Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
cat ${OUTDATED_BRANCHES_FILE}
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
branch_head=$(echo ${remote_ref}|cut -d'/' -f2)
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
OUTDATED_BRANCHES_FILE=$(echo $PWD/result/outdated-branches.log)
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
for remote_ref in $(echo ${remote_branche_references});do
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
ref_search=$(git log $branch_head --pretty=tformat:%H|grep ${reference_head}|wc -l)
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
if [ ${ref_search} -ne 1 ];then
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Use 'cd ... || exit' or 'cd ... || return' in case cd fails. Open
cd ${FINAL_RELEASE_REPO}
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Use cd ... || exit in case cd fails.
Problematic code:
cd generated_files
rm -r *.c
func(){
cd foo
do_something
}
Correct code:
cd generated_files || exit
rm -r *.c
# For functions, you may want to use return:
func(){
cd foo || return
do_something
}
Rationale:
cd
can fail for a variety of reasons: misspelled paths, missing directories, missing permissions, broken symlinks and more.
If/when it does, the script will keep going and do all its operations in the wrong directory. This can be messy, especially if the operations involve creating or deleting a lot of files.
To avoid this, make sure you handle the cases when cd
fails. Ways to do this include
-
cd foo || exit
as suggested to just abort immediately -
if cd foo; then echo "Ok"; else echo "Fail"; fi
for custom handling -
<(cd foo && cmd)
as an alternative to<(cd foo || exit; cmd)
in<(..)
,$(..)
or( )
Exceptions:
ShellCheck does not give this warning when cd
is on the left of a ||
or &&
, or the condition of a if
, while
or until
loop. Having a set -e
command anywhere in the script will disable this message, even though it won't necessarily prevent the issue.
If you are accounting for cd
failures in a way shellcheck doesn't realize, you can disable this message with a [[directive]].
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
name=$(echo ${remote_ref}|cut -d'/' -f1)
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
if [ -f ${OUTDATED_BRANCHES_FILE} ];then
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
ref_search=$(git log $branch_head --pretty=tformat:%H|grep ${reference_head}|wc -l)
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
echo ${name} >> ${OUTDATED_BRANCHES_FILE}
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting. Open
echo ${name} >> ${OUTDATED_BRANCHES_FILE}
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Problematic code:
echo $1
for i in $*; do :; done # this done and the next one also applies to expanding arrays.
for i in $@; do :; done
Correct code:
echo "$1"
for i in "$@"; do :; done # or, 'for i; do'
Rationale
The first code looks like "print the first argument". It's actually "Split the first argument by IFS (spaces, tabs and line feeds). Expand each of them as if it was a glob. Join all the resulting strings and filenames with spaces. Print the result."
The second one looks like "iterate through all arguments". It's actually "join all the arguments by the first character of IFS (space), split them by IFS and expand each of them as globs, and iterate on the resulting list". The third one skips the joining part.
Quoting variables prevents word splitting and glob expansion, and prevents the script from breaking when input contains spaces, line feeds, glob characters and such.
Strictly speaking, only expansions themselves need to be quoted, but for stylistic reasons, entire arguments with multiple variable and literal parts are often quoted as one:
$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file # Unquoted (bad)
"$HOME"/"$dir"/dist/bin/"$file" # Minimal quoting (good)
"$HOME/$dir/dist/bin/$file" # Canonical quoting (good)
When quoting composite arguments, make sure to exclude globs and brace expansions, which lose their special meaning in double quotes: "$HOME/$dir/src/*.c"
will not expand, but "$HOME/$dir/src"/*.c
will.
Note that $( )
starts a new context, and variables in it have to be quoted independently:
echo "This $variable is quoted $(but this $variable is not)"
echo "This $variable is quoted $(and now this "$variable" is too)"
Exceptions
Sometimes you want to split on spaces, like when building a command line:
options="-j 5 -B"
make $options file
Just quoting this doesn't work. Instead, you should have used an array (bash, ksh, zsh):
options=(-j 5 -B) # ksh: set -A options -- -j 5 -B
make "${options[@]}" file
or a function (POSIX):
make_with_flags() { make -j 5 -B "$@"; }
make_with_flags file
To split on spaces but not perform glob expansion, Posix has a set -f
to disable globbing. You can disable word splitting by setting IFS=''
.
Similarly, you might want an optional argument:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="-x"
bash $debug script
Quoting this doesn't work, since in the default case, "$debug"
would expand to one empty argument while $debug
would expand into zero arguments. In this case, you can use an array with zero or one elements as outlined above, or you can use an unquoted expansion with an alternate value:
debug=""
[[ $1 == "--trace-commands" ]] && debug="yes"
bash ${debug:+"-x"} script
This is better than an unquoted value because the alternative value can be properly quoted, e.g. wget ${output:+ -o "$output"}
.
As always, this warning can be [[ignore]]d on a case-by-case basis.
this is especially relevant when BASH many not be available for the array work around. For example, use in eval or in command options where script has total control of the variables...
FLAGS="-av -e 'ssh -x' --delete --delete-excluded"
...
# shellcheck disable=SC2086
eval rsync $FLAGS ~/dir remote_host:dir
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Useless echo? Instead of 'cmd $(echo foo)', just use 'cmd foo'. Open
for remote_ref in $(echo ${remote_branche_references});do
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
SC2116 Useless echo? Instead of 'cmd $(echo foo)', just use 'cmd foo'.
Problematic code:
greeting=$(echo "Hello, $name")
# or
tar czf "$(echo "$(date +%F).tar.gz")" *
Correct code:
greeting="Hello, $name"
# or
tar czf "$(date +%F).tar.gz" *
Rationale:
You appear to be using echo
to write a value to stdout, and then using $(..)
or `..`
to capture the value again. This is as pointless as mailing yourself a postcard: you already have what you want, so there's no need to send it on a round trip.
You can just replace $(echo myvalue)
with myvalue
.
Exceptions
Sometimes this pattern is used because of side effect of echo
or expansions. For example, here $(echo ..)
is used to expand a glob.
glob="*.png"
files="$(echo $var)"
The echo
is not useless, but this code is problematic because it concatenates filenames by spaces. This will break filenames containing spaces and other characters later when the list is split again. Better options are:
- Arrays, if supported by the shell:
files=( $glob ); echo "The first file is ${files[0]}"
- Positional parameters when possible:
set -- $glob; echo "The first file is $1"
- Delaying expansion until it's needed:
for file in $glob; do ...
All three methods will let you avoid issues with special characters in filenames.
As another example, here $(echo ..)
is used to expand escape sequences:
unexpanded='var\tvalue'
expanded="$(echo "$var")"
In this case, use printf
instead. It's well defined with regard to escape sequences.
Finally, if you really do want to concatenate a series of elements by a character like space, consider doing it explicitly with for
or printf
(e.g. printf '%s\n' $glob
).
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Consider using grep -c instead of grep|wc -l. Open
ref_search=$(git log $branch_head --pretty=tformat:%H|grep ${reference_head}|wc -l)
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
Consider using grep -c instead of grep|wc.
Problematic code:
grep foo | wc -l
Correct code:
grep -c foo
Rationale:
This is purely a stylistic issue. grep
can count lines without piping to wc
.
Note that in many cases, this number is only used to see whether there are matches (i.e. > 0
). In these cases, it's better and more efficient to use grep -q
and check its exit status:
if grep -q pattern file
then
echo "The file contains the pattern"
fi
Also note that in foo | grep bar | wc -l
, wc will mask the exit code of grep by default (i.e. without set -o pipefail
), and always return success. If replacing with foo | grep -c bar
, grep will exit non-zero when the count is 0. This is convenient for conditional statements but may require handling when used with set -e
.
Exceptions
If you e.g. want to count characters instead of lines, and you actually care about the number and not just whether it's greater than 0, you can [[ignore]] this error.
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.
Useless echo? Instead of 'cmd $(echo foo)', just use 'cmd foo'. Open
OUTDATED_BRANCHES_FILE=$(echo $PWD/result/outdated-branches.log)
- Read upRead up
- Create a ticketCreate a ticket
- Exclude checks
SC2116 Useless echo? Instead of 'cmd $(echo foo)', just use 'cmd foo'.
Problematic code:
greeting=$(echo "Hello, $name")
# or
tar czf "$(echo "$(date +%F).tar.gz")" *
Correct code:
greeting="Hello, $name"
# or
tar czf "$(date +%F).tar.gz" *
Rationale:
You appear to be using echo
to write a value to stdout, and then using $(..)
or `..`
to capture the value again. This is as pointless as mailing yourself a postcard: you already have what you want, so there's no need to send it on a round trip.
You can just replace $(echo myvalue)
with myvalue
.
Exceptions
Sometimes this pattern is used because of side effect of echo
or expansions. For example, here $(echo ..)
is used to expand a glob.
glob="*.png"
files="$(echo $var)"
The echo
is not useless, but this code is problematic because it concatenates filenames by spaces. This will break filenames containing spaces and other characters later when the list is split again. Better options are:
- Arrays, if supported by the shell:
files=( $glob ); echo "The first file is ${files[0]}"
- Positional parameters when possible:
set -- $glob; echo "The first file is $1"
- Delaying expansion until it's needed:
for file in $glob; do ...
All three methods will let you avoid issues with special characters in filenames.
As another example, here $(echo ..)
is used to expand escape sequences:
unexpanded='var\tvalue'
expanded="$(echo "$var")"
In this case, use printf
instead. It's well defined with regard to escape sequences.
Finally, if you really do want to concatenate a series of elements by a character like space, consider doing it explicitly with for
or printf
(e.g. printf '%s\n' $glob
).
Notice
Original content from the ShellCheck https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/wiki.