I am trying to configure PS4 for better xtrace output when I also have verbose set for verbose mode. Several of the things I would like to do spawn subshells but I want to see any -x or -v output for those operations because they would print for every line.
I also wanted to get rid of the nesting/indirection depth level indicator (+) because I want the trace output to be aligned.
My initial idea was:
BACKSPACES=$'\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b'
PS4='+`printf "%s[\t] %-16.16s:%03d (%-16.16s) $ " ${BACKSPACES:0:$BASH_SUBSHELL} $(basename $BASH_SOURCE) $LINENO ${FUNCNAME[0]:+${FUNCNAME[0]}}`'
The first problem I ran into was that $BASH_SUBSHELL doesn't always seem to be the same as the number of +'s that would print. Looking into $SHLVL didn't help either.
echo $X
+ 0 2 $ echo x <-- toplevel prints one + and $BASH_SUBSHELL is 0, as expected
x
( echo subshell )
+ 1 2 $ echo subshell <-- $BASH_SUBSHELL increments to 1 as expected, but why only one + instead of two ++?
source ./test2.sh
+ 0 2 $ source ./test2.sh
echo $X$X$X$X
++ 0 2 $ echo xxxx <-- ??? is $BASH_SUBSHELL relative to the current file or something but the + indicators are not???
xxxx
subshell
I think I have gotten around this by forgetting about using $BASH_SUBSHELL and instead making the first character in PS4 an unprintable one but I'd still like to know why $BASH_SUBSHELL isn't what I expect.
To work around the issue with subshells being created within PS4, I looked an equivalent of PS1's PROMPT_COMMAND but didn't find anything except some indications on how to implement it myself.
The best way I thought I found was to trap the DEBUG signal.
trap 'debugfun $BASH_SOURCE' DEBUG
Of course, the -vx options also apply to calls to debugfun. My solution to suppress that output was to wrap the function's steps in set +vx and set -vx.
debugfun() {
set +vx
VAR=`basename $1 .sh`
set -vx
}
Now... I had to deal with the matter of every call printing:
debugfun $BASH_SOURCE <-- from -v
++ debugfun ./test.sh <-- from -x
++ set +vx <-- from -x
I'm not sure why -v doesn't cause a print on the "set +vx" line either. I thought -T option might do that but it didn't.
Anyway, I thought the output was always going to consistent so all I had to do was erase those 3 lines from within debugfun. My ugly solution was to add this line after the "set +vx":
printf "\b\r\033[K\b\r\033[K\b\r\033[K" # clear previous 3 lines
It worked!
... Except when I pipe more than once.
I'll remove the printf line to show why:
echo $X$X | sed 's/x/y/' # pipe once... debugfun is called every time before each pipe component
debugfun $BASH_SOURCE
++ debugfun ./test.sh
++ set +vx
debugfun $BASH_SOURCE
++ debugfun ./test.sh
++ set +vx
+ echo xx
+ sed s/x/y/
echo $X$X$X | sed 's/x/y/' | sed 's/y/x/' # pipe twice
debugfun $BASH_SOURCE
++ debugfun ./test.sh
++ set +vx
debugfun $BASH_SOURCE
++ debugfun ./test.sh
++ set +vx
+ echo xxx
+ sed s/x/y/ # because this line is here, clearing 3 previous lines from the next "set +vx" would clear it
debugfun $BASH_SOURCE
++ debugfun ./test.sh
++ set +vx
+ sed s/y/x/
xxx
I did, finally, come up with this solution but I think it's really ugly and, while close, isn't exactly what I want:
SPACES=" "
PS4='^@\[\e[31m\]+ [\t] \
${SPACES:0:$((${#BASH_SOURCE} > 24 ? 0 : 24 - ${#BASH_SOURCE}))}${BASH_SOURCE:$((${#BASH_SOURCE} < 24 ? 0 : -24))}:\
${SPACES:0:$((3-${#LINENO}))}$LINENO \
${FUNCNAME:-${SPACES:0:20}}${FUNCNAME:+${SPACES:0:$((20 - ${#FUNCNAME}))}} \
$ \[\e[0m\]'
The main thing I don't like is that I can't nest the bash string manipulations to not only reverse truncate $BASH_SOURCE, but to get it's basename without a subshell (i.e. combine with echo ${BASH_SOURCE##*/})
I'm out of ideas and would appreciate and clarification or tips on how to accomplish what I'm trying to do.
GNU bash, version 4.1.2(1)-release (x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu)
source ./test2.sh, 1. does./test2.shstart with#!/bin/bash? 2. normally a sourced file is executed in the same process space as the calling shell, so0 2seems right to me. You're doing something near the limits of shell programming, don't expect it to be easy ;-) Good luck! – shellter Feb 1 at 3:48DEBUGisn't a signal.BASH_SUBSHELLdoesn't actually increment for every subshell, andPS4is affected by several factors that aren't particularly useful indicators of anything. The most useful debug output comes fromset -x,BASH_COMMAND, and whatever you stick into aDEBUGtrap.set -visn't very useful. This has all come up on the mailing list in the past. You'll find some answers if you search there. You might also want to look at thecallerbuiltin. – ormaaj Feb 1 at 4:12