command - execute a simple command
command [-p] command_name [argument
...]
command [ -v | -V ] command_name
The command utility shall cause the shell to treat the arguments as a simple command, suppressing the shell function lookup that is described in Command Search and Execution , item 1b.
If the command_name is the same as the name of one of the special built-in utilities, the special properties in the enumerated list at the beginning of Special Built-In Utilities shall not occur. In every other respect, if command_name is not the name of a function, the effect of command (with no options) shall be the same as omitting command.
On systems supporting the User Portability Utilities option, the command utility also shall provide information concerning how a command name is interpreted by the shell; see -v and -V.
The command utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines.
The following options shall be supported:
Utilities, regular built-in utilities, command_names including a slash character, and any implementation-defined functions that are found using the PATH variable (as described in Command Search and Execution ), shall be written as absolute pathnames.
Shell functions, special built-in utilities, regular built-in utilities not associated with a PATH search, and shell reserved words shall be written as just their names.
An alias shall be written as a command line that represents its alias definition.
Otherwise, no output shall be written and the exit status shall reflect that the name was not found.
Utilities, regular built-in utilities, and any implementation-defined functions that are found using the PATH variable (as described in Command Search and Execution ), shall be identified as such and include the absolute pathname in the string.
Other shell functions shall be identified as functions.
Aliases shall be identified as aliases and their definitions included in the string.
Special built-in utilities shall be identified as special built-in utilities.
Regular built-in utilities not associated with a PATH search shall be identified as regular built-in utilities. (The term "regular" need not be used.)
Shell reserved words shall be identified as reserved words.
The following operands shall be supported:
The name of a utility or a special built-in utility.
The following environment variables shall affect the execution of command:
When the -v option is specified, standard output shall be formatted as:
"%s\n", <pathname or command>
When the -V option is specified, standard output shall be formatted as:
"%s\n", <unspecified>
The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.
When the -v or -V options are specified, the following exit values shall be returned:
Otherwise, the following exit values shall be returned:
Otherwise, the exit status of command shall be that of the simple command specified by the arguments to command.
Default.
The following sections are informative.
The order for command search allows functions to override regular built-ins and path searches. This utility is necessary to allow functions that have the same name as a utility to call the utility (instead of a recursive call to the function).
The system default path is available using getconf; however, since getconf may need to have the PATH set up before it can be called itself, the following can be used:
command -p getconf _CS_PATH
There are some advantages to suppressing the special characteristics of special built-ins on occasion. For example:
command exec > unwritable-file
does not cause a non-interactive script to abort, so that the output status can be checked by the script.
The command, env, nohup, time, and xargs utilities have been specified to use exit code 127 if an error occurs so that applications can distinguish "failure to find a utility" from "invoked utility exited with an error indication". The value 127 was chosen because it is not commonly used for other meanings; most utilities use small values for "normal error conditions" and the values above 128 can be confused with termination due to receipt of a signal. The value 126 was chosen in a similar manner to indicate that the utility could be found, but not invoked. Some scripts produce meaningful error messages differentiating the 126 and 127 cases. The distinction between exit codes 126 and 127 is based on KornShell practice that uses 127 when all attempts to exec the utility fail with [ENOENT], and uses 126 when any attempt to exec the utility fails for any other reason.
Since the -v and -V options of command produce output in relation to the current shell execution environment, command is generally provided as a shell regular built-in. If it is called in a subshell or separate utility execution environment, such as one of the following:
(PATH=foo command -v) nohup command -v
it does not necessarily produce correct results. For example, when called with nohup or an exec function, in a separate utility execution environment, most implementations are not able to identify aliases, functions, or special built-ins.
Two types of regular built-ins could be encountered on a system and these are described separately by command. The description of command search in Command Search and Execution allows for a standard utility to be implemented as a regular built-in as long as it is found in the appropriate place in a PATH search. So, for example, command -v true might yield /bin/true or some similar pathname. Other implementation-defined utilities that are not defined by this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 might exist only as built-ins and have no pathname associated with them. These produce output identified as (regular) built-ins. Applications encountering these are not able to count on execing them, using them with nohup, overriding them with a different PATH , and so on.
Make a version of cd that always prints out the new working directory exactly once:
cd() { command cd "$@" >/dev/null pwd }
Start off a "secure shell script" in which the script avoids being spoofed by its parent:
IFS=' # The preceding value should be <space><tab><newline>. # Set IFS to its default value. \unalias -a # Unset all possible aliases. # Note that unalias is escaped to prevent an alias # being used for unalias. unset -f command # Ensure command is not a user function. PATH="$(command -p getconf _CS_PATH):$PATH" # Put on a reliable PATH prefix. # ...
At this point, given correct permissions on the directories called by PATH , the script has the ability to ensure that any utility it calls is the intended one. It is being very cautious because it assumes that implementation extensions may be present that would allow user functions to exist when it is invoked; this capability is not specified by this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, but it is not prohibited as an extension. For example, the ENV variable precedes the invocation of the script with a user start-up script. Such a script could define functions to spoof the application.
Since command is a regular built-in utility it is always found prior to the PATH search.
There is nothing in the description of command that implies the command line is parsed any differently from that of any other simple command. For example:
command a | b ; c
is not parsed in any special way that causes '|' or ';' to be treated other than a pipe operator or semicolon or that prevents function lookup on b or c.
The command utility is somewhat similar to the Eighth Edition shell builtin command, but since command also goes to the file system to search for utilities, the name builtin would not be intuitive.
The command utility is most likely to be provided as a regular built-in. It is not listed as a special built-in for the following reasons:
The removal of exportable functions made the special precedence of a special built-in unnecessary.
A special built-in has special properties (see Special Built-In Utilities ) that were inappropriate for invoking other utilities. For example, two commands such as:
date > unwritable-file
command date > unwritable-file
would have entirely different results; in a non-interactive script, the former would continue to execute the next command, the latter would abort. Introducing this semantic difference along with suppressing functions was seen to be non-intuitive.
The -p option is present because it is useful to be able to ensure a safe path search that finds all the standard utilities. This search might not be identical to the one that occurs through one of the exec functions (as defined in the System Interfaces volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001) when PATH is unset. At the very least, this feature is required to allow the script to access the correct version of getconf so that the value of the default path can be accurately retrieved.
The command -v and -V options were added to satisfy requirements from users that are currently accomplished by three different historical utilities: type in the System V shell, whence in the KornShell, and which in the C shell. Since there is no historical agreement on how and what to accomplish here, the POSIX command utility was enhanced and the historical utilities were left unmodified. The C shell which merely conducts a path search. The KornShell whence is more elaborate-in addition to the categories required by POSIX, it also reports on tracked aliases, exported aliases, and undefined functions.
The output format of -V was left mostly unspecified because human users are its only audience. Applications should not be written to care about this information; they can use the output of -v to differentiate between various types of commands, but the additional information that may be emitted by the more verbose -V is not needed and should not be arbitrarily constrained in its verbosity or localization for application parsing reasons.
Command Search and Execution , Shell Execution Environment , Special Built-In Utilities , sh , type , the System Interfaces volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, exec
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