The manual page on Terminal for echo -n is the following:
-n Do not print the trailing newline character. This may also be
achieved by appending `\c' to the end of the string, as is done by
iBCS2 compatible systems. Note that this option as well as the
effect of `\c' are implementation-defined in IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
(``POSIX.1'') as amended by Cor. 1-2002. Applications aiming for
maximum portability are strongly encouraged to use printf(1) to
suppress the newline character.
Some shells may provide a builtin echo command which is similar or iden-
tical to this utility. Most notably, the builtin echo in sh(1) does not
accept the -n option. Consult the builtin(1) manual page.
When I try to do generate an MD5 hash by:
echo "password" | md5
It returns 286755fad04869ca523320acce0dc6a4
When I do
echo -n "password"
It returns the value that online MD5 generators return: 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99
What difference does the option -n do? I don't understand the entry in Terminal.
echo
at pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009604599/utilities/echo.html worth reading. Notably, it points out thatecho -n
is not portable across all UNIX systems (though this is better thanecho -e
, which cannot be implemented without breaking the standard outright!)