What are the uses of the exec command in shell scripts?
任何人都可以用简单的例子来解释exec命令在shell脚本中的用途吗?
The exec
built-in command mirrors functions in the kernel, there are a family of them based on execve
, which is usually called from C.
exec
replaces the current program in the current process, without fork
ing a new process. It is not something you would use in every script you write, but it comes in handy on occasion. Here are some scenarios I have used it;
We want the user to run a specific application program without access to the shell. We could change the sign-in program in /etc/passwd, but maybe we want environment setting to be used from start-up files. So, in (say) .profile
, the last statement says something like:
exec appln-program
so now there is no shell to go back to. Even if appln-program
crashes, the end-user cannot get to a shell, because it is not there - the exec
replaced it.
We want to use a different shell to the one in /etc/passwd. Stupid as it may seem, some sites do not allow users to alter their sign-in shell. One site I know had everyone start with csh
, and everyone just put into their .login
(csh start-up file) a call to ksh
. While that worked, it left a stray csh
process running, and the logout was two stage which could get confusing. So we changed it to exec ksh
which just replaced the c-shell program with the korn shell, and made everything simpler (there are other issues with this, such as the fact that the ksh
is not a login-shell).
Just to save processes. If we call prog1 -> prog2 -> prog3 -> prog4
etc. and never go back, then make each call an exec. It saves resources (not much, admittedly, unless repeated) and makes shutdown simplier.
You have obviously seen exec
used somewhere, perhaps if you showed the code that's bugging you we could justify its use.
Edit : I realised that my answer above is incomplete. There are two uses of exec
in shells like ksh
and bash
- used for opening file descriptors. Here are some examples:
exec 3< thisfile # open "thisfile" for reading on file descriptor 3
exec 4> thatfile # open "thatfile" for writing on file descriptor 4
exec 8<> tother # open "tother" for reading and writing on fd 8
exec 6>> other # open "other" for appending on file descriptor 6
exec 5<&0 # copy read file descriptor 0 onto file descriptor 5
exec 7>&4 # copy write file descriptor 4 onto 7
exec 3<&- # close the read file descriptor 3
exec 6>&- # close the write file descriptor 6
Note that spacing is very important here. If you place a space between the fd number and the redirection symbol then exec
reverts to the original meaning:
exec 3 < thisfile # oops, overwrite the current program with command "3"
There are several ways you can use these, on ksh use read -u
or print -u
, on bash
, for example:
read <&3
echo stuff >&4
Just to augment the accepted answer with a brief newbie-friendly short answer, you probably don't need exec
.
If you're still here, the following discussion should hopefully reveal why. When you run, say,
sh -c 'command'
you run a sh
instance, then start command
as a child of that sh
instance. When command
finishes, the sh
instance also finishes.
sh -c 'exec command'
runs a sh
instance, then replaces that sh
instance with the command
binary, and runs that instead.
Of course, both of these are useless in this limited context; you simply want
command
There are some fringe situations where you want the shell to read its configuration file or somehow otherwise set up the environment as a preparation for running command
. This is pretty much the sole situation where exec command
is useful.
#!/bin/sh
ENVIRONMENT=$(some complex task)
exec command
This does some stuff to prepare the environment so that it contains what is needed. Once that's done, the sh
instance is no longer necessary, and so it's a (minor) optimization to simply replace the sh
instance with the command
process, rather than have sh
run it as a child process and wait for it, then exit as soon as it finishes.
Similarly, if you want to free up as much resources as possible for a heavyish command at the end of a shell script, you might want to exec
that command as an optimization.
If something forces you to run sh
but you really wanted to run something else, exec something else
is of course a workaround to replace the undesired sh
instance (like for example if you really wanted to run your own spiffy gosh
instead of sh
but yours isn't listed in /etc/shells
so you can't specify it as your login shell).
The second use of exec
to manipulate file descriptors is a separate topic. The accepted answer covers that nicely; to keep this self-contained, I'll just defer to the manual for anything where exec
is followed by a redirect instead of a command name.