NAME
basename
, dirname
— return filename or directory
portion of pathname
SYNOPSIS
basename |
string [suffix] |
basename |
[-a ] [-s
suffix] string
[...] |
dirname |
string [...] |
DESCRIPTION
Thebasename
utility deletes any prefix ending with the
last slash ‘/
’ character present in
string (after first stripping trailing slashes), and a
suffix, if given. The suffix is
not stripped if it is identical to the remaining characters in
string. The resulting filename is written to the
standard output. A non-existent suffix is ignored. If
-a
is specified, then every argument is treated as a
string as if basename
were
invoked with just one argument. If -s
is specified,
then the suffix is taken as its argument, and all other
arguments are treated as a string.
The dirname
utility deletes the filename
portion, beginning with the last slash
‘/
’ character to the end of
string (after first stripping trailing slashes), and
writes the result to the standard output.
EXIT STATUS
The basename
and
dirname
utilities exit 0 on success,
and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
basename
together with
-a interprets the second argument as a
string and produces "foo" followed by
"bar" for:
basename -a /usr/bin/foo
/sbin/bar
Passing multiple arguments to dirname
produces /usr/bin followed by
/sbin
dirname /usr/bin/foo
/sbin/bar
The following line sets the shell variable
FOO
to /usr/bin.
FOO=`dirname
/usr/bin/trail`
SEE ALSO
STANDARDS
The basename
and
dirname
utilities are expected to be
IEEE Std 1003.2 (“POSIX.2”)
compatible.