Man Linux: Main Page and Category List

NAME

       zshall - the Z shell meta-man page

OVERVIEW

       Because  zsh contains many features, the zsh manual has been split into
       a number of sections.  This  manual  page  includes  all  the  separate
       manual pages in the following order:

       zshroadmap   Informal introduction to the manual
       zshmisc      Anything not fitting into the other sections
       zshexpn      Zsh command and parameter expansion
       zshparam     Zsh parameters
       zshoptions   Zsh options
       zshbuiltins  Zsh built-in functions
       zshzle       Zsh command line editing
       zshcompwid   Zsh completion widgets
       zshcompsys   Zsh completion system
       zshcompctl   Zsh completion control
       zshmodules   Zsh loadable modules
       zshcalsys    Zsh built-in calendar functions
       zshtcpsys    Zsh built-in TCP functions
       zshzftpsys   Zsh built-in FTP client
       zshcontrib   Additional zsh functions and utilities

DESCRIPTION

       Zsh  is  a  UNIX  command  interpreter (shell) usable as an interactive
       login shell and as a shell script command processor.  Of  the  standard
       shells,  zsh most closely resembles ksh but includes many enhancements.
       Zsh has command line editing, builtin spelling correction, programmable
       command  completion,  shell  functions  (with  autoloading),  a history
       mechanism, and a host of other features.

AUTHOR

       Zsh was originally written by Paul Falstad <pf@zsh.org>.   Zsh  is  now
       maintained   by   the   members   of   the   zsh-workers  mailing  list
       <zsh-workers@sunsite.dk>.  The development is currently coordinated  by
       Peter  Stephenson  <pws@zsh.org>.   The coordinator can be contacted at
       <coordinator@zsh.org>,  but  matters  relating  to  the   code   should
       generally go to the mailing list.

AVAILABILITY

       Zsh  is available from the following anonymous FTP sites.  These mirror
       sites are kept frequently up to date.  The sites marked with (H) may be
       mirroring ftp.cs.elte.hu instead of the primary site.

       Primary site
              ftp://ftp.zsh.org/pub/zsh/
              http://www.zsh.org/pub/zsh/

       Australia
              ftp://ftp.zsh.org/pub/zsh/
              http://www.zsh.org/pub/zsh/

       Denmark
              ftp://sunsite.dk/pub/unix/shells/zsh/

       Finland
              ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/unix/shells/zsh/

       Germany
              ftp://ftp.fu-berlin.de/pub/unix/shells/zsh/  (H)
              ftp://ftp.gmd.de/packages/zsh/
              ftp://ftp.uni-trier.de/pub/unix/shell/zsh/

       Hungary
              ftp://ftp.cs.elte.hu/pub/zsh/
              http://www.cs.elte.hu/pub/zsh/
              ftp://ftp.kfki.hu/pub/packages/zsh/

       Israel
              ftp://ftp.math.technion.ac.il/pub/zsh/
              http://www.math.technion.ac.il/pub/zsh/

       Japan
              ftp://ftp.win.ne.jp/pub/shell/zsh/

       Korea
              ftp://linux.sarang.net/mirror/system/shell/zsh/

       Netherlands
              ftp://ftp.demon.nl/pub/mirrors/zsh/

       Norway
              ftp://ftp.uit.no/pub/unix/shells/zsh/

       Poland
              ftp://sunsite.icm.edu.pl/pub/unix/shells/zsh/

       Romania
              ftp://ftp.roedu.net/pub/mirrors/ftp.zsh.org/pub/zsh/
              ftp://ftp.kappa.ro/pub/mirrors/ftp.zsh.org/pub/zsh/

       Slovenia
              ftp://ftp.siol.net/mirrors/zsh/

       Sweden
              ftp://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/unix/zsh/

       UK
              ftp://ftp.net.lut.ac.uk/zsh/
              ftp://sunsite.org.uk/packages/zsh/

       USA
              http://zsh.open-mirror.com/

       The  up-to-date  source  code  is  available  via  anonymous  CVS  from
       Sourceforge.  See http://sourceforge.net/projects/zsh/ for details.

MAILING LISTS

       Zsh has 3 mailing lists:

       <zsh-announce@sunsite.dk>
              Announcements about releases, major changes in the shell and the
              monthly posting of the Zsh FAQ.  (moderated)

       <zsh-users@sunsite.dk>
              User discussions.

       <zsh-workers@sunsite.dk>
              Hacking, development, bug reports and patches.

       To subscribe or unsubscribe, send mail to the associated administrative
       address for the mailing list.

       <zsh-announce-subscribe@sunsite.dk>
       <zsh-users-subscribe@sunsite.dk>
       <zsh-workers-subscribe@sunsite.dk>
       <zsh-announce-unsubscribe@sunsite.dk>
       <zsh-users-unsubscribe@sunsite.dk>
       <zsh-workers-unsubscribe@sunsite.dk>

       YOU ONLY NEED TO JOIN ONE OF THE MAILING LISTS AS THEY ARE NESTED.  All
       submissions  to  zsh-announce are automatically forwarded to zsh-users.
       All  submissions  to   zsh-users   are   automatically   forwarded   to
       zsh-workers.

       If  you  have  problems subscribing/unsubscribing to any of the mailing
       lists, send  mail  to  <listmaster@zsh.org>.   The  mailing  lists  are
       maintained by Karsten Thygesen <karthy@kom.auc.dk>.

       The  mailing  lists  are archived; the archives can be accessed via the
       administrative addresses listed  above.   There  is  also  a  hypertext
       archive,   maintained   by   Geoff  Wing  <gcw@zsh.org>,  available  at
       http://www.zsh.org/mla/.

THE ZSH FAQ

       Zsh has a list of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ), maintained by Peter
       Stephenson  <pws@zsh.org>.   It  is  regularly  posted to the newsgroup
       comp.unix.shell and the zsh-announce mailing list.  The latest  version
       can    be    found   at   any   of   the   Zsh   FTP   sites,   or   at
       http://www.zsh.org/FAQ/.  The contact address for  FAQ-related  matters
       is <faqmaster@zsh.org>.

THE ZSH WEB PAGE

       Zsh  has  a  web page which is located at http://www.zsh.org/.  This is
       maintained by Karsten Thygesen <karthy@zsh.org>,  of  SunSITE  Denmark.
       The contact address for web-related matters is <webmaster@zsh.org>.

THE ZSH USERGUIDE

       A  userguide is currently in preparation.  It is intended to complement
       the manual, with explanations and hints on issues where the manual  can
       be cabbalistic, hierographic, or downright mystifying (for example, the
       word `hierographic' does not exist).  It can be viewed in  its  current
       state   at  http://zsh.sunsite.dk/Guide/.   At  the  time  of  writing,
       chapters dealing with startup files and  their  contents  and  the  new
       completion system were essentially complete.

THE ZSH WIKI

       A  `wiki'  website for zsh has been created at http://www.zshwiki.org/.
       This is a site which can be added to and  modified  directly  by  users
       without  any  special  permission.   You  can add your own zsh tips and
       configurations.

INVOCATION OPTIONS

       The following flags are  interpreted  by  the  shell  when  invoked  to
       determine where the shell will read commands from:

       -c     Take  the  first  argument  as a command to execute, rather than
              reading commands from  a  script  or  standard  input.   If  any
              further  arguments  are  given, the first one is assigned to $0,
              rather than being used as a positional parameter.

       -i     Force shell to be interactive.

       -s     Force shell to read commands from the standard input.  If the -s
              flag is not present and an argument is given, the first argument
              is taken to be the pathname of a script to execute.

       After the  first  one  or  two  arguments  have  been  appropriated  as
       described above, the remaining arguments are assigned to the positional
       parameters.

       For further options,  which  are  common  to  invocation  and  the  set
       builtin, see zshoptions(1).

       Options  may  be specified by name using the -o option.  -o acts like a
       single-letter option, but takes a following string as the option  name.
       For example,

              zsh -x -o shwordsplit scr

       runs  the  script  scr,  setting the XTRACE option by the corresponding
       letter `-x' and the SH_WORD_SPLIT  option  by  name.   Options  may  be
       turned  off  by  name  by using +o instead of -o.  -o can be stacked up
       with preceding single-letter options, so for example `-xo  shwordsplit'
       or `-xoshwordsplit' is equivalent to `-x -o shwordsplit'.

       Options  may  also  be  specified  by  name  in  GNU long option style,
       `--option-name'.  When this is done, `-' characters in the option  name
       are permitted: they are translated into `_', and thus ignored.  So, for
       example, `zsh  --sh-word-split'  invokes  zsh  with  the  SH_WORD_SPLIT
       option  turned  on.   Like other option syntaxes, options can be turned
       off by replacing the initial `-' with a `+'; thus `+-sh-word-split'  is
       equivalent  to  `--no-sh-word-split'.   Unlike  other  option syntaxes,
       GNU-style long options cannot be stacked with any other options, so for
       example  `-x-shwordsplit'  is  an error, rather than being treated like
       `-x --shwordsplit'.

       The special GNU-style  option  `--version'  is  handled;  it  sends  to
       standard   output   the   shell's   version   information,  then  exits
       successfully.  `--help' is also handled; it sends to standard output  a
       list  of  options  that can be used when invoking the shell, then exits
       successfully.

       Option processing may be finished, allowing  following  arguments  that
       start  with  `-' or `+' to be treated as normal arguments, in two ways.
       Firstly, a lone `-' (or `+') as  an  argument  by  itself  ends  option
       processing.   Secondly,  a  special option `--' (or `+-'), which may be
       specified on its own (which is the standard  POSIX  usage)  or  may  be
       stacked  with  preceding  options  (so `-x-' is equivalent to `-x --').
       Options are not permitted to be stacked after `--'  (so  `-x-f'  is  an
       error),  but  note  the  GNU-style  option  form discussed above, where
       `--shwordsplit' is permitted and does not end option processing.

       Except when the sh/ksh emulation single-letter options are  in  effect,
       the  option  `-b' (or `+b') ends option processing.  `-b' is like `--',
       except that further single-letter options can be stacked after the `-b'
       and will take effect as normal.

COMPATIBILITY

       Zsh  tries  to  emulate  sh  or  ksh  when  it  is invoked as sh or ksh
       respectively; more precisely, it looks at the first letter of the  name
       by  which  it  was invoked, excluding any initial `r' (assumed to stand
       for `restricted'), and if that is `s' or `k' it will emulate sh or ksh.
       Furthermore,  if  invoked  as su (which happens on certain systems when
       the shell is executed by the su command), the shell will try to find an
       alternative  name  from  the  SHELL  environment  variable  and perform
       emulation based on that.

       In sh and ksh compatibility modes  the  following  parameters  are  not
       special  and not initialized by the shell: ARGC, argv, cdpath, fignore,
       fpath, HISTCHARS, mailpath, MANPATH,  manpath,  path,  prompt,  PROMPT,
       PROMPT2, PROMPT3, PROMPT4, psvar, status, watch.

       The  usual zsh startup/shutdown scripts are not executed.  Login shells
       source /etc/profile followed by $HOME/.profile.  If the ENV environment
       variable  is  set  on  invocation,  $ENV  is  sourced after the profile
       scripts.  The value of ENV is subjected to parameter expansion, command
       substitution,  and  arithmetic  expansion before being interpreted as a
       pathname.  Note that the PRIVILEGED option also affects  the  execution
       of startup files.

       The  following  options  are  set if the shell is invoked as sh or ksh:
       NO_BAD_PATTERN,       NO_BANG_HIST,       NO_BG_NICE,        NO_EQUALS,
       NO_FUNCTION_ARGZERO,      GLOB_SUBST,     NO_GLOBAL_EXPORT,     NO_HUP,
       INTERACTIVE_COMMENTS, KSH_ARRAYS,  NO_MULTIOS,  NO_NOMATCH,  NO_NOTIFY,
       POSIX_BUILTINS,  NO_PROMPT_PERCENT,  RM_STAR_SILENT, SH_FILE_EXPANSION,
       SH_GLOB, SH_OPTION_LETTERS, SH_WORD_SPLIT.  Additionally  the  BSD_ECHO
       and  IGNORE_BRACES  options are set if zsh is invoked as sh.  Also, the
       KSH_OPTION_PRINT,   LOCAL_OPTIONS,   PROMPT_BANG,   PROMPT_SUBST    and
       SINGLE_LINE_ZLE options are set if zsh is invoked as ksh.

RESTRICTED SHELL

       When  the  basename  of  the command used to invoke zsh starts with the
       letter `r' or the `-r' command line option is supplied  at  invocation,
       the  shell  becomes  restricted.   Emulation  mode  is determined after
       stripping the letter `r' from the invocation name.  The  following  are
       disabled in restricted mode:

       o      changing directories with the cd builtin

       o      changing  or unsetting the PATH, path, MODULE_PATH, module_path,
              SHELL, HISTFILE,  HISTSIZE,  GID,  EGID,  UID,  EUID,  USERNAME,
              LD_LIBRARY_PATH,     LD_AOUT_LIBRARY_PATH,     LD_PRELOAD    and
              LD_AOUT_PRELOAD parameters

       o      specifying command names containing /

       o      specifying command pathnames using hash

       o      redirecting output to files

       o      using the exec builtin command to replace the shell with another
              command

       o      using  jobs  -Z  to  overwrite  the  shell process' argument and
              environment space

       o      using the ARGV0  parameter  to  override  argv[0]  for  external
              commands

       o      turning off restricted mode with set +r or unsetopt RESTRICTED

       These  restrictions  are  enforced  after processing the startup files.
       The startup files should set  up  PATH  to  point  to  a  directory  of
       commands  which  can  be  safely invoked in the restricted environment.
       They may also add further restrictions by disabling selected  builtins.

       Restricted  mode  can  also  be  activated  any  time  by  setting  the
       RESTRICTED option.   This  immediately  enables  all  the  restrictions
       described  above  even if the shell still has not processed all startup
       files.

STARTUP/SHUTDOWN FILES

       Commands  are  first  read  from  /etc/zsh/zshenv;   this   cannot   be
       overridden.  Subsequent behaviour is modified by the RCS and GLOBAL_RCS
       options; the former affects all startup files, while  the  second  only
       affects  global  startup  files (those shown here with an path starting
       with a /).  If one of the options is unset at any point, any subsequent
       startup file(s) of the corresponding type will not be read.  It is also
       possible for a file in $ZDOTDIR to re-enable GLOBAL_RCS. Both  RCS  and
       GLOBAL_RCS are set by default.

       Commands  are then read from $ZDOTDIR/.zshenv.  If the shell is a login
       shell,   commands   are   read   from   /etc/zsh/zprofile   and    then
       $ZDOTDIR/.zprofile.   Then,  if  the shell is interactive, commands are
       read from /etc/zsh/zshrc and then  $ZDOTDIR/.zshrc.   Finally,  if  the
       shell  is a login shell, /etc/zsh/zlogin and $ZDOTDIR/.zlogin are read.

       When  a  login  shell  exits,  the  files  $ZDOTDIR/.zlogout  and  then
       /etc/zsh/zlogout  are  read.  This happens with either an explicit exit
       via the exit or  logout  commands,  or  an  implicit  exit  by  reading
       end-of-file from the terminal.  However, if the shell terminates due to
       exec'ing another process, the logout files are  not  read.   These  are
       also  affected  by  the RCS and GLOBAL_RCS options.  Note also that the
       RCS option affects the saving of history files, i.e. if  RCS  is  unset
       when the shell exits, no history file will be saved.

       If ZDOTDIR is unset, HOME is used instead.  Files listed above as being
       in /etc may be in another directory, depending on the installation.

       As /etc/zsh/zshenv is run for all instances of  zsh,  it  is  important
       that it be kept as small as possible.  In particular, it is a good idea
       to put code that does not need to be run for every single shell  behind
       a  test  of the form `if [[ -o rcs ]]; then ...' so that it will not be
       executed when zsh is invoked with the `-f' option.

       Any of these files  may  be  pre-compiled  with  the  zcompile  builtin
       command (see zshbuiltins(1)).  If a compiled file exists (named for the
       original file plus the  .zwc  extension)  and  it  is  newer  than  the
       original file, the compiled file will be used instead.

FILES

       $ZDOTDIR/.zshenv
       $ZDOTDIR/.zprofile
       $ZDOTDIR/.zshrc
       $ZDOTDIR/.zlogin
       $ZDOTDIR/.zlogout
       ${TMPPREFIX}*   (default is /tmp/zsh*)
       /etc/zsh/zshenv
       /etc/zsh/zprofile
       /etc/zsh/zshrc
       /etc/zsh/zlogin
       /etc/zsh/zlogout    (installation-specific - /etc is the default)

SEE ALSO

       sh(1), csh(1), tcsh(1), rc(1), bash(1), ksh(1)

       IEEE  Standard  for  information Technology - Portable Operating System
       Interface (POSIX) - Part 2: Shell and Utilities, IEEE Inc,  1993,  ISBN
       1-55937-255-9.