This may end up being a duplicate, but it proved quite hard to search for.
My problem is the following. Imagine a script that takes two parameters, say prog
and args
and passes args
to prog
. I want the quoting of args
to be preserved for prog
.
Let's take these two scripts as an example:
$ cat x
#! /bin/bash
while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
echo "$1"
shift
done
$ cat y
#! /bin/bash
echo $1
./x $1
The first script (x
) just prints the arguments in a line (so to tell how the arguments broke down). The second script passes the arguments to the first script.
Here's what happens:
$ ./y 'a b "x y"'
a b "x y"
a
b
"x
y"
As the first line (from echo
) shows, $1
correctly expands to a b "x y"
with the quotes around "x y"
in place. So why, when passed to another script ./x $1
, the "x y"
term is not kept as a single argument, but instead as two ("x
and y"
)?
How can I prevent this? I.e., how can I pass the set of arguments given to y
as a single argument (i.e., 'a b "x y"'
) to x
as multiple arguments with the quoting taking effect?
P.S. I had also tried with $@
with no difference in behavior. %q
of printf
didn't make anything sensible either. Just to be clear, my expected output is:
$ ./y 'a b "x y"'
a b "x y"
a
b
x y
Edit: What I'm trying to do is separate arguments given to two programs in the y
script. For example:
$ ./y 'args to prog1' 'args to prog2'
and have y
run prog1
with its own arguments and prog2
with its own.