Here's the answer I would give if I were actually asked this question in an interview:
What environment is this where I have bash
but not tail
? Early boot scripts, maybe? Can we get busybox
in there so we can use the full complement of shell utilities? Or maybe we should see if we can squeeze a stripped-down Perl interpreter in, even without most of the modules that would make life a whole lot easier. You know dash
is much smaller than bash
and perfectly good for scripting use, right? That might also help. If none of that is an option, we should check how much space a statically linked C mini-tail
would need, I bet I can fit it in the same number of disk blocks as the shell script you want.
If that doesn't convince the interviewer that it's a silly question, then I go on to observe that I don't believe in using bash extensions, because the only good reason to write anything complicated in shell script nowadays is if total portability is an overriding concern. By avoiding anything that isn't portable even in one-offs, I don't develop bad habits, and I don't get tempted to do something in shell when it would be better done in a real programming language.
Now the thing is, in truly portable shell, arrays may not be available. (I don't actually know whether the POSIX shell spec has arrays, but there certainly are legacy-Unix shells that don't have them.) So, if you have to emulate tail
using only shell builtins and it's got to work everywhere, this is the best you can do, and yes, it's hideous, because you're writing in the wrong language:
#! /bin/sh
a=""
b=""
c=""
d=""
e=""
f=""
while read x; do
a="$b"
b="$c"
c="$d"
d="$e"
e="$f"
f="$x"
done
printf '%s\n' "$a"
printf '%s\n' "$b"
printf '%s\n' "$c"
printf '%s\n' "$d"
printf '%s\n' "$e"
printf '%s\n' "$f"
Adjust the number of variables to match the number of lines you want to print.
The battle-scarred will note that printf
is not 100% available either. Unfortunately, if all you have is echo
, you are up a creek: some versions of echo
cannot print the literal string "-n
", and others cannot print the literal string "\n
", and even figuring out which one you have is a bit of a pain, particularly as, if you don't have printf
(which is in POSIX), you probably don't have user-defined functions either.
(N.B. The code in this answer, sans rationale, was originally posted by user 'Nirk' but then deleted under downvote pressure from people whom I shall charitably assume were not aware that some shells do not have arrays.)