read - read line of input into variables¶
Synopsis¶
read [OPTIONS] [VARIABLE ...]
Description¶
read
reads from standard input and either writes the result back to standard output (for use in command substitution), or stores the result in one or more shell variables. By default, read
reads a single line and splits it into variables on spaces or tabs. Alternatively, a null character or a maximum number of characters can be used to terminate the input, and other delimiters can be given. Unlike other shells, there is no default variable (such as REPLY
) for storing the result - instead, it is printed on standard output.
The following options are available:
-c CMD
or--command=CMD
sets the initial string in the interactive mode command buffer toCMD
.-d DELIMITER
or--delimiter=DELIMITER
splits on DELIMITER. DELIMITER will be used as an entire string to split on, not a set of characters.-g
or--global
makes the variables global.-s
or--silent
masks characters written to the terminal, replacing them with asterisks. This is useful for reading things like passwords or other sensitive information.-l
or--local
makes the variables local.-n NCHARS
or--nchars=NCHARS
makesread
return after reading NCHARS characters or the end of the line, whichever comes first.-p PROMPT_CMD
or--prompt=PROMPT_CMD
uses the output of the shell commandPROMPT_CMD
as the prompt for the interactive mode. The default prompt command isset_color green; echo read; set_color normal; echo "> "
-P PROMPT_STR
or--prompt-str=PROMPT_STR
uses the string as the prompt for the interactive mode. It is equivalent toecho PROMPT_STR
and is provided solely to avoid the need to frame the prompt as a command. All special characters in the string are automatically escaped before being passed to the echo command.-R RIGHT_PROMPT_CMD
or--right-prompt=RIGHT_PROMPT_CMD
uses the output of the shell commandRIGHT_PROMPT_CMD
as the right prompt for the interactive mode. There is no default right prompt command.-S
or--shell
enables syntax highlighting, tab completions and command termination suitable for entering shellscript code in the interactive mode. NOTE: Prior to fish 3.0, the short opt for--shell
was-s
, but it has been changed for compatibility with bash's-s
short opt for--silent
.-t
-or--tokenize
causes read to split the input into variables by the shell's tokenization rules. This means it will honor quotes and escaping. This option is of course incompatible with other options to control splitting like--delimiter
and does not honor $IFS (like fish's tokenizer). It saves the tokens in the manner they'd be passed to commands on the commandline, so e.g.a\ b
is stored asa b
. Note that currently it leaves command substitutions intact along with the parentheses.-u
or--unexport
prevents the variables from being exported to child processes (default behaviour).-U
or--universal
causes the specified shell variable to be made universal.-x
or--export
exports the variables to child processes.-a
or--list
stores the result as a list in a single variable. This option is also available as--array
for backwards compatibility.-z
or--null
marks the end of the line with the NUL character, instead of newline. This also disables interactive mode.-L
or--line
reads each line into successive variables, and stops after each variable has been filled. This cannot be combined with the--delimiter
option.
Without the --line
option, read
reads a single line of input from standard input, breaks it into tokens, and then assigns one token to each variable specified in VARIABLES
. If there are more tokens than variables, the complete remainder is assigned to the last variable.
If no option to determine how to split like --delimiter
, --line
or --tokenize
is given, the variable IFS
is used as a list of characters to split on. Relying on the use of IFS
is deprecated and this behaviour will be removed in future versions. The default value of IFS
contains space, tab and newline characters. As a special case, if IFS
is set to the empty string, each character of the input is considered a separate token.
With the --line
option, read
reads a line of input from standard input into each provided variable, stopping when each variable has been filled. The line is not tokenized.
If no variable names are provided, read
enters a special case that simply provides redirection from standard input to standard output, useful for command substitution. For instance, the fish shell command below can be used to read data that should be provided via a command line argument from the console instead of hardcoding it in the command itself, allowing the command to both be reused as-is in various contexts with different input values and preventing possibly sensitive text from being included in the shell history:
mysql -uuser -p(read)
When running in this mode, read
does not split the input in any way and text is redirected to standard output without any further processing or manipulation.
If -a
or --array
is provided, only one variable name is allowed and the tokens are stored as a list in this variable.
See the documentation for set
for more details on the scoping rules for variables.
When read
reaches the end-of-file (EOF) instead of the terminator, the exit status is set to 1.
Otherwise, it is set to 0.
In order to protect the shell from consuming too many system resources, read
will only consume a
maximum of 100 MiB (104857600 bytes); if the terminator is not reached before this limit then VARIABLE
is set to empty and the exit status is set to 122. This limit can be altered with the
fish_read_limit
variable. If set to 0 (zero), the limit is removed.
Example¶
The following code stores the value 'hello' in the shell variable $foo
.
echo hello|read foo
# This is a neat way to handle command output by-line:
printf '%s\n' line1 line2 line3 line4 | while read -l foo
echo "This is another line: $foo"
end
# Delimiters given via "-d" are taken as one string
echo a==b==c | read -d == -l a b c
echo $a # a
echo $b # b
echo $c # c
# --tokenize honors quotes and escaping like the shell's argument passing:
echo 'a\ b' | read -t first second
echo $first # outputs "a b", $second is empty
echo 'a"foo bar"b (command echo wurst)*" "{a,b}' | read -lt -l a b c
echo $a # outputs 'afoo bar' (without the quotes)
echo $b # outputs '(command echo wurst)* {a,b}' (without the quotes)
echo $c # nothing