test - perform tests on files and text
Synopsis
test [EXPRESSION] [ [EXPRESSION] ]
Description
Tests the expression given and sets the exit status to 0 if true, and 1 if false. An expression is made up of one or more operators and their arguments.
The first form (test
) is preferred. For compatibility with other shells, the second form is available: a matching pair of square brackets ([ [EXPRESSION ] ]
).
This test is mostly POSIX-compatible.
When using a variable as an argument for a test operator you should almost always enclose it in double-quotes. There are only two situations it is safe to omit the quote marks. The first is when the argument is a literal string with no whitespace or other characters special to the shell (e.g., semicolon). For example, test -b /my/file
. The second is using a variable that expands to exactly one element including if that element is the empty string (e.g., set x ''
). If the variable is not set, set but with no value, or set to more than one value you must enclose it in double-quotes. For example, test "$x" = "$y"
. Since it is always safe to enclose variables in double-quotes when used as test
arguments that is the recommended practice.
Operators for files and directories
-
-b FILE
returns true ifFILE
is a block device. -
-c FILE
returns true ifFILE
is a character device. -
-d FILE
returns true ifFILE
is a directory. -
-e FILE
returns true ifFILE
exists. -
-f FILE
returns true ifFILE
is a regular file. -
-g FILE
returns true ifFILE
has the set-group-ID bit set. -
-G FILE
returns true ifFILE
exists and has the same group ID as the current user. -
-k FILE
returns true ifFILE
has the sticky bit set. If the OS does not support the concept it returns false. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sticky_bit. -
-L FILE
returns true ifFILE
is a symbolic link. -
-O FILE
returns true ifFILE
exists and is owned by the current user. -
-p FILE
returns true ifFILE
is a named pipe. -
-r FILE
returns true ifFILE
is marked as readable. -
-s FILE
returns true if the size ofFILE
is greater than zero. -
-S FILE
returns true ifFILE
is a socket. -
-t FD
returns true if the file descriptorFD
is a terminal (TTY). -
-u FILE
returns true ifFILE
has the set-user-ID bit set. -
-w FILE
returns true ifFILE
is marked as writable; note that this does not check if the filesystem is read-only. -
-x FILE
returns true ifFILE
is marked as executable.
Operators for text strings
-
STRING1 = STRING2
returns true if the stringsSTRING1
andSTRING2
are identical. -
STRING1 != STRING2
returns true if the stringsSTRING1
andSTRING2
are not identical. -
-n STRING
returns true if the length ofSTRING
is non-zero. -
-z STRING
returns true if the length ofSTRING
is zero.
Operators to compare and examine numbers
-
NUM1 -eq NUM2
returns true ifNUM1
andNUM2
are numerically equal. -
NUM1 -ne NUM2
returns true ifNUM1
andNUM2
are not numerically equal. -
NUM1 -gt NUM2
returns true ifNUM1
is greater thanNUM2
. -
NUM1 -ge NUM2
returns true ifNUM1
is greater than or equal toNUM2
. -
NUM1 -lt NUM2
returns true ifNUM1
is less thanNUM2
. -
NUM1 -le NUM2
returns true ifNUM1
is less than or equal toNUM2
.
Both integers and floating point numbers are supported.
Operators to combine expressions
-
COND1 -a COND2
returns true if bothCOND1
andCOND2
are true. -
COND1 -o COND2
returns true if eitherCOND1
orCOND2
are true.
Expressions can be inverted using the !
operator:
-
! EXPRESSION
returns true ifEXPRESSION
is false, and false ifEXPRESSION
is true.
Expressions can be grouped using parentheses.
-
( EXPRESSION )
returns the value ofEXPRESSION
.
\(
to avoid being interpreted as a command substitution. Examples
If the /tmp
directory exists, copy the /etc/motd
file to it:
if test -d /tmp cp /etc/motd /tmp/motd end
If the variable MANPATH
is defined and not empty, print the contents. (If MANPATH
is not defined, then it will expand to zero arguments, unless quoted.)
if test -n "$MANPATH" echo $MANPATH end
Parentheses and the -o
and -a
operators can be combined to produce more complicated expressions. In this example, success is printed if there is a /foo
or /bar
file as well as a /baz
or /bat
file.
if test \( -f /foo -o -f /bar \) -a \( -f /baz -o -f /bat \) echo Success. end.
Numerical comparisons will simply fail if one of the operands is not a number:
if test 42 -eq "The answer to life, the universe and everything" echo So long and thanks for all the fish # will not be executed end
A common comparison is with $status:
if test $status -eq 0 echo "Previous command succeeded" end
The previous test can likewise be inverted:
if test ! $status -eq 0 echo "Previous command failed" end
which is logically equivalent to the following:
if test $status -ne 0 echo "Previous command failed" end
Standards
test
implements a subset of the IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (POSIX.1) standard. The following exceptions apply:
- The
<
and>
operators for comparing strings are not implemented. - Because this test is a shell builtin and not a standalone utility, using the -c flag on a special file descriptors like standard input and output may not return the same result when invoked from within a pipe as one would expect when invoking the
test
utility in another shell.
command
test
to explicitly use the system's standalone test
rather than this builtin
test
.
© 2019 fish-shell developers
Licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.
https://fishshell.com/docs/3.1/cmds/test.html