What's going to be new in bash 5
The changes made to bash
between release 4.4 and 5.0 (released 2019-01-07) may be found in the NEWS
file in the bash
source distribution.
Here is a link to it (the changes are too numerous to list here).
If you, like me, are looking for the headline features rather than the full changelog, this post by the maintainer, Chet Ramey, goes over that. Here is the interesting section:
This release fixes several outstanding bugs in bash-4.4 and introduces several new features. The most significant bug fixes are an overhaul of how nameref variables resolve and a number of potential out-of-bounds memory errors discovered via fuzzing. There are a number of changes to the expansion of $@ and $* in various contexts where word splitting is not performed to conform to a Posix standard interpretation, and additional changes to resolve corner cases for Posix conformance.
The most notable new features are several new shell variables: BASH_ARGV0, EPOCHSECONDS, and EPOCHREALTIME. The `history' builtin can remove ranges of history entries and understands negative arguments as offsets from the end of the history list. There is an option to allow local variables to inherit the value of a variable with the same name at a preceding scope. There is a new shell option that, when enabled, causes the shell to attempt to expand associative array subscripts only once (this is an issue when they are used in arithmetic expressions). The `globasciiranges' shell option is now enabled by default; it can be set to off by default at configuration time.
There are a few incompatible changes between bash-4.4 and bash-5.0. The changes to how nameref variables are resolved means that some uses of namerefs will behave differently, though I have tried to minimize the compatibility issues. By default, the shell only sets BASH_ARGC and BASH_ARGV at startup if extended debugging mode is enabled; it was an oversight that it was set unconditionally and caused performance issues when scripts were passed large numbers of arguments.
He also refers to these two files, in case you want more:
- NEWS: more detail (also in Kusalananda's answer)
- CHANGES: most detail
The `history' builtin can remove ranges of history entries and understands negative arguments as offsets from the end of the history list.
Example on deleting a range:
history -d 123-130
or deleting the last 10:
history -d -10--1
Excerpt from Bash 5 Man Page:
'history'
Options, if supplied, have the following meanings:
'-d OFFSET' Delete the history entry at position OFFSET. If OFFSET is positive, it should be specified as it appears when the history is displayed. If OFFSET is negative, it is interpreted as relative to one greater than the last history position, so negative indices count back from the end of the history, and an index of '-1' refers to the current 'history -d' command.
'-d START-END' Delete the history entries between positions START and END, inclusive. Positive and negative values for START and END are interpreted as described above.
See my related answer: Delete a range of bash history