Building a Shell

(healeycodes.com)

140 points | by ingve 10 hours ago

13 comments

  • lvales 9 hours ago

    Building a shell is a great exercise, but honestly having to deal with string parsing is such a bother that it robs like 2/3 of the joy along the way. I once built a very simple one in Go [0] as a learning exercise and I stopped once I started getting frustrated with all the corner cases.

    [0] https://github.com/lourencovales/codecrafters/blob/master/sh...

    • chubot 4 hours ago

      A common problem I noticed is that if you took certain courses in computer science, you may have a pre-conceived notion of how to parse programming languages, and the shell language doesn't quite fit that model

      I have seen this misconception many times

      In Oils, we have some pretty minor elaborations of the standard model, and it makes things a lot easier

      How to Parse Shell Like a Programming Language - https://www.oilshell.org/blog/2019/02/07.html

      Everything I wrote there still holds, although that post could use some minor updates (and OSH is the most bash-compatible shell, and more POSIX-compatible than /bin/sh on Debian - e.g. https://pages.oils.pub/spec-compat/2025-11-02/renamed-tmp/sp... )

      ---

      To summarize that, I'd say that doing as much work as possible in the lexer, with regular languages and "lexer modes", drastically reduces the complexity of writing a shell parser

      And it's not just one parser -- shell actually has 5 to 15 different parsers, depending on how you count

      I often show this file to make that point: https://oils.pub/release/0.37.0/pub/src-tree.wwz/_gen/_tmp/m...

      (linked from https://oils.pub/release/0.37.0/quality.html)

      Fine-grained heterogenous algebraic data types also help. Shells in C tend to use a homogeneous command* and word* kind of representation

      https://oils.pub/release/0.37.0/pub/src-tree.wwz/frontend/sy... (~700 lines of type definitions)

      • healeycodes 8 hours ago

        Author here, and yeah, I agree. I skipped writing a parser altogether and just split on whitespace and `|` so that I could get to the interesting bits.

        For side-projects, I have to ask myself if I'm writing a parser, or if I'm building something else; e.g. for a toy programming language, it's way more fun to start with an AST and play around, and come back to the parser if you really fall in love with it.

        • ferguess_k 6 hours ago

          Can say the same for control characters in terminals. I even think maybe it's just easier to ditch them all and use QT to build a "terminal" with clickable urls, something similar to what TempleOS does.

        • wei03288 6 hours ago

          The pipe section is the part that changes how you think about processes. Once you've manually done the dup2 dance — close write-end in parent, close read-end in child, wire them up — it stops being magic and starts being obvious why `grep | sort | uniq` works at all. The thing that surprised me building a similar toy was how late in the process job control has to come: you can get a working pipe chain surprisingly fast, and then job control (SIGTSTP, tcsetpgrp, the whole mess) costs 5x more than everything else combined.

          • chubot 4 hours ago

            Yup, job control is a huge mess. I think Bill Joy was able to modify the shell, the syscall interface, and the terminal driver at the same time to implement the hacky mechanism of job control. But a few years later that kind of crosscutting change would have been harder

            One thing we learned from implementing job control in https://oils.pub is that the differing pipeline semantics of bash and zsh makes a difference

            In bash, the last part of the pipeline is forked (unless shopt -s lastpipe)

            In zsh, it isn't

                $ bash -c 'echo hi | read x; echo $x'  # no output
                      
                $ zsh -c 'echo hi | read x; echo $x'
                hi
            
            And then that affects this case:

                bash$ sleep 5 | read
                ^Z
                [1]+  Stopped                 sleep 5 | read
            
            
                zsh$ sleep 5 | read    # job control doesn't apply to this case in zsh
                ^Zzsh: job can't be suspended
            
            
            So yeah the semantics of shell are not very well specified (which is one reason for OSH and YSH). I recall a bug running an Alpine Linux shell script where this difference matters -- if the last part is NOT forked, then the script doesn't run

            I think there was almost a "double bug" -- the script relied on the `read` output being "lost", even though that was likely not the intended behavior

            • sloum 1 hour ago

              Yes!! This!! I wrote a shell awhile back and was pretty happy with it... but could _not_ get job control to work quite right. It was a big pain.

            • emersion 8 hours ago

              Some time ago I've written an article about a particular aspect of shells, job control: https://emersion.fr/blog/2019/job-control/

              • rrampage 2 hours ago

                Fun read! I built a minimal Linux shell [0] in c and Zig last year which does not depend on libc. It was a great way to learn about execve, the new-ish clone3 syscall and how Linux starts a process. Parsing strings is the least fun part of the building the shell.

                [0] https://gist.github.com/rrampage/5046b60ca2d040bcffb49ee38e8...

                • mzs 8 hours ago

                  Had an assignment to build a shell in a week, how hard could it be?

                    controlling terminal
                    session leader
                    job control
                  
                  The parser was easy in comparison.
                  • ratzkewatzke 3 hours ago

                    There's a very good exercise on Codecrafters (https://app.codecrafters.io/courses/shell/overview) to walk you through writing your own shell. I found it enlightening, as well as a good way to learn a new language.

                    • lasgawe 2 hours ago

                      Great article. There are many things every developer should do when starting to learn programming or when trying to improve their skills. This is one of them. I once built a shell-like programming language (not an interpreter). If anyone reading this wants to improve their skills, I strongly suggest building your own shell from scratch.

                      • lioeters 5 hours ago

                        Link was previously posted by author: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47398749 There are other good quality articles on their site, and maybe deserves the imaginary points.

                        • hexer303 5 hours ago

                          Unix shells are conceptually simple but hide a surprising amount of complexity under the hood that we take for granted. I recently had build my own PTY controller. There were so many edge-cases to deal with. It took weeks of stress testing and writing many tests to get it right.

                          • doe88 2 hours ago

                            Is there a (real) shell whose code is relatively short and self contained and would be valuable to read? This was always something I wanted to do but never quite spent time to look for a good one to explore.

                            • giancarlostoro 2 hours ago

                              Although not the same... Destroy All Software has videos on building your own shell using Ruby. I watched it to learn and it was a lot of fun to watch him basically building a shell, I'm not really a Ruby guy, but it was easy to grasp. It's not free, you would need a subscription, but its worth the watch otherwise.

                              https://www.destroyallsoftware.com/screencasts/catalog/shell...

                              • epr 2 hours ago

                                I think there's a good one if you search around for "xv6 sh.c". Hard to tell immediately from a google search just now since there are many implementations (people do it in school) and github's currently blocking requests from my phone.

                                Also helpful may be running strace on your shell, then reviewing the output line by line to make sure you understand each. This is a VERY instructive exercise to do in general.

                              • zokier 9 hours ago

                                Bit of pedantry but I don't think traditional unix shell (like this) follows repl model; the shell is not usually doing printing of the result of evaluation. Instead the printing happens more as a side effect of the commands.

                                • jermaustin1 8 hours ago

                                  I remember my first shell programming I ever did was batch in windows back in the 3.11/95 days.

                                  The first line was always to turn off echo, and I've always wondered why that was a decision for batch script. Or I'm misremembering. 30 years of separation makes it hard to remember the details.

                                  • enoint 7 hours ago

                                    Echo in that case prints command lines before executing them. Its analog is `set -x` rather than `echo`.

                                  • themafia 1 hour ago

                                    It prints a prompt.

                                    • skydhash 7 hours ago

                                      It’s a shell, not the whole thing. The whole thing is the shell+kernel+programs.

                                    • dirk94018 5 hours ago

                                      Interesting. I wanted to do toast | bash to let the AI drive the computer but the bash shell really got in the way. Too much complexity. The things that annoy humans, $ expansion, special characters, etc don't work for AI either. Ended up writing a custom shell for AI (and humans). When a tool gets in the way, sometimes it just time to change the tool.

                                      • austy69 7 hours ago

                                        Fun read. Wonder if you are able to edit text in the shell, or if you need to implement a gap buffer to allow it?

                                        • healeycodes 7 hours ago

                                          Editing the current line works because I brought in https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/readline.3.html towards the end so I could support editing, tab completion, and history.

                                          IIRC readline uses a `char *` internally since the length of a user-edited line is fairly bounded.

                                          • zokier 1 hour ago

                                            worth noting that you get basic line editing for "free" from kernels tty subsystem even if you don't use readline.

                                            • austy69 6 hours ago

                                              Very cool. Currently working on the beginning of a small text editor so this part seemed interesting and was curious of any overlap. Thanks for the interesting post!