WORDEXP(3) manual page
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wordexp, wordfree - perform word expansion like
a posix-shell
#include <wordexp.h>
int wordexp(const char *s, wordexp_t
*p, int flags);
void wordfree(wordexp_t *p);
Feature Test Macro Requirements
for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)
):
wordexp(), wordfree(): _XOPEN_SOURCE
The function wordexp() performs a shell-like expansion of the
string s and returns the result in the structure pointed to by p. The data
type wordexp_t is a structure that at least has the fields we_wordc, we_wordv,
and we_offs. The field we_wordc is a size_t that gives the number of words
in the expansion of s. The field we_wordv is a char ** that points to the
array of words found. The field we_offs of type size_t is sometimes (depending
on flags, see below) used to indicate the number of initial elements in
the we_wordv array that should be filled with NULLs.
The function wordfree()
frees the allocated memory again. More precisely, it does not free its argument,
but it frees the array we_wordv and the strings that points to.
Since the expansion is the same as the expansion by the shell (see
sh(1)
) of the parameters to a command, the string s must not contain characters
that would be illegal in shell command parameters. In particular, there
must not be any unescaped newline or |, &, ;, <, >, (, ), {, } characters outside
a command substitution or parameter substitution context.
If the argument
s contains a word that starts with an unquoted comment character #, then
it is unspecified whether that word and all following words are ignored,
or the # is treated as a non-comment character.
The expansion
done consists of the following stages: tilde expansion (replacing ~user
by user’s home directory), variable substitution (replacing $FOO by the
value of the environment variable FOO), command substitution (replacing
$(command) or ‘command‘ by the output of command), arithmetic expansion,
field splitting, wildcard expansion, quote removal.
The result of expansion
of special parameters ($@, $*, $#, $?, $-, $$, $!, $0) is unspecified.
Field
splitting is done using the environment variable $IFS. If it is not set,
the field separators are space, tab and newline.
The array
we_wordv contains the words found, followed by a NULL.
The
flag argument is a bitwise inclusive OR of the following values:
- WRDE_APPEND
- Append the words found to the array resulting from a previous call.
- WRDE_DOOFFS
- Insert we_offs initial NULLs in the array we_wordv. (These are not counted
in the returned we_wordc.)
- WRDE_NOCMD
- Don’t do command substitution.
- WRDE_REUSE
- The argument p resulted from a previous call to wordexp(), and wordfree()
was not called. Reuse the allocated storage.
- WRDE_SHOWERR
- Normally during
command substitution stderr is redirected to /dev/null. This flag specifies
that stderr is not to be redirected.
- WRDE_UNDEF
- Consider it an error if
an undefined shell variable is expanded.
In case of success
0 is returned. In case of error one of the following five values is returned.
- WRDE_BADCHAR
- Illegal occurrence of newline or one of |, &, ;, <, >, (, ), {,
}.
- WRDE_BADVAL
- An undefined shell variable was referenced, and the WRDE_UNDEF
flag told us to consider this an error.
- WRDE_CMDSUB
- Command substitution
requested, but the WRDE_NOCMD flag told us to consider this an error.
- WRDE_NOSPACE
- Out of memory.
- WRDE_SYNTAX
- Shell syntax error, such as unbalanced parentheses
or unmatched quotes.
wordexp() and wordfree() are provided in glibc
since version 2.1.
POSIX.1-2001.
The output of the following
example program is approximately that of "ls [a-c]*.c".
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <wordexp.h>
int
main(int argc, char **argv)
{
wordexp_t p;
char **w;
int i;
wordexp("[a-c]*.c", &p, 0);
w = p.we_wordv;
for (i = 0; i < p.we_wordc; i++)
printf("%s\n", w[i]);
wordfree(&p);
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
fnmatch(3)
, glob(3)
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