Initial release | January 1979; 46 years ago (1979-01) |
---|---|
Operating system | Unix and Unix-like |
Platform | Cross-platform |
Type | Command |
In Unix-like operating systems, true
and false
are commands whose only function is to always return with a predetermined exit status. Programmers and scripts often use the exit status of a command to assess success (exit status zero) or failure (non-zero) of the command. The true
and false
commands represent the logical values of command success, because true returns 0, and false returns 1.
Usage
The commands are usually employed in conditional statements and loops of shell scripts. For example, the following shell script repeats the echo hello loop until interrupted:
while true do echo hello done
The commands can be used to ignore the success or failure of a sequence of other commands, as in the example:
make … && false
Setting a user's login shell to false, in /etc/passwd, effectively denies them access to an interactive shell, but their account may still be valid for other services, such as FTP. (Although /sbin/nologin, if available, may be more fitting for this purpose, as it prints a notification before terminating the session.)
The programs take no "actual" parameters; in the GNU version, the standard parameter --help
displays a usage summary and --version
displays the program version.
Null command
The true command is sometimes substituted with the very similar null command, written as a single colon (:
). The null command is built into the shell, and may therefore be more efficient if true is an external program (true is usually a shell built in function). We can rewrite the upper example using :
instead of true
:
while : do echo hello done
The null command may take parameters, which are ignored. It is also used as a no-op dummy command for side-effects such as assigning default values to shell variables through the ${parameter:=word}
parameter expansion form. For example, from bashbug, the bug-reporting script for Bash:
: ${TMPDIR:=/tmp} : ${EDITOR=$DEFEDITOR} : ${USER=${LOGNAME-`whoami`}}
See also
Notes
- These are distinct from the truth values of classical logic and most general purpose programming languages: true (1 or T) and false (0 or ⊥).
References
- "Colon", The Open group base specifications, issue 7, IEEE std 1003.1-2008
- Cooper, Mendel (April 2011), "Null command", Advanced Bash-scripting guide, 6.3, The Linux documentation project, retrieved 2011-08-04
External links
true
: return true value – Shell and Utilities Reference, The Single UNIX Specification, Version 4 from The Open Groupfalse
: return false value – Shell and Utilities Reference, The Single UNIX Specification, Version 4 from The Open Group
Manual pages
- true(1): Do nothing, successfully – GNU Coreutils reference
- false(1): Do nothing, unsuccessfully – GNU Coreutils reference
- true(1): Return true value – FreeBSD manual page
- false(1): Return false value – FreeBSD manual page
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