The Unix Shell

Discussion

Job Control Codes

The shell accepts a few special commands that allow users to interact with running processes or programs. You can enter each of these “control codes” by holding down the CTRL key and then pressing one of the control characters. In other tutorials, you may see the ^ character used to represent the CTRL key (e.g. ^c = CTRL+c).

Control Code Description
CTRL+c Interrupts and cancels a running program. This is useful if you want to cancel a command that is taking too long to execute.
CTRL+d Indicates the end of a file or stream of characters that you are entering on the command line. For example, we saw earlier that the wc command counts lines, words, and characters in a file. If we just type wc and hit Enter without providing a file name, then wc will assume we want it to analyze all the stuff we type next. After typing our magnum opus directly into the shell prompt, we can then type CTRL+d to tell wc that we’re done and we’d like to see the results of the word count.
CTRL+z Suspends a process but does not terminate it. You can then use the command fg to restart the job in the foreground.

For new shell users, these control codes can all appear to have the same effect: they make things “go away.” But it is helpful to understand the differences. In general, if something went wrong and you just want to get your shell prompt back, it is better to use CTRL+c.

Other Shells

Before Bash became popular in the end of nineties, scientists widely used (and some still use) another shell, C-shell, or Csh. Bash and Csh have similar feature sets, but their syntax rules are different and this makes them incompatible with each other. A few other shells have appeared since, including ksh, zsh, and a number of others; they are mostly compatible with Bash, and Bash is the default shell on most modern implementations of Unix (including most packages that provide Unix-like tools for Windows) but if you get strange errors in shell scripts written by colleagues, check to see which shell they were written for.