Is “/bin/[.exe” a legitimate file? [Cygwin, Windows 10]
I can not find anything about this, is it a known file?
I am using a CYGWIN based terminal on windows 10
Here are their locations and the commands I used.
$ find -name [*
./bin/[.exe
./usr/bin/[.exe
$ ls -l -a -r /* | grep [-.*>]
...all other files that match this...
-rwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 67134 Nov 6 14:22 [.exe
drwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 0 Apr 2 18:15 ..
drwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 0 Jan 26 03:20 .
I would like more information on this file if anyone has any knowledge about it and whether or not I can remove it.
shell cygwin
New contributor
add a comment |
I can not find anything about this, is it a known file?
I am using a CYGWIN based terminal on windows 10
Here are their locations and the commands I used.
$ find -name [*
./bin/[.exe
./usr/bin/[.exe
$ ls -l -a -r /* | grep [-.*>]
...all other files that match this...
-rwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 67134 Nov 6 14:22 [.exe
drwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 0 Apr 2 18:15 ..
drwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 0 Jan 26 03:20 .
I would like more information on this file if anyone has any knowledge about it and whether or not I can remove it.
shell cygwin
New contributor
1
Possible duplicate of What is the purpose of square bracket executable
– roaima
2 hours ago
Not necessarily, I didn't know what it was, all the times I've ls'ed into /bin/ No google searches for things close to and the title would provide much to the direct answer here below. Updated the title for relevance
– Joe
1 hour ago
add a comment |
I can not find anything about this, is it a known file?
I am using a CYGWIN based terminal on windows 10
Here are their locations and the commands I used.
$ find -name [*
./bin/[.exe
./usr/bin/[.exe
$ ls -l -a -r /* | grep [-.*>]
...all other files that match this...
-rwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 67134 Nov 6 14:22 [.exe
drwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 0 Apr 2 18:15 ..
drwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 0 Jan 26 03:20 .
I would like more information on this file if anyone has any knowledge about it and whether or not I can remove it.
shell cygwin
New contributor
I can not find anything about this, is it a known file?
I am using a CYGWIN based terminal on windows 10
Here are their locations and the commands I used.
$ find -name [*
./bin/[.exe
./usr/bin/[.exe
$ ls -l -a -r /* | grep [-.*>]
...all other files that match this...
-rwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 67134 Nov 6 14:22 [.exe
drwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 0 Apr 2 18:15 ..
drwxr-xr-x 1 X 197121 0 Jan 26 03:20 .
I would like more information on this file if anyone has any knowledge about it and whether or not I can remove it.
shell cygwin
shell cygwin
New contributor
New contributor
edited 1 hour ago
Joe
New contributor
asked 3 hours ago
JoeJoe
1092
1092
New contributor
New contributor
1
Possible duplicate of What is the purpose of square bracket executable
– roaima
2 hours ago
Not necessarily, I didn't know what it was, all the times I've ls'ed into /bin/ No google searches for things close to and the title would provide much to the direct answer here below. Updated the title for relevance
– Joe
1 hour ago
add a comment |
1
Possible duplicate of What is the purpose of square bracket executable
– roaima
2 hours ago
Not necessarily, I didn't know what it was, all the times I've ls'ed into /bin/ No google searches for things close to and the title would provide much to the direct answer here below. Updated the title for relevance
– Joe
1 hour ago
1
1
Possible duplicate of What is the purpose of square bracket executable
– roaima
2 hours ago
Possible duplicate of What is the purpose of square bracket executable
– roaima
2 hours ago
Not necessarily, I didn't know what it was, all the times I've ls'ed into /bin/ No google searches for things close to and the title would provide much to the direct answer here below. Updated the title for relevance
– Joe
1 hour ago
Not necessarily, I didn't know what it was, all the times I've ls'ed into /bin/ No google searches for things close to and the title would provide much to the direct answer here below. Updated the title for relevance
– Joe
1 hour ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
You should not remove that file. In general, don't remove random files that you have not created yourself.
It's the executable file for the [
utility. This utility is exactly the same as test
but requires that the last operand is ]
.
See man [
and man test
.
Example of use:
[ -n "hello" ] && echo '"hello" is a non-empty string'
You would also be able to use
/bin/[.exe -n "hello" ] && echo 'That works too'
(though I don't have access to Cygwin to try it, so I don't know if you need to specify the .exe
suffix on the command or not)
Note that /bin/[.exe
is the executable file for the external [
utility. This utility is very often also available as a built-in utility in your shell. If your shell is bash
, then man bash
(and help [
) would document it.
Related:
- How exactly does "/bin/[" work?
This is ironically enough, hilarious. I did not know that was a legitimate executable. I thought it as a potential security risk through a regex related attack. Thank you very much for this information, it was thoroughly explained well,... formerly not, (now should be for others), provided through google/forum indexing.
– Joe
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
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oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You should not remove that file. In general, don't remove random files that you have not created yourself.
It's the executable file for the [
utility. This utility is exactly the same as test
but requires that the last operand is ]
.
See man [
and man test
.
Example of use:
[ -n "hello" ] && echo '"hello" is a non-empty string'
You would also be able to use
/bin/[.exe -n "hello" ] && echo 'That works too'
(though I don't have access to Cygwin to try it, so I don't know if you need to specify the .exe
suffix on the command or not)
Note that /bin/[.exe
is the executable file for the external [
utility. This utility is very often also available as a built-in utility in your shell. If your shell is bash
, then man bash
(and help [
) would document it.
Related:
- How exactly does "/bin/[" work?
This is ironically enough, hilarious. I did not know that was a legitimate executable. I thought it as a potential security risk through a regex related attack. Thank you very much for this information, it was thoroughly explained well,... formerly not, (now should be for others), provided through google/forum indexing.
– Joe
1 hour ago
add a comment |
You should not remove that file. In general, don't remove random files that you have not created yourself.
It's the executable file for the [
utility. This utility is exactly the same as test
but requires that the last operand is ]
.
See man [
and man test
.
Example of use:
[ -n "hello" ] && echo '"hello" is a non-empty string'
You would also be able to use
/bin/[.exe -n "hello" ] && echo 'That works too'
(though I don't have access to Cygwin to try it, so I don't know if you need to specify the .exe
suffix on the command or not)
Note that /bin/[.exe
is the executable file for the external [
utility. This utility is very often also available as a built-in utility in your shell. If your shell is bash
, then man bash
(and help [
) would document it.
Related:
- How exactly does "/bin/[" work?
This is ironically enough, hilarious. I did not know that was a legitimate executable. I thought it as a potential security risk through a regex related attack. Thank you very much for this information, it was thoroughly explained well,... formerly not, (now should be for others), provided through google/forum indexing.
– Joe
1 hour ago
add a comment |
You should not remove that file. In general, don't remove random files that you have not created yourself.
It's the executable file for the [
utility. This utility is exactly the same as test
but requires that the last operand is ]
.
See man [
and man test
.
Example of use:
[ -n "hello" ] && echo '"hello" is a non-empty string'
You would also be able to use
/bin/[.exe -n "hello" ] && echo 'That works too'
(though I don't have access to Cygwin to try it, so I don't know if you need to specify the .exe
suffix on the command or not)
Note that /bin/[.exe
is the executable file for the external [
utility. This utility is very often also available as a built-in utility in your shell. If your shell is bash
, then man bash
(and help [
) would document it.
Related:
- How exactly does "/bin/[" work?
You should not remove that file. In general, don't remove random files that you have not created yourself.
It's the executable file for the [
utility. This utility is exactly the same as test
but requires that the last operand is ]
.
See man [
and man test
.
Example of use:
[ -n "hello" ] && echo '"hello" is a non-empty string'
You would also be able to use
/bin/[.exe -n "hello" ] && echo 'That works too'
(though I don't have access to Cygwin to try it, so I don't know if you need to specify the .exe
suffix on the command or not)
Note that /bin/[.exe
is the executable file for the external [
utility. This utility is very often also available as a built-in utility in your shell. If your shell is bash
, then man bash
(and help [
) would document it.
Related:
- How exactly does "/bin/[" work?
edited 2 hours ago
answered 3 hours ago
Kusalananda♦Kusalananda
139k17259430
139k17259430
This is ironically enough, hilarious. I did not know that was a legitimate executable. I thought it as a potential security risk through a regex related attack. Thank you very much for this information, it was thoroughly explained well,... formerly not, (now should be for others), provided through google/forum indexing.
– Joe
1 hour ago
add a comment |
This is ironically enough, hilarious. I did not know that was a legitimate executable. I thought it as a potential security risk through a regex related attack. Thank you very much for this information, it was thoroughly explained well,... formerly not, (now should be for others), provided through google/forum indexing.
– Joe
1 hour ago
This is ironically enough, hilarious. I did not know that was a legitimate executable. I thought it as a potential security risk through a regex related attack. Thank you very much for this information, it was thoroughly explained well,... formerly not, (now should be for others), provided through google/forum indexing.
– Joe
1 hour ago
This is ironically enough, hilarious. I did not know that was a legitimate executable. I thought it as a potential security risk through a regex related attack. Thank you very much for this information, it was thoroughly explained well,... formerly not, (now should be for others), provided through google/forum indexing.
– Joe
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Joe is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Joe is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Joe is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Joe is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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1
Possible duplicate of What is the purpose of square bracket executable
– roaima
2 hours ago
Not necessarily, I didn't know what it was, all the times I've ls'ed into /bin/ No google searches for things close to and the title would provide much to the direct answer here below. Updated the title for relevance
– Joe
1 hour ago