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NAME

       history - GNU History Library

COPYRIGHT

       The GNU History Library is Copyright (C) 1989-2002 by the Free Software
       Foundation, Inc.

DESCRIPTION

       Many programs read input from the user a  line  at  a  time.   The  GNU
       History  library  is  able  to  keep  track  of  those lines, associate
       arbitrary data with each line, and utilize  information  from  previous
       lines in composing new ones.

HISTORY EXPANSION

       The  history  library  supports  a  history  expansion  feature that is
       identical to the history expansion in  bash.   This  section  describes
       what syntax features are available.

       History expansions introduce words from the history list into the input
       stream, making it easy to repeat commands, insert the  arguments  to  a
       previous command into the current input line, or fix errors in previous
       commands quickly.

       History expansion is usually performed  immediately  after  a  complete
       line  is read.  It takes place in two parts.  The first is to determine
       which line from the history  list  to  use  during  substitution.   The
       second  is  to  select  portions  of  that  line for inclusion into the
       current one.  The line selected from the history is the event, and  the
       portions of that line that are acted upon are words.  Various modifiers
       are available to manipulate the selected words.   The  line  is  broken
       into words in the same fashion as bash does when reading input, so that
       several words that would otherwise be separated are considered one word
       when  surrounded  by  quotes (see the description of history_tokenize()
       below).  History expansions are introduced by  the  appearance  of  the
       history expansion character, which is ! by default.  Only backslash (\)
       and single quotes can quote the history expansion character.

   Event Designators
       An event designator is a reference to  a  command  line  entry  in  the
       history list.

       !      Start  a  history substitution, except when followed by a blank,
              newline, = or (.
       !n     Refer to command line n.
       !-n    Refer to the current command line minus n.
       !!     Refer to the previous command.  This is a synonym for ‘!-1’.
       !string
              Refer to the most recent command starting with string.
       !?string[?]
              Refer  to  the  most  recent  command  containing  string.   The
              trailing ? may be omitted if string is followed immediately by a
              newline.
       ^string1^string2^
              Quick substitution.  Repeat the last command, replacing  string1
              with  string2.   Equivalent  to  ‘‘!!:s/string1/string2/’’  (see
              Modifiers below).
       !#     The entire command line typed so far.

   Word Designators
       Word designators are used to select desired words from the event.  A  :
       separates  the event specification from the word designator.  It may be
       omitted if the word designator begins with a ^, $, *, -, or  %.   Words
       are  numbered from the beginning of the line, with the first word being
       denoted by  0  (zero).   Words  are  inserted  into  the  current  line
       separated by single spaces.

       0 (zero)
              The zeroth word.  For the shell, this is the command word.
       n      The nth word.
       ^      The first argument.  That is, word 1.
       $      The last argument.
       %      The word matched by the most recent ‘?string?’ search.
       x-y    A range of words; ‘-y’ abbreviates ‘0-y’.
       *      All  of  the words but the zeroth.  This is a synonym for ‘1-$’.
              It is not an error to use * if there is just  one  word  in  the
              event; the empty string is returned in that case.
       x*     Abbreviates x-$.
       x-     Abbreviates x-$ like x*, but omits the last word.

       If  a  word  designator is supplied without an event specification, the
       previous command is used as the event.

   Modifiers
       After the optional word designator, there may appear a sequence of  one
       or more of the following modifiers, each preceded by a ‘:’.

       h      Remove a trailing file name component, leaving only the head.
       t      Remove all leading file name components, leaving the tail.
       r      Remove a trailing suffix of the form .xxx, leaving the basename.
       e      Remove all but the trailing suffix.
       p      Print the new command but do not execute it.
       q      Quote the substituted words, escaping further substitutions.
       x      Quote the substituted words as with q, but break into  words  at
              blanks and newlines.
       s/old/new/
              Substitute  new  for  the  first  occurrence of old in the event
              line.  Any delimiter can be used  in  place  of  /.   The  final
              delimiter  is  optional if it is the last character of the event
              line.  The delimiter may be quoted in old and new with a  single
              backslash.   If  &  appears  in  new,  it is replaced by old.  A
              single backslash will quote the &.  If old is null, it is set to
              the   last   old   substituted,   or,  if  no  previous  history
              substitutions took place,  the  last  string  in  a  !?string[?]
              search.
       &      Repeat the previous substitution.
       g      Cause changes to be applied over the entire event line.  This is
              used in conjunction with ‘:s’ (e.g.,  ‘:gs/old/new/’)  or  ‘:&’.
              If  used with ‘:s’, any delimiter can be used in place of /, and
              the final delimiter is optional if it is the last  character  of
              the event line.  An a may be used as a synonym for g.
       G      Apply  the following ‘s’ modifier once to each word in the event
              line.

PROGRAMMING WITH HISTORY FUNCTIONS

       This section  describes  how  to  use  the  History  library  in  other
       programs.

   Introduction to History
       The  programmer  using  the History library has available functions for
       remembering lines on a history list, associating arbitrary data with  a
       line,  removing  lines  from the list, searching through the list for a
       line containing an arbitrary text string, and referencing any  line  in
       the  list  directly.   In  addition,  a  history  expansion function is
       available  which  provides  for  a  consistent  user  interface  across
       different programs.

       The  user  using  programs  written  with  the  History library has the
       benefit of a  consistent  user  interface  with  a  set  of  well-known
       commands  for  manipulating  the  text of previous lines and using that
       text in new commands.  The  basic  history  manipulation  commands  are
       identical to the history substitution provided by bash.

       If  the  programmer  desires,  he  can  use the Readline library, which
       includes some history  manipulation  by  default,  and  has  the  added
       advantage of command line editing.

       Before  declaring  any  functions  using  any functionality the History
       library provides in other code, an application  writer  should  include
       the  file  <readline/history.h>  in  any  file  that  uses  the History
       library’s features.  It supplies extern declarations  for  all  of  the
       library’s  public  functions  and  variables,  and  declares all of the
       public data structures.

   History Storage
       The history list is an array of history entries.  A  history  entry  is
       declared as follows:

       typedef void * histdata_t;

       typedef struct _hist_entry {
         char *line;
         char *timestamp;
         histdata_t data;
       } HIST_ENTRY;

       The history list itself might therefore be declared as

       HIST_ENTRY ** the_history_list;

       The  state  of  the  History  library  is  encapsulated  into  a single
       structure:

       /*
        * A structure used to pass around the current state of the history.
        */
       typedef struct _hist_state {
         HIST_ENTRY **entries; /* Pointer to the entries themselves. */
         int offset;           /* The location pointer within this array. */
         int length;           /* Number of elements within this array. */
         int size;             /* Number of slots allocated to this array. */
         int flags;
       } HISTORY_STATE;

       If the flags member includes HS_STIFLED, the history has been  stifled.

History Functions

       This  section  describes the calling sequence for the various functions
       exported by the GNU History library.

   Initializing History and State Management
       This section describes functions used  to  initialize  and  manage  the
       state of the History library when you want to use the history functions
       in your program.

       void using_history (void)
       Begin a session in which the history functions  might  be  used.   This
       initializes the interactive variables.

       HISTORY_STATE * history_get_history_state (void)
       Return a structure describing the current state of the input history.

       void history_set_history_state (HISTORY_STATE *state)
       Set the state of the history list according to state.

   History List Management
       These  functions  manage individual entries on the history list, or set
       parameters managing the list itself.

       void add_history (const char *string)
       Place string at the end of the history list.  The associated data field
       (if any) is set to NULL.

       void add_history_time (const char *string)
       Change  the time stamp associated with the most recent history entry to
       string.

       HIST_ENTRY * remove_history (int which)
       Remove history entry at offset which from  the  history.   The  removed
       element  is  returned  so  you  can free the line, data, and containing
       structure.

       histdata_t free_history_entry (HIST_ENTRY *histent)
       Free the history entry histent and any  history  library  private  data
       associated  with  it.   Returns  the  application-specific  data so the
       caller can dispose of it.

       HIST_ENTRY  *  replace_history_entry  (int  which,  const  char  *line,
       histdata_t data)
       Make  the  history  entry  at  offset  which  have line and data.  This
       returns the old entry so the caller can  dispose  of  any  application-
       specific  data.   In  the  case  of an invalid which, a NULL pointer is
       returned.

       void clear_history (void)
       Clear the history list by deleting all the entries.

       void stifle_history (int max)
       Stifle the history list, remembering only the last max entries.

       int unstifle_history (void)
       Stop stifling the history.  This  returns  the  previously-set  maximum
       number  of  history  entries (as set by stifle_history()).  history was
       stifled.  The value is positive if the history was stifled, negative if
       it wasn’t.

       int history_is_stifled (void)
       Returns non-zero if the history is stifled, zero if it is not.

   Information About the History List
       These  functions  return  information  about the entire history list or
       individual list entries.

       HIST_ENTRY ** history_list (void)
       Return a NULL terminated array of HIST_ENTRY *  which  is  the  current
       input  history.   Element  0 of this list is the beginning of time.  If
       there is no history, return NULL.

       int where_history (void)
       Returns the offset of the current history element.

       HIST_ENTRY * current_history (void)
       Return the history entry at the  current  position,  as  determined  by
       where_history().  If there is no entry there, return a NULL pointer.

       HIST_ENTRY * history_get (int offset)
       Return   the   history   entry   at   position  offset,  starting  from
       history_base.  If there is no entry there, or if offset is greater than
       the history length, return a NULL pointer.

       time_t history_get_time (HIST_ENTRY *)
       Return  the  time stamp associated with the history entry passed as the
       argument.

       int history_total_bytes (void)
       Return the number of bytes that the primary history entries are  using.
       This  function  returns  the sum of the lengths of all the lines in the
       history.

   Moving Around the History List
       These functions allow the current index into the history list to be set
       or changed.

       int history_set_pos (int pos)
       Set the current history offset to pos, an absolute index into the list.
       Returns 1 on success, 0 if pos is less than zero or  greater  than  the
       number of history entries.

       HIST_ENTRY * previous_history (void)
       Back  up  the current history offset to the previous history entry, and
       return a pointer to that entry.  If there is no previous entry,  return
       a NULL pointer.

       HIST_ENTRY * next_history (void)
       Move  the current history offset forward to the next history entry, and
       return the a pointer to that entry.  If there is no next entry,  return
       a NULL pointer.

   Searching the History List
       These  functions  allow  searching  of  the  history  list  for entries
       containing a specific string.  Searching may be performed both  forward
       and  backward  from  the  current  history position.  The search may be
       anchored, meaning that the string must match at the  beginning  of  the
       history entry.

       int history_search (const char *string, int direction)
       Search  the history for string, starting at the current history offset.
       If direction is less than  0,  then  the  search  is  through  previous
       entries,  otherwise  through  subsequent  entries.  If string is found,
       then the current history index is set to that history  entry,  and  the
       value  returned is the offset in the line of the entry where string was
       found.  Otherwise, nothing is changed, and a -1 is returned.

       int history_search_prefix (const char *string, int direction)
       Search the history for string, starting at the current history  offset.
       The  search  is  anchored:  matching  lines must begin with string.  If
       direction is less than 0, then the search is through previous  entries,
       otherwise  through  subsequent  entries.   If string is found, then the
       current history index is set to that entry, and the return value is  0.
       Otherwise, nothing is changed, and a -1 is returned.

       int history_search_pos (const char *string, int direction, int pos)
       Search  for  string  in  the history list, starting at pos, an absolute
       index into the list.  If direction is  negative,  the  search  proceeds
       backward  from  pos,  otherwise forward.  Returns the absolute index of
       the history element where string was found, or -1 otherwise.

   Managing the History File
       The History library can read the history from and write it to  a  file.
       This section documents the functions for managing a history file.

       int read_history (const char *filename)
       Add the contents of filename to the history list, a line at a time.  If
       filename is NULL, then read from ~/.history.  Returns 0 if  successful,
       or errno if not.

       int read_history_range (const char *filename, int from, int to)
       Read  a  range of lines from filename, adding them to the history list.
       Start reading at line from and end at to.  If from is  zero,  start  at
       the beginning.  If to is less than from, then read until the end of the
       file.  If filename is NULL, then read from ~/.history.   Returns  0  if
       successful, or errno if not.

       int write_history (const char *filename)
       Write   the  current  history  to  filename,  overwriting  filename  if
       necessary.  If filename  is  NULL,  then  write  the  history  list  to
       ~/.history.  Returns 0 on success, or errno on a read or write error.

       int append_history (int nelements, const char *filename)
       Append the last nelements of the history list to filename.  If filename
       is NULL, then append to ~/.history.  Returns 0 on success, or errno  on
       a read or write error.

       int history_truncate_file (const char *filename, int nlines)
       Truncate the history file filename, leaving only the last nlines lines.
       If filename is NULL,  then  ~/.history  is  truncated.   Returns  0  on
       success, or errno on failure.

   History Expansion
       These functions implement history expansion.

       int history_expand (char *string, char **output)
       Expand  string,  placing the result into output, a pointer to a string.
       Returns:
              0      If no expansions took place (or, if the  only  change  in
                     the  text  was the removal of escape characters preceding
                     the history expansion character);
              1      if expansions did take place;
              -1     if there was an error in expansion;
              2      if  the  returned  line  should  be  displayed,  but  not
                     executed, as with the :p modifier.
       If  an  error  ocurred in expansion, then output contains a descriptive
       error message.

       char * get_history_event (const char *string, int *cindex, int qchar)
       Returns the text of the history event beginning at  string  +  *cindex.
       *cindex is modified to point to after the event specifier.  At function
       entry, cindex points to the index into string where the  history  event
       specification  begins.  qchar is a character that is allowed to end the
       event  specification  in  addition  to   the   ‘‘normal’’   terminating
       characters.

       char ** history_tokenize (const char *string)
       Return  an  array  of  tokens  parsed  out of string, much as the shell
       might.    The   tokens   are   split   on   the   characters   in   the
       history_word_delimiters  variable,  and  shell  quoting conventions are
       obeyed.

       char * history_arg_extract (int first, int last, const char *string)
       Extract a string segment consisting of the first through last arguments
       present in string.  Arguments are split using history_tokenize().

   History Variables
       This section describes the externally-visible variables exported by the
       GNU History Library.

       int history_base
       The logical offset of the first entry in the history list.

       int history_length
       The number of entries currently stored in the history list.

       int history_max_entries
       The maximum number of history entries.   This  must  be  changed  using
       stifle_history().

       int history_write_timestamps
       If non-zero, timestamps are written to the history file, so they can be
       preserved between sessions.  The  default  value  is  0,  meaning  that
       timestamps are not saved.

       char history_expansion_char
       The  character  that  introduces  a  history  event.  The default is !.
       Setting this to 0 inhibits history expansion.

       char history_subst_char
       The character that invokes word substitution if found at the start of a
       line.  The default is ^.

       char history_comment_char
       During  tokenization,  if this character is seen as the first character
       of a word, then it and all subsequent characters up to  a  newline  are
       ignored,  suppressing  history expansion for the remainder of the line.
       This is disabled by default.

       char * history_word_delimiters
       The  characters  that  separate  tokens  for  history_tokenize().   The
       default value is " \t\n()<>;&|".

       char * history_no_expand_chars
       The  list  of  characters  which  inhibit  history  expansion  if found
       immediately following history_expansion_char.  The  default  is  space,
       tab, newline, \r, and =.

       char * history_search_delimiter_chars
       The  list  of  additional characters which can delimit a history search
       string, in addition to space, tab, : and ? in the case of  a  substring
       search.  The default is empty.

       int history_quotes_inhibit_expansion
       If  non-zero,  single-quoted  words  are  not  scanned  for the history
       expansion character.  The default value is 0.

       rl_linebuf_func_t * history_inhibit_expansion_function
       This should be set  to  the  address  of  a  function  that  takes  two
       arguments: a char * (string) and an int index into that string (i).  It
       should return a non-zero value if the  history  expansion  starting  at
       string[i]  should  not  be  performed;  zero if the expansion should be
       done.  It is intended for use by applications like bash  that  use  the
       history  expansion character for additional purposes.  By default, this
       variable is set to NULL.

FILES

       ~/.history
              Default filename for reading and writing saved history

SEE ALSO

       The Gnu Readline Library, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey
       The Gnu History Library, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey
       bash(1)
       readline(3)

AUTHORS

       Brian Fox, Free Software Foundation
       bfox@gnu.org

       Chet Ramey, Case Western Reserve University
       chet@ins.CWRU.Edu

BUG REPORTS

       If you find a bug in the history library, you should  report  it.   But
       first,  you  should  make  sure  that  it  really is a bug, and that it
       appears in the latest version of the history library that you have.

       Once you have determined that a bug actually exists, mail a bug  report
       to  bug-readline@gnu.org.   If  you have a fix, you are welcome to mail
       that as well!  Suggestions  and  ‘philosophical’  bug  reports  may  be
       mailed  to  bug-readline@gnu.org  or  posted  to  the  Usenet newsgroup
       gnu.bash.bug.

       Comments and bug reports concerning this manual page should be directed
       to chet@ins.CWRU.Edu.