So I have a problem below, but my question is more generic - how to see exact content of memory referenced by bash variable to understand why they don't match:
# [[ $c1 == $c ]] || echo nope
nope
# [[ $c1 == "bkup dt" ]] || echo nope
# [[ $c == "bkup dt" ]] || echo nope
nope
# hexdump -C <<<$c
00000000 62 6b 75 70 20 64 74 0a |bkup dt.|
00000008
# hexdump -C <<<$c1
00000000 62 6b 75 70 20 64 74 0a |bkup dt.|
00000008
# [ "$c1" = "$c" ] || echo nope
nope
# [ ! "$c1" = "$c" ] || echo nope
Or does it look like a bug? I can repeat the problem with:
$ cd /tmp
$ mkdir aaa
$ echo 2 > aaa/1
$ echo 2 > aaa/2
$ c=$(ls -A aaa)
$ [[ $c == $(echo $c) ]] || echo not equal
not equal
$ hexdump -C <<<$c
00000000 31 20 32 0a |1 2.|
00000004
$ hexdump -C <<<$(echo $c)
00000000 31 20 32 0a |1 2.|
00000004
$ c1="1 2"
$ [[ $c1 == $(echo $c1) ]] || echo not equal
$ [[ $c1 == $(echo $c) ]] || echo not equal
$ [[ $c1 == $c ]] || echo not equal
not equal
The best thing to inspect the content of a variable is to use
declare -p
:Note that your tests are wrong because you're missing out quotes in your variable expansions!
Look:
You must quote every single variable expansion, unless you really want to have word splitting and pathname expansion applied to them! (and usually, you certainly don't want that to happen).
Even with your
hexdump
strategy you need quotes:What you're experiencing is exactly this:
Sometimes
declare -p
will not quite show spaces properly. In this case you can useprintf
like so:The declare strategy is also nice as you can inspect arrays and functions too:
You also have access to the flags of the variables:
You don't see the exact content of the variable because you ask bash to modify it. The most basic effect is in this command:
Quoting prevents the shell from interpreting the special character # as a comment start character, and thus it gets printed.
Please read more here
The only correct way to print a variable exact content is to quote it.
Above, var a is getting an exact string because it is single quoted.
Above, the value of var
a
is exactly reproduced because of the double quotes.As soon as you fail to quote a variable expansion
$a
, you get something else:This is a very basic requirement of any shell: quoting.
And there are single quotes, double quotes and backslash quoting.
In your case, to reproduce what you see, the vars are not really equal, they are:
That is, c contains an additional newline at the end compared to c1.
Let's repeat your commands, but correctly quoting to see the real contents of each var (Please understand that inside
[[…]]
variables could be used un-quoted most of the time).The variables are Not equal.
variable
c1
is exactly equal tobkup dt
(no output).No,
c
is not exactly "bkup dt" (it has an additional new line).Note the two newlines at the end, now the quoted variable reproduces its internal value correctly with an added newline from the
<<<
.Compare with
$c1
.Only one newline!!.
Maybe a better way will be to use:
Here, the newline inside the variable is clearly shown.
The variable
$c1
doesn't show that:The command declare could be used also:
As cat, sed and some others:
Provided you quote the variable expansion and know how a new line looks like.
Your second example also has a new line issue.
In this case,
c
seem to have an space, but what it really have is:A newline
Thus, an echo also fails (for a couple of missing quotes, both are needed):