This one stumped me. I have a simple shell script executing that works fine on my Linux (AWS aka CentOS) machine but crashed on my Mac OS X machine. It turned out escapes (\
) in string commands needed an extra escape character (\\
).
Could someone enlighten me as to what I am missing here -- ie, what is it about running the R scripts on Macs that require this?
The behavior was *not* observed when calling, say, python3 -c ..
On both machines, I am using bash
, specifically /bin/bash
NOTE: The Mac is a slightly later version of R: 3.5.1 vs 3.4.1, but I would be strongly surprised if that was the culprit. Anyone available to confirm?
Simple Example:
R --vanilla -e 'cat(" Hello \n World \n ")'
The above runs fine on a CentOS machine, but requires an additional escape character (\\n
instead of \n
) to execute correctly. (example at bottom)
For reference/comparison, the following python command works identically on each of the Mac OS X, CentOS machines I tested.
python3 -c 'print("Hello \n World")'
For details, here is the output comparing the two commands on each of the two machines
1. R --vanilla -e 'cat(" Hello \n World \n ")'
2. R --vanilla -e 'cat(" Hello \\n World \\n ")'
1.
R --vanilla -e 'cat(" Hello \n World \n ")'
## CENTOS:
> cat(" Hello \n World \n ")
Hello
World
## MAC OS X:
> cat(" Hello
+
+ Error: unexpected end of input
Execution halted
2.
R --vanilla -e 'cat(" Hello \\n World \\n ")'
## CENTOS:
> cat(" Hello \\n World \\n ")
Hello \n World \n >
## MAC OS X:
> cat(" Hello \n World \n ")
Hello
World
For comparison's sake, I'm not seeing the same behavior when running a simple python script.
## Each of these produce identical
## results in Mac OSX as CentOS
python3 -c 'print("Hello \n World")'
python3 -c 'print("Hello \\n World")'
Machine & Session Info:
- Linux Box
> cat /etc/os-release
NAME="Amazon Linux AMI"
VERSION="2018.03"
ID="amzn"
ID_LIKE="rhel fedora"
VERSION_ID="2018.03"
PRETTY_NAME="Amazon Linux AMI 2018.03"
ANSI_COLOR="0;33"
CPE_NAME="cpe:/o:amazon:linux:2018.03:ga"
HOME_URL="http://aws.amazon.com/amazon-linux-ami/"
> R --vanilla -e 'sessionInfo()'
R version 3.4.1 (2017-06-30)
Platform: x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu (64-bit)
Running under: Amazon Linux AMI 2018.03
Matrix products: default
BLAS/LAPACK: /usr/lib64/R/lib/libRblas.so
locale:
[1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=C
[3] LC_TIME=en_US.UTF-8 LC_COLLATE=en_US.UTF-8
[5] LC_MONETARY=en_US.UTF-8 LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8
[7] LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NAME=C
[9] LC_ADDRESS=C LC_TELEPHONE=C
[11] LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8 LC_IDENTIFICATION=C
attached base packages:
[1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base
loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
[1] compiler_3.4.1
- Mac OS Box
Mojave 10.14.3
> R --vanilla -e 'sessionInfo()'
R version 3.5.1 (2018-07-02)
Platform: x86_64-apple-darwin15.6.0 (64-bit)
Running under: macOS 10.14.3
Matrix products: default
BLAS: /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.5/Resources/lib/libRblas.0.dylib
LAPACK: /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.5/Resources/lib/libRlapack.dylib
locale:
[1] en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/C/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8
attached base packages:
[1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base
loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
[1] compiler_3.5.1
- Another Mac OSX machine, running 3.4.3, same error
> sessionInfo()
R version 3.4.3 (2017-11-30)
Platform: x86_64-apple-darwin15.6.0 (64-bit)
Running under: macOS High Sierra 10.13.6
R
wrapper shell script, it's pretty ugly in there (as in, rampant BashFAQ #50 violations) -- I'd need to dig in more to say anything conclusive, but it certainly smells like they could have introduced some bugs. – Charles Duffy Mar 18 '19 at 19:51R
wrapper script executesexec "${R_binary}" ${args} "${@}"
. That's... well, follow the BashFAQ #50 link in the above comment for a description of why unquoted$args
is a practice nobody should ever, ever use. – Charles Duffy Mar 18 '19 at 19:53R_HOME=/usr/lib/R /usr/lib/R/bin/exec/R -e 'cat(" Hello \n World \n ")'
behave consistently, after you fix up the paths to be correct for each platform? – Charles Duffy Mar 18 '19 at 20:03bash --version
is the wrong way to check anyhow; it tells you which version is first in the PATH, not which version is currently running; thus, on MacOS, it shows any newer interpreter installed with Nix/MacPorts/Homebrew, even if Apple's/bin/bash
is currently in use. – Charles Duffy Mar 19 '19 at 11:58sed
even on MacOS. Answering your other question: To check the running version of bash,declare -p BASH_VERSION
will do. – Charles Duffy Mar 19 '19 at 19:59