; .zshrc
is probably the right place.
If you have CORRECT_ALL
set, the way to avoid the `mkdir
' command
spell-checking its arguments --- which is useless, because they have to
be non-existent for the command to work --- is to define:
alias mkdir='nocorrect mkdir'This shows one useful feature about aliases: the alias can contain something of the same name as itself. When it is encountered in the expansion text (the right hand side), the shell knows it is not to expand the alias again, but this time to treat it as a real command. Note that functions do not have this property: functions are more powerful than aliases and in some cases it is useful for them to call themselves, It's a common mistake to have functions call themselves over and over again until the shell complains. I'll describe ways round this in chapter 3.
One other way functions are more powerful than aliases is that functions
can take arguments while aliases can't --- in other words, there is no way
of referring inside the alias to what follows it on the command line,
unlike a function, and also unlike aliases in csh (because that has no
functions, that's why). It is just blindly expanded, and the remainder of
the command line stuck on the end. Hence aliases in zsh are usually kept
for quite simple things, and functions are written for anything more
complicated. You couldn't do that trick with `nocorrect
' using a
function, though, since the function is called too late: aliases are
expanded straight away, so the nocorrect
is found in time to be useful.
You can almost think of them as just plain typing abbreviations.
Normal aliases only work when in command position, i.e. at the start of the
command line (more strictly, when zsh is expecting a command). There are
other things called `global aliases', which you define by the `-g
'
option to alias
, which will be expanded at any position on the command
line. You should think seriously before defining these, as they can have a
drastic effect. Note, however, that quoting a word, or even a single
character, will stop an alias being expanded for it.
I only tend to use aliases in interactive shells, so I define them from
.zshrc
, but you may want to use .zshenv
if you use aliases more
widely. In fact, to keep my .zshrc
neat I save all the aliases in a
separate file called .aliasrc
and in .zshrc
I have:
if [[ -r ~/.aliasrc ]]; then . ~/.aliasrc fiwhich checks if there is a readable file
~/.aliasrc
, and if there is,
it runs it in exactly the same way the normal startup files are run.
You can use `source
' instead of `.
' if it means more to you;
`.
' is the traditional Bourne and Korn shell name, however.
Often, the manual for a programme will tell you to define certain environment variables, usually a collection of uppercase letters with maybe numbers and the odd underscore. These can pass information to the programme without you needing to use extra arguments. In zsh, environment variables appear as ordinary shell parameters, although they have to be defined slightly differently: strictly, the environment is a special region outside the shell, and zsh has to be told to put a copy there as well as keeping one of its own. The usual syntax is
export VARNAME='value'in other words, like an ordinary assignment, but with `
export
' in
front. Note there is no `$
' before the name of the environment
variable; all `export
' and similar statements work the same way.
The easiest place to put these is in .zshenv
--- hence it's name.
Environment variables will be passed to any programmes run from a shell, so
it may be enough to define them in .zlogin
or .zprofile
: however,
any shell started for you non-interactively won't run those, and there are
other possible problems if you use a windowing system which is started by a
shell other than zsh or which doesn't run a shell start-up file at all ---
I had to tweak mine to make it do so. So .zshenv
is the safest place;
it doesn't take long to define environment variables. Other people will no
doubt give you completely contradictory views, but that's people for you.
Note that you can't export arrays. If you export a parameter, then assign
an array to it, nothing will appear in the environment; you can use the
external command `printenv VARNAME
' (again no `$
' because the
command needs to know the name, not the value) to check. There's a more
subtle problem with arrays, too. The export
builtin is just a special
case of the builtin typeset, which defines a variable without marking
it for export to the environment. You might think you could do
typeset array=(this doesn\'t work)but you can't --- the special array syntax is only understood when the assignment does not follow a command, not in normal arguments like the case here, so you have to put the array assignment on the next line. This is a very easy mistake to make. More uses of
typeset
will be described
in chapter 3; they include creating local parameters in
functions, and defining special attributes (of which the `export'
attribute is just one) for parameters.
It helps to be able to find external programmes, i.e. anything not part of
the shell, any command other than a builtin, function or alias. The
$path
array is used for this. Actually, what the system needs is the
environment variable $PATH
, which contains a list of directories in
which to search for programmes, separated from each other by a colon.
These directories are the individual components of the array $path
. So
if $path
contains
path=(/bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin .)then
$PATH
will automatically contain the effect of
PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin:.without you having to set that. The idea is simply that, while the system needs
$PATH
because it doesn't understand arrays, it's much more
flexible to be able to use arrays within the shell and hence pretty much
forget about the $PATH
form.
Changes to the path are similar to changes to environment variables
described above, so all that applies. There's a slight difficulty in
setting $path
in .zshenv
however, even though the reasons given
above for doing so still apply. Usually, the path will be set for you,
either by the system, or by the system administrator in one of the global
start up files, and if you change path you will simply want to add to it.
But if your .zshenv
contains
path=(~/bin ~/progs/bin $path)--- which is the right way of adding something to the front of
$path
--- then every time .zshenv
is called, ~/bin
and ~/progs/bin
are stuck in front, so if you start another zsh you will have two sets
there.
You can add tests to see if something's already there, of course. Zsh
conveniently allows you to test for the existence of elements in an array.
By preceding an array index by (r)
(for reverse), it will try to find
a matching element and return that, else an empty string. Here's a
way of doing that (but don't add this yet, see the next paragraph):
for dir in ~/bin ~/progs/bin; do if [[ -z ${path[(r)$dir]} ]]; then path=($dir $path) fi doneThat
for
... do
... done
is another special shell construct.
It takes each thing after `in
' and assigns it in turn to the
parameter named before the `in
' --- $dir
, but because this is
a form of assignment, the `$
' is left off --- so the first time
round it has the effect of dir=~/bin
, and the next time
dir=~/progs/bin
. Then it executes what's in the loop. The test -z
checks that what follows is empty: in this case it will be if the
directory $dir
is not yet in $path
, so it goes ahead and adds
it in front. Note that the directories get added in the reverse of
the order they appear.
Actually, however, zsh takes all that trouble away from you. The
incantation `typeset -U path
', where the -U
stands for unique,
tells the shell that it should not add anything to $path
if it's there
already. To be precise, it keeps only the left-most occurrence, so if
you added something at the end it will disappear and if you added
something at the beginning, the old one will disappear. Thus the
following works nicely in .zshenv
:
typeset -U path path=(~/bin ~/progs/bin $path)and you can put down that `
for
' stuff as a lesson in shell programming.
You can list all the variables which have uniqueness turned on by
typing `typeset +U
', with `+
' instead of `-
', because in the
latter case the shell would show the values of the parameters as well,
which isn't what you need here. The -U
flag will also work with
colon-separated arrays, like $PATH
.
Zsh will check for new mail for you. If all you need is to be reminded of
something arriving in your normal folder every now and then, you just need
to set the parameter $MAIL
to wherever that is: it's typically one of
/usr/spool/mail
, /var/spool/mail
, or /var/mail
.
The array $mailpath
allows more possibilities. Like $path
, it has
a colleague in uppercase, $MAILPATH
, which is a colon-separated array.
The system doesn't need that, this time, so it's mainly there so that you
can export it to another version of zsh; exporting arrays won't work. As
may by now be painfully clear, if you set in .zshenv
or .zshrc
, you
don't need to export it, because it's set in each instance of the
shell. The elements of $mailpath
work like $MAIL
, so you can
specify different places where mail arrives. That's most useful if
you have a programme like filter
or procmail
running to
redistribute arriving mail to different folders. You can specify a
different message for each folder by putting `?
message' at
the end. For example, mine looks like this.
mailpref=/temp/pws/Mail mailpath=($mailpref/newmail $mailpref/zsh-new'?New zsh mail' $mailpref/list-new'?New list mail' $mailpref/urth-new'?New Urth mail')Note that zsh knows the array isn't finished until the `)', even though the elements are on different lines; this is one very good reason for setting
$mailpath
rather than $MAILPATH
, which needs one long
chunk.
The other parameter of interest is $MAILCHECK
, which gives the
frequency in seconds when zsh should check for new mail. The default is
60. Actually, zsh only checks just after a command has finished running
and it is about to print a prompt. Since checking files doesn't take long,
you can usually set this to its minimum value, which is MAILCHECK=1
;
zero doesn't work because it switches off checking. One reason why you
wouldn't want to do that might be because $MAIL
and $mailpath
can
contain directories instead of ordinary files; these will be checked
recursively for any files with something new in them, so this can be slow.
Finally, there is one associated option, MAIL_WARNING
(though
MAIL_WARN
is also accepted for the same thing for reasons of
compatibility with less grammatical shells). The shell remembers when it
found the mail file was checked; next time it checks, it compares the date.
If there is no new mail, but the date of the file changed anyway, it will
print a warning message. This will happen if you read the mail with your
mail reader and put the messages somewhere else. Presumably you know
you did that, so the warning may not be all that useful.
There are other pairs like $path
and $PATH
. I will keep back talk
of $cdpath
until I say more about the way zsh handles directories.
When I mentioned $fpath
, I didn't say there was also $FPATH
, but
there is. Then there is $manpath
and $MANPATH
; these aren't used
by the shell at all, but $MANPATH
, if exported, is used by the man
external command, and $manpath
gives an easier way to set it.
From 3.1.6 there is a mechanism to define your own such combinations; if
this had been available before, there would have been no need to build in
$manpath
and $MANPATH
. In .zshenv
you would put,
export -TU TEXINPUTS texinputsto define such a pair. The
-T
(for tie) is the key to that; I've used
`export
' even though the basic variable declaration command is
`typeset
' because you nearly always want to get the colon-separated
version ($TEXINPUTS
here) visible to the environment, and I've set
-U
as described above for $path
because it's a neat feature anyway.
Now you can assign to the array $texinputs
and let the programme (TeX
or its derivatives) see $TEXINPUTS
. Another useful variable to do this
with is $LD_LIBRARY_PATH
, which on most modern versions of UNIX (and
Linux) tells the system where to find the libraries which provide extra
functions when it runs a programme.
Since zsh changes faster than almost any other command interpreter known to
humankind, you will often find you need to find out what version you are
using. This can get a bit verbose; indeed, the parameter you need to
check, which is now $ZSH_VERSION
, used simply to be called $VERSION
before version 3.0
. If you are not using legacy software of that kind,
you can probably get away with tests like this:
if [[ $ZSH_VERSION == 3.1.<5->* || $ZSH_VERSION == 3.<2->* || $ZSH_VERSION == <4->* ]]; then # set feature which appeared first in 3.1.5 fiIt's like that to be futureproof: it says that if this is a 3.1 release, it has to be at least 3.1.5, but any 3.2 release (there weren't any), or any release 4 or later, will also be OK. The `
<5->
' etc. are advanced
pattern matching tests: pattern matching uses the same symbols as globbing,
but to test other things, here what's on the left of the `==
'. This
one matches any number which is at least 5, for example 6 or 10 or 252, but
not 1 or 4. There are also development releases; nowadays the version
numbers look like X.
Y.
Z-tag-N (tag is
some short word, the others are numbers) but unless you're keeping up with
development you won't need to look for those, since they aren't released
officially. That `==
' in the test could also be just `=
', but the
manual says the former is preferred, so I've used them here, even though
people usually don't bother.
Version 4 of zsh provides a function is-at-least
to do this for you: it
looks only at the numbers X, Y and Z (and N if it
exists), ignoring all letters and punctuation. You give it the minimum
version of the shell you need and it returns true if the current shell is
recent enough. For example, `is-at-least 3.1.6-pws-9
' will return true
if the current version of zsh is 3.1.6-dev-20 (or 3.1.9, or 4.0.1, and so
on), which is the correct behaviour. As with any other shell function, you
have to arrange for is-at-least
to be autoload
ed if you want to use
it.
There are many other possibilities for things to go in startup
files; in particular, I haven't touched on defining things for the line
editor and setting up completion. There's quite a lot to explain for
those, so I'll come back to those in the appropriate chapters. You just
need to remember that all that stuff should go in .zshrc
, since you
need it for all interactive shells, and for no others.