The exec builtin command¶
Synopsis¶
exec [-a NAME] [-cl] [COMMAND] [ARG...] [REDIRECTION...]
Description¶
The exec
builtin command is used to
- replace the shell with a given program (executing it, not as new process)
- set redirections for the program to execute or for the current shell
If only redirections are given, the redirections affect the current shell without executing any program.
Options¶
Option | Description |
---|---|
-a NAME | Passes NAME as zeroth argument for the program to be executed |
-c | Execute the program with an empty (cleared) environment |
-l | Prepends a dash (- ) to the zeroth argument of the program to be executed, similar to what the login program does |
Exit status¶
- on redirection errors it returns 1, otherwise 0
- on exec failures:
- a non-interactive shell terminates; if the shell option execfail is set
exec
returns failure - in an interactive shell,
exec
returns failure
- a non-interactive shell terminates; if the shell option execfail is set
Examples¶
Wrapper around a program¶
myprog=/bin/ls
echo "This is the wrapper script, it will exec $myprog"
# do some vodoo here, probably change the arguments etc.
# well, stuff a wrapper is there for
exec "$myprog" "$@"
Open a file as input for the script¶
# open it
exec 3< input.txt
# for example: read one line from the file(-descriptor)
read -u 3 LINE
# or
read LINE <&3
# finally, close it
exec 3<&-
Overall script logfile¶
To redirect the whole stdout
and stderr
of the shell or shellscript to a file, you can use the exec
builtin command:
Portability considerations¶
*POSIX(r) specifies error code ranges:
* if ''exec'' can't find the program to execute, the error code shall be 126
* on a redirection error, the error code shall be between 1 and 125
* the ''-a NAME'' option appeared in Bash 4.2-alpha
* POSIX(r) does **not** specify any options for ''exec'' (like ''-c'', ''-l'', ''-a NAME'').