POSIX is the name for a family of standards based on Unix. A number of Unix services, tools, and functions are part of the standard, ranging from the basic system calls and C library functions to common applications and tools to system administration and management.
The POSIX Shell and Utilities standard was originally developed by IEEE Working Group 1003.2 (POSIX.2). The first edition of the 1003.2 standard was published in 1992. It was merged with the original IEEE 1003.1 Working Group and is currently maintained by the Austin Group (a joint working group of the IEEE, The Open Group and ISO/IEC SC22/WG15). Today the Shell and Utilities are a volume within the set of documents that make up IEEE Std 1003.1-2024, and thus the former POSIX.2 (from 1992) is now part of the current unified POSIX standard.
The Shell and Utilities volume concentrates on the command interpreter interface and utility programs commonly executed from the command line or by other programs. The standard is freely available on the web at https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9799919799/utilities/contents.html.
Bash is concerned with the aspects of the shell’s behavior defined by the POSIX Shell and Utilities volume. The shell command language has of course been standardized, including the basic flow control and program execution constructs, I/O redirection and pipelines, argument handling, variable expansion, and quoting.
The special builtins, which must be implemented as part of the
shell to provide the desired functionality, are specified as
being part of the shell; examples of these are eval and
export.
Other utilities appear in the sections of POSIX not
devoted to the shell which are commonly (and in some cases must
be) implemented as builtin commands, such as
read and test.
POSIX also specifies aspects of the shell’s interactive
behavior, including job control and command
line editing.
Only vi-style line editing commands have been standardized;
emacs editing commands were left out due to objections.
Although Bash is an implementation of the POSIX shell specification, there are areas where the Bash default behavior differs from the specification. The Bash posix mode changes the Bash behavior in these areas so that it conforms more strictly to the standard.
Starting Bash with the --posix command-line option or executing ‘set -o posix’ while Bash is running will cause Bash to conform more closely to the POSIX standard by changing the behavior to match that specified by POSIX in areas where the Bash default differs.
When invoked as sh, Bash enters POSIX mode after reading the
startup files.
The following list is what’s changed when POSIX mode is in effect:
POSIXLY_CORRECT variable is set.
$ENV) rather than
the normal Bash files (see Bash Startup Files.
time reserved word may be used by itself as a simple command.
When used in this way, it displays timing statistics for the shell
and its completed children.
The TIMEFORMAT variable controls the format of the timing information.
time as a reserved word if the next
token begins with a ‘-’.
$* as if it were
double-quoted.
PATH variable are not expanded as described above
under Tilde Expansion.
type and command builtins.
$PATH to find the new location.
This is also available with ‘shopt -s checkhash’.
$PATH search.
SIGTSTP.
wait or jobs builtins.
It removes the job from the jobs list after notifying the user of its
termination, but the status is still available via wait, as long
as wait is supplied a PID argument.
vi editing mode will invoke the vi editor directly when
the ‘v’ command is run, instead of checking $VISUAL and
$EDITOR.
PS1 and PS2 expansions of ‘!’ to
the history number and ‘!!’ to ‘!’,
and Bash performs parameter expansion on the values of PS1 and
PS2 regardless of the setting of the promptvars option.
$HISTFILE).
histexpand option is enabled.
type), Bash does
not print the function reserved word unless necessary.
for statement or the selection variable in a
select statement is a readonly variable or has an invalid name.
. filename
is not found.
. or source builtins, or in a string processed by
the eval builtin.
export, readonly or unset
builtin commands get an argument
that is not a valid identifier, and they are not operating on shell
functions.
These errors force an exit because these are special builtins.
command builtin does not prevent builtins that take assignment
statements as arguments from expanding them as assignment statements;
when not in POSIX mode, declaration commands lose their assignment
statement expansion properties when preceded by command.
inherit_errexit option, so
subshells spawned to execute command substitutions inherit the value of
the -e option from the parent shell.
When the inherit_errexit option is not enabled,
Bash clears the -e option in such subshells.
shift_verbose option, so numeric arguments to shift
that exceed the number of positional parameters will result in an
error message.
interactive_comments option (see Comments).
. and source builtins do not search the current directory
for the filename argument if it is not found by searching PATH.
alias builtin displays alias definitions, it does not
display them with a leading ‘alias ’ unless the -p option
is supplied.
bg builtin uses the required format to describe each job placed
in the background, which does not include an indication of whether the job
is the current or previous job.
cd builtin is invoked in logical mode, and the pathname
constructed from $PWD and the directory name supplied as an argument
does not refer to an existing directory, cd will fail instead of
falling back to physical mode.
cd builtin cannot change a directory because the
length of the pathname
constructed from $PWD and the directory name supplied as an argument
exceeds PATH_MAX when canonicalized, cd will
attempt to use the supplied directory name.
xpg_echo option is enabled, Bash does not attempt to
interpret any arguments to echo as options.
echo displays each argument after converting escape sequences.
export and readonly builtin commands display their
output in the format required by POSIX.
fc builtin does not include an
indication of whether or not a history entry has been modified.
fc is ed.
fc treats extra arguments as an error instead of ignoring them.
fc -s, fc prints
an error message and returns failure.
kill builtin does not accept signal names with a ‘SIG’
prefix.
kill builtin returns a failure status if any of the pid or job
arguments are invalid or if sending the specified signal to any of them
fails.
In default mode, kill returns success if the signal was
successfully sent to any of the specified processes.
printf builtin uses double (via strtod) to convert
arguments corresponding to floating point conversion specifiers, instead of
long double if it’s available.
The ‘L’ length modifier forces
printf to use long double if it’s available.
pwd builtin verifies that the value it prints is the same as the
current directory, even if it is not asked to check the file system with the
-P option.
read builtin may be interrupted by a signal for which a trap
has been set.
If Bash receives a trapped signal while executing read, the trap
handler executes and read returns an exit status greater than 128.
set builtin is invoked without options, it does not display
shell function names and definitions.
set builtin is invoked without options, it displays
variable values without quotes, unless they contain shell metacharacters,
even if the result contains nonprinting characters.
test builtin compares strings using the current locale when
evaluating the ‘<’ and ‘>’ binary operators.
test builtin’s -t unary primary requires an argument.
Historical versions of test made the argument optional in certain
cases, and Bash attempts to accommodate those for backwards compatibility.
trap builtin displays signal names without the leading
SIG.
trap builtin doesn’t check the first argument for a possible
signal specification and revert the signal handling to the original
disposition if it is, unless that argument consists solely of digits and
is a valid signal number.
If users want to reset the handler for a given
signal to the original disposition, they should use ‘-’ as the
first argument.
trap -p without arguments displays signals whose dispositions are
set to SIG_DFL and those that were ignored when the shell started, not
just trapped signals.
type and command builtins will not report a non-executable
file as having been found, though the shell will attempt to execute such a
file if it is the only so-named file found in $PATH.
ulimit builtin uses a block size of 512 bytes for the -c
and -f options.
unset builtin with the -v option specified returns a
fatal error if it attempts to unset a readonly or non-unsettable
variable,
which causes a non-interactive shell to exit.
unset builtin attempts to unset a variable
of the same name in the current or previous scope as well.
This implements the required "if an assigned variable is further modified
by the utility, the modifications made by the utility shall persist" behavior.
SIGCHLD when a trap is set on SIGCHLD does
not interrupt the wait builtin and cause it to return immediately.
The trap command is run once for each child that exits.
wait builtin returns it.
There is additional POSIX behavior that Bash does not implement by default even when in POSIX mode. Specifically:
IFS potentially splits a
word, even if that byte is part of a multibyte character in IFS
or part of multibyte character in the word.
Bash allows multibyte characters in the value of IFS, treating
a valid multibyte character as a single delimiter, and will not
split a valid multibyte character even if one of the bytes composing that
character appears in IFS.
This is POSIX interpretation 1560, further modified by issue 1924.
fc builtin checks $EDITOR as a program to edit history
entries if FCEDIT is unset, rather than defaulting directly to
ed.
fc uses ed if EDITOR is unset.
xpg_echo option to be enabled for
the echo builtin to be fully conformant.
Bash can be configured to be POSIX-conformant by default, by specifying
the --enable-strict-posix-default to configure when building
(see Optional Features).