Skip to content

42 School implementation of the Bourne-Again Shell (Bash).

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

AlecLavallee/Minishell42

Repository files navigation

Minishell42

42 School implementation of the Bourne-Again Shell (Bash) that was developped by project GNU. A program that replicates the behavior and environment of Bash and will help us learn more about the inner workings of shells.

#Main documentation provided for Bash by GNU

Whats's is Bash?

Bash is the shell, or command language interpreter, for the GNU operating system. The name is an acronym for the ‘Bourne-Again SHell’, a pun on Stephen Bourne, the author of the direct ancestor of the current Unix shell sh, which appeared in the Seventh Edition Bell Labs Research version of Unix.

Bash is largely compatible with sh and incorporates useful features from the Korn shell ksh and the C shell csh. It is intended to be a conformant implementation of the IEEE POSIX Shell and Tools portion of the IEEE POSIX specification (IEEE Standard 1003.1). It offers functional improvements over sh for both interactive and programming use.

While the GNU operating system provides other shells, including a version of csh, Bash is the default shell. Like other GNU software, Bash is quite portable. It currently runs on nearly every version of Unix and a few other operating systems - independently-supported ports exist for MS-DOS, OS/2, and Windows platforms.

What' is Shell?

At its base, a shell is simply a macro processor that executes commands. The term macro processor means functionality where text and symbols are expanded to create larger expressions.

A Unix shell is both a command interpreter and a programming language. As a command interpreter, the shell provides the user interface to the rich set of GNU utilities. The programming language features allow these utilities to be combined. Files containing commands can be created, and become commands themselves. These new commands have the same status as system commands in directories such as /bin, allowing users or groups to establish custom environments to automate their common tasks.

Shells may be used interactively or non-interactively. In interactive mode, they accept input typed from the keyboard. When executing non-interactively, shells execute commands read from a file.

A shell allows execution of GNU commands, both synchronously and asynchronously. The shell waits for synchronous commands to complete before accepting more input; asynchronous commands continue to execute in parallel with the shell while it reads and executes additional commands. The redirection constructs permit fine-grained control of the input and output of those commands. Moreover, the shell allows control over the contents of commands’ environments.

Shells also provide a small set of built-in commands (builtins) implementing functionality impossible or inconvenient to obtain via separate utilities. For example, cd, break, continue, and exec cannot be implemented outside of the shell because they directly manipulate the shell itself. The history, getopts, kill, or pwd builtins, among others, could be implemented in separate utilities, but they are more convenient to use as builtin commands. All of the shell builtins are described in subsequent sections.

While executing commands is essential, most of the power (and complexity) of shells is due to their embedded programming languages. Like any high-level language, the shell provides variables, flow control constructs, quoting, and functions.

Shells offer features geared specifically for interactive use rather than to augment the programming language. These interactive features include job control, command line editing, command history and aliases. Each of these features is described in this manual.

Questions related to the subject:

Afficher un prompt en l’attente d’une nouvelle commande

Chercher et lancer le bon exécutable (en se basant sur la variable d’environnement PATH, ou sur un chemin relatif ou absolu).

Posséder un historique fonctionnel.

Ne pas interpréter de quotes (guillemets) non fermés ou de caractères spéciaux non demandés dans le sujet, tels que \ (le backslash) ou ; (le point-virgule). Gérer ’ (single quote) qui doit empêcher le shell d’interpréter les méta-caractères présents dans la séquence entre guillemets. Gérer " (double quote) qui doit empêcher le shell d’interpréter les méta-caractères présents dans la séquence entre guillemets sauf le $ (signe dollar). Implémenter les redirections

Useful links : https://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/index.html

About

42 School implementation of the Bourne-Again Shell (Bash).

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published