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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Commands  





2 Differences from other Unix shells  





3 Compared to PASE for i  





4 See also  





5 References  





6 Further reading  





7 External links  














Qshell






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Qshell
Developer(s)IBM
Operating systemIBM i
PlatformIBM Power Systems
Standard(s)POSIX, X/Open
Available inEnglish
TypeCommand shell
WebsiteQshell

Qshell is an optional command-line interpreter (shell) for the IBM i operating system. Qshell is based on POSIX and X/Open standards. It is a Bourne-like shell that also includes features of KornShell.[1] The utilities (orcommands) are external programs that provide additional functions. The development team of Qshell had to deal with platform-specific issues such as translating between ASCII and EBCDIC. The shell supports interactive mode as well as batch processing and can run shell scripts from Unix-like operating systems with few or no modifications.[1]

Commands[edit]

The following is a list of commands that are supported by the Qshell command-line interpreter on IBM i 7.4.[2]

  • ajar
  • alias
  • appletviewer
  • attr
  • basename
  • break
  • builtin
  • cat
  • catsplf
  • cd
  • chgrp
  • chmod
  • chown
  • clrtmp
  • cmp
  • colon (:)
  • command
  • compress
  • continue
  • cp
  • cut
  • dataq
  • datarea
  • date
  • db2profc
  • db2profp
  • declare
  • dirname
  • dot (.)
  • dspmsg
  • echo
  • egrep
  • env
  • eval
  • exec
  • exit
  • export
  • expr
  • extcheck
  • false
  • fgrep
  • file
  • find
  • gencat
  • getconf
  • getjobid
  • getopts
  • grep
  • hash
  • head
  • help
  • hostname
  • iconv
  • id
  • ipcrm
  • ipcs
  • jar
  • jarsigner
  • java
  • javac
  • javadoc
  • javah
  • javakey
  • javap
  • jobs
  • kdestroy
  • keytab
  • keytool
  • kill
  • kinit
  • klist
  • ksetup
  • ldapadd
  • ldapchangepwd
  • ldapdelete
  • ldapdiff
  • ldapexop
  • ldapmodify
  • ldapmodrdn
  • ldapsearch
  • let
  • liblist
  • ln
  • local
  • locale
  • logger
  • logname
  • ls
  • mkdir
  • mkfifo
  • mv
  • native2ascii
  • nohup
  • od
  • pax
  • policytool
  • pr
  • print
  • printenv
  • printf
  • profconv
  • profdb
  • profp
  • ps
  • pwd
  • pwdx
  • qsh
  • read
  • readonly
  • return
  • rexec
  • rexx
  • Rfile
  • rm
  • rmdir
  • rmic
  • rmid
  • rmiregistry
  • sed
  • serialver
  • set
  • setccsid
  • sh
  • shift
  • sleep
  • sort
  • source
  • split
  • sqlj
  • system
  • sysval
  • tail
  • tar
  • tee
  • test
  • tnameserv
  • touch
  • tr
  • trap
  • true
  • type
  • typeset
  • ulimit
  • umask
  • unalias
  • uname
  • uncompress
  • uniq
  • unset
  • wait
  • wc
  • whence
  • xargs
  • zcat
  • Differences from other Unix shells[edit]

    Qshell does not support the <> redirection operator or provide a command history. It also has no job control support as IBM i operating system does not have the concept of a foregroundorbackground process group. The POSIX standard fg and bg built-in commands are therefore not available as well.[3]

    Compared to PASE for i[edit]

    According to IBM, QSHELL is a “Unix-like” interface built over IBM i. The commands issued by the user point to programs in a “Qshell” library. It began as a port from the ash shell, which was a Bourne-like shell created by Berkeley Software Design.[1]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b c Holt, Ted; Kulack, Fred (February 1, 2004). Qshell for iSeries. MC Press. ISBN 1-58347-046-8.
  • ^ "List of all utilities". IBM.
  • ^ "Differences with other interpreters". IBM.
  • Further reading[edit]

    External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Qshell&oldid=1217508803"

    Categories: 
    Unix shells
    Command shells
    Interpreters (computing)
    IBM operating systems
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    This page was last edited on 6 April 2024, at 06:34 (UTC).

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