Bourne shell
Command-line interpreter for operating systems / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Bourne shell (sh
) is a shell command-line interpreter for computer operating systems.
Original author(s) | Stephen Bourne |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Bell Telephone Laboratories |
Initial release | 1979; 45 years ago (1979) |
Operating system | Unix |
Type | Unix shell |
License | [under discussion] |
The Bourne shell was the default shell for Version 7 Unix. Unix-like systems continue to have /bin/sh
—which will be the Bourne shell, or a symbolic link or hard link to a compatible shell—even when other shells are used by most users.
Developed by Stephen Bourne at Bell Labs, it was a replacement for the Thompson shell, whose executable file had the same name—sh
. It was released in 1979 in the Version 7 Unix release distributed to colleges and universities. Although it is used as an interactive command interpreter, it was also intended as a scripting language and contains most of the features that are commonly considered to produce structured programs.
It gained popularity with the publication of The Unix Programming Environment by Brian Kernighan and Rob Pike—the first commercially published book that presented the shell as a programming language in a tutorial form.