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Bash Shell

Different types of Shells

In this section, we will take a look at different types of shells.

  • There are different types of shells in linux, some of the popular ones are below
    • Bourne Shell (sh)
    • C Shell (csh or tsh)
    • Korn Shell (ksh)
    • Z Shell (zsh)
    • Bourne again shell (Bash)

To check the shell being used. Use the command echo $SHELL

$ echo $SHELL

To change the default shell. Use the command chsh, you will be prompted for the password and following that input the name of the new shell. You have to login into new terminal session to see this change though.

$ chsh

Bash Shell Features

  1. Bash supports command auto-completion. What this means is bash means to auto-complete commands for you if you type part of it and press the tab key

    bash-auto

    bash-auto1

  2. In Bash we can set custom aliases for the actual commands

    $ date
    $ alias dt=date
    $ dt
    
  3. Use the history command to list the previous run commands that you ran earlier

    $ history
    

Bash environment variables

To print SHELL environment variable

$ echo $SHELL

To see a list of all environment variables. Run env from the terminal

$ env

To set an environment variable with in the shell. The value is not carry forward to any other process.

$ OFFICE=caleston

To set an environment variable we can use the export command. To make the value carry forward to any other process.

$ export OFFICE=caleston

To persistently set an environment variable over subsequent login or a reboot add them to the ~/.profile or ~/.pam_environment in the users home directory.

$ echo "export OFFICE=caleston" >> ~/.profile (or)
$ echo "export OFFICE=caleston" >> ~/.pam_environment

To check the value of a environment variable called LOGNAME

$ echo $LOGNAME

Path Variable

Speaking about the environment variables, when a user issues an external command into the shell, the shell uses path variable to search for these external commands

To see the directories defined in path variable. Use the command echo $PATH.

$ echo $PATH

To check if the location of the command can be identified. Use the which command

Syntax: which <command>

$ which obs-studio

To define a command in the PATH variable. To add we can use the export command.

$ export PATH=$PATH:/opt/obs/bin
$ which obs-studio

Customize Bash Prompt

Once you login into the shell, the line you see is the bash prompt.

bash-prompt

It can be customized to see the username and the hostname

bash-prompt1

The bash prompt is set in control by a set of special shell environment variables. The most common of these and the one we will focus on is PS1 variable.

bash-prompt2

To see the value assign to PS1, type echo $PS1

$ echo $PS1

To change the PS1 to only display the word ubuntu-server.

$ PS1="ubuntu-server"
$ echo $PS1

To customize further, have a look at the below special character.

bash-prompt3

To change the bash prompt to display date, time, username of the current user, the hostname and the current working directory

$ PS1="[\d \t \u@\h:\w ] $ "