Understanding Bash's Read-a-File Command Substitution












8















I am trying to understand how exactly Bash treats the following line:



$(< "$FILE")


According to the Bash man page, this is equivalent to:



$(cat "$FILE")


and I can follow the line of reasoning for this second line. Bash performs variable expansion on $FILE, enters command substitution, passes the value of $FILE to cat, cat outputs the contents of $FILE to standard output, command substitution finishes by replacing the entire line with the standard output resulting from the command inside, and Bash attempts to execute it like a simple command.



However, for the first line I mentioned above, I understand it as: Bash performs variable substitution on $FILE, Bash opens $FILE for reading on standard input, somehow standard input is copied to standard output, command substitution finishes, and Bash attempts to execute the resulting standard output.



Can someone please explain to me how the contents of $FILE goes from stdin to stdout?










share|improve this question





























    8















    I am trying to understand how exactly Bash treats the following line:



    $(< "$FILE")


    According to the Bash man page, this is equivalent to:



    $(cat "$FILE")


    and I can follow the line of reasoning for this second line. Bash performs variable expansion on $FILE, enters command substitution, passes the value of $FILE to cat, cat outputs the contents of $FILE to standard output, command substitution finishes by replacing the entire line with the standard output resulting from the command inside, and Bash attempts to execute it like a simple command.



    However, for the first line I mentioned above, I understand it as: Bash performs variable substitution on $FILE, Bash opens $FILE for reading on standard input, somehow standard input is copied to standard output, command substitution finishes, and Bash attempts to execute the resulting standard output.



    Can someone please explain to me how the contents of $FILE goes from stdin to stdout?










    share|improve this question



























      8












      8








      8


      3






      I am trying to understand how exactly Bash treats the following line:



      $(< "$FILE")


      According to the Bash man page, this is equivalent to:



      $(cat "$FILE")


      and I can follow the line of reasoning for this second line. Bash performs variable expansion on $FILE, enters command substitution, passes the value of $FILE to cat, cat outputs the contents of $FILE to standard output, command substitution finishes by replacing the entire line with the standard output resulting from the command inside, and Bash attempts to execute it like a simple command.



      However, for the first line I mentioned above, I understand it as: Bash performs variable substitution on $FILE, Bash opens $FILE for reading on standard input, somehow standard input is copied to standard output, command substitution finishes, and Bash attempts to execute the resulting standard output.



      Can someone please explain to me how the contents of $FILE goes from stdin to stdout?










      share|improve this question
















      I am trying to understand how exactly Bash treats the following line:



      $(< "$FILE")


      According to the Bash man page, this is equivalent to:



      $(cat "$FILE")


      and I can follow the line of reasoning for this second line. Bash performs variable expansion on $FILE, enters command substitution, passes the value of $FILE to cat, cat outputs the contents of $FILE to standard output, command substitution finishes by replacing the entire line with the standard output resulting from the command inside, and Bash attempts to execute it like a simple command.



      However, for the first line I mentioned above, I understand it as: Bash performs variable substitution on $FILE, Bash opens $FILE for reading on standard input, somehow standard input is copied to standard output, command substitution finishes, and Bash attempts to execute the resulting standard output.



      Can someone please explain to me how the contents of $FILE goes from stdin to stdout?







      bash shell io-redirection command-substitution






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Sep 3 '17 at 5:43









      Scott

      6,94152750




      6,94152750










      asked Mar 12 '15 at 14:52









      Stanley YuStanley Yu

      1954




      1954






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

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          -3














          The < isn't directly an aspect of bash command substitution. It is a redirection operator (like a pipe), which some shells allow without a command (POSIX does not specify this behavior).



          Perhaps it would be more clear with more spaces:



          echo $( < $FILE )


          this is effectively* the same as the more POSIX-safe



          echo $( cat $FILE )


          ... which is also effectively*



          echo $( cat < $FILE )


          Let's start with that last version. This runs cat with no arguments, which means it will read from standard input. $FILE is redirected into standard input due to the <, so cat puts its contents are put into standard output. The $(command) subsitution then pushes cat's output into arguments for echo.



          In bash (but not in the POSIX standard), you can use < without a command. bash (and zsh and ksh but not dash) will interpret that as if cat <, though without invoking a new subprocess. As this is native to the shell, it is faster than literally running the external command cat. *This is why I say "effectively the same as."






          share|improve this answer


























          • So in the last paragraph when you say "bash will interpret that as cat filename", do you mean this behavior is specific to command substitution? Because if I run < filename by itself, bash does not cat it out. It will output nothing and return me back to a prompt.

            – Stanley Yu
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:06











          • A command is still needed. @cuonglm altered my original text from cat < filename to cat filename which I oppose and may revert.

            – Adam Katz
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:11






          • 1





            A pipe is a type of file. The shell operator | creates a pipe between two subprocesses (or, with some shells, from a subprocess to the shell's standard input). The shell operator $(…) creates a pipe from a subprocess to the shell itself (not to its standard input). The shell operator < does not involve a pipe, it only opens a file and moves the file descriptor to standard input.

            – Gilles
            Mar 12 '15 at 23:15






          • 2





            < file is not the same as cat < file (except in zsh where it's like $READNULLCMD < file). < file is perfectly POSIX and just opens file for reading and then does nothing (so file is close straight away). It's $(< file) or `< file` that is a special operator of ksh, zsh and bash (and the behaviour is left unspecified in POSIX). See my answer for details.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 23 '17 at 15:41








          • 1





            To put @StéphaneChazelas’s comment in another light: to a first approximation, $(cmd1) $(cmd2) will typically be the same as $(cmd1; cmd2).   But look at the case where cmd2 is < file.   If we say $(cmd1; < file), the file is not read, but, with $(cmd1) $(< file), it is.   So it is incorrect to say that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file.   $(< …) is a special case of command substitution, and not a normal usage of redirection.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44



















          9














          $(<file) (also works with `<file`) is a special operator of the Korn shell copied by zsh and bash. It does look a lot like command substitution but it's not really.



          In POSIX shells, a simple command is:



          < file var1=value1 > file2 cmd 2> file3 args 3> file4


          All parts are optional, you can have redirections only, command only, assignment only or combinations.



          If there are redirections but no command, the redirections are performed (so a > file would open and truncate file), but then nothing happens. So



          < file


          Opens file for reading, but then nothing happens as there's no command. So the file is then closed and that's it. If $(< file) was a simple command substitution, then it would expand to nothing.



          In the POSIX specification, in $(script), if script consists only of redirections, that produces unspecified results. That's to allow that special behaviour of the Korn shell.



          In ksh (here tested with ksh93u+), if the script consists of one and only one simple command (though comments are allowed before and after) that consists only of redirections (no command, no assignment) and if the first redirection is a stdin (fd 0) input only (<, << or <<<) redirection, so:




          • $(< file)

          • $(0< file)


          • $(<&3) (also $(0>&3) actually as that's in effect the same operator)

          • $(< file > foo 2> $(whatever))


          but not:




          • $(> foo < file)

          • nor $(0<> file)

          • nor $(< file; sleep 1)

          • nor $(< file; < file2)


          then




          • all but the first redirection are ignored (they are parsed away)

          • and it expands to the content of the file/heredoc/herestring (or whatever can be read from the file descriptor if using things like <&3) minus the trailing newline characters.


          as if using $(cat < file) except that




          • the reading is done internally by the shell and not by cat

          • no pipe nor extra process is involved

          • as a consequence of the above, since the code inside is not run in a subshell, any modification remain thereafter (as in $(<${file=foo.txt}) or $(<file$((++n))))

          • read errors (though not errors while opening files or duplicating file descriptors) are silently ignored.


          In zsh, it's the same except that that special behaviour is only triggered when there's only one file input redirection (<file or 0< file, no <&3, <<<here, < a < b...)



          However, except when emulating other shells, in:



          < file
          <&3
          <<< here...


          that is when there are only input redirections without commands, outside of command substitution, zsh runs the $READNULLCMD (a pager by default), and when there are both input and output redirections, the $NULLCMD (cat by default), so even if $(<&3) is not recognized as that special operator, it will still work like in ksh though by invoking a pager to do it (that pager acting like cat since its stdout will be a pipe).



          However while ksh's $(< a < b) would expand to the content of a, in zsh, it expands to the content of a and b (or just b if the multios option is disabled), $(< a > b) would copy a to b and expand to nothing, etc.



          bash has a similar operator but with a few differences:





          • comments are allowed before but not after:



            echo "$(
            # getting the content of file
            < file)"


            works but:



            echo "$(< file
            # getting the content of file
            )"


            expands to nothing.



          • like in zsh, only one file stdin redirection, though there's no fall back to a $READNULLCMD, so $(<&3), $(< a < b) do perform the redirections but expand to nothing.


          • for some reason, while bash does not invoke cat, it still forks a process that feeds the content of the file through a pipe making it much less of an optimisation than in other shells. It's in effect like a $(cat < file) where cat would be a builtin cat.

          • as a consequence of the above, any change made within are lost afterwards (in the $(<${file=foo.txt}), mentioned above for instance, that $file assignment is lost afterwards).


          In bash, IFS= read -rd '' var < file (also works in zsh) is a more effective way to read the content of a text file into a variable. It also has the benefit of preserving the trailing newline characters. See also $mapfile[file] in zsh (in the zsh/mapfile module and only for regular files) which also works with binary files.



          Note that the pdksh-based variants of ksh have a few variations compared to ksh93. Of interest, in mksh (one of those pdksh-derived shells), in



          var=$(<<'EOF'
          That's multi-line
          test with *all* sorts of "special"
          characters
          EOF
          )


          is optimised in that the content of the here document (without the trailing characters) is expanded without a temporary file or pipe being used as is otherwise the case for here documents, which makes it an effective multi-line quoting syntax.



          To be portable to all versions of ksh, zsh and bash, best is to limit to only $(<file) avoiding comments and bearing in mind that modifications to variables made within may or may not be preserved.






          share|improve this answer


























          • Is it correct that $(<) is an operator on filenames? Is < in $(<) a redirection operator, or not an operator on its own, and must be part of the entire operator $(<)?

            – Tim
            Aug 23 '17 at 21:32













          • @Tim, it doesn't matter much how you want to call them. $(<file) is meant to expand to the content of file in a similar way as $(cat < file) would. How it's done varies from shell to shell which is described at length in the answer. If you like, you can say that it's a special operator that is triggered when what looks like a command substitution (syntactically) contains what looks like a single stdin redirection (syntactically), but again with caveats and variations depending on the shell as listed here.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 24 '17 at 8:21













          • @StéphaneChazelas: Fascinating, as usual; I’ve bookmarked this.  So, n<&m and n>&m do the same thing? I didn’t know that, but I guess it’s not too surprising.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:45











          • @Scott, yes, they both do a dup(m, n). I can see some evidence of ksh86 using stdio and some fdopen(fd, "r" or "w"), so it might have mattered then. But using stdio in a shell makes little sense, so I don't expect you'll find any modern shell where that will make a difference. One difference is that >&n is dup(n, 1) (short for 1>&n), while <&n is dup(n, 0) (short for 0<&n).

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Sep 3 '17 at 9:08











          • Right. Except, of course, the two-argument form of the file descriptor duplication call is called dup2(); dup() takes only one argument and, like open(), uses the lowest available file descriptor. (Today I learned that there is a dup3() function.)

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 15:52





















          8














          Because bash does it internally for you, expanded the filename and cats the file to standard output, like if you were to do $(cat < filename). It's a bash feature, maybe you need to look into the bash source code to know exactly how it works.



          Here the the function to handle this feature (From bash source code, file builtins/evalstring.c):



          /* Handle a $( < file ) command substitution.  This expands the filename,
          returning errors as appropriate, then just cats the file to the standard
          output. */
          static int
          cat_file (r)
          REDIRECT *r;
          {
          char *fn;
          int fd, rval;

          if (r->instruction != r_input_direction)
          return -1;

          /* Get the filename. */
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing++;
          fn = redirection_expand (r->redirectee.filename);
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing--;

          if (fn == 0)
          {
          redirection_error (r, AMBIGUOUS_REDIRECT);
          return -1;
          }

          fd = open(fn, O_RDONLY);
          if (fd < 0)
          {
          file_error (fn);
          free (fn);
          return -1;
          }

          rval = zcatfd (fd, 1, fn);

          free (fn);
          close (fd);

          return (rval);
          }


          A note that $(<filename) is not exactly equivalent to $(cat filename); the latter will fail if the filename starts with a dash -.



          $(<filename) was originally from ksh, and was added to bash from Bash-2.02.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            cat filename will fail if the filename starts with a dash because cat accepts options. You can work around that on most modern systems with cat -- filename.

            – Adam Katz
            Jul 6 '17 at 1:20



















          -1














          Think of command substitution as running a command as usual and dumping the output at the point where you are running the command.




          The output of commands can be used as arguments to another command, to
          set a variable, and even for generating the argument list in a for
          loop.




          foo=$(echo "bar") will set value of the variable $foo to bar; the output of the command echo bar.



          Command Substitution






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            I believe that it’s fairly clear from the question that the OP understands the basics of command substitution; the question is about the special case of $(< file), and he doesn't need a tutorial on the general case.  If you are saying that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file, then you are saying the same thing Adam Katz is saying, and you are both wrong.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44











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          4 Answers
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          active

          oldest

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          4 Answers
          4






          active

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          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

          votes









          -3














          The < isn't directly an aspect of bash command substitution. It is a redirection operator (like a pipe), which some shells allow without a command (POSIX does not specify this behavior).



          Perhaps it would be more clear with more spaces:



          echo $( < $FILE )


          this is effectively* the same as the more POSIX-safe



          echo $( cat $FILE )


          ... which is also effectively*



          echo $( cat < $FILE )


          Let's start with that last version. This runs cat with no arguments, which means it will read from standard input. $FILE is redirected into standard input due to the <, so cat puts its contents are put into standard output. The $(command) subsitution then pushes cat's output into arguments for echo.



          In bash (but not in the POSIX standard), you can use < without a command. bash (and zsh and ksh but not dash) will interpret that as if cat <, though without invoking a new subprocess. As this is native to the shell, it is faster than literally running the external command cat. *This is why I say "effectively the same as."






          share|improve this answer


























          • So in the last paragraph when you say "bash will interpret that as cat filename", do you mean this behavior is specific to command substitution? Because if I run < filename by itself, bash does not cat it out. It will output nothing and return me back to a prompt.

            – Stanley Yu
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:06











          • A command is still needed. @cuonglm altered my original text from cat < filename to cat filename which I oppose and may revert.

            – Adam Katz
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:11






          • 1





            A pipe is a type of file. The shell operator | creates a pipe between two subprocesses (or, with some shells, from a subprocess to the shell's standard input). The shell operator $(…) creates a pipe from a subprocess to the shell itself (not to its standard input). The shell operator < does not involve a pipe, it only opens a file and moves the file descriptor to standard input.

            – Gilles
            Mar 12 '15 at 23:15






          • 2





            < file is not the same as cat < file (except in zsh where it's like $READNULLCMD < file). < file is perfectly POSIX and just opens file for reading and then does nothing (so file is close straight away). It's $(< file) or `< file` that is a special operator of ksh, zsh and bash (and the behaviour is left unspecified in POSIX). See my answer for details.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 23 '17 at 15:41








          • 1





            To put @StéphaneChazelas’s comment in another light: to a first approximation, $(cmd1) $(cmd2) will typically be the same as $(cmd1; cmd2).   But look at the case where cmd2 is < file.   If we say $(cmd1; < file), the file is not read, but, with $(cmd1) $(< file), it is.   So it is incorrect to say that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file.   $(< …) is a special case of command substitution, and not a normal usage of redirection.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44
















          -3














          The < isn't directly an aspect of bash command substitution. It is a redirection operator (like a pipe), which some shells allow without a command (POSIX does not specify this behavior).



          Perhaps it would be more clear with more spaces:



          echo $( < $FILE )


          this is effectively* the same as the more POSIX-safe



          echo $( cat $FILE )


          ... which is also effectively*



          echo $( cat < $FILE )


          Let's start with that last version. This runs cat with no arguments, which means it will read from standard input. $FILE is redirected into standard input due to the <, so cat puts its contents are put into standard output. The $(command) subsitution then pushes cat's output into arguments for echo.



          In bash (but not in the POSIX standard), you can use < without a command. bash (and zsh and ksh but not dash) will interpret that as if cat <, though without invoking a new subprocess. As this is native to the shell, it is faster than literally running the external command cat. *This is why I say "effectively the same as."






          share|improve this answer


























          • So in the last paragraph when you say "bash will interpret that as cat filename", do you mean this behavior is specific to command substitution? Because if I run < filename by itself, bash does not cat it out. It will output nothing and return me back to a prompt.

            – Stanley Yu
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:06











          • A command is still needed. @cuonglm altered my original text from cat < filename to cat filename which I oppose and may revert.

            – Adam Katz
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:11






          • 1





            A pipe is a type of file. The shell operator | creates a pipe between two subprocesses (or, with some shells, from a subprocess to the shell's standard input). The shell operator $(…) creates a pipe from a subprocess to the shell itself (not to its standard input). The shell operator < does not involve a pipe, it only opens a file and moves the file descriptor to standard input.

            – Gilles
            Mar 12 '15 at 23:15






          • 2





            < file is not the same as cat < file (except in zsh where it's like $READNULLCMD < file). < file is perfectly POSIX and just opens file for reading and then does nothing (so file is close straight away). It's $(< file) or `< file` that is a special operator of ksh, zsh and bash (and the behaviour is left unspecified in POSIX). See my answer for details.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 23 '17 at 15:41








          • 1





            To put @StéphaneChazelas’s comment in another light: to a first approximation, $(cmd1) $(cmd2) will typically be the same as $(cmd1; cmd2).   But look at the case where cmd2 is < file.   If we say $(cmd1; < file), the file is not read, but, with $(cmd1) $(< file), it is.   So it is incorrect to say that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file.   $(< …) is a special case of command substitution, and not a normal usage of redirection.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44














          -3












          -3








          -3







          The < isn't directly an aspect of bash command substitution. It is a redirection operator (like a pipe), which some shells allow without a command (POSIX does not specify this behavior).



          Perhaps it would be more clear with more spaces:



          echo $( < $FILE )


          this is effectively* the same as the more POSIX-safe



          echo $( cat $FILE )


          ... which is also effectively*



          echo $( cat < $FILE )


          Let's start with that last version. This runs cat with no arguments, which means it will read from standard input. $FILE is redirected into standard input due to the <, so cat puts its contents are put into standard output. The $(command) subsitution then pushes cat's output into arguments for echo.



          In bash (but not in the POSIX standard), you can use < without a command. bash (and zsh and ksh but not dash) will interpret that as if cat <, though without invoking a new subprocess. As this is native to the shell, it is faster than literally running the external command cat. *This is why I say "effectively the same as."






          share|improve this answer















          The < isn't directly an aspect of bash command substitution. It is a redirection operator (like a pipe), which some shells allow without a command (POSIX does not specify this behavior).



          Perhaps it would be more clear with more spaces:



          echo $( < $FILE )


          this is effectively* the same as the more POSIX-safe



          echo $( cat $FILE )


          ... which is also effectively*



          echo $( cat < $FILE )


          Let's start with that last version. This runs cat with no arguments, which means it will read from standard input. $FILE is redirected into standard input due to the <, so cat puts its contents are put into standard output. The $(command) subsitution then pushes cat's output into arguments for echo.



          In bash (but not in the POSIX standard), you can use < without a command. bash (and zsh and ksh but not dash) will interpret that as if cat <, though without invoking a new subprocess. As this is native to the shell, it is faster than literally running the external command cat. *This is why I say "effectively the same as."







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Aug 25 '17 at 15:04

























          answered Mar 12 '15 at 18:36









          Adam KatzAdam Katz

          2,2401221




          2,2401221













          • So in the last paragraph when you say "bash will interpret that as cat filename", do you mean this behavior is specific to command substitution? Because if I run < filename by itself, bash does not cat it out. It will output nothing and return me back to a prompt.

            – Stanley Yu
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:06











          • A command is still needed. @cuonglm altered my original text from cat < filename to cat filename which I oppose and may revert.

            – Adam Katz
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:11






          • 1





            A pipe is a type of file. The shell operator | creates a pipe between two subprocesses (or, with some shells, from a subprocess to the shell's standard input). The shell operator $(…) creates a pipe from a subprocess to the shell itself (not to its standard input). The shell operator < does not involve a pipe, it only opens a file and moves the file descriptor to standard input.

            – Gilles
            Mar 12 '15 at 23:15






          • 2





            < file is not the same as cat < file (except in zsh where it's like $READNULLCMD < file). < file is perfectly POSIX and just opens file for reading and then does nothing (so file is close straight away). It's $(< file) or `< file` that is a special operator of ksh, zsh and bash (and the behaviour is left unspecified in POSIX). See my answer for details.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 23 '17 at 15:41








          • 1





            To put @StéphaneChazelas’s comment in another light: to a first approximation, $(cmd1) $(cmd2) will typically be the same as $(cmd1; cmd2).   But look at the case where cmd2 is < file.   If we say $(cmd1; < file), the file is not read, but, with $(cmd1) $(< file), it is.   So it is incorrect to say that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file.   $(< …) is a special case of command substitution, and not a normal usage of redirection.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44



















          • So in the last paragraph when you say "bash will interpret that as cat filename", do you mean this behavior is specific to command substitution? Because if I run < filename by itself, bash does not cat it out. It will output nothing and return me back to a prompt.

            – Stanley Yu
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:06











          • A command is still needed. @cuonglm altered my original text from cat < filename to cat filename which I oppose and may revert.

            – Adam Katz
            Mar 12 '15 at 20:11






          • 1





            A pipe is a type of file. The shell operator | creates a pipe between two subprocesses (or, with some shells, from a subprocess to the shell's standard input). The shell operator $(…) creates a pipe from a subprocess to the shell itself (not to its standard input). The shell operator < does not involve a pipe, it only opens a file and moves the file descriptor to standard input.

            – Gilles
            Mar 12 '15 at 23:15






          • 2





            < file is not the same as cat < file (except in zsh where it's like $READNULLCMD < file). < file is perfectly POSIX and just opens file for reading and then does nothing (so file is close straight away). It's $(< file) or `< file` that is a special operator of ksh, zsh and bash (and the behaviour is left unspecified in POSIX). See my answer for details.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 23 '17 at 15:41








          • 1





            To put @StéphaneChazelas’s comment in another light: to a first approximation, $(cmd1) $(cmd2) will typically be the same as $(cmd1; cmd2).   But look at the case where cmd2 is < file.   If we say $(cmd1; < file), the file is not read, but, with $(cmd1) $(< file), it is.   So it is incorrect to say that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file.   $(< …) is a special case of command substitution, and not a normal usage of redirection.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44

















          So in the last paragraph when you say "bash will interpret that as cat filename", do you mean this behavior is specific to command substitution? Because if I run < filename by itself, bash does not cat it out. It will output nothing and return me back to a prompt.

          – Stanley Yu
          Mar 12 '15 at 20:06





          So in the last paragraph when you say "bash will interpret that as cat filename", do you mean this behavior is specific to command substitution? Because if I run < filename by itself, bash does not cat it out. It will output nothing and return me back to a prompt.

          – Stanley Yu
          Mar 12 '15 at 20:06













          A command is still needed. @cuonglm altered my original text from cat < filename to cat filename which I oppose and may revert.

          – Adam Katz
          Mar 12 '15 at 20:11





          A command is still needed. @cuonglm altered my original text from cat < filename to cat filename which I oppose and may revert.

          – Adam Katz
          Mar 12 '15 at 20:11




          1




          1





          A pipe is a type of file. The shell operator | creates a pipe between two subprocesses (or, with some shells, from a subprocess to the shell's standard input). The shell operator $(…) creates a pipe from a subprocess to the shell itself (not to its standard input). The shell operator < does not involve a pipe, it only opens a file and moves the file descriptor to standard input.

          – Gilles
          Mar 12 '15 at 23:15





          A pipe is a type of file. The shell operator | creates a pipe between two subprocesses (or, with some shells, from a subprocess to the shell's standard input). The shell operator $(…) creates a pipe from a subprocess to the shell itself (not to its standard input). The shell operator < does not involve a pipe, it only opens a file and moves the file descriptor to standard input.

          – Gilles
          Mar 12 '15 at 23:15




          2




          2





          < file is not the same as cat < file (except in zsh where it's like $READNULLCMD < file). < file is perfectly POSIX and just opens file for reading and then does nothing (so file is close straight away). It's $(< file) or `< file` that is a special operator of ksh, zsh and bash (and the behaviour is left unspecified in POSIX). See my answer for details.

          – Stéphane Chazelas
          Aug 23 '17 at 15:41







          < file is not the same as cat < file (except in zsh where it's like $READNULLCMD < file). < file is perfectly POSIX and just opens file for reading and then does nothing (so file is close straight away). It's $(< file) or `< file` that is a special operator of ksh, zsh and bash (and the behaviour is left unspecified in POSIX). See my answer for details.

          – Stéphane Chazelas
          Aug 23 '17 at 15:41






          1




          1





          To put @StéphaneChazelas’s comment in another light: to a first approximation, $(cmd1) $(cmd2) will typically be the same as $(cmd1; cmd2).   But look at the case where cmd2 is < file.   If we say $(cmd1; < file), the file is not read, but, with $(cmd1) $(< file), it is.   So it is incorrect to say that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file.   $(< …) is a special case of command substitution, and not a normal usage of redirection.

          – Scott
          Sep 3 '17 at 5:44





          To put @StéphaneChazelas’s comment in another light: to a first approximation, $(cmd1) $(cmd2) will typically be the same as $(cmd1; cmd2).   But look at the case where cmd2 is < file.   If we say $(cmd1; < file), the file is not read, but, with $(cmd1) $(< file), it is.   So it is incorrect to say that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file.   $(< …) is a special case of command substitution, and not a normal usage of redirection.

          – Scott
          Sep 3 '17 at 5:44













          9














          $(<file) (also works with `<file`) is a special operator of the Korn shell copied by zsh and bash. It does look a lot like command substitution but it's not really.



          In POSIX shells, a simple command is:



          < file var1=value1 > file2 cmd 2> file3 args 3> file4


          All parts are optional, you can have redirections only, command only, assignment only or combinations.



          If there are redirections but no command, the redirections are performed (so a > file would open and truncate file), but then nothing happens. So



          < file


          Opens file for reading, but then nothing happens as there's no command. So the file is then closed and that's it. If $(< file) was a simple command substitution, then it would expand to nothing.



          In the POSIX specification, in $(script), if script consists only of redirections, that produces unspecified results. That's to allow that special behaviour of the Korn shell.



          In ksh (here tested with ksh93u+), if the script consists of one and only one simple command (though comments are allowed before and after) that consists only of redirections (no command, no assignment) and if the first redirection is a stdin (fd 0) input only (<, << or <<<) redirection, so:




          • $(< file)

          • $(0< file)


          • $(<&3) (also $(0>&3) actually as that's in effect the same operator)

          • $(< file > foo 2> $(whatever))


          but not:




          • $(> foo < file)

          • nor $(0<> file)

          • nor $(< file; sleep 1)

          • nor $(< file; < file2)


          then




          • all but the first redirection are ignored (they are parsed away)

          • and it expands to the content of the file/heredoc/herestring (or whatever can be read from the file descriptor if using things like <&3) minus the trailing newline characters.


          as if using $(cat < file) except that




          • the reading is done internally by the shell and not by cat

          • no pipe nor extra process is involved

          • as a consequence of the above, since the code inside is not run in a subshell, any modification remain thereafter (as in $(<${file=foo.txt}) or $(<file$((++n))))

          • read errors (though not errors while opening files or duplicating file descriptors) are silently ignored.


          In zsh, it's the same except that that special behaviour is only triggered when there's only one file input redirection (<file or 0< file, no <&3, <<<here, < a < b...)



          However, except when emulating other shells, in:



          < file
          <&3
          <<< here...


          that is when there are only input redirections without commands, outside of command substitution, zsh runs the $READNULLCMD (a pager by default), and when there are both input and output redirections, the $NULLCMD (cat by default), so even if $(<&3) is not recognized as that special operator, it will still work like in ksh though by invoking a pager to do it (that pager acting like cat since its stdout will be a pipe).



          However while ksh's $(< a < b) would expand to the content of a, in zsh, it expands to the content of a and b (or just b if the multios option is disabled), $(< a > b) would copy a to b and expand to nothing, etc.



          bash has a similar operator but with a few differences:





          • comments are allowed before but not after:



            echo "$(
            # getting the content of file
            < file)"


            works but:



            echo "$(< file
            # getting the content of file
            )"


            expands to nothing.



          • like in zsh, only one file stdin redirection, though there's no fall back to a $READNULLCMD, so $(<&3), $(< a < b) do perform the redirections but expand to nothing.


          • for some reason, while bash does not invoke cat, it still forks a process that feeds the content of the file through a pipe making it much less of an optimisation than in other shells. It's in effect like a $(cat < file) where cat would be a builtin cat.

          • as a consequence of the above, any change made within are lost afterwards (in the $(<${file=foo.txt}), mentioned above for instance, that $file assignment is lost afterwards).


          In bash, IFS= read -rd '' var < file (also works in zsh) is a more effective way to read the content of a text file into a variable. It also has the benefit of preserving the trailing newline characters. See also $mapfile[file] in zsh (in the zsh/mapfile module and only for regular files) which also works with binary files.



          Note that the pdksh-based variants of ksh have a few variations compared to ksh93. Of interest, in mksh (one of those pdksh-derived shells), in



          var=$(<<'EOF'
          That's multi-line
          test with *all* sorts of "special"
          characters
          EOF
          )


          is optimised in that the content of the here document (without the trailing characters) is expanded without a temporary file or pipe being used as is otherwise the case for here documents, which makes it an effective multi-line quoting syntax.



          To be portable to all versions of ksh, zsh and bash, best is to limit to only $(<file) avoiding comments and bearing in mind that modifications to variables made within may or may not be preserved.






          share|improve this answer


























          • Is it correct that $(<) is an operator on filenames? Is < in $(<) a redirection operator, or not an operator on its own, and must be part of the entire operator $(<)?

            – Tim
            Aug 23 '17 at 21:32













          • @Tim, it doesn't matter much how you want to call them. $(<file) is meant to expand to the content of file in a similar way as $(cat < file) would. How it's done varies from shell to shell which is described at length in the answer. If you like, you can say that it's a special operator that is triggered when what looks like a command substitution (syntactically) contains what looks like a single stdin redirection (syntactically), but again with caveats and variations depending on the shell as listed here.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 24 '17 at 8:21













          • @StéphaneChazelas: Fascinating, as usual; I’ve bookmarked this.  So, n<&m and n>&m do the same thing? I didn’t know that, but I guess it’s not too surprising.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:45











          • @Scott, yes, they both do a dup(m, n). I can see some evidence of ksh86 using stdio and some fdopen(fd, "r" or "w"), so it might have mattered then. But using stdio in a shell makes little sense, so I don't expect you'll find any modern shell where that will make a difference. One difference is that >&n is dup(n, 1) (short for 1>&n), while <&n is dup(n, 0) (short for 0<&n).

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Sep 3 '17 at 9:08











          • Right. Except, of course, the two-argument form of the file descriptor duplication call is called dup2(); dup() takes only one argument and, like open(), uses the lowest available file descriptor. (Today I learned that there is a dup3() function.)

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 15:52


















          9














          $(<file) (also works with `<file`) is a special operator of the Korn shell copied by zsh and bash. It does look a lot like command substitution but it's not really.



          In POSIX shells, a simple command is:



          < file var1=value1 > file2 cmd 2> file3 args 3> file4


          All parts are optional, you can have redirections only, command only, assignment only or combinations.



          If there are redirections but no command, the redirections are performed (so a > file would open and truncate file), but then nothing happens. So



          < file


          Opens file for reading, but then nothing happens as there's no command. So the file is then closed and that's it. If $(< file) was a simple command substitution, then it would expand to nothing.



          In the POSIX specification, in $(script), if script consists only of redirections, that produces unspecified results. That's to allow that special behaviour of the Korn shell.



          In ksh (here tested with ksh93u+), if the script consists of one and only one simple command (though comments are allowed before and after) that consists only of redirections (no command, no assignment) and if the first redirection is a stdin (fd 0) input only (<, << or <<<) redirection, so:




          • $(< file)

          • $(0< file)


          • $(<&3) (also $(0>&3) actually as that's in effect the same operator)

          • $(< file > foo 2> $(whatever))


          but not:




          • $(> foo < file)

          • nor $(0<> file)

          • nor $(< file; sleep 1)

          • nor $(< file; < file2)


          then




          • all but the first redirection are ignored (they are parsed away)

          • and it expands to the content of the file/heredoc/herestring (or whatever can be read from the file descriptor if using things like <&3) minus the trailing newline characters.


          as if using $(cat < file) except that




          • the reading is done internally by the shell and not by cat

          • no pipe nor extra process is involved

          • as a consequence of the above, since the code inside is not run in a subshell, any modification remain thereafter (as in $(<${file=foo.txt}) or $(<file$((++n))))

          • read errors (though not errors while opening files or duplicating file descriptors) are silently ignored.


          In zsh, it's the same except that that special behaviour is only triggered when there's only one file input redirection (<file or 0< file, no <&3, <<<here, < a < b...)



          However, except when emulating other shells, in:



          < file
          <&3
          <<< here...


          that is when there are only input redirections without commands, outside of command substitution, zsh runs the $READNULLCMD (a pager by default), and when there are both input and output redirections, the $NULLCMD (cat by default), so even if $(<&3) is not recognized as that special operator, it will still work like in ksh though by invoking a pager to do it (that pager acting like cat since its stdout will be a pipe).



          However while ksh's $(< a < b) would expand to the content of a, in zsh, it expands to the content of a and b (or just b if the multios option is disabled), $(< a > b) would copy a to b and expand to nothing, etc.



          bash has a similar operator but with a few differences:





          • comments are allowed before but not after:



            echo "$(
            # getting the content of file
            < file)"


            works but:



            echo "$(< file
            # getting the content of file
            )"


            expands to nothing.



          • like in zsh, only one file stdin redirection, though there's no fall back to a $READNULLCMD, so $(<&3), $(< a < b) do perform the redirections but expand to nothing.


          • for some reason, while bash does not invoke cat, it still forks a process that feeds the content of the file through a pipe making it much less of an optimisation than in other shells. It's in effect like a $(cat < file) where cat would be a builtin cat.

          • as a consequence of the above, any change made within are lost afterwards (in the $(<${file=foo.txt}), mentioned above for instance, that $file assignment is lost afterwards).


          In bash, IFS= read -rd '' var < file (also works in zsh) is a more effective way to read the content of a text file into a variable. It also has the benefit of preserving the trailing newline characters. See also $mapfile[file] in zsh (in the zsh/mapfile module and only for regular files) which also works with binary files.



          Note that the pdksh-based variants of ksh have a few variations compared to ksh93. Of interest, in mksh (one of those pdksh-derived shells), in



          var=$(<<'EOF'
          That's multi-line
          test with *all* sorts of "special"
          characters
          EOF
          )


          is optimised in that the content of the here document (without the trailing characters) is expanded without a temporary file or pipe being used as is otherwise the case for here documents, which makes it an effective multi-line quoting syntax.



          To be portable to all versions of ksh, zsh and bash, best is to limit to only $(<file) avoiding comments and bearing in mind that modifications to variables made within may or may not be preserved.






          share|improve this answer


























          • Is it correct that $(<) is an operator on filenames? Is < in $(<) a redirection operator, or not an operator on its own, and must be part of the entire operator $(<)?

            – Tim
            Aug 23 '17 at 21:32













          • @Tim, it doesn't matter much how you want to call them. $(<file) is meant to expand to the content of file in a similar way as $(cat < file) would. How it's done varies from shell to shell which is described at length in the answer. If you like, you can say that it's a special operator that is triggered when what looks like a command substitution (syntactically) contains what looks like a single stdin redirection (syntactically), but again with caveats and variations depending on the shell as listed here.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 24 '17 at 8:21













          • @StéphaneChazelas: Fascinating, as usual; I’ve bookmarked this.  So, n<&m and n>&m do the same thing? I didn’t know that, but I guess it’s not too surprising.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:45











          • @Scott, yes, they both do a dup(m, n). I can see some evidence of ksh86 using stdio and some fdopen(fd, "r" or "w"), so it might have mattered then. But using stdio in a shell makes little sense, so I don't expect you'll find any modern shell where that will make a difference. One difference is that >&n is dup(n, 1) (short for 1>&n), while <&n is dup(n, 0) (short for 0<&n).

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Sep 3 '17 at 9:08











          • Right. Except, of course, the two-argument form of the file descriptor duplication call is called dup2(); dup() takes only one argument and, like open(), uses the lowest available file descriptor. (Today I learned that there is a dup3() function.)

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 15:52
















          9












          9








          9







          $(<file) (also works with `<file`) is a special operator of the Korn shell copied by zsh and bash. It does look a lot like command substitution but it's not really.



          In POSIX shells, a simple command is:



          < file var1=value1 > file2 cmd 2> file3 args 3> file4


          All parts are optional, you can have redirections only, command only, assignment only or combinations.



          If there are redirections but no command, the redirections are performed (so a > file would open and truncate file), but then nothing happens. So



          < file


          Opens file for reading, but then nothing happens as there's no command. So the file is then closed and that's it. If $(< file) was a simple command substitution, then it would expand to nothing.



          In the POSIX specification, in $(script), if script consists only of redirections, that produces unspecified results. That's to allow that special behaviour of the Korn shell.



          In ksh (here tested with ksh93u+), if the script consists of one and only one simple command (though comments are allowed before and after) that consists only of redirections (no command, no assignment) and if the first redirection is a stdin (fd 0) input only (<, << or <<<) redirection, so:




          • $(< file)

          • $(0< file)


          • $(<&3) (also $(0>&3) actually as that's in effect the same operator)

          • $(< file > foo 2> $(whatever))


          but not:




          • $(> foo < file)

          • nor $(0<> file)

          • nor $(< file; sleep 1)

          • nor $(< file; < file2)


          then




          • all but the first redirection are ignored (they are parsed away)

          • and it expands to the content of the file/heredoc/herestring (or whatever can be read from the file descriptor if using things like <&3) minus the trailing newline characters.


          as if using $(cat < file) except that




          • the reading is done internally by the shell and not by cat

          • no pipe nor extra process is involved

          • as a consequence of the above, since the code inside is not run in a subshell, any modification remain thereafter (as in $(<${file=foo.txt}) or $(<file$((++n))))

          • read errors (though not errors while opening files or duplicating file descriptors) are silently ignored.


          In zsh, it's the same except that that special behaviour is only triggered when there's only one file input redirection (<file or 0< file, no <&3, <<<here, < a < b...)



          However, except when emulating other shells, in:



          < file
          <&3
          <<< here...


          that is when there are only input redirections without commands, outside of command substitution, zsh runs the $READNULLCMD (a pager by default), and when there are both input and output redirections, the $NULLCMD (cat by default), so even if $(<&3) is not recognized as that special operator, it will still work like in ksh though by invoking a pager to do it (that pager acting like cat since its stdout will be a pipe).



          However while ksh's $(< a < b) would expand to the content of a, in zsh, it expands to the content of a and b (or just b if the multios option is disabled), $(< a > b) would copy a to b and expand to nothing, etc.



          bash has a similar operator but with a few differences:





          • comments are allowed before but not after:



            echo "$(
            # getting the content of file
            < file)"


            works but:



            echo "$(< file
            # getting the content of file
            )"


            expands to nothing.



          • like in zsh, only one file stdin redirection, though there's no fall back to a $READNULLCMD, so $(<&3), $(< a < b) do perform the redirections but expand to nothing.


          • for some reason, while bash does not invoke cat, it still forks a process that feeds the content of the file through a pipe making it much less of an optimisation than in other shells. It's in effect like a $(cat < file) where cat would be a builtin cat.

          • as a consequence of the above, any change made within are lost afterwards (in the $(<${file=foo.txt}), mentioned above for instance, that $file assignment is lost afterwards).


          In bash, IFS= read -rd '' var < file (also works in zsh) is a more effective way to read the content of a text file into a variable. It also has the benefit of preserving the trailing newline characters. See also $mapfile[file] in zsh (in the zsh/mapfile module and only for regular files) which also works with binary files.



          Note that the pdksh-based variants of ksh have a few variations compared to ksh93. Of interest, in mksh (one of those pdksh-derived shells), in



          var=$(<<'EOF'
          That's multi-line
          test with *all* sorts of "special"
          characters
          EOF
          )


          is optimised in that the content of the here document (without the trailing characters) is expanded without a temporary file or pipe being used as is otherwise the case for here documents, which makes it an effective multi-line quoting syntax.



          To be portable to all versions of ksh, zsh and bash, best is to limit to only $(<file) avoiding comments and bearing in mind that modifications to variables made within may or may not be preserved.






          share|improve this answer















          $(<file) (also works with `<file`) is a special operator of the Korn shell copied by zsh and bash. It does look a lot like command substitution but it's not really.



          In POSIX shells, a simple command is:



          < file var1=value1 > file2 cmd 2> file3 args 3> file4


          All parts are optional, you can have redirections only, command only, assignment only or combinations.



          If there are redirections but no command, the redirections are performed (so a > file would open and truncate file), but then nothing happens. So



          < file


          Opens file for reading, but then nothing happens as there's no command. So the file is then closed and that's it. If $(< file) was a simple command substitution, then it would expand to nothing.



          In the POSIX specification, in $(script), if script consists only of redirections, that produces unspecified results. That's to allow that special behaviour of the Korn shell.



          In ksh (here tested with ksh93u+), if the script consists of one and only one simple command (though comments are allowed before and after) that consists only of redirections (no command, no assignment) and if the first redirection is a stdin (fd 0) input only (<, << or <<<) redirection, so:




          • $(< file)

          • $(0< file)


          • $(<&3) (also $(0>&3) actually as that's in effect the same operator)

          • $(< file > foo 2> $(whatever))


          but not:




          • $(> foo < file)

          • nor $(0<> file)

          • nor $(< file; sleep 1)

          • nor $(< file; < file2)


          then




          • all but the first redirection are ignored (they are parsed away)

          • and it expands to the content of the file/heredoc/herestring (or whatever can be read from the file descriptor if using things like <&3) minus the trailing newline characters.


          as if using $(cat < file) except that




          • the reading is done internally by the shell and not by cat

          • no pipe nor extra process is involved

          • as a consequence of the above, since the code inside is not run in a subshell, any modification remain thereafter (as in $(<${file=foo.txt}) or $(<file$((++n))))

          • read errors (though not errors while opening files or duplicating file descriptors) are silently ignored.


          In zsh, it's the same except that that special behaviour is only triggered when there's only one file input redirection (<file or 0< file, no <&3, <<<here, < a < b...)



          However, except when emulating other shells, in:



          < file
          <&3
          <<< here...


          that is when there are only input redirections without commands, outside of command substitution, zsh runs the $READNULLCMD (a pager by default), and when there are both input and output redirections, the $NULLCMD (cat by default), so even if $(<&3) is not recognized as that special operator, it will still work like in ksh though by invoking a pager to do it (that pager acting like cat since its stdout will be a pipe).



          However while ksh's $(< a < b) would expand to the content of a, in zsh, it expands to the content of a and b (or just b if the multios option is disabled), $(< a > b) would copy a to b and expand to nothing, etc.



          bash has a similar operator but with a few differences:





          • comments are allowed before but not after:



            echo "$(
            # getting the content of file
            < file)"


            works but:



            echo "$(< file
            # getting the content of file
            )"


            expands to nothing.



          • like in zsh, only one file stdin redirection, though there's no fall back to a $READNULLCMD, so $(<&3), $(< a < b) do perform the redirections but expand to nothing.


          • for some reason, while bash does not invoke cat, it still forks a process that feeds the content of the file through a pipe making it much less of an optimisation than in other shells. It's in effect like a $(cat < file) where cat would be a builtin cat.

          • as a consequence of the above, any change made within are lost afterwards (in the $(<${file=foo.txt}), mentioned above for instance, that $file assignment is lost afterwards).


          In bash, IFS= read -rd '' var < file (also works in zsh) is a more effective way to read the content of a text file into a variable. It also has the benefit of preserving the trailing newline characters. See also $mapfile[file] in zsh (in the zsh/mapfile module and only for regular files) which also works with binary files.



          Note that the pdksh-based variants of ksh have a few variations compared to ksh93. Of interest, in mksh (one of those pdksh-derived shells), in



          var=$(<<'EOF'
          That's multi-line
          test with *all* sorts of "special"
          characters
          EOF
          )


          is optimised in that the content of the here document (without the trailing characters) is expanded without a temporary file or pipe being used as is otherwise the case for here documents, which makes it an effective multi-line quoting syntax.



          To be portable to all versions of ksh, zsh and bash, best is to limit to only $(<file) avoiding comments and bearing in mind that modifications to variables made within may or may not be preserved.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 31 mins ago

























          answered Jun 1 '17 at 21:40









          Stéphane ChazelasStéphane Chazelas

          306k57579933




          306k57579933













          • Is it correct that $(<) is an operator on filenames? Is < in $(<) a redirection operator, or not an operator on its own, and must be part of the entire operator $(<)?

            – Tim
            Aug 23 '17 at 21:32













          • @Tim, it doesn't matter much how you want to call them. $(<file) is meant to expand to the content of file in a similar way as $(cat < file) would. How it's done varies from shell to shell which is described at length in the answer. If you like, you can say that it's a special operator that is triggered when what looks like a command substitution (syntactically) contains what looks like a single stdin redirection (syntactically), but again with caveats and variations depending on the shell as listed here.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 24 '17 at 8:21













          • @StéphaneChazelas: Fascinating, as usual; I’ve bookmarked this.  So, n<&m and n>&m do the same thing? I didn’t know that, but I guess it’s not too surprising.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:45











          • @Scott, yes, they both do a dup(m, n). I can see some evidence of ksh86 using stdio and some fdopen(fd, "r" or "w"), so it might have mattered then. But using stdio in a shell makes little sense, so I don't expect you'll find any modern shell where that will make a difference. One difference is that >&n is dup(n, 1) (short for 1>&n), while <&n is dup(n, 0) (short for 0<&n).

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Sep 3 '17 at 9:08











          • Right. Except, of course, the two-argument form of the file descriptor duplication call is called dup2(); dup() takes only one argument and, like open(), uses the lowest available file descriptor. (Today I learned that there is a dup3() function.)

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 15:52





















          • Is it correct that $(<) is an operator on filenames? Is < in $(<) a redirection operator, or not an operator on its own, and must be part of the entire operator $(<)?

            – Tim
            Aug 23 '17 at 21:32













          • @Tim, it doesn't matter much how you want to call them. $(<file) is meant to expand to the content of file in a similar way as $(cat < file) would. How it's done varies from shell to shell which is described at length in the answer. If you like, you can say that it's a special operator that is triggered when what looks like a command substitution (syntactically) contains what looks like a single stdin redirection (syntactically), but again with caveats and variations depending on the shell as listed here.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Aug 24 '17 at 8:21













          • @StéphaneChazelas: Fascinating, as usual; I’ve bookmarked this.  So, n<&m and n>&m do the same thing? I didn’t know that, but I guess it’s not too surprising.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:45











          • @Scott, yes, they both do a dup(m, n). I can see some evidence of ksh86 using stdio and some fdopen(fd, "r" or "w"), so it might have mattered then. But using stdio in a shell makes little sense, so I don't expect you'll find any modern shell where that will make a difference. One difference is that >&n is dup(n, 1) (short for 1>&n), while <&n is dup(n, 0) (short for 0<&n).

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            Sep 3 '17 at 9:08











          • Right. Except, of course, the two-argument form of the file descriptor duplication call is called dup2(); dup() takes only one argument and, like open(), uses the lowest available file descriptor. (Today I learned that there is a dup3() function.)

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 15:52



















          Is it correct that $(<) is an operator on filenames? Is < in $(<) a redirection operator, or not an operator on its own, and must be part of the entire operator $(<)?

          – Tim
          Aug 23 '17 at 21:32







          Is it correct that $(<) is an operator on filenames? Is < in $(<) a redirection operator, or not an operator on its own, and must be part of the entire operator $(<)?

          – Tim
          Aug 23 '17 at 21:32















          @Tim, it doesn't matter much how you want to call them. $(<file) is meant to expand to the content of file in a similar way as $(cat < file) would. How it's done varies from shell to shell which is described at length in the answer. If you like, you can say that it's a special operator that is triggered when what looks like a command substitution (syntactically) contains what looks like a single stdin redirection (syntactically), but again with caveats and variations depending on the shell as listed here.

          – Stéphane Chazelas
          Aug 24 '17 at 8:21







          @Tim, it doesn't matter much how you want to call them. $(<file) is meant to expand to the content of file in a similar way as $(cat < file) would. How it's done varies from shell to shell which is described at length in the answer. If you like, you can say that it's a special operator that is triggered when what looks like a command substitution (syntactically) contains what looks like a single stdin redirection (syntactically), but again with caveats and variations depending on the shell as listed here.

          – Stéphane Chazelas
          Aug 24 '17 at 8:21















          @StéphaneChazelas: Fascinating, as usual; I’ve bookmarked this.  So, n<&m and n>&m do the same thing? I didn’t know that, but I guess it’s not too surprising.

          – Scott
          Sep 3 '17 at 5:45





          @StéphaneChazelas: Fascinating, as usual; I’ve bookmarked this.  So, n<&m and n>&m do the same thing? I didn’t know that, but I guess it’s not too surprising.

          – Scott
          Sep 3 '17 at 5:45













          @Scott, yes, they both do a dup(m, n). I can see some evidence of ksh86 using stdio and some fdopen(fd, "r" or "w"), so it might have mattered then. But using stdio in a shell makes little sense, so I don't expect you'll find any modern shell where that will make a difference. One difference is that >&n is dup(n, 1) (short for 1>&n), while <&n is dup(n, 0) (short for 0<&n).

          – Stéphane Chazelas
          Sep 3 '17 at 9:08





          @Scott, yes, they both do a dup(m, n). I can see some evidence of ksh86 using stdio and some fdopen(fd, "r" or "w"), so it might have mattered then. But using stdio in a shell makes little sense, so I don't expect you'll find any modern shell where that will make a difference. One difference is that >&n is dup(n, 1) (short for 1>&n), while <&n is dup(n, 0) (short for 0<&n).

          – Stéphane Chazelas
          Sep 3 '17 at 9:08













          Right. Except, of course, the two-argument form of the file descriptor duplication call is called dup2(); dup() takes only one argument and, like open(), uses the lowest available file descriptor. (Today I learned that there is a dup3() function.)

          – Scott
          Sep 3 '17 at 15:52







          Right. Except, of course, the two-argument form of the file descriptor duplication call is called dup2(); dup() takes only one argument and, like open(), uses the lowest available file descriptor. (Today I learned that there is a dup3() function.)

          – Scott
          Sep 3 '17 at 15:52













          8














          Because bash does it internally for you, expanded the filename and cats the file to standard output, like if you were to do $(cat < filename). It's a bash feature, maybe you need to look into the bash source code to know exactly how it works.



          Here the the function to handle this feature (From bash source code, file builtins/evalstring.c):



          /* Handle a $( < file ) command substitution.  This expands the filename,
          returning errors as appropriate, then just cats the file to the standard
          output. */
          static int
          cat_file (r)
          REDIRECT *r;
          {
          char *fn;
          int fd, rval;

          if (r->instruction != r_input_direction)
          return -1;

          /* Get the filename. */
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing++;
          fn = redirection_expand (r->redirectee.filename);
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing--;

          if (fn == 0)
          {
          redirection_error (r, AMBIGUOUS_REDIRECT);
          return -1;
          }

          fd = open(fn, O_RDONLY);
          if (fd < 0)
          {
          file_error (fn);
          free (fn);
          return -1;
          }

          rval = zcatfd (fd, 1, fn);

          free (fn);
          close (fd);

          return (rval);
          }


          A note that $(<filename) is not exactly equivalent to $(cat filename); the latter will fail if the filename starts with a dash -.



          $(<filename) was originally from ksh, and was added to bash from Bash-2.02.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            cat filename will fail if the filename starts with a dash because cat accepts options. You can work around that on most modern systems with cat -- filename.

            – Adam Katz
            Jul 6 '17 at 1:20
















          8














          Because bash does it internally for you, expanded the filename and cats the file to standard output, like if you were to do $(cat < filename). It's a bash feature, maybe you need to look into the bash source code to know exactly how it works.



          Here the the function to handle this feature (From bash source code, file builtins/evalstring.c):



          /* Handle a $( < file ) command substitution.  This expands the filename,
          returning errors as appropriate, then just cats the file to the standard
          output. */
          static int
          cat_file (r)
          REDIRECT *r;
          {
          char *fn;
          int fd, rval;

          if (r->instruction != r_input_direction)
          return -1;

          /* Get the filename. */
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing++;
          fn = redirection_expand (r->redirectee.filename);
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing--;

          if (fn == 0)
          {
          redirection_error (r, AMBIGUOUS_REDIRECT);
          return -1;
          }

          fd = open(fn, O_RDONLY);
          if (fd < 0)
          {
          file_error (fn);
          free (fn);
          return -1;
          }

          rval = zcatfd (fd, 1, fn);

          free (fn);
          close (fd);

          return (rval);
          }


          A note that $(<filename) is not exactly equivalent to $(cat filename); the latter will fail if the filename starts with a dash -.



          $(<filename) was originally from ksh, and was added to bash from Bash-2.02.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            cat filename will fail if the filename starts with a dash because cat accepts options. You can work around that on most modern systems with cat -- filename.

            – Adam Katz
            Jul 6 '17 at 1:20














          8












          8








          8







          Because bash does it internally for you, expanded the filename and cats the file to standard output, like if you were to do $(cat < filename). It's a bash feature, maybe you need to look into the bash source code to know exactly how it works.



          Here the the function to handle this feature (From bash source code, file builtins/evalstring.c):



          /* Handle a $( < file ) command substitution.  This expands the filename,
          returning errors as appropriate, then just cats the file to the standard
          output. */
          static int
          cat_file (r)
          REDIRECT *r;
          {
          char *fn;
          int fd, rval;

          if (r->instruction != r_input_direction)
          return -1;

          /* Get the filename. */
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing++;
          fn = redirection_expand (r->redirectee.filename);
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing--;

          if (fn == 0)
          {
          redirection_error (r, AMBIGUOUS_REDIRECT);
          return -1;
          }

          fd = open(fn, O_RDONLY);
          if (fd < 0)
          {
          file_error (fn);
          free (fn);
          return -1;
          }

          rval = zcatfd (fd, 1, fn);

          free (fn);
          close (fd);

          return (rval);
          }


          A note that $(<filename) is not exactly equivalent to $(cat filename); the latter will fail if the filename starts with a dash -.



          $(<filename) was originally from ksh, and was added to bash from Bash-2.02.






          share|improve this answer















          Because bash does it internally for you, expanded the filename and cats the file to standard output, like if you were to do $(cat < filename). It's a bash feature, maybe you need to look into the bash source code to know exactly how it works.



          Here the the function to handle this feature (From bash source code, file builtins/evalstring.c):



          /* Handle a $( < file ) command substitution.  This expands the filename,
          returning errors as appropriate, then just cats the file to the standard
          output. */
          static int
          cat_file (r)
          REDIRECT *r;
          {
          char *fn;
          int fd, rval;

          if (r->instruction != r_input_direction)
          return -1;

          /* Get the filename. */
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing++;
          fn = redirection_expand (r->redirectee.filename);
          if (posixly_correct && !interactive_shell)
          disallow_filename_globbing--;

          if (fn == 0)
          {
          redirection_error (r, AMBIGUOUS_REDIRECT);
          return -1;
          }

          fd = open(fn, O_RDONLY);
          if (fd < 0)
          {
          file_error (fn);
          free (fn);
          return -1;
          }

          rval = zcatfd (fd, 1, fn);

          free (fn);
          close (fd);

          return (rval);
          }


          A note that $(<filename) is not exactly equivalent to $(cat filename); the latter will fail if the filename starts with a dash -.



          $(<filename) was originally from ksh, and was added to bash from Bash-2.02.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Mar 13 '15 at 6:55

























          answered Mar 12 '15 at 18:56









          cuonglmcuonglm

          104k24205302




          104k24205302








          • 1





            cat filename will fail if the filename starts with a dash because cat accepts options. You can work around that on most modern systems with cat -- filename.

            – Adam Katz
            Jul 6 '17 at 1:20














          • 1





            cat filename will fail if the filename starts with a dash because cat accepts options. You can work around that on most modern systems with cat -- filename.

            – Adam Katz
            Jul 6 '17 at 1:20








          1




          1





          cat filename will fail if the filename starts with a dash because cat accepts options. You can work around that on most modern systems with cat -- filename.

          – Adam Katz
          Jul 6 '17 at 1:20





          cat filename will fail if the filename starts with a dash because cat accepts options. You can work around that on most modern systems with cat -- filename.

          – Adam Katz
          Jul 6 '17 at 1:20











          -1














          Think of command substitution as running a command as usual and dumping the output at the point where you are running the command.




          The output of commands can be used as arguments to another command, to
          set a variable, and even for generating the argument list in a for
          loop.




          foo=$(echo "bar") will set value of the variable $foo to bar; the output of the command echo bar.



          Command Substitution






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            I believe that it’s fairly clear from the question that the OP understands the basics of command substitution; the question is about the special case of $(< file), and he doesn't need a tutorial on the general case.  If you are saying that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file, then you are saying the same thing Adam Katz is saying, and you are both wrong.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44
















          -1














          Think of command substitution as running a command as usual and dumping the output at the point where you are running the command.




          The output of commands can be used as arguments to another command, to
          set a variable, and even for generating the argument list in a for
          loop.




          foo=$(echo "bar") will set value of the variable $foo to bar; the output of the command echo bar.



          Command Substitution






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            I believe that it’s fairly clear from the question that the OP understands the basics of command substitution; the question is about the special case of $(< file), and he doesn't need a tutorial on the general case.  If you are saying that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file, then you are saying the same thing Adam Katz is saying, and you are both wrong.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44














          -1












          -1








          -1







          Think of command substitution as running a command as usual and dumping the output at the point where you are running the command.




          The output of commands can be used as arguments to another command, to
          set a variable, and even for generating the argument list in a for
          loop.




          foo=$(echo "bar") will set value of the variable $foo to bar; the output of the command echo bar.



          Command Substitution






          share|improve this answer













          Think of command substitution as running a command as usual and dumping the output at the point where you are running the command.




          The output of commands can be used as arguments to another command, to
          set a variable, and even for generating the argument list in a for
          loop.




          foo=$(echo "bar") will set value of the variable $foo to bar; the output of the command echo bar.



          Command Substitution







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 13 '15 at 3:48









          iyriniyrin

          1,545621




          1,545621








          • 1





            I believe that it’s fairly clear from the question that the OP understands the basics of command substitution; the question is about the special case of $(< file), and he doesn't need a tutorial on the general case.  If you are saying that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file, then you are saying the same thing Adam Katz is saying, and you are both wrong.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44














          • 1





            I believe that it’s fairly clear from the question that the OP understands the basics of command substitution; the question is about the special case of $(< file), and he doesn't need a tutorial on the general case.  If you are saying that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file, then you are saying the same thing Adam Katz is saying, and you are both wrong.

            – Scott
            Sep 3 '17 at 5:44








          1




          1





          I believe that it’s fairly clear from the question that the OP understands the basics of command substitution; the question is about the special case of $(< file), and he doesn't need a tutorial on the general case.  If you are saying that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file, then you are saying the same thing Adam Katz is saying, and you are both wrong.

          – Scott
          Sep 3 '17 at 5:44





          I believe that it’s fairly clear from the question that the OP understands the basics of command substitution; the question is about the special case of $(< file), and he doesn't need a tutorial on the general case.  If you are saying that $(< file) is just an ordinary case of $(command) with a command of < file, then you are saying the same thing Adam Katz is saying, and you are both wrong.

          – Scott
          Sep 3 '17 at 5:44


















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