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Bash POSIX Mode
===============
Starting Bash with the `--posix' command-line option or executing `set
-o posix' while Bash is running will cause Bash to conform more closely
to the POSIX.2 standard by changing the behavior to match that
specified by POSIX.2 in areas where the Bash default differs.
The following list is what's changed when `POSIX mode' is in effect:
1. When a command in the hash table no longer exists, Bash will
re-search `$PATH' to find the new location. This is also
available with `shopt -s checkhash'.
2. The `>&' redirection does not redirect stdout and stderr.
3. The message printed by the job control code and builtins when a job
exits with a non-zero status is `Done(status)'.
4. Reserved words may not be aliased.
5. The POSIX.2 `PS1' and `PS2' expansions of `!' to the history
number and `!!' to `!' are enabled, and parameter expansion is
performed on the value regardless of the setting of the
`promptvars' option.
6. Interactive comments are enabled by default. (Note that Bash has
them on by default anyway.)
7. The POSIX.2 startup files are executed (`$ENV') rather than the
normal Bash files.
8. Tilde expansion is only performed on assignments preceding a
command name, rather than on all assignment statements on the line.
9. The default history file is `~/.sh_history' (this is the default
value of `$HISTFILE').
10. The output of `kill -l' prints all the signal names on a single
line, separated by spaces.
11. Non-interactive shells exit if FILENAME in `.' FILENAME is not
found.
12. Redirection operators do not perform filename expansion on the word
in the redirection unless the shell is interactive.
13. Function names must be valid shell `name's. That is, they may not
contain characters other than letters, digits, and underscores, and
may not start with a digit. Declaring a function with an illegal
name causes a fatal syntax error in non-interactive shells.
14. POSIX.2 `special' builtins are found before shell functions during
command lookup.
15. If a POSIX.2 special builtin returns an error status, a
non-interactive shell exits. The fatal errors are those listed in
the POSIX.2 standard, and include things like passing incorrect
options, redirection errors, variable assignment errors for
assignments preceding the command name, and so on.
16. If the `cd' builtin finds a directory to change to using
`$CDPATH', the value it assigns to the `PWD' variable does not
contain any symbolic links, as if `cd -P' had been executed.
17. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if a variable
assignment error occurs when no command name follows the assignment
statements. A variable assignment error occurs, for example, when
trying to assign a value to a read-only variable.
18. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if the iteration
variable in a `for' statement or the selection variable in a
`select' statement is a read-only variable.
19. Process substitution is not available.
20. Assignment statements preceding POSIX.2 `special' builtins persist
in the shell environment after the builtin completes.
21. The `export' and `readonly' builtin commands display their output
in the format required by POSIX.2.
There is other POSIX.2 behavior that Bash does not implement.
Specifically:
1. Assignment statements affect the execution environment of all
builtins, not just special ones.
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