Indeed, bash is the default shell on linux ... by default. You can change it, and for instance, certain database softwares will require that either csh or ksh be the login shell.
> I don't see how bash is a Linux-ism. > I see the point: bash tends to be associated with Linux. However, you may run bash on pretty much any *nix. > > Do modern BSDs tend to default to another shell? > > Yes. > FreeBSD defaults to csh, OpenBSD and NetBSD to ksh. > In any case, changing shells is trivial. > Easier than to pronounce: chsh. > Yes, diverting from the default and subscribing > to something incompatible with the default shell > is indeed trivial. > > That's why well-written scripts start with a SheBang<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shebang_(Unix)>: rule of scriptisation #287, never assume anything about the environment your script will run on. -- Jean Gobin, CCENT, CCNA, CCNA Security http://newsfromjean.blogspot.com/
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