Appendix K. A Sample .bashrc File

The ~/.bashrc file determines the behavior of interactive shells. A good look at this file can lead to a better understanding of Bash.

Emmanuel Rouat contributed the following very elaborate .bashrc file, written for a Linux system. He welcomes reader feedback on it.

Study the file carefully, and feel free to reuse code snippets and functions from it in your own .bashrc file or even in your scripts.


Example K-1. Sample .bashrc file

   1 #===============================================================
   2 #
   3 # PERSONAL $HOME/.bashrc FILE for bash-2.05a (or later)
   4 #
   5 # Last modified: Tue Apr 15 20:32:34 CEST 2003
   6 #
   7 # This file is read (normally) by interactive shells only.
   8 # Here is the place to define your aliases, functions and
   9 # other interactive features like your prompt.
  10 #
  11 # This file was designed (originally) for Solaris but based 
  12 # on Redhat's default .bashrc file
  13 # --> Modified for Linux.
  14 # The majority of the code you'll find here is based on code found
  15 # on Usenet (or internet).
  16 # This bashrc file is a bit overcrowded - remember it is just
  17 # just an example. Tailor it to your needs
  18 #
  19 #
  20 #===============================================================
  21 
  22 # --> Comments added by HOWTO author.
  23 # --> And then edited again by ER :-)
  24 
  25 #-----------------------------------
  26 # Source global definitions (if any)
  27 #-----------------------------------
  28 
  29 if [ -f /etc/bashrc ]; then
  30         . /etc/bashrc   # --> Read /etc/bashrc, if present.
  31 fi
  32 
  33 #-------------------------------------------------------------
  34 # Automatic setting of $DISPLAY (if not set already)
  35 # This works for linux - your mileage may vary.... 
  36 # The problem is that different types of terminals give
  37 # different answers to 'who am i'......
  38 # I have not found a 'universal' method yet
  39 #-------------------------------------------------------------
  40 
  41 function get_xserver ()
  42 {
  43     case $TERM in
  44 	xterm )
  45             XSERVER=$(who am i | awk '{print $NF}' | tr -d ')''(' ) 
  46             # Ane-Pieter Wieringa suggests the following alternative:
  47             # I_AM=$(who am i)
  48             # SERVER=${I_AM#*(}
  49             # SERVER=${SERVER%*)}
  50 
  51             XSERVER=${XSERVER%%:*}
  52 	    ;;
  53 	aterm | rxvt)
  54  	# find some code that works here.....
  55 	    ;;
  56     esac  
  57 }
  58 
  59 if [ -z ${DISPLAY:=""} ]; then
  60     get_xserver
  61     if [[ -z ${XSERVER}  || ${XSERVER} == $(hostname) ||
  62           ${XSERVER} == "unix" ]]; then
  63 	DISPLAY=":0.0"		# Display on local host
  64     else		
  65 	DISPLAY=${XSERVER}:0.0	# Display on remote host
  66     fi
  67 fi
  68 
  69 export DISPLAY
  70 
  71 #---------------
  72 # Some settings
  73 #---------------
  74 
  75 ulimit -S -c 0        # Don't want any coredumps
  76 set -o notify
  77 set -o noclobber
  78 set -o ignoreeof
  79 set -o nounset
  80 #set -o xtrace        # Useful for debuging
  81 
  82 # Enable options:
  83 shopt -s cdspell
  84 shopt -s cdable_vars
  85 shopt -s checkhash
  86 shopt -s checkwinsize
  87 shopt -s mailwarn
  88 shopt -s sourcepath
  89 shopt -s no_empty_cmd_completion  # bash>=2.04 only
  90 shopt -s cmdhist
  91 shopt -s histappend histreedit histverify
  92 shopt -s extglob      # Necessary for programmable completion
  93 
  94 # Disable options:
  95 shopt -u mailwarn
  96 unset MAILCHECK       # I don't want my shell to warn me of incoming mail
  97 
  98 
  99 export TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal %3R\tuser %3U\tsys %3S\tpcpu %P\n'
 100 export HISTIGNORE="&:bg:fg:ll:h"
 101 export HOSTFILE=$HOME/.hosts	# Put a list of remote hosts in ~/.hosts
 102 
 103 
 104 
 105 #-----------------------
 106 # Greeting, motd etc...
 107 #-----------------------
 108 
 109 # Define some colors first:
 110 red='\e[0;31m'
 111 RED='\e[1;31m'
 112 blue='\e[0;34m'
 113 BLUE='\e[1;34m'
 114 cyan='\e[0;36m'
 115 CYAN='\e[1;36m'
 116 NC='\e[0m'              # No Color
 117 # --> Nice. Has the same effect as using "ansi.sys" in DOS.
 118 
 119 # Looks best on a black background.....
 120 echo -e "${CYAN}This is BASH ${RED}${BASH_VERSION%.*}\
 121 ${CYAN} - DISPLAY on ${RED}$DISPLAY${NC}\n"
 122 date
 123 if [ -x /usr/games/fortune ]; then
 124     /usr/games/fortune -s     # makes our day a bit more fun.... :-)
 125 fi
 126 
 127 function _exit()	# function to run upon exit of shell
 128 {
 129     echo -e "${RED}Hasta la vista, baby${NC}"
 130 }
 131 trap _exit EXIT
 132 
 133 #---------------
 134 # Shell Prompt
 135 #---------------
 136 
 137 if [[ "${DISPLAY#$HOST}" != ":0.0" &&  "${DISPLAY}" != ":0" ]]; then  
 138     HILIT=${red}   # remote machine: prompt will be partly red
 139 else
 140     HILIT=${cyan}  # local machine: prompt will be partly cyan
 141 fi
 142 
 143 #  --> Replace instances of \W with \w in prompt functions below
 144 #+ --> to get display of full path name.
 145 
 146 function fastprompt()
 147 {
 148     unset PROMPT_COMMAND
 149     case $TERM in
 150         *term | rxvt )
 151            PS1="${HILIT}[\h]$NC \W > \[\033]0;\${TERM} [\u@\h] \w\007\]" ;;
 152 	linux )
 153            PS1="${HILIT}[\h]$NC \W > " ;;
 154         *)
 155            PS1="[\h] \W > " ;;
 156     esac
 157 }
 158 
 159 function powerprompt()
 160 {
 161     _powerprompt()
 162     {
 163         LOAD=$(uptime|sed -e "s/.*: \([^,]*\).*/\1/" -e "s/ //g")
 164     }
 165 
 166  PROMPT_COMMAND=_powerprompt
 167  case $TERM in
 168    *term | rxvt  )
 169       PS1="${HILIT}[\A \$LOAD]$NC\n[\h \#] \W > \
 170            \[\033]0;\${TERM} [\u@\h] \w\007\]" ;;
 171         linux )
 172            PS1="${HILIT}[\A - \$LOAD]$NC\n[\h \#] \w > " ;;
 173         * )
 174            PS1="[\A - \$LOAD]\n[\h \#] \w > " ;;
 175  esac
 176 }
 177 
 178 powerprompt     # This is the default prompt -- might be slow.
 179                 # If too slow, use fastprompt instead.
 180 
 181 #===============================================================
 182 #
 183 # ALIASES AND FUNCTIONS
 184 #
 185 # Arguably, some functions defined here are quite big
 186 # (ie 'lowercase') but my workstation has 512Meg of RAM, so ...
 187 # If you want to make this file smaller, these functions can
 188 # be converted into scripts.
 189 #
 190 # Many functions were taken (almost) straight from the bash-2.04
 191 # examples.
 192 #
 193 #===============================================================
 194 
 195 #-------------------
 196 # Personnal Aliases
 197 #-------------------
 198 
 199 alias rm='rm -i'
 200 alias cp='cp -i'
 201 alias mv='mv -i'
 202 # -> Prevents accidentally clobbering files.
 203 alias mkdir='mkdir -p'
 204 
 205 alias h='history'
 206 alias j='jobs -l'
 207 alias r='rlogin'
 208 alias which='type -all'
 209 alias ..='cd ..'
 210 alias path='echo -e ${PATH//:/\\n}'
 211 alias print='/usr/bin/lp -o nobanner -d $LPDEST'
 212       # Assumes LPDEST is defined
 213 alias pjet='enscript -h -G -fCourier9 -d $LPDEST'
 214       # Pretty-print using enscript
 215 alias background='xv -root -quit -max -rmode 5'
 216       # Put a picture in the background
 217 alias du='du -kh'
 218 alias df='df -kTh'
 219 
 220 # The 'ls' family (this assumes you use the GNU ls)
 221 alias la='ls -Al'               # show hidden files
 222 alias ls='ls -hF --color'	# add colors for filetype recognition
 223 alias lx='ls -lXB'              # sort by extension
 224 alias lk='ls -lSr'              # sort by size
 225 alias lc='ls -lcr'		# sort by change time  
 226 alias lu='ls -lur'		# sort by access time   
 227 alias lr='ls -lR'               # recursive ls
 228 alias lt='ls -ltr'              # sort by date
 229 alias lm='ls -al |more'         # pipe through 'more'
 230 alias tree='tree -Csu'		# nice alternative to 'ls'
 231 
 232 # tailoring 'less'
 233 alias more='less'
 234 export PAGER=less
 235 export LESSCHARSET='latin1'
 236 export LESSOPEN='|/usr/bin/lesspipe.sh %s 2>&-'
 237        # Use this if lesspipe.sh exists.
 238 export LESS='-i -N -w  -z-4 -g -e -M -X -F -R -P%t?f%f \
 239 :stdin .?pb%pb\%:?lbLine %lb:?bbByte %bb:-...'
 240 
 241 # spelling typos - highly personnal :-)
 242 alias xs='cd'
 243 alias vf='cd'
 244 alias moer='more'
 245 alias moew='more'
 246 alias kk='ll'
 247 
 248 #----------------
 249 # a few fun ones
 250 #----------------
 251 
 252 function xtitle ()
 253 {
 254     case "$TERM" in
 255         *term | rxvt)
 256             echo -n -e "\033]0;$*\007" ;;
 257         *)  
 258 	    ;;
 259     esac
 260 }
 261 
 262 # aliases...
 263 alias top='xtitle Processes on $HOST && top'
 264 alias make='xtitle Making $(basename $PWD) ; make'
 265 alias ncftp="xtitle ncFTP ; ncftp"
 266 
 267 # .. and functions
 268 function man ()
 269 {
 270     for i ; do
 271 	xtitle The $(basename $1|tr -d .[:digit:]) manual
 272 	command man -F -a "$i"
 273     done
 274 }
 275 
 276 function ll()
 277 { ls -l "$@"| egrep "^d" ; ls -lXB "$@" 2>&-| egrep -v "^d|total "; }
 278 
 279 function te()  # wrapper around xemacs/gnuserv
 280 {
 281     if [ "$(gnuclient -batch -eval t 2>&-)" == "t" ]; then
 282         gnuclient -q "$@";
 283     else
 284         ( xemacs "$@" &);
 285     fi
 286 }
 287 
 288 #-----------------------------------
 289 # File & strings related functions:
 290 #-----------------------------------
 291 
 292 # Find a file with a pattern in name:
 293 function ff()
 294 
 295 { find . -type f -iname '*'$*'*' -ls ; }
 296 # Find a file with pattern $1 in name and Execute $2 on it:
 297 
 298 function fe()
 299 { find . -type f -iname '*'$1'*' -exec "${2:-file}" {} \;  ; }
 300 # find pattern in a set of filesand highlight them:
 301 
 302 function fstr()
 303 {
 304     OPTIND=1
 305     local case=""
 306     local usage="fstr: find string in files.
 307 Usage: fstr [-i] \"pattern\" [\"filename pattern\"] "
 308     while getopts :it opt
 309     do
 310         case "$opt" in
 311         i) case="-i " ;;
 312         *) echo "$usage"; return;;
 313         esac
 314     done
 315     shift $(( $OPTIND - 1 ))
 316     if [ "$#" -lt 1 ]; then
 317         echo "$usage"
 318         return;
 319     fi
 320     local SMSO=$(tput smso)
 321     local RMSO=$(tput rmso)
 322     find . -type f -name "${2:-*}" -print0 |
 323     xargs -0 grep -sn ${case} "$1" 2>&- | \
 324     sed "s/$1/${SMSO}\0${RMSO}/gI" | more
 325 }
 326 
 327 function cuttail() # Cut last n lines in file, 10 by default.
 328 {
 329     nlines=${2:-10}
 330     sed -n -e :a -e "1,${nlines}!{P;N;D;};N;ba" $1
 331 }
 332 
 333 function lowercase()  # move filenames to lowercase
 334 {
 335     for file ; do
 336         filename=${file##*/}
 337         case "$filename" in
 338         */*) dirname==${file%/*} ;;
 339         *) dirname=.;;
 340         esac
 341         nf=$(echo $filename | tr A-Z a-z)
 342         newname="${dirname}/${nf}"
 343         if [ "$nf" != "$filename" ]; then
 344             mv "$file" "$newname"
 345             echo "lowercase: $file --> $newname"
 346         else
 347             echo "lowercase: $file not changed."
 348         fi
 349     done
 350 }
 351 
 352 function swap()         # swap 2 filenames around
 353 {
 354     local TMPFILE=tmp.$$
 355     mv "$1" $TMPFILE
 356     mv "$2" "$1"
 357     mv $TMPFILE "$2"
 358 }
 359 
 360 
 361 #-----------------------------------
 362 # Process/system related functions:
 363 #-----------------------------------
 364 
 365 function my_ps()
 366 { ps $@ -u $USER -o pid,%cpu,%mem,bsdtime,command ; }
 367 
 368 function pp()
 369 { my_ps f | awk '!/awk/ && $0~var' var=${1:-".*"} ; }
 370 
 371 # This function is roughly the same as 'killall' on linux
 372 # but has no equivalent (that I know of) on Solaris
 373 function killps()   # kill by process name
 374 {
 375    local pid pname sig="-TERM"   # default signal
 376    if [ "$#" -lt 1 ] || [ "$#" -gt 2 ]; then
 377        echo "Usage: killps [-SIGNAL] pattern"
 378        return;
 379    fi
 380    if [ $# = 2 ]; then sig=$1 ; fi
 381    for pid in $(my_ps| awk '!/awk/ && $0~pat { print $1 }' pat=${!#} ) ; do
 382        pname=$(my_ps | awk '$1~var { print $5 }' var=$pid )
 383        if ask "Kill process $pid <$pname> with signal $sig?"
 384            then kill $sig $pid
 385        fi
 386    done
 387 }
 388 
 389 function my_ip() # get IP adresses
 390 {
 391     MY_IP=$(/sbin/ifconfig ppp0 | awk '/inet/ { print $2 } ' | \
 392 sed -e s/addr://)
 393     MY_ISP=$(/sbin/ifconfig ppp0 | awk '/P-t-P/ { print $3 } ' | \
 394 sed -e s/P-t-P://)
 395 }
 396 
 397 function ii()   # get current host related info
 398 {
 399   echo -e "\nYou are logged on ${RED}$HOST"
 400   echo -e "\nAdditionnal information:$NC " ; uname -a
 401   echo -e "\n${RED}Users logged on:$NC " ; w -h
 402   echo -e "\n${RED}Current date :$NC " ; date
 403   echo -e "\n${RED}Machine stats :$NC " ; uptime
 404   echo -e "\n${RED}Memory stats :$NC " ; free
 405   my_ip 2>&- ;
 406   echo -e "\n${RED}Local IP Address :$NC" ; echo ${MY_IP:-"Not connected"}
 407   echo -e "\n${RED}ISP Address :$NC" ; echo ${MY_ISP:-"Not connected"}
 408   echo
 409 }
 410 
 411 # Misc utilities:
 412 
 413 function repeat()       # repeat n times command
 414 {
 415     local i max
 416     max=$1; shift;
 417     for ((i=1; i <= max ; i++)); do  # --> C-like syntax
 418         eval "$@";
 419     done
 420 }
 421 
 422 function ask()
 423 {
 424     echo -n "$@" '[y/n] ' ; read ans
 425     case "$ans" in
 426         y*|Y*) return 0 ;;
 427         *) return 1 ;;
 428     esac
 429 }
 430 
 431 #=======================================================================
 432 #
 433 # PROGRAMMABLE COMPLETION - ONLY SINCE BASH-2.04
 434 # Most are taken from the bash 2.05 documentation and from Ian McDonalds
 435 # 'Bash completion' package
 436 #  (http://www.caliban.org/bash/index.shtml#completion)
 437 # You will in fact need bash-2.05a for some features
 438 #
 439 #=======================================================================
 440 
 441 if [ "${BASH_VERSION%.*}" \< "2.05" ]; then
 442    echo "You will need to upgrade to version 2.05 \
 443 for programmable completion"
 444    return
 445 fi
 446 
 447 shopt -s extglob        # necessary
 448 set +o nounset          # otherwise some completions will fail
 449 
 450 complete -A hostname   rsh rcp telnet rlogin r ftp ping disk
 451 complete -A export     printenv
 452 complete -A variable   export local readonly unset
 453 complete -A enabled    builtin
 454 complete -A alias      alias unalias
 455 complete -A function   function
 456 complete -A user       su mail finger
 457 
 458 complete -A helptopic  help     # currently same as builtins
 459 complete -A shopt      shopt
 460 complete -A stopped -P '%' bg
 461 complete -A job -P '%'     fg jobs disown
 462 
 463 complete -A directory  mkdir rmdir
 464 complete -A directory   -o default cd
 465 
 466 # Compression
 467 complete -f -o default -X '*.+(zip|ZIP)'  zip
 468 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(zip|ZIP)' unzip
 469 complete -f -o default -X '*.+(z|Z)'      compress
 470 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(z|Z)'     uncompress
 471 complete -f -o default -X '*.+(gz|GZ)'    gzip
 472 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(gz|GZ)'   gunzip
 473 complete -f -o default -X '*.+(bz2|BZ2)'  bzip2
 474 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(bz2|BZ2)' bunzip2
 475 # Postscript,pdf,dvi.....
 476 complete -f -o default -X '!*.ps'  gs ghostview ps2pdf ps2ascii
 477 complete -f -o default -X '!*.dvi' dvips dvipdf xdvi dviselect dvitype
 478 complete -f -o default -X '!*.pdf' acroread pdf2ps
 479 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(pdf|ps)' gv
 480 complete -f -o default -X '!*.texi*' makeinfo texi2dvi texi2html texi2pdf
 481 complete -f -o default -X '!*.tex' tex latex slitex
 482 complete -f -o default -X '!*.lyx' lyx
 483 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(htm*|HTM*)' lynx html2ps
 484 # Multimedia
 485 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(jp*g|gif|xpm|png|bmp)' xv gimp
 486 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(mp3|MP3)' mpg123 mpg321
 487 complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(ogg|OGG)' ogg123
 488 
 489 
 490 
 491 complete -f -o default -X '!*.pl'  perl perl5
 492 
 493 # This is a 'universal' completion function - it works when commands have
 494 # a so-called 'long options' mode , ie: 'ls --all' instead of 'ls -a'
 495 
 496 _get_longopts () 
 497 { 
 498     $1 --help | sed  -e '/--/!d' -e 's/.*--\([^[:space:].,]*\).*/--\1/'| \
 499 grep ^"$2" |sort -u ;
 500 }
 501 
 502 _longopts_func ()
 503 {
 504     case "${2:-*}" in
 505 	-*)	;;
 506 	*)	return ;;
 507     esac
 508 
 509     case "$1" in
 510 	\~*)	eval cmd="$1" ;;
 511 	*)	cmd="$1" ;;
 512     esac
 513     COMPREPLY=( $(_get_longopts ${1} ${2} ) )
 514 }
 515 complete  -o default -F _longopts_func configure bash
 516 complete  -o default -F _longopts_func wget id info a2ps ls recode
 517 
 518 
 519 _make_targets ()
 520 {
 521     local mdef makef gcmd cur prev i
 522 
 523     COMPREPLY=()
 524     cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]}
 525     prev=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD-1]}
 526 
 527     # if prev argument is -f, return possible filename completions.
 528     # we could be a little smarter here and return matches against
 529     # `makefile Makefile *.mk', whatever exists
 530     case "$prev" in
 531         -*f)    COMPREPLY=( $(compgen -f $cur ) ); return 0;;
 532     esac
 533 
 534     # if we want an option, return the possible posix options
 535     case "$cur" in
 536         -)      COMPREPLY=(-e -f -i -k -n -p -q -r -S -s -t); return 0;;
 537     esac
 538 
 539     # make reads `makefile' before `Makefile'
 540     if [ -f makefile ]; then
 541         mdef=makefile
 542     elif [ -f Makefile ]; then
 543         mdef=Makefile
 544     else
 545         mdef=*.mk               # local convention
 546     fi
 547 
 548     # before we scan for targets, see if a makefile name was specified
 549     # with -f
 550     for (( i=0; i < ${#COMP_WORDS[@]}; i++ )); do
 551         if [[ ${COMP_WORDS[i]} == -*f ]]; then
 552             eval makef=${COMP_WORDS[i+1]}      # eval for tilde expansion
 553             break
 554         fi
 555     done
 556 
 557         [ -z "$makef" ] && makef=$mdef
 558 
 559     # if we have a partial word to complete, restrict completions to
 560     # matches of that word
 561     if [ -n "$2" ]; then gcmd='grep "^$2"' ; else gcmd=cat ; fi
 562 
 563     # if we don't want to use *.mk, we can take out the cat and use
 564     # test -f $makef and input redirection
 565     COMPREPLY=( $(cat $makef 2>/dev/null | \
 566     awk 'BEGIN {FS=":"} /^[^.#   ][^=]*:/ {print $1}' \
 567     | tr -s ' ' '\012' | sort -u | eval $gcmd ) )
 568 }
 569 
 570 complete -F _make_targets -X '+($*|*.[cho])' make gmake pmake
 571 
 572 
 573 # cvs(1) completion
 574 _cvs ()
 575 {
 576     local cur prev
 577     COMPREPLY=()
 578     cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]}
 579     prev=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD-1]}
 580 
 581     if [ $COMP_CWORD -eq 1 ] || [ "${prev:0:1}" = "-" ]; then
 582         COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -W 'add admin checkout commit diff \
 583         export history import log rdiff release remove rtag status \
 584         tag update' $cur ))
 585     else
 586         COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -f $cur ))
 587     fi
 588     return 0
 589 }
 590 complete -F _cvs cvs
 591 
 592 _killall ()
 593 {
 594     local cur prev
 595     COMPREPLY=()
 596     cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]}
 597 
 598     # get a list of processes (the first sed evaluation
 599     # takes care of swapped out processes, the second
 600     # takes care of getting the basename of the process)
 601     COMPREPLY=( $( /usr/bin/ps -u $USER -o comm  | \
 602         sed -e '1,1d' -e 's#[]\[]##g' -e 's#^.*/##'| \
 603         awk '{if ($0 ~ /^'$cur'/) print $0}' ))
 604 
 605     return 0
 606 }
 607 
 608 complete -F _killall killall killps
 609 
 610 
 611 # A meta-command completion function for commands like sudo(8), which
 612 # need to first complete on a command,
 613 # then complete according to that command's own
 614 # completion definition - currently not quite foolproof
 615 # (e.g. mount and umount don't work properly),
 616 # but still quite useful --
 617 # By Ian McDonald, modified by me.
 618 
 619 _my_command()
 620 {
 621     local cur func cline cspec
 622     
 623     COMPREPLY=()
 624     cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]}
 625 
 626     if [ $COMP_CWORD = 1 ]; then
 627 	COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -c $cur ) )
 628     elif complete -p ${COMP_WORDS[1]} &>/dev/null; then
 629 	cspec=$( complete -p ${COMP_WORDS[1]} )
 630 	if [ "${cspec%%-F *}" != "${cspec}" ]; then
 631 	    # complete -F <function>
 632 	    #
 633 	    # COMP_CWORD and COMP_WORDS() are not read-only,
 634 	    # so we can set them before handing off to regular
 635 	    # completion routine
 636 	
 637 	    # set current token number to 1 less than now
 638 	    COMP_CWORD=$(( $COMP_CWORD - 1 ))
 639 	    # get function name
 640 	    func=${cspec#*-F }
 641 	    func=${func%% *}
 642 	    # get current command line minus initial command
 643 	    cline="${COMP_LINE#$1 }"
 644 	    # split current command line tokens into array
 645 		COMP_WORDS=( $cline )
 646 	    $func $cline
 647 	elif [ "${cspec#*-[abcdefgjkvu]}" != "" ]; then
 648           # complete -[abcdefgjkvu]
 649           #func=$( echo $cspec | sed -e 's/^.*\(-[abcdefgjkvu]\).*$/\1/' )
 650           func=$( echo $cspec | sed -e 's/^complete//' -e 's/[^ ]*$//' )
 651 	    COMPREPLY=( $( eval compgen $func $cur ) )
 652 	elif [ "${cspec#*-A}" != "$cspec" ]; then
 653 	    # complete -A <type>
 654 	    func=${cspec#*-A }
 655 	func=${func%% *}
 656 	COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -A $func $cur ) )
 657 	fi
 658     else
 659 	COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -f $cur ) )
 660     fi
 661 }
 662 
 663 
 664 complete -o default -F _my_command nohup exec eval \
 665 trace truss strace sotruss gdb
 666 complete -o default -F _my_command command type which man nice
 667 
 668 # Local Variables:
 669 # mode:shell-script
 670 # sh-shell:bash
 671 # End: