Chapter 31. Options

Options are settings that change shell and/or script behavior.

The set command enables options within a script. At the point in the script where you want the options to take effect, use set -o option-name or, in short form, set -option-abbrev. These two forms are equivalent.

      #!/bin/bash

      set -o verbose
      # Echoes all commands before executing.
      

      #!/bin/bash

      set -v
      # Exact same effect as above.
      

Note

To disable an option within a script, use set +o option-name or set +option-abbrev.

      #!/bin/bash

      set -o verbose
      # Command echoing on.
      command
      ...
      command

      set +o verbose
      # Command echoing off.
      command
      # Not echoed.


      set -v
      # Command echoing on.
      command
      ...
      command

      set +v
      # Command echoing off.
      command

      exit 0
      

An alternate method of enabling options in a script is to specify them immediately following the #! script header.

      #!/bin/bash -x
      #
      # Body of script follows.
      

It is also possible to enable script options from the command line. Some options that will not work with set are available this way. Among these are -i, force script to run interactive.

bash -v script-name

bash -o verbose script-name

The following is a listing of some useful options. They may be specified in either abbreviated form or by complete name.

Table 31-1. bash options

Abbreviation Name Effect
-C noclobber Prevent overwriting of files by redirection (may be overridden by >|)
-D (none) List double-quoted strings prefixed by $, but do not execute commands in script
-a allexport Export all defined variables
-b notify Notify when jobs running in background terminate (not of much use in a script)
-c ... (none) Read commands from ...
-f noglob Filename expansion (globbing) disabled
-i interactive Script runs in interactive mode
-p privileged Script runs as "suid" (caution!)
-r restricted Script runs in restricted mode (see Chapter 21).
-u nounset Attempt to use undefined variable outputs error message, and forces an exit
-v verbose Print each command to stdout before executing it
-x xtrace Similar to -v, but expands commands
-e errexit Abort script at first error (when a command exits with non-zero status)
-n noexec Read commands in script, but do not execute them (syntax check)
-s stdin Read commands from stdin
-t (none) Exit after first command
- (none) End of options flag. All other arguments are positional parameters.
-- (none) Unset positional parameters. If arguments given (-- arg1 arg2), positional parameters set to arguments.