138

I'd like to execute an gawk script with --re-interval using a shebang. The "naive" approach of

#!/usr/bin/gawk --re-interval -f
... awk script goes here

does not work, since gawk is called with the first argument "--re-interval -f" (not splitted around the whitespace), which it does not understand. Is there a workaround for that?

Of course you can either not call gawk directly but wrap it into a shell script that splits the first argument, or make a shell script that then calls gawk and put the script into another file, but I was wondering if there was some way to do this within one file.

The behaviour of shebang lines differs from system to system - at least in Cygwin it does not split the arguments by whitespaces. I just care about how to do it on a system that behaves like that; the script is not meant to be portable.

4
  • 2
    A silly experiment I just did was with one script using another script on the shebang line, which did split the arguments correctly.
    – Hasturkun
    Nov 29, 2010 at 12:40
  • 1
    @Hasturkun, that raises another issue, that the behavior of shebang lines also differs from system to system wrt whether the invoked program can itself be a script.
    – dubiousjim
    Apr 19, 2012 at 15:05
  • 2
  • With recent versions of gawk (>= 4.0), --re-interval is not needed anymore (see [gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/…).
    – user1461760
    Mar 3, 2018 at 20:56

10 Answers 10

163

The shebang line has never been specified as part of POSIX, SUS, LSB or any other specification. AFAIK, it hasn't even been properly documented.

There is a rough consensus about what it does: take everything between the ! and the \n and exec it. The assumption is that everything between the ! and the \n is a full absolute path to the interpreter. There is no consensus about what happens if it contains whitespace.

  1. Some operating systems simply treat the entire thing as the path. After all, in most operating systems, whitespace or dashes are legal in a path.
  2. Some operating systems split at whitespace and treat the first part as the path to the interpreter and the rest as individual arguments.
  3. Some operating systems split at the first whitespace and treat the front part as the path to the interpeter and the rest as a single argument (which is what you are seeing).
  4. Some even don't support shebang lines at all.

Thankfully, 1. and 4. seem to have died out, but 3. is pretty widespread, so you simply cannot rely on being able to pass more than one argument.

And since the location of commands is also not specified in POSIX or SUS, you generally use up that single argument by passing the executable's name to env so that it can determine the executable's location; e.g.:

#!/usr/bin/env gawk

[Obviously, this still assumes a particular path for env, but there are only very few systems where it lives in /bin, so this is generally safe. The location of env is a lot more standardized than the location of gawk or even worse something like python or ruby or spidermonkey.]

Which means that you cannot actually use any arguments at all.

12
  • 3
    FreeBSD's env has a -S switch which helps here, but it's not present on my Linux env, and I suspect isn't available on gygwin, either. @hstoerr, other users with different situations may be reading your questions later, so in general portable answers are preferable, even if you don't now require portability.
    – dubiousjim
    Apr 19, 2012 at 15:11
  • 4
    So we can’t portably use arguments in a shebang. But what if we need arguments by any means necessary? I’m guessing that the solution is to write a wrapper shell script containing #!/bin/sh and /usr/bin/env gawk --re-interval -f my-script.awk. Is that correct? Jul 5, 2012 at 14:24
  • 1
    Sounds like that -S option would be useful to have added to the GNU coreutils version of env?? And/or the linux kernel shebang behavior modified to be like option 2... though I presume there would be compatibility concerns with the latter change.
    – lindes
    Dec 24, 2013 at 5:42
  • 7
    @Kaz: Yes, but since the paths of many binaries are not standardized, you use up your one argument for #!/usr/bin/env ruby or the likes. Jun 9, 2014 at 19:35
  • 4
    @Pacerier: Change the POSIX specification and wait 20-30 years until all systems have been updated to be compliant with the spec. Aug 16, 2017 at 6:32
50

Although not exactly portable, starting with coreutils 8.30 and according to its documentation you will be able to use:

#!/usr/bin/env -S command arg1 arg2 ...

So given:

$ cat test.sh
#!/usr/bin/env -S showargs here 'is another' long arg -e "this and that " too

you will get:

% ./test.sh 
$0 is '/usr/local/bin/showargs'
$1 is 'here'
$2 is 'is another'
$3 is 'long'
$4 is 'arg'
$5 is '-e'
$6 is 'this and that '
$7 is 'too'
$8 is './test.sh'

and in case you are curious showargs is:

#!/usr/bin/env sh
echo "\$0 is '$0'"

i=1
for arg in "$@"; do
    echo "\$$i is '$arg'"
    i=$((i+1))
done

Original answer here.

1
  • 1
    FYI, FreeBSD has had -S for years (since 6.0). This is a welcome portability addition to coreutils.
    – Juan
    Jan 18, 2019 at 21:14
27

This seems to work for me with (g)awk.

#!/bin/sh
arbitrary_long_name==0 "exec" "/usr/bin/gawk" "--re-interval" "-f" "$0" "$@"


# The real awk program starts here
{ print $0 }

Note the #! runs /bin/sh, so this script is first interpreted as a shell script.

At first, I simply tried "exec" "/usr/bin/gawk" "--re-interval" "-f" "$0" "$@", but awk treated that as a command and printed out every line of input unconditionally. That is why I put in the arbitrary_long_name==0 - it's supposed to fail all the time. You could replace it with some gibberish string. Basically, I was looking for a false-condition in awk that would not adversely affect the shell script.

In the shell script, the arbitrary_long_name==0 defines a variable called arbitrary_long_name and sets it equal to =0.

4
  • 1
    This is my answer, but I wonder if it's sufficiently portable and robust. Does it depend specifically on the bash, or will it work with any POSIX sh? And I don't use awk often, so I'm not sure my trick on the second line is a good way to force awk to ignore the line. Sep 26, 2014 at 9:49
  • 1
    Just what I was wondering, +1, but probably inadvisable (hence the relative votes). Apr 6, 2016 at 12:42
  • Can you explain what problems this might have, @AaronHall ? As long as the variable arbitrary_long_name doesn't clash with a variable used in the real awk program, I can't see any issue. Is there something I'm missing? Apr 7, 2016 at 9:07
  • Use #!/bin/sh - instead of #!/bin/sh to protect the script from possibly misbehaving in a dangerous way if invoked with a zeroth argument that has - as the first character. This can happen accidentally in programming languages like C, where it is easy to accidentally mess up by forgetting to pass the invoked program name as part of the argument array to execve and similar functions, and if people habitually forget to protect against it, it can also end up being the last step in a maliciously exploitable vulnerability that lets an attacker get an interactive shell.
    – mtraceur
    May 11, 2020 at 19:41
13

I came across the same issue, with no apparent solution because of the way the whitespaces are dealt with in a shebang (at least on Linux).

However, you can pass several options in a shebang, as long as they are short options and they can be concatenated (the GNU way).

For example, you can not have

#!/usr/bin/foo -i -f

but you can have

#!/usr/bin/foo -if

Obviously, that only works when the options have short equivalents and take no arguments.

11

Under Cygwin and Linux everything after the path of the shebang gets parsed to the program as one argument.

It's possible to hack around this by using another awk script inside the shebang:

#!/usr/bin/gawk {system("/usr/bin/gawk --re-interval -f " FILENAME); exit}

This will execute {system("/usr/bin/gawk --re-interval -f " FILENAME); exit} in awk.
And this will execute /usr/bin/gawk --re-interval -f path/to/your/script.awk in your systems shell.

1
  • 2
    this wont work if youve passed arguments to the script
    – Zombo
    Jan 14, 2017 at 21:48
4
#!/bin/sh
''':'
exec YourProg -some_options "$0" "$@"
'''

The above shell shebang trick is more portable than /usr/bin/env.

5
  • The ''':' is a hold-over because my original solution was for a python script so the ''':' tells the python interpreter to ignore the exec part. Jan 10, 2014 at 19:13
  • 4
    I think you're being downvoted because your solution is for python, but this question is about awk. Sep 26, 2014 at 9:42
  • 1
    Great hack for python.
    – Zaar Hai
    Aug 15, 2017 at 10:50
  • what was the purpose of the single quotes? ''':' and '''
    – Walid
    Jan 8, 2021 at 7:59
  • 1
    @Walid – In python (but not awk and not posix shell!), triple apostrophes can be used for a string without having to worry about quotes or apostrophes inside it (unless there are 3+ consecutive apostrophes).
    – Adam Katz
    Sep 2, 2021 at 18:59
3

In the gawk manual (http://www.gnu.org/manual/gawk/gawk.html), the end of section 1.14 note that you should only use a single argument when running gawk from a shebang line. It says that the OS will treat everything after the path to gawk as a single argument. Perhaps there is another way to specify the --re-interval option? Perhaps your script can reference your shell in the shebang line, run gawk as a command, and include the text of your script as a "here document".

2
  • It seems there is no other way to specify the option. You are right: gawk -f - <<EOF , some lines of scripts, EOF works, but it precludes me from reading the standard input with gawk. Nov 30, 2010 at 9:42
  • The here document eats up the standard input stream for gawk, but you may still be able to pipe something in over stderr (that is, redirect stdout to stderr before piping into this script). I've never actually tried that but as long as the first process doesn't emit anything on stderr, it might work. You can also create a named pipe (linuxjournal.com/content/using-named-pipes-fifos-bash) if you want to make sure that nothing else is using it.
    – bta
    Dec 1, 2010 at 1:52
3

Why not use bash and gawk itself, to skip past shebang, read the script, and pass it as a file to a second instance of gawk [--with-whatever-number-of-params-you-need]?

#!/bin/bash
gawk --re-interval -f <(gawk 'NR>3' $0 )
exit
{
  print "Program body goes here"
  print $1
}

(-the same could naturally also be accomplished with e.g. sed or tail, but I think there's some kind of beauty depending only on bash and gawk itself;)

0

Just for fun: there is the following quite weird solution that reroutes stdin and the program through file descriptors 3 and 4. You could also create a temporary file for the script.

#!/bin/bash
exec 3>&0
exec <<-EOF 4>&0
BEGIN {print "HALLO"}
{print \$1}
EOF
gawk --re-interval -f <(cat 0>&4) 0>&3

One thing is annoying about this: the shell does variable expansion on the script, so you have to quote every $ (as done in the second line of the script) and probably more than that.

-1

For a portable solution, use awk rather than gawk, invoke the standard BOURNE shell (/bin/sh) with your shebang, and invoke awk directly, passing the program on the command line as a here document rather than via stdin:

#!/bin/sh
gawk --re-interval <<<EOF
PROGRAM HERE
EOF

Note: no -f argument to awk. That leaves stdin available for awk to read input from. Assuming you have gawk installed and on your PATH, that achieves everything I think you were trying to do with your original example (assuming you wanted the file content to be the awk script and not the input, which I think your shebang approach would have treated it as).

2
  • 3
    That didn't work for me. The bash man says <<<blabla puts blabla on stdin. Did you mean <<-EOF? Either way, that's also puts the program on stdin. Mar 15, 2013 at 13:10
  • That's a bashism. This will work if it's #!/bin/bash or if /bin/sh is actually bash. It won't work if it's dash or some similar simple posix shell.
    – Adam Katz
    Sep 2, 2021 at 19:00

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