Using the
test or [
(square bracket) command (44.20)
for a string test can cause
errors if the variable starts with a dash (-
). For example:
if [ "$var" =something
] then ...
If $var
starts with -r
, the test command
may think that you want to test for a readable file.
One common fix (that doesn't always work; see below) is to put an extra character at the start of each side of the test. This means the first argument will never start with a dash; it won't look like an option:
if [ "X$var" = Xsomething
] then ...
That trick doesn't work if you want the test to fail when the variable is empty or not set. Here's a test that handles empty variables:
case "${var+X}" in X) ...do this if variable is set... ;; *) ...do this if variable is not set... ;; esac
If $var
is set (even if it has an empty string), the shell replaces
${var+X}
(45.12)
with just X
and the first part of the case succeeds.
Otherwise the default case, *)
, is used.
-