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Selasa, 25 Oktober 2011

Belajar Linux : Gratis E-Book GNU Bash Reference Manual

Belajar Linux : Gratis E-Book GNU Bash Reference Manual
GNU Bash Reference Manual


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 /bin/sh, which appeared in the Seventh Edition Bell Labs Research version of Unix.

Publisher's Preface
1 Introduction

1.1 What is Bash?
1.2 What is a shell?

2 Definitions
3 Basic Shell Features

3.1 Shell Syntax

3.1.1 Shell Operation
3.1.2 Quoting

3.1.2.1 Escape Character
3.1.2.2 Single Quotes
3.1.2.3 Double Quotes
3.1.2.4 ANSI-C Quoting
3.1.2.5 Locale-Specific Translation

3.1.3 Comments

3.2 Shell Commands

3.2.1 Simple Commands
3.2.2 Pipelines
3.2.3 Lists of Commands
3.2.4 Compound Commands

3.2.4.1 Looping Constructs
3.2.4.2 Conditional Constructs
3.2.4.3 Grouping Commands

3.3 Shell Functions
3.4 Shell Parameters

3.4.1 Positional Parameters
3.4.2 Special Parameters

3.5 Shell Expansions

3.5.1 Brace Expansion
3.5.2 Tilde Expansion
3.5.3 Shell Parameter Expansion
3.5.4 Command Substitution
3.5.5 Arithmetic Expansion
3.5.6 Process Substitution
3.5.7 Word Splitting
3.5.8 Filename Expansion

3.5.8.1 Pattern Matching

3.5.9 Quote Removal

3.6 Redirections

3.6.1 Redirecting Input
3.6.2 Redirecting Output
3.6.3 Appending Redirected Output
3.6.4 Redirecting Standard Output and Standard Error
3.6.5 Here Documents
3.6.6 Here Strings
3.6.7 Duplicating File Descriptors
3.6.8 Moving File Descriptors
3.6.9 Opening File Descriptors for Reading and Writing

3.7 Executing Commands

3.7.1 Simple Command Expansion
3.7.2 Command Search and Execution
3.7.3 Command Execution Environment
3.7.4 Environment
3.7.5 Exit Status
3.7.6 Signals

3.8 Shell Scripts

4 Shell Builtin Commands

4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins
4.2 Bash Builtin Commands
4.3 The Set Builtin
4.4 Special Builtins

5 Shell Variables

5.1 Bourne Shell Variables
5.2 Bash Variables

6 Bash Features

6.1 Invoking Bash
6.2 Bash Startup Files
6.3 Interactive Shells

6.3.1 What is an Interactive Shell?
6.3.2 Is this Shell Interactive?
6.3.3 Interactive Shell Behavior

6.4 Bash Conditional Expressions
6.5 Shell Arithmetic
6.6 Aliases
6.7 Arrays
6.8 The Directory Stack

6.8.1 Directory Stack Builtins

6.9 Controlling the Prompt
6.10 The Restricted Shell
6.11 Bash POSIX Mode

7 Job Control

7.1 Job Control Basics
7.2 Job Control Builtins
7.3 Job Control Variables

8 Command Line Editing

8.1 Introduction to Line Editing
8.2 Readline Interaction

8.2.1 Readline Bare Essentials
8.2.2 Readline Movement Commands
8.2.3 Readline Killing Commands
8.2.4 Readline Arguments
8.2.5 Searching for Commands in the History

8.3 Readline Init File

8.3.1 Readline Init File Syntax
8.3.2 Conditional Init Constructs
8.3.3 Sample Init File

8.4 Bindable Readline Commands

8.4.1 Commands For Moving
8.4.2 Commands For Manipulating The History
8.4.3 Commands For Changing Text
8.4.4 Killing And Yanking
8.4.5 Specifying Numeric Arguments
8.4.6 Letting Readline Type For You
8.4.7 Keyboard Macros
8.4.8 Some Miscellaneous Commands

8.5 Readline vi Mode
8.6 Programmable Completion
8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins

9 Using History Interactively

9.1 Bash History Facilities
9.2 Bash History Builtins
9.3 History Expansion

9.3.1 Event Designators
9.3.2 Word Designators
9.3.3 Modifiers

10 Installing Bash

10.1 Basic Installation
10.2 Compilers and Options
10.3 Compiling For Multiple Architectures
10.4 Installation Names
10.5 Specifying the System Type
10.6 Sharing Defaults
10.7 Operation Controls
10.8 Optional Features

A Reporting Bugs
B Major Differences From The Bourne Shell
B.1 Implementation Differences From The SVR4.2 Shell
C Copying This Manual
History
Index of Shell Builtin Commands
Index of Shell Reserved Words
Parameter and Variable Index
Function Index
Concept Index

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