I can type alias to show a list of all the aliases.
But for functions, all I can do is grep my .bash_profile
.
That only gets the ones in that file, not those defined in subsidiary files or dynamically.
Is there a more convenient way to find out what functions are currently defined?
declare -F
Function names and definitions may be listed with the
-f
option to thedeclare
builtin command (see Bash Builtins). The-F
option todeclare
will list the function names only (and optionally the source file and line number).
Bash Reference Manual
Assuming bash shell:
typeset -f
will list the functions.
typeset -F
will list just the function names.
declare -F
will give you the names of all functions
type function_name
will give you the source for a particular function
declare -F
actually prints declare commands and not only function names:
$ declare -F
declare -f function1
declare -f function2
You can use compgen -A function
to print only function names:
$ compgen -A function
function1
function2
typeset is obsolete, please use:
declare -f
or
declare -f function_name
or
type function_name
set | grep " ()"
In place of grep you can also use fgrep or hgrep (hgrep is my personal favorite, it's grep but it hi-lites the 'grep-ped' result.
hgrep can be found here: ACME Labs hgrep
I'm no expert at this, still learning, but after finding this question and its answer because I wanted the same, I wrote the following (based on "The Archetypal Paul's declare" answer) to give me ultimately what I was after: a formatted list of both aliases and functions:
function functionaliaslist() {
echo
echo -e "\033[1;4;32m""Functions:""\033[0;34m"
declare -F | awk {'print $3'}
echo
echo -e "\033[1;4;32m""Aliases:""\033[0;34m"
alias | awk {'print $2'} | awk -F= {'print $1'}
echo
echo -e "\033[0m"
}
That was before I saw Lri's answer, and so extrapolating from that, I replace the declare
and alias
lines with appropriate compgen
commands instead, to get:
function functionaliaslist() {
echo
echo -e "\033[1;4;32m""Functions:""\033[0;34m"
compgen -A function
echo
echo -e "\033[1;4;32m""Aliases:""\033[0;34m"
compgen -A alias
echo
echo -e "\033[0m"
}
Woks a treat for what I wanted. Sharing in case it helps anyone else.
There are a multitude of other "actions" available to compgen -A [action]
(and other options for compgen
of course). I found a good write-up here which also includes a link to the man page (because man compgen
doesn't work in some cases).
Bash shell script specific answer
(because this question was marked as a duplicate of this one)
If you have functions exported in your shell a called script will see them. But luckily, they get marked as such.
Copy-Pasta Demo script
#!/bin/bash
foo(){ :;}; bar(){ :;}; baz(){ :;}; export -f foo bar
export -pf
bash -c $'spam(){ :;}; \
echo "RAW:"; \
declare -pF; \
echo "FILTERED:"; \
declare -pF | awk \'$2 !~ /x/{print$3}\''
Transcript in Bash
/tmp $ foo(){ :;}; bar(){ :;}; baz(){ :;}; export -f foo bar
/tmp $ export -pf
bar ()
{
:
}
declare -fx bar
foo ()
{
:
}
declare -fx foo
/tmp $ bash -c $'spam(){ :;}; echo "RAW:"; declare -pF; echo "FILTERED:"; declare -pF | awk \'$2 !~ /x/{print$3}\''
RAW:
declare -fx bar
declare -fx foo
declare -f spam
FILTERED:
spam
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