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PROLOG

       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of
       this interface may differ (consult the corresponding Linux  manual  page  for  details  of
       Linux behavior), or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.

NAME

       wordexp, wordfree — perform word expansions

SYNOPSIS

       #include <wordexp.h>

       int wordexp(const char *restrict words, wordexp_t *restrict pwordexp,
           int flags);
       void wordfree(wordexp_t *pwordexp);

DESCRIPTION

       The  wordexp()  function  shall  perform  word  expansions  as  described in the Shell and
       Utilities volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 2.6, Word  Expansions,  subject  to  quoting  as
       described  in  the  Shell  and Utilities volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 2.2, Quoting, and
       place the list of expanded words into the structure pointed to by pwordexp.

       The words argument is a pointer to a string containing one or more words to  be  expanded.
       The  expansions shall be the same as would be performed by the command line interpreter if
       words were the part of a command line representing the arguments to a utility.  Therefore,
       the  application  shall ensure that words does not contain an unquoted <newline> character
       or any of the unquoted shell special characters '|', '&', ';',  '<',  '>'  except  in  the
       context  of  command  substitution  as  specified  in  the  Shell  and Utilities volume of
       POSIX.1‐2008, Section 2.6.3, Command Substitution.  It also  shall  not  contain  unquoted
       parentheses  or  braces,  except  in  the context of command or variable substitution. The
       application shall ensure that every member of words which it expects to have  expanded  by
       wordexp()  does  not  contain an unquoted initial comment character. The application shall
       also ensure that any words which it intends to be ignored (because they begin or  continue
       a  comment)  are  deleted  from words.  If the argument words contains an unquoted comment
       character (<number-sign>) that is the beginning of a token, wordexp() shall  either  treat
       the  comment  character as a regular character, or interpret it as a comment indicator and
       ignore the remainder of words.

       The structure type wordexp_t is defined in the <wordexp.h> header and  includes  at  least
       the following members:

                  ┌──────────────┬──────────────┬────────────────────────────────────┐
                  │Member TypeMember NameDescription             │
                  ├──────────────┼──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────┤
                  │size_twe_wordc      │ Count of words matched by words.   │
                  │char **we_wordv      │ Pointer to list of expanded words. │
                  │size_twe_offs       │ Slots  to reserve at the beginning │
                  │              │              │ of pwordexp->we_wordv.             │
                  └──────────────┴──────────────┴────────────────────────────────────┘
       The wordexp() function shall store the number of generated words  into  pwordexp->we_wordc
       and  a pointer to a list of pointers to words in pwordexp->we_wordv. Each individual field
       created during field splitting (see  the  Shell  and  Utilities  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2008,
       Section  2.6.5, Field Splitting) or pathname expansion (see the Shell and Utilities volume
       of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 2.6.6, Pathname Expansion)  shall  be  a  separate  word  in  the
       pwordexp->we_wordv  list.  The  words  shall  be  in  order  as described in the Shell and
       Utilities volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 2.6, Word Expansions.  The first  pointer  after
       the  last  word  pointer  shall  be  a  null pointer.  The expansion of special parameters
       described in the Shell and  Utilities  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2008,  Section  2.5.2,  Special
       Parameters is unspecified.

       It  is  the  caller's  responsibility to allocate the storage pointed to by pwordexp.  The
       wordexp() function shall allocate other space as needed, including memory  pointed  to  by
       pwordexp->we_wordv. The wordfree() function frees any memory associated with pwordexp from
       a previous call to wordexp().

       The flags argument is used to control the behavior of wordexp().  The value  of  flags  is
       the  bitwise-inclusive OR of zero or more of the following constants, which are defined in
       <wordexp.h>:

       WRDE_APPEND   Append words generated to the ones from a previous call to wordexp().

       WRDE_DOOFFS   Make use of pwordexp->we_offs. If this flag  is  set,  pwordexp->we_offs  is
                     used  to  specify  how  many  null  pointers  to  add  to  the  beginning of
                     pwordexp->we_wordv.  In  other  words,  pwordexp->we_wordv  shall  point  to
                     pwordexp->we_offs   null   pointers,  followed  by  pwordexp->we_wordc  word
                     pointers, followed by a null pointer.

       WRDE_NOCMD    If the implementation supports  the  utilities  defined  in  the  Shell  and
                     Utilities volume of POSIX.1‐2008, fail if command substitution, as specified
                     in the Shell and Utilities volume of POSIX.1‐2008,  Section  2.6.3,  Command
                     Substitution, is requested.

       WRDE_REUSE    The pwordexp argument was passed to a previous successful call to wordexp(),
                     and has not been passed to wordfree().  The result shall be the same  as  if
                     the  application  had  called  wordfree()  and then called wordexp() without
                     WRDE_REUSE.

       WRDE_SHOWERR  Do not redirect stderr to /dev/null.

       WRDE_UNDEF    Report error on an attempt to expand an undefined shell variable.

       The WRDE_APPEND flag can be used to append a new set of words  to  those  generated  by  a
       previous  call  to  wordexp().  The following rules apply to applications when two or more
       calls to wordexp() are made with the same value of pwordexp and without intervening  calls
       to wordfree():

        1. The first such call shall not set WRDE_APPEND. All subsequent calls shall set it.

        2. All of the calls shall set WRDE_DOOFFS, or all shall not set it.

        3. After  the  second  and each subsequent call, pwordexp->we_wordv shall point to a list
           containing the following:

            a. Zero or more null pointers, as specified by WRDE_DOOFFS and pwordexp->we_offs

            b. Pointers to the words that were in the pwordexp->we_wordv list before the call, in
               the same order as before

            c. Pointers to the new words generated by the latest call, in the specified order

        4. The  count  returned in pwordexp->we_wordc shall be the total number of words from all
           of the calls.

        5. The application can change any of the fields after a call to wordexp(), but if it does
           it  shall  reset  them  to the original value before a subsequent call, using the same
           pwordexp value, to wordfree() or wordexp() with the WRDE_APPEND or WRDE_REUSE flag.

       If the implementation supports the utilities defined in the Shell and Utilities volume  of
       POSIX.1‐2008, and words contains an unquoted character—<newline>, '|', '&', ';', '<', '>',
       '(', ')', '{', '}'—in an inappropriate context, wordexp() shall fail, and  the  number  of
       expanded words shall be 0.

       Unless  WRDE_SHOWERR is set in flags, wordexp() shall redirect stderr to /dev/null for any
       utilities executed as  a  result  of  command  substitution  while  expanding  words.   If
       WRDE_SHOWERR  is set, wordexp() may write messages to stderr if syntax errors are detected
       while expanding words; however, it is unspecified whether  any  write  errors  encountered
       while  outputting  such  messages  will  affect the stderr error indicator or the value of
       errno.

       The application shall ensure that if WRDE_DOOFFS is set, then  pwordexp->we_offs  has  the
       same value for each wordexp() call and wordfree() call using a given pwordexp.

       The following constants are defined as error return values:

       WRDE_BADCHAR  One of the unquoted characters—<newline>, '|', '&', ';', '<', '>', '(', ')',
                     '{', '}'—appears in words in an inappropriate context.

       WRDE_BADVAL   Reference to undefined shell variable when WRDE_UNDEF is set in flags.

       WRDE_CMDSUB   Command substitution requested when WRDE_NOCMD was set in flags.

       WRDE_NOSPACE  Attempt to allocate memory failed.

       WRDE_SYNTAX   Shell syntax error, such as unbalanced parentheses or unterminated string.

RETURN VALUE

       Upon successful completion, wordexp() shall return 0.  Otherwise,  a  non-zero  value,  as
       described in <wordexp.h>, shall be returned to indicate an error. If wordexp() returns the
       value WRDE_NOSPACE, then pwordexp->we_wordc and pwordexp->we_wordv  shall  be  updated  to
       reflect  any  words  that  were  successfully  expanded. In other cases, they shall not be
       modified.

       The wordfree() function shall not return a value.

ERRORS

       No errors are defined.

       The following sections are informative.

EXAMPLES

       None.

APPLICATION USAGE

       The wordexp() function is intended to be used by an application that wants to  do  all  of
       the  shell's  expansions  on  a  word  or  words obtained from a user. For example, if the
       application prompts for a pathname (or list of  pathnames)  and  then  uses  wordexp()  to
       process  the  input,  the user could respond with anything that would be valid as input to
       the shell.

       The WRDE_NOCMD flag is provided for applications that, for security or other reasons, want
       to  prevent  a  user  from  executing  shell commands.  Disallowing unquoted shell special
       characters also prevents unwanted side-effects, such as executing a command or  writing  a
       file.

       POSIX.1‐2008  does  not  require  the  wordexp()  function  to be thread-safe if passed an
       expression referencing an environment variable while  any  other  thread  is  concurrently
       modifying any environment variable; see exec.

       Even  though  the  WRDE_SHOWERR flag allows the implementation to write messages to stderr
       during command substitution or syntax errors, this standard does not provide  any  way  to
       detect write failures during the output of such messages.

RATIONALE

       This  function  was  included  as  an  alternative  to  glob().  There had been continuing
       controversy over exactly what features should be included in glob().  It is hoped that  by
       providing  wordexp()  (which  provides  all of the shell word expansions, but which may be
       slow to execute) and glob() (which is faster, but which only performs pathname  expansion,
       without tilde or parameter expansion) this will satisfy the majority of applications.

       While  wordexp()  could  be implemented entirely as a library routine, it is expected that
       most implementations run a shell in a subprocess to do the expansion.

       Two different approaches have been proposed for how  the  required  information  might  be
       presented to the shell and the results returned.  They are presented here as examples.

       One  proposal is to extend the echo utility by adding a −q option. This option would cause
       echo to add a <backslash> before each  <backslash>  and  <blank>  that  occurs  within  an
       argument. The wordexp() function could then invoke the shell as follows:

           (void) strcpy(buffer, "echo -q");
           (void) strcat(buffer, words);
           if ((flags & WRDE_SHOWERR) == 0)
               (void) strcat(buffer, "2>/dev/null");
           f = popen(buffer, "r");

       The  wordexp()  function  would  read  the  resulting  output, remove unquoted <backslash>
       characters, and break into words at unquoted <blank> characters. If  the  WRDE_NOCMD  flag
       was set, wordexp() would have to scan words before starting the subshell to make sure that
       there would be no command substitution. In any case, it  would  have  to  scan  words  for
       unquoted special characters.

       Another proposal is to add the following options to sh:

       −w wordlist
             This  option  provides  a  wordlist  expansion service to applications. The words in
             wordlist shall be expanded and the following written to standard output:

              1. The count of the number of words after expansion, in decimal, followed by a null
                 byte

              2. The  number  of bytes needed to represent the expanded words (not including null
                 separators), in decimal, followed by a null byte

              3. The expanded words, each terminated by a null byte

             If an error is encountered during word expansion, sh exits with  a  non-zero  status
             after writing the former to report any words successfully expanded

       −P    Run  in ``protected'' mode. If specified with the −w option, no command substitution
             shall be performed.

       With these options, wordexp() could be implemented fairly simply by creating a  subprocess
       using fork() and executing sh using the line:

           execl(<shell path>, "sh", "-P", "-w", words, (char *)0);

       after directing standard error to /dev/null.

       It  seemed objectionable for a library routine to write messages to standard error, unless
       explicitly requested, so wordexp() is required to redirect standard error to /dev/null  to
       ensure   that   no  messages  are  generated,  even  for  commands  executed  for  command
       substitution. The WRDE_SHOWERR flag can be specified to request  that  error  messages  be
       written.

       The  WRDE_REUSE  flag  allows  the  implementation  to  avoid  the  expense of freeing and
       reallocating memory, if that is possible. A minimal  implementation  can  call  wordfree()
       when WRDE_REUSE is set.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       exec, fnmatch(), glob()

       The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, <wordexp.h>

       The Shell and Utilities volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Chapter 2, Shell Command Language

COPYRIGHT

       Portions  of  this  text  are  reprinted  and  reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std
       1003.1, 2013 Edition, Standard for Information Technology  --  Portable  Operating  System
       Interface  (POSIX),  The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, Copyright (C) 2013 by the
       Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc  and  The  Open  Group.   (This  is
       POSIX.1-2008  with  the  2013  Technical  Corrigendum  1  applied.)  In  the  event of any
       discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and The Open  Group  Standard,  the
       original  IEEE  and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The original Standard
       can be obtained online at http://www.unix.org/online.html .

       Any typographical or formatting errors that appear in this page are most  likely  to  have
       been  introduced  during  the conversion of the source files to man page format. To report
       such errors, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .