The yash
shell has a printf
built-in, according to its manual.
However, this is what I see in a yash
shell with default configuration:
$ command -v printf /usr/bin/printf $ type printf printf: a regular built-in at /usr/bin/printf
Is printf
a built-in in this shell or not? The result is similar for a number of other supposedly built-in utilities that are also available as external commands.
As a comparison, in pdksh
(ksh
on OpenBSD, where printf
is not a built-in):
$ command -v printf /usr/bin/printf $ type printf printf is /usr/bin/printf
And in bash
(where printf
is a built-in):
$ command -v printf printf $ type printf printf is a shell builtin
Answers:
Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.
Method 1
The yash
shell does have, and does use, a built-in version of printf
(and other utilities). It just happens to be very pedantically POSIX compliant in the way it formulates the result of the command -v
and type
commands.
As mosvy comments, the POSIX standard requires that a regular built-in command be available as an external command in $PATH
for the built-in version of the command to be executed.
This is the relevant text from the standard:
Command Search and Execution
If a simple command results in a command name and an optional list of arguments, the following actions shall be performed:
- If the command name does not contain any <slash> characters, the first successful step in the following sequence shall occur:
- a. If the command name matches the name of a special built-in utility, that special built-in utility shall be invoked.
[…]- e. Otherwise, the command shall be searched for using the PATH environment variable as described in XBD Environment Variables :
- i. If the search is successful:
- a. If the system has implemented the utility as a regular built-in or as a shell function, it shall be invoked at this point in the path search.
- b. Otherwise, the shell executes the utility in a separate utility environment […]
[…]- ii. If the search is unsuccessful, the command shall fail with an exit status of 127 and the shell shall write an error message.
- If the command name contains at least one <slash>, […]
This means that the output of command -v printf
signifies that the printf
command was found in the search path, while the output of type printf
adds to this that the command is a regular built-in.
Since the printf
command was found in the search path, and since it’s a regular built-in in the shell, yash
will call its built-in version of the command. If the printf
was not found in the path, and if the yash
shell was running in POSIX-ly correct mode, an error would have been generated instead.
yash
prides itself on being a very POSIX compliant shell, and this is also true if we look at what POSIX says about command -v
:
-v
Write a string to standard output that indicates the pathname or command that will be used by the shell, in the current shell execution environment (see Shell Execution Environment), to invoke
command_name
, but do not invokecommand_name
.
- Utilities, regular built-in utilities,
command_names
including a<slash>
character, and any implementation-defined functions that are found using thePATH
variable (as described in Command Search and Execution), shall be written as absolute pathnames.
Method 2
The Watanabe shell has three sorts of built-ins, described in detail in its manual. All of the built-in commands are also listed there, but one has to infer that something is a “regular” built-in command from the absence of any note saying that the command is a “special” or a “semi-special” built-in. Regular built-ins are unmarked.
printf
is one such “regular” built-in. In native mode it is always invoked, irrespective of whether there is an external command found by that name.
$ PATH=/usr/bin $ printf printf: this command requires an operand $ type printf printf: a regular built-in at /usr/bin/printf $ $ PATH=/ $ printf printf: this command requires an operand $ type printf printf: a regular built-in (not found in $PATH) $
But when the posixly-correct
shell option is set it is only a built-in if the external command can be found on the PATH
.
$ set --posixly-correct $ $ PATH=/usr/bin $ printf printf: this command requires an operand $ $ PATH=/ $ printf yash: no such command `printf' $
This is actually conformant to what the Single Unix Specifiation says, and has said since at least 1997.
It differs from the Z shell, the 93 Korn shell, the Bourne Again shell, and the Debian Almquist shell, none of which either implement or document such behaviour for regular built-ins. The Z shell, for example, documents that regular built-ins are always found, before the step that searches PATH
. So too does the Debian Almquist shell. And that’s what these shells all do, even if invoked as sh
with their turn-on-POSIX options.
% /bin/exec -a sh zsh -c "PATH=/ ; type printf ; printf" printf is a shell builtin zsh:printf:1: not enough arguments % /bin/exec -a sh ksh93 -c "PATH=/ ; type printf ; printf" printf is a shell builtin Usage: printf [ options ] format [string ...] % /bin/exec -a sh bash --posix -c "PATH=/ type printf ; printf" printf is a shell builtin printf: usage: printf [-v var] format [arguments] % /bin/exec -a sh dash -c "PATH=/ ; type printf ; printf" printf is a shell builtin sh: 1: printf: usage: printf format [arg ...] %
However, not running printf
when it is not on the PATH
is the behaviour of the PD Korn shell, the Heirloom Bourne shell, and the MirBSD Korn shell; because they do not have a printf
built-in in the first place. ☺
% /bin/exec -a sh `command -v ksh` -c "PATH=/ ; type printf ; printf" printf not found sh: printf: not found % /bin/exec -a sh `command -v oksh` -c "PATH=/ ; type printf ; printf" printf not found sh: printf: not found % /bin/exec -a sh `command -v jsh` -c "PATH=/ ; type printf ; printf" printf not found sh: printf: not found % /bin/exec -a sh mksh -c "PATH=/ ; type printf ; printf" printf not found sh: printf: not found % ksh -c "type printf ; printf" printf is a tracked alias for /usr/bin/printf usage: printf format [arguments ...] % oksh -c "type printf ; printf" printf is a tracked alias for /usr/bin/printf usage: printf format [arguments ...] % jsh -c "type printf ; printf" printf is hashed (/usr/bin/printf) usage: printf format [arguments ...] % mksh -c "type printf ; printf" printf is a tracked alias for /usr/bin/printf usage: printf format [arguments ...] $
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0