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How do I get a bash script working on FreeBSD, OpenBSD and Linux without modifying it?

Sorry, the headline might be a bit irritating, but I didn't know anything better. Anyway, I want a bash script to work on FreeBSD, OpenBSD and Linux without modifying it, but bash isn't located at the same place in Linux and BSD.

So, if I write #!/bin/bash then it won't work on BSD, because the bash shell is located in /usr/local/bin/bash there. Is there any solution to get this script working on both?

Or do I really need to ship two scripts with different paths...?

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Thomas Avatar asked Jul 12 '13 12:07

Thomas


2 Answers

Using env in the shebang (#!/usr/bin/env bash) should make the script OS agnostic.

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Ansgar Wiechers Avatar answered Sep 29 '22 01:09

Ansgar Wiechers


I like the answer about using #!/usr/bin/env bash It is an interesting and excellent answer, but that would only work if bash is in the path.

Another option might be to use #!/bin/sh which is the most universally compatible shell location. Then, have the script do something in sh, such as check where bash is installed (if bash is even installed). Another option might be to have bash exist to both locations. Making another installation may sound like overkill, but this goal could be accomplished as simply as creating a hard link so that bash actually exists in both locations.

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TGOGAM Avatar answered Sep 29 '22 00:09

TGOGAM