Lots of UNIX versions let you start a script file this way:
#!/bin/sh
That executable file will always be read by a Bourne shell. If some
versions of UNIX you use don't
understand #! (44.4),
here's how to start your scripts:
|| | #!/bin/sh export PATH || exec /bin/sh $0 $argv:q |
|---|
If a Bourne shell reads that line (that is, if the #!/bin/sh
succeeded), the export PATH command will succeed and
the rest of the command line will be skipped. If a C shell reads the
line, it will print the error export: Command not found. Then
it will run exec /bin/sh $0 $argv:q. The
exec (45.7)
replaces the C shell with a Bourne shell, passes it the name of the
script file in $0, and passes a quoted list of the
command-line arguments from $argv
:q (9.6).
-