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📌 **What You’ll Learn**:
A UNIX shell written in pure Ruby.
Shell syntax is parsed and compiled to Ruby code, then executed by the Ruby VM.
Rubish supports all the features of bash, and the shell syntax is fully compatible. You can run your existing bash scripts without modification. If you found any bash script that doesn’t work in rubish, we consider it a bug, so please report it!
Rubish is not just a shell implemented in Ruby, but a shell that deeply integrates Ruby. You can seamlessly mix shell commands and Ruby code, and even use Ruby’s powerful features like blocks, iterators, and libraries in your shell scripts.
brew tap amatsuda/rubish
brew install --HEAD rubish
git clone https://github.com/amatsuda/rubish.git
cd rubish
bundle install
bundle exec exe/rubish
bin/rubish is a small bash launcher that finds a usable Ruby on its own (probes ~/.rbenv/shims/ruby, /opt/homebrew/bin/ruby, /usr/local/bin/ruby, system Ruby; honors $RUBY). Use it when bundler isn’t around — for example as a login shell, from a .app bundle, or anywhere PATH may be minimal:
./bin/rubish
RUBY=/opt/homebrew/opt/ruby@3.4/bin/ruby ./bin/rubish # explicit override
Start an interactive shell:
Run a single command:
Run a script:
Or you can even use this as a login shell!
echo "$(which rubish)" | sudo tee -a /etc/shells
chsh -s "$(which rubish)"
Use Ruby expressions as conditions in if, while, and until by wrapping them in . Shell variables are automatically bound as local variables in the Ruby expression:
Commands can be invoked using Ruby method call syntax with parentheses, in addition to the traditional UNIX style with spaces:
# These are equivalent:
ls -la
ls('-la')
# Arguments can be passed as method arguments:
cat(file.txt)
grep('pattern', file.txt)
Commands can be chained with Ruby methods using dot notation, forming a pipeline. The chain has to be opened by a parenthesized call, an array literal, or a block — once you’re in chain context, subsequent methods can be bare:
The first segment needs the parens because bare cmd.method is ambiguous with paths and dotted filenames (./script.sh, file.tar.gz) — once () confirms a method-call form, the lexer knows it’s safe to chain.
Ruby iterator methods (.each, .map, .select, .detect) can take blocks to process command output line by line:
ls.each
cat(file.txt).map
ls.select x * x
Any line starting with a capital letter is evaluated as Ruby code directly. This means you can use Ruby classes, methods, and expressions right from the shell prompt without any special syntax:
rubish$ Time.now
=> 2025-01-01 12:00:00 +0900
rubish$ Dir.glob('*.rb').sort
=> ["Gemfile", "Rakefile"]
rubish$ ENV['HOME']
=> "/Users/you"
Ruby array and regexp literals
Ruby array literals can be used directly in shell context. Rubish distinguishes them from glob patterns like [a-z] automatically:
rubish$ [1, 2, 3].map
=> [1, 4, 9]
You can execute any Ruby code by surrounding it with a lambda expression (-> 🔥):
rubish$ -> { 2 ** 10 }
=> 1024
Ruby-style function definitions
In addition to the standard shell function syntax, rubish supports Ruby-style def...end with named parameters and splat args:
def greet(name)
echo "Hello, $name"
end
def log(level, *messages)
echo "[$level] $messages"
end
greet world # => Hello, world
Define your prompt as a Ruby function for full programmatic control. The function is called on every prompt render, so it can include dynamic content:
def rubish_prompt
branch = `git branch --show-current 2>/dev/null`.strip
dir = Dir.pwd.sub(ENV['HOME'], '~')
"\e[36m#{dir}\e[0m \e[33m#{branch}\e[0m $ "
end
def rubish_right_prompt
Time.now.strftime('%H:%M:%S')
end
You can also use the traditional PS1/RPROMPT variables with bash (\X) or zsh (%X) escape codes.
Slow shell initializations (e.g., rbenv init, nvm, pyenv) can be deferred to a background thread using lazy_load. The block runs immediately in the background, and its result (a string of shell code) is applied before the next prompt. This keeps shell startup instant:
# In ~/.rubishrc
lazy_load {
`rbenv init - --no-rehash bash`
}
lazy_load {
`nodenv init - bash`
}
Multiple lazy_load blocks run in parallel. By the time you type your first command, they’re usually done.
Running rubish -r disables all Ruby integration features (inline evaluation, lambdas, blocks, Ruby conditions, and array literals) for executing untrusted scripts safely. Only standard shell syntax is allowed.
In addition to full Bash compatibility, rubish also supports zsh-style features:
setopt/unsetoptcompdef/compinitautoloadwithfpath%Xprompt codes andRPROMPT/RPS1- Abbreviated path expansion: type
a/c/aand it expands toapp/controllers/application_controller.rb
Login shells load (in order):
/etc/profile~/.config/rubish/profileor~/.rubish_profile(or~/.bash_profile/~/.bash_login/~/.profile)
Interactive shells load:
~/.config/rubish/configor~/.rubishrc(or~/.bashrc)./.rubishrc(project-local)
Logout:
~/.config/rubish/logoutor~/.rubish_logout(or~/.bash_logout)
Embedding in a Ruby program
Rubish exposes a public API so other Ruby programs (terminal emulators, IDE plugins, GUI front-ends) can drive a rubish session in-process — no fork+exec, no JSON serialization, just method calls. The sibling Echoes terminal emulator uses this to render syntax-highlighted prompts and decide command-execution shape ahead of time.
require 'rubish'
repl = Rubish::REPL.new(login_shell: true)
# Run interactively (default).
repl.run
# Or drive it programmatically.
repl.tokenize('ls | grep foo') # => Array of Rubish::Lexer::Token (each
# with :type and :value) for syntax
# highlighting; never raises.
repl.try_parse('if true; then') # => :ok | :incomplete | :error
# (use to decide PS2 vs. submit).
repl.parse_ast('echo hi') # => AST root, or nil on parse failure.
repl.complete_at(line: 'gi', point: 2) # => Array of completion candidates at
# the cursor.
repl.prompt_segments # => Array of styled-text segments
# {text:, fg:, bg:, bold:, italic:,
# underline:, inverse:}, ANSI codes
# already parsed.
repl.right_prompt_segments # => same shape for the right prompt,
# or nil if unset.
The default Rubish::Frontend::Tty wraps Reline + stdin/stdout. Hosts that own their own line editor can subclass Rubish::Frontend::Base and pass an instance into the REPL:
class MyFrontend < Rubish::Frontend::Base
def read_line(prompt:, rprompt: nil)
# ...feed input from your own UI here
end
end
Rubish::REPL.new(frontend: MyFrontend.new).run
Child-process pre-exec hook
To run setup code in every forked child between fork() and exec() (e.g. to attach a per-command controlling tty so the line discipline can deliver Ctrl-C to the child):
Rubish::Command.child_pre_exec_hook = -> {
Process.setsid
# ...ioctls, signal handlers, etc.
}
| Category | Commands |
|---|---|
| Directory | cd, pwd, pushd, popd, dirs |
| I/O | echo, printf, read, mapfile, readarray |
| Variables | export, declare, typeset, readonly, unset, local, shift, set |
| Process | exit, logout, exec, kill, wait, times |
| Job control | jobs, fg, bg, disown, suspend |
| Functions | function, return, caller |
| Aliases | alias, unalias |
| History | history, fc |
| Execution | eval, source, ., command, builtin |
| Testing | test, [, [[, (( )), let |
| Control | break, continue, trap |
| Completion | complete, compgen, compopt, bind |
| Config | shopt, setopt, unsetopt |
| Info | help, type, which, hash |
| Other | true, false, :, getopts, umask, ulimit, enable |
bundle install
bundle exec rake test
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/amatsuda/rubish.
MIT
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