Problem
The execution of a Bash script fails with the following error message when the 'extglob' option is set inside a subshell:
/tmp/foo.sh: line 7: syntax error near unexpected token `('
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
(
shopt -s extglob
for f in ?(.)!(|+(.)|vendor); do
echo "$f"
done
)
It fails in the same manner inside a function:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
list_no_vendor () {
shopt -s extglob
for f in ?(.)!(|+(.)|vendor); do
echo "$f"
done
}
list_no_vendor
Investigation
In both cases, the script executes successfully when the option is set globally, outside of the subshell or function.
Surprisingly, when set locally, the 'extglob' option appears to be effectively enabled in both the subshell and function:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
(
shopt -s extglob
echo 'In the subshell:' "$(shopt extglob)"
)
list_no_vendor () {
shopt -s extglob
echo 'In the function:' "$(shopt extglob)"
}
echo 'In the main shell:' "$(shopt extglob)"
list_no_vendor
Output:
In the subshell: extglob on
In the main shell: extglob off
In the function: extglob on
This makes the syntax error extremely puzzling to me.
Workaround
Passing a heredoc to the bash
command works.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
bash <<'EOF'
shopt -s extglob
echo 'In the child:' "$(shopt extglob)"
EOF
echo 'In the parent:' "$(shopt extglob)"
Output:
In the child: extglob on
In the parent: extglob off
However I would be curious to understand the gist of the problem here.
set -e
is rather widely frowned on. See BashFAQ #105, skipping the allegory for the exercises below if in a hurry, and in-ulm.de/~mascheck/various/set-e, listing incompatibilities (of which there are many) amongst different shells' implementations of same.