Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: ksh vs bash
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting ksh vs bash Post 302427168 by pasricha.kunal on Friday 4th of June 2010 06:01:33 AM
Old 06-04-2010
ksh vs bash

what is diff between KSH and Bash can you tell me some commands which run in either of two but not in both.
while doing normal shell programming I am unable to find diffrence between two
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Ksh vs Bash

Hi Buddy, Can any one help me to overcome from the below problem? #/usr/bin/ksh typeset -Z dd dd=1 echo $dd =========== out put for the above is 01 same script I'm migrating to bash but typeset -Z option is not found in bash, Pls get me the equivalent option in BASH Thanks in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: krishna
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need help : KSH>BASH

Hello, I've written a script in KSH, but now it needs to run on a system without KSH, ie sh or bash etc, bash seems best bet, but the simplest of things don't seem to work.. The snippet below is the main issue, basically I'm reading from a dat file and putting fields into arrays.. Dat file... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: itsupplies
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

bash and ksh: variable lost in loop in bash?

Hi, I use AIX (ksh) and Linux (bash) servers. I'm trying to do scripts to will run in both ksh and bash, and most of the time it works. But this time I don't get it in bash (I'm more familar in ksh). The goal of my script if to read a "config file" (like "ini" file), and make various report.... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: estienne
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

ksh to bash mode

Hi guys... I have a ksh shell by default, so when I login to my unix box, all my .profile statements gets executed(including the aliases). But for some reasons(may be not comfortable using ksh), I would always switch to BASH(in the same session but as a child process) but in the process I am... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: anduzzi
16 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Specified Ksh but executing in bash

Hi, I am a new bie to unix shell programming. I have specified ksh as the first line in my script but when executed it complains. *********** Script=test******************** #!/usr/bin/ksh echo hello print -p 123 ************************************ ++++++++ Execution... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: akhilnagpal
7 Replies

6. Solaris

ksh vs bash

Hi, I've a general question regarding shell. I 've seen that every where i worked in production environment people are using ksh .. but i like to use .. bash .. is there any particular reason why hardcore sysadmins use ksh ? (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: fugitive
8 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

bash preferred or ksh with bash features

I'm a user on a fairly locked down sys V server. By default, I have ksh set as my default shell. I added to my .profile: bash -o vi so when I login, it goes into bash so I can take advantage of tab completion and use the up key to bring up previous commands. However, whenever I want to exit, I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrwatkin
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

BASH to KSH

I have a script in KSH and now need to incorporate this into another script which is in BASH. OUr script contains code like below in good number of places. Eg: echo “A B C” | read VAR1 VAR2 VAR3 This works only in ksh and not in BASH. Please let me know 1. Which is the equivalent... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cvsanthosh
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bash to ksh problem

Hi all Below code works in bash but it is not working in ksh. enddate=`date -d "$enddate + $i day" "+%Y_%m_%d"` Please help me how it works in ksh Thanks (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: pmreddy
10 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Changing from bash to ksh

Hello, I want to run a script written in ksh but my default shell is bash as root e.g in the script it has #!/bin/ksh i have gone into /etc/passwd to change it from :/bin/bash to /bin/ksh but still giving me an error when running scripts such as ./installer -bash: ./installer: /bin/ksh:... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: DOkuwa
3 Replies
GIT-SH(1)																 GIT-SH(1)

NAME
git-sh -- a git shell SYNOPSIS
git-sh DESCRIPTION
git-sh starts an interactive bash(1) session modified for git-heavy workflows. Typical usage is to change into the directory of a git work tree or bare repository and run the git-sh command to start an interactive shell session. Top-level command aliases are created for all core git(1) subcommands, git-sh builtin aliases (see BUILTIN ALIASES), and git command aliases defined in ~/.gitconfig. BUILTIN ALIASES
git-sh loads a set of standard aliases in addition to all core git commands. The builtin aliases are overridden by aliases defined in the user or system gitconfig files. a git add b git branch c git checkout d git diff f git fetch --prune k git cherry-pick l git log --pretty=oneline --abbrev-commit n git commit --verbose --amend r git remote s git commit --dry-run --short t git diff --cached The Staging Area a git add aa git add --update (mnemonic: "add all") stage git add ap git add --patch p git diff --cached (mnemonic: "patch") ps git diff --cached --stat (mnemonic: "patch stat") unstage git reset HEAD Commits and Commit History ci git commit --verbose ca git commit --verbose --all amend git commit --verbose --amend n git commit --verbose --amend k git cherry-pick re git rebase --interactive pop git reset --soft HEAD^ peek git log -p --max-count=1 Fetching and Pulling f git fetch pm git pull (mnemonic: "pull merge") pr git pull --rebase (mnemonic: "pull rebase") Miscellaneous Commands d git diff ds git diff --stat (mnemonic: "diff stat") hard git reset --hard soft git reset --soft scrap git checkout HEAD CUSTOM ALIASES
Anything defined in the [alias] section of the repository, user, or system git config files are also available as top-level shell commands. Assuming a ~/.gitconfig that looked like this: [alias] ci = commit --verbose ca = commit -a d = diff s = status thanks = !git-thanks ... you might then have the following shell session: master!something> echo "stuff" >somefile master!something*> s M somefile master!something*> d diff --git a/somefile b/somefile -- a/somefile ++ b/somefile @@ -0,0 +1 @@ + stuff master!something*> ca -m "add stuff" master!something> thanks HEAD PROMPT The default prompt shows the current branch, a bang (!), and then the relative path to the current working directory from the root of the work tree. If the work tree includes modified files that have not yet been staged, a dirty status indicator (*) is also displayed. The git-sh prompt includes ANSI colors when the git color.ui option is set and enabled. To enable git-sh's prompt colors explicitly, set the color.sh config value to auto: $ git config --global color.sh auto Customize prompt colors by setting the color.sh.branch, color.sh.workdir, and color.sh.dirty git config values: $ git config --global color.sh.branch 'yellow reverse' $ git config --global color.sh.workdir 'blue bold' $ git config --global color.sh.dirty 'red' See colors in git for information. COMPLETION
Bash completion support is automatically enabled for all git built-in commands and also for aliases defined in the user ~/.gitconfig file. The auto-completion logic is smart enough to know an alias d that expands to git-diff should use the same completion configuration as the git-diff command. The completion code is a slightly modified version of the git bash completion script shipped with the core git distribution. The script is built into thegit-sh executable at compile time and need not be obtained or installed separately. CUSTOMIZING
Most git-sh behavior can be configured by editing the user or system gitconfig files (~/.gitconfig and /etc/gitconfig) either by hand or using git-config(1). The [alias] section is used to create basic command aliases. The /etc/gitshrc and ~/.gitshrc files are sourced (in that order) immediately before the shell becomes interactive. The ~/.bashrc file is sourced before either /etc/gitshrc or ~/.gitshrc. Any bash customizations defined there and not explicitly overrid- den by git-sh are also available. ENVIRONMENT
PS1 Set to the dynamic git-sh prompt. This can be customized in the ~/.gitshrc or /etc/gitshrc files. GIT_DIR Explicitly set the path to the git repository instead of assuming the nearest .git path. GIT_WORK_TREE Explicitly set the path to the root of the work tree instead of assuming the nearest parent directory with a .git repository. SEE ALSO
bash(1), git(1), git-config(1),http://github.com/rtomayko/git-sh Ryan Tomayko March 2010 GIT-SH(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:35 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy