Using the KSH Definition Type
The Korn shell is the default UNIX shell on various UNIX systems such as AIX, HP-UX and Solaris. It is also available for Linux and Microsoft Windows in the form of pdksh
.
note
You must assign at least one process server to run KSH process definitions in order to use the definition type.
Interpreter
By default, the interpreter for KSH scripts defaults to /bin/ksh
on most platforms. You can override this by specifying an interpreter on process server-level with the LocalInterpreter_KSH
process server parameter, for example, /usr/local/bin/pdksh
. You can also specify a list of allowed interpreters on process server-level using the InterpreterWhitelist_KSH
process server parameter and override the default interpreter on process definition-level with the parameter JCS_INTERPRETER_KSH
. Simply create the parameter and point it to your preferred interpreter, it must exist and be white-listed using the InterpreterWhitelist_KSH
process server parameter.
The InterpreterWhitelist_KSH
process server parameter takes a regular expression that must match the value of the JCS_INTERPRETER_KSH
parameter.
Writing portable KSH scripts
KSH is not the same implementation on all platforms. We have found the following compatibility issues between these variations:
- Some versions of KSH do not support aliases in non-interactive invocations of the Korn shell. In other implementations, aliases can only be used in scripts that are not sourced, but executed. Since the process definition script code is sourced, it cannot call any aliases. We highly recommend that you use functions instead.
- On Solaris, the syntax
$(command)
to execute a program and substitute its standard output is not allowed. You should use a pair of backtiocks (grave accents) to remain portable to Solaris: ``command.
- The
pdksh
does not implement all the features of AT&T ksh so there are minor differences between the two. - The AT&T Korn shell has been released with an Eclipse Public License and the source code is freely available on github. This means that most major Linux distributions can now offer AT&T's Korn shell. If you have an older Solaris or Linux system, you might consider building and deploying it.
Environment
See Using Platform Definition Types for more information regarding the predefined variables and how to create per-system or per-user environment variables.
In addition, the KSH definition type will source ${JCS_HOME}/admin/ksh.profile
if it exists, for backwards compatibility with v7. You can set JCS_HOME
with the EnvironmentFile or EnvironmentVariables mechanism documented in Using Platform Definition Types.
Variables and Parameters
- Parameters in the process definition are manipulated in the KSH source simply as variables, using the standard
$VARIABLE
syntax. - The Korn shell does not have actual data types; all parameter values are stored as strings. Numbers are translated automatically. Dates are sent and retrieved using the Script Date Format.
- Out parameters are supported by setting the parameter using the
VARIABLE=VALUE
syntax. - Array parameters are supported for KSH, provided your interpreter supports them
Returning an Error
If your script code exits with a non-zero exit code this is correctly reflected in the server.
Code a set -e
command to abort script execution immediately on running a command that has a non-zero exit status.
KSH Examples
The following shows how to use a normal environment variable:
echo "This is running under user $USER with home directory $HOME and temporary directory $TMPDIR."
The following shows how to pass numeric (N1), string (S1) and date (D1) parameters to and from KSH scripts:
# Note KSH allows no spaces around = in variable assignment
N1=`expr $N1 + $N1` # Add numeric variable to itself
S1="$S1 $S1" # Concatenate string
echo "Concatenated string" $S1
DTEMP="1999/12/31 23:59:59,000 GMT"
echo You said $D1, I propose $DTEMP
D1=$DTEMP # Set DateTime to new string value
The following example shows you how to return a non-zero exit code resulting in the process going into Error:
N=1
echo "Exiting with value $N."
exit $N
echo "Not reached"