Why Sponsor Oils? | source | all docs for version 0.22.0 | all versions | oilshell.org
Oils Reference — Chapter Front End
This chapter describes command line usage and lexing.
(in progress)
bin/oils-for-unix is an executable that contains OSH, YSH, and more.
Usage: oils-for-unix MAIN_NAME ARG*
MAIN_NAME ARG*
It behaves like busybox. The command name can be passed as the first argument:
oils-for-unix ysh -c 'echo hi'
More commonly, it's invoked through a symlink like 'ysh', which causes it to
behave like that command:
ysh -c 'echo hi'
bin/osh is compatible with POSIX shell, bash, and other shells.
Usage: osh FLAG* SCRIPT ARG*
osh FLAG* -c COMMAND ARG*
osh FLAG*
The command line accepted by `bin/osh` is compatible with /bin/sh and bash.
osh -c 'echo hi'
osh myscript.sh
echo 'echo hi' | osh
It also has a few enhancements:
osh -n -c 'hello' # pretty-print the AST
osh --ast-format text -n -c 'hello' # print it full
osh accepts POSIX sh flags, with these additions:
-n parse the program but don't execute it. Print the AST.
--ast-format what format the AST should be in
bin/ysh is the shell with data tYpes, influenced by pYthon, JavaScript, ...
Usage: ysh FLAG* SCRIPT ARG*
ysh FLAG* -c COMMAND ARG*
ysh FLAG*
`bin/ysh` is the same as `bin/osh` with a the `ysh:all` option group set. So
`bin/ysh` also accepts shell flags.
ysh -c 'echo hi'
ysh myscript.ysh
echo 'echo hi' | ysh
If the --rcfile flag is specified, that file will be executed on startup. Otherwise:
bin/osh
runs ~/.config/oils/oshrc
bin/ysh
runs ~/.config/oils/yshrc
Pass --rcfile /dev/null or --norc to disable the startup file.
If the --rcdir flag is specified, files in that folder will be executed on startup. Otherwise:
bin/osh
runs everything in ~/.config/oils/oshrc.d/
bin/ysh
runs everything in ~/.config/oils/yshrc.d/
Pass --norc to disable the startup directory.
History is read?
Oils is often built with GNU readline, which recognizes many terminal commands for editing input.
A useful option is set -o vi
, which tells GNU readline to accept vi keys.
The meaning of exit codes is a convention, and generally follows one of two paradigms.
0
for success.1
for runtime error
echo foo > out.txt
and out.txt
can't be opened.fg
and there's not job to put in the foreground.2
for parse error. This means that we didn't attempt to do
anything, rather than doing something, then it fails.
echo $(
.read -z
.3
for runtime expression errors. The expression language is new to
Oils, so its errors have a new exit code.
42 / 0
a[1000]
POSIX exit codes:
126
for permission denied when running a command (errno EACCES
)127
for command not foundHint: Error checking often looks like this:
try {
ls /bad
}
if (_status !== 0) {
echo 'failed'
}
0
for true1
for false.
test -f foo
and foo
isn't a file.2
for error (usage error, parse error, etc.)
test -q
: the flag isn't accepted.Hint: The boolstatus
builtin ensures that false and error aren't confused:
if boolstatus test -f foo {
echo 'foo exists'
}
See YSH Fixes Shell's Error Handling for more detail.
A comment starts with #
and goes until the end of the line.
echo hi # print a greeting
A backslash \
at the end of a line continues the line without executing it:
ls /usr/bin \
/usr/lib \
~/src # A single command split over three lines
In most places, Oils uses the same definition of ASCII whitespace as JSON. That is, any of these 4 bytes are considered whitespace:
[ \t\r\n] # space, tab, carriage return, newline
Sometimes newlines are significant, e.g. after shell commands. Then the set of whitespace characters is:
[ \t\r]
(We don't handle the Windows \r\n
sequence in a special way. Instead, \r
is often treated like space and tab.)
Examples:
$(( 1 + 2 ))
, ASCII whitespace is ignored.42 + a[i] * f(x)
, ASCII whitespace is ignored.Exceptions:
\r
may not always be whitespace.
$IFS
doesn't include \r
.trim()
functions also respect Unicode space.The ASCII control chars have byte values 0x00
to 0x1F
. This set includes 3
whitespace chars:
\t
aka 0x09
\n
aka 0x0a
\r
aka 0x0d
(It doesn't include the space - 0x20
.)
General rules:
Note about NUL
aka 0x00
:
Doc comments look like this:
proc deploy {
### Deploy the app
echo hi
}
The ... prefix starts a single command over multiple lines. It allows writing long commands without \ continuation lines, and the resulting limitations on where you can put comments.
Single command example:
... chromium-browser
# comment on its own line
--no-proxy-server
--incognito # comment to the right
;
Long pipelines and and-or chains:
... find .
# exclude tests
| grep -v '_test.py'
| xargs wc -l
| sort -n
;
... ls /
&& ls /bin
&& ls /lib
|| error "oops"
;
Print files embedded in the oils-for-unix
binary to stdout. Example:
osh --tool cat-em stdlib/math.ysh stdlib/other.ysh
The reference is divided in to "chapters", each of which has its own table of
contents. Type:
help osh-$CHAPTER
Where $CHAPTER is one of:
front-end
command-lang
osh-assign
word-lang
mini-lang
builtin-cmd
option
special-var
plugin
Example:
help osh-word-lang
The reference is divided in to "chapters", each of which has its own table of
contents. Type:
help ysh-$CHAPTER
Where $CHAPTER is one of:
front-end
command-lang
expr-lang
word-lang
builtin-cmd
option
special-var
type-method
builtin-func
Example:
help ysh-expr-lang