Name
set
Synopsis
[
set
options
] [arg1 arg2 .
..]
With no arguments, set prints the values of all variables known to the current shell. Options can be enabled (-
option
) or disabled (+
option
). Options can also be set when the shell is invoked, via bash
. Arguments are assigned in order to $1
, $2
, and so on.
Options
- -
Turn off -v and -x, and turn off option processing.
-
--
Used as the last option; turn off option processing so that arguments beginning with - are not misinterpreted as options. (For example, you can set
$1
to-1
.) If no arguments are given after--
, unset the positional parameters.-
-a
From now on, automatically mark variables for export after defining or changing them.
-
-b
Report background job status at termination instead of waiting for next shell prompt.
-
-e
Exit if a command yields a nonzero exit status.
-
-f
Don’t expand filename metacharacters (e.g.,
* ? [ ]
). Wildcard expansion is sometimes called globbing.-
-h
Locate and remember commands as they are defined.
-
-k
Assignment of environment variables (
var
=
value
) take effect regardless of where they appear on the command line. Normally, assignments must precede the command name.-
-m
Monitor mode. Enable job control; background jobs execute in a separate process group. -m usually is set automatically.
-
-n
Read commands, but don’t execute. Useful for checking errors, particularly for shell scripts.
-
-o [
m]
List shell modes, or turn on mode m. Many modes can be set by other options. The modes can be turned off through the ...
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