OK. I decided to do a little test with BASH and ASH scripts to compare them. I was having problems passing some variables to a function(), so this is what I came up with. #!/bin/sh -e blah=1 blee=2 fcn_echo() { echo "blah=$blah blee=$blee" } fcn_echo blah=a fcn_echo blah=b fcn_echo blah=c ; fcn_echo Here's the output: [16:51:30] chad at cyan (521)$ bash blah.sh blah=1 blee=2 blah=a blee=2 blah=b blee=2 blah=c blee=2 [16:52:22] chad at cyan (522)$ bash --posix blah.sh blah=1 blee=2 blah=a blee=2 blah=b blee=2 blah=b blee=2 [16:52:36] chad at cyan (523)$ ash blah.sh blah=1 blee=2 blah=a blee=2 blah=b blee=2 blah=c blee=2 (Yes, the blee variable was extraneous.) Check out how bash changes its behavior. ash claims to be the /most/ POSIX compliant sh interpretor. Why, then, does bash change its output when invoked with the --posix switch (or when called as /bin/sh)? Ugh, what other BASH'isms or ASH'isms do we have to worry about?! -- Chad Walstrom <chewie at wookimus.net> | a.k.a. ^chewie http://www.wookimus.net/ | s.k.a. gunnarr Get my public key, ICQ#, etc. $(mailx -s 'get info' chewie at wookimus.net) -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 232 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://shadowknight.real-time.com/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20020315/058e79f1/attachment.pgp