On a Linux system, what is /bin/true
? What is it used for?
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/foo/bar || true (works if /bin/true) is in the path. While not labeled as such, this question does explain something that is useful in shell scripts, makefiles, etc.. thus not voting to close.– user50049Commented Feb 1, 2010 at 14:16
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1forums.thedailywtf.com/forums/t/3779.aspx– Colin PickardCommented Jul 22, 2011 at 16:02
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You may want to have a look at the source code of them; since I was curious.– Константин ВанCommented Jun 7, 2017 at 5:42
6 Answers
/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).
From the man page:
true - do nothing, successfully
true returns a status 0.
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48SyaZ: You may also be amused by the description of
false(1)
: "do nothing, unsuccessfully".– camhCommented Feb 2, 2012 at 10:49
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";
}
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.
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
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
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1Well, 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