The C shell has two variables ( 6.9 ) that, when set, will help you follow the convoluted trail of variable and metacharacter expansion. This will echo every command line before shell variables have been evaluated:
set |
%
|
---|
This command will display each line after the variables and metacharacters have been substituted:
%set echo
If you wish to turn the variables off, use unset ( 6.8 ) instead of set .
The Bourne shell syntax is different. To turn on the verbose flag, use:
$set -v
The command
set
-x
turns on the echo flag. You can also type them together:
set
-xv
.
If your version of UNIX
understands (
44.4
)
scripts that start with
#!
, here's a convenient way to turn these variables on from the first line of a script:
#!/bin/sh -xv
It is not necessary to modify the program. You can enable variable tracing in Bourne shell scripts by typing the shell name and options on the command line:
$sh -v
script
$sh -x
script
Not all Bourne shells let you turn these variables off. If yours does, you can do it by using a plus sign instead of a minus sign:
set +xv
-