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On a Linux system, what is /bin/true? What is it used for?

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6 Answers 6

92

/bin/true is a command that returns 0 (a truth value in the shell).

Its purpose is to use in places in a shell script where you would normally use a literal such as "true" in a programming language, but where the shell will only take a command to run.

/bin/false is the opposite that returns non-zero (a false value in the shell).

31

From the man page:

true - do nothing, successfully

true returns a status 0.
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  • 48
    SyaZ: You may also be amused by the description of false(1): "do nothing, unsuccessfully".
    – camh
    Commented Feb 2, 2012 at 10:49
10

Note, it's not just silly or visually nice. It helps for example to exit a program without activating the end handlers which might mess up when doing multi threading or forked programs. Like in perl:

#!/usr/bin/env perl

exec "/bin/true";

END {
  print "This wont get printed .. would have if I just 'exit' or 'die'\n";
}
2

I've seen it used to fool a system operation into thinking a command has run when it hasn't. If a command is faulty eg looping, you can replace it with a symlink to 'true' to get the master job to run. Only a good idea if the job replaced isn't essential.

1

Simply saying its a program returning 0. Sometimes we need to get this value to let the script more readable. It is usually used when you need to use a command for a true value.

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  • 1
    How about adding an example? Commented May 19, 2020 at 0:00
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In the UNIX shells, it's used for the same purposes as boolean constants true and false in any other language.

while true; do
    something
done
flag=true
...
if $flag; then
    something
done
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  • 1
    how is that different from cd . ?
    – padjee
    Commented Oct 22, 2022 at 13:56
  • 1
    Well, for one thing, cd . can fail. mkdir foo; cd foo; rmdir ../foo; cd . But mostly it isn't different, nor is it different from :, nor any of a ton of other ways to force a command to succeed. But it's a lot clearer than any of those. Commented Oct 23, 2022 at 17:12
  • 1
    cd . in a deleted directory does seem to work (with a warning message) in some shells. But not all. Commented Oct 23, 2022 at 17:20

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