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Eli Schwartz authored
The "which" utility is not guaranteed to be installed, and if it is, its behavior is not portable. Conversely, the "command -v" shell builtin is required to exist in all POSIX 2008 compliant shells, and is thus guaranteed to work everywhere. Examples of open-source shells likely to be installed as /bin/sh on Linux, which implement the 12-year-old standard: ash, bash, busybox, dash, ksh, mksh and zsh. A side benefit of using the POSIX portable option is that it does not require an external disk executable to be forked. This therefore represents a mild speedup.
Eli Schwartz authoredThe "which" utility is not guaranteed to be installed, and if it is, its behavior is not portable. Conversely, the "command -v" shell builtin is required to exist in all POSIX 2008 compliant shells, and is thus guaranteed to work everywhere. Examples of open-source shells likely to be installed as /bin/sh on Linux, which implement the 12-year-old standard: ash, bash, busybox, dash, ksh, mksh and zsh. A side benefit of using the POSIX portable option is that it does not require an external disk executable to be forked. This therefore represents a mild speedup.
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