Shebang
<operating system> (Or "shebang line", "
bang path") /sh*-bang'/ (From "
sharp" and "
bang") The
magic cookie "#!" used in
Unix to mark the start of a
script, e.g. a
shell script or Perl script.
Under
Unix, if the first two bytes of an
executable file are "#!", the
kernel treats the file as a script rather than a
machine code program.
The word following the "!" (i.e., everything up to the first
whitespace) is used as the
pathname of the
interpreter.
For example, if the first line of an executable is
#!/usr/local/bin/perl
the script will be treated as a
Perl script and passed as an argument to /usr/local/bin/perl to be interpreted.
Some variants of Unix also allow one or more parameters to be passed to the interpreter, for example, you can write
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
and the script will be started as if you typed
/usr/bin/perl -w <filename>
on the command line.
Also, most modern kernels ignore any whitespace between the "!" and the interpreter pathname.
Even some modern kernels have fairly small limits (e.g. 32) on the length of line they will accept, making long pathnames and arguments somewhat unportable.
[Does anyone call this a "magic string"?]