bashlex is a Python port of the parser used internally by GNU bash.
For the most part it's transliterated from C, the major differences are:
- it does not execute anything
- it is reentrant
- it generates a complete AST
$ pip install bashlex
$ python
>>> import bashlex
>>> parts = bashlex.parse('true && cat <(echo $(echo foo))')
>>> for ast in parts:
... print ast.dump()
ListNode(pos=(0, 31), parts=[
CommandNode(pos=(0, 4), parts=[
WordNode(pos=(0, 4), word='true'),
]),
OperatorNode(op='&&', pos=(5, 7)),
CommandNode(pos=(8, 31), parts=[
WordNode(pos=(8, 11), word='cat'),
WordNode(pos=(12, 31), word='<(echo $(echo foo))', parts=[
ProcesssubstitutionNode(command=
CommandNode(pos=(14, 30), parts=[
WordNode(pos=(14, 18), word='echo'),
WordNode(pos=(19, 30), word='$(echo foo)', parts=[
CommandsubstitutionNode(command=
CommandNode(pos=(21, 29), parts=[
WordNode(pos=(21, 25), word='echo'),
WordNode(pos=(26, 29), word='foo'),
]), pos=(19, 30)),
]),
]), pos=(12, 31)),
]),
]),
])
It is also possible to only use the tokenizer and get similar behaviour to shlex.split, but bashlex understands more complex constructs such as command and process substitutions:
>>> list(bashlex.split('cat <(echo "a $(echo b)") | tee'))
['cat', '<(echo "a $(echo b)")', '|', 'tee']
..compared to shlex:
>>> shlex.split('cat <(echo "a $(echo b)") | tee')
['cat', '<(echo', 'a $(echo b))', '|', 'tee']
The examples/ directory contains a sample script that demonstrate how to traverse the ast to do more complicated things.
Currently the parser has no support for:
- arithmetic expressions $((..))
- the more complicated parameter expansions such as ${parameter#word} are taken literally and do not produce child nodes
It can be useful to debug bashlex in conjunction to GNU bash, since it's mostly
a transliteration. Comments in the code sometimes contain line references to
bash's source code, e.g. # bash/parse.y L2626
.
$ git clone git://git.sv.gnu.org/bash.git
$ cd bash
$ git checkout df2c55de9c87c2ee8904280d26e80f5c48dd6434 # commit used in
translating the code
$ ./configure
$ make CFLAGS=-g CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD=-g # debug info and don't optimize
$ gdb --args ./bash -c 'echo foo'
Useful things to look at when debugging bash:
- variables yylval, shell_input_line, shell_input_line_index
- breakpoint at
yylex
(token numbers to names is in file parser-built) - breakpoint at
read_token_word
(corresponds tobashlex/tokenizer._readtokenword
) xparse_dolparen, expand_word_internal
(called when parsing $())
I wrote this library for another project of mine, explainshell which needed a new parsing backend to support complex constructs such as process/command substitutions.
- make tests
- bump version in setup.py
- git tag the new commit
- run
python setup.py bdist_egg sdist upload
The license for this is the same as that used by GNU bash, GNU GPL v3+.