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Contents

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a CLI?

A "CLI" is a command-line interface.

How do I incorporate BASH3 Boilerplate into my own project?

You can incorporate BASH3 Boilerplate into your project in one of two ways:

  1. Copy the desired portions of main.sh into your own script.
  2. Download main.sh and start pressing the delete-key to remove unwanted things

Once the main.sh has been tailor-made for your project, you can either append your own script in the same file, or source it in the following ways:

  1. Copy main.sh into the same directory as your script and then edit and embed it into your script using Bash's source include feature, e.g.:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
source main.sh
  1. Source main.sh in your script or at the command line:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
source main.sh

How do I add a command-line flag?

  1. Copy the line from the main.sh read block that most resembles the desired behavior and paste the line into the same block.
  2. Edit the single-character (e.g., -d) and, if present, the multi-character (e.g., --debug) versions of the flag in the copied line.
  3. Omit the [arg] text in the copied line, if the desired flag takes no arguments.
  4. Omit or edit the text after Default= to set or not set default values, respectively.
  5. Omit the Required. text, if the flag is optional.

How do I access the value of a command-line argument?

To find out the value of an argument, append the corresponding single-character flag to the text $arg_. For example, if the [read block] contains the line

   -t --temp  [arg] Location of tempfile. Default="/tmp/bar"

then you can evaluate the corresponding argument and assign it to a variable as follows:

__temp_file_name="${arg_t}"

What is a magic variable?

The magic variables in main.sh are special in that they have a different value, depending on your environment. You can use ${__file} to get a reference to your current script, and ${__dir} to get a reference to the directory it lives in. This is not to be confused with the location of the calling script that might be sourcing the ${__file}, which is accessible via ${0}, or the current directory of the administrator running the script, accessible via $(pwd).

How do I submit an issue report?

Please visit our Issues page.

How can I contribute to this project?

Please fork this repository. After that, create a branch containing your suggested changes and submit a pull request based on the main branch of https://github.com/kvz/bash3boilerplate/. We are always more than happy to accept your contributions!

Why are you typing BASH in all caps?

As an acronym, Bash stands for Bourne-again shell, and is usually written with one uppercase. This project's name, however, is "BASH3 Boilerplate". It is a reference to "HTML5 Boilerplate", which was founded to serve a similar purpose, only for crafting webpages. Somewhat inconsistent but true to Unix ancestry the abbreviation for our project is "b3bp".

You are saying you are portable, but why won't b3bp code run in dash / busybox / posh / ksh / mksh / zsh?

When we say portable, we mean across Bash versions. Bash is widespread and most systems offer at least version 3 of it. Make sure you have that available and b3bp will work for you.

We run automated tests to make sure that it will. Here is some proof for the following platforms:

  • Linux GNU bash, version 4.2.25(1)-release (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)
  • OSX GNU bash, version 3.2.51(1)-release (x86_64-apple-darwin13)

This portability, however, does not mean that we try to be compatible with KornShell, Zsh, posh, yash, dash, or other shells. We allow syntax that would explode if you pasted it in anything but Bash 3 and up.

How do I do Operating System detection?

We used to offer a magic __os variable, but we quickly discovered that it would be hard to create a satisfactory abstraction that is not only correct, but also covers enough use-cases, while still having a relatively small footprint in main.sh.

For simple OS detection, we recommend using the ${OSTYPE} variable available in Bash as is demoed in this stackoverflow post:

if [[ "${OSTYPE}" = "linux-gnu" ]]; then
  echo "GNU Linux"
elif [[ "${OSTYPE}" = "darwin"* ]]; then
  echo "Mac OSX"
elif [[ "${OSTYPE}" = "cygwin" ]]; then
  echo "POSIX compatibility layer and Linux environment emulation for Windows"
elif [[ "${OSTYPE}" = "msys" ]]; then
  echo "Lightweight shell and GNU utilities compiled for Windows (part of MinGW)"
elif [[ "${OSTYPE}" = "win32" ]]; then
  echo "I'm not sure this can happen."
elif [[ "${OSTYPE}" = "freebsd"* ]]; then
  echo "..."
else
  echo "Unknown."
fi

How do I access a potentially unset (environment) variable?

The set -o nounset line in main.sh causes error termination when an unset environment variables is detected as unbound. There are multiple ways to avoid this.

Some code to illustrate:

# method 1
echo ${NAME1:-Damian} # echos Damian, $NAME1 is still unset
# method 2
echo ${NAME2:=Damian} # echos Damian, $NAME2 is set to Damian
# method 3
NAME3=${NAME3:-Damian}; echo ${NAME3} # echos Damian, $NAME3 is set to Damian

This subject is briefly touched on as well in the Safety and Portability section under point 5. b3bp currently uses method 1 when we want to access a variable that could be undeclared, and method 3 when we also want to set a default to an undeclared variable, because we feel it is more readable than method 2. We feel := is easily overlooked, and not very beginner friendly. Method 3 seems more explicit in that regard in our humble opinion.

How can I detect or trap Ctrl-C and other signals?

You can trap Unix signals like Ctrl-C with code similar to:

# trap ctrl-c and call ctrl_c()
trap ctrl_c INT

function ctrl_c() {
        echo "** Trapped CTRL-C"
}

See http://mywiki.wooledge.org/SignalTrap for a list of signals, examples, and an in depth discussion.

How can I get the PID of my running script?

The PID of a running script is contained in the ${$} variable. This is not the pid of any subshells. With Bash 4 you can get the PID of your subshell with ${BASHPID}. For a comprehensive list of Bash built in variables see, e.g., http://www.tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/internalvariables.html