'''Korn Shell''', or ''ksh'', is the creation of David Korn at AT&T. This shell combines derived from::compatible with::Bourne Shell syntax with a command-line editor, command history, tilde expansion, arithmetic expressions, arrays, coprocesses and several more features. Korn Shell has influenced many later shells; Public Domain Korn Shell and Z Shell clone several features, and the X/Open and POSIX standards take a few features from Korn Shell. David Korn continues to maintain ksh93, the original implementation.

AT&T freed ksh93 during 2000, using an open-source license. For many years before that, the original Korn Shell was not free; it was only part of AT&T System V and some commercial Unix variants. Therefore, ''ksh'' in some systems is not David Korn's shell, but is some other shell, perhaps ''pdksh'' or ''mksh''.

Which Korn Shell do I have?

Start ''ksh'' and run

$ echo $KSH_VERSION
  • If the output looks like Version JM 93u 2011-02-08, then you have ''ksh93''. ** Version AJM 93u+ 2012-08-01
  • If the output looks like @(#)PD KSH v5.2.14 99/07/13.2, then you have ''pdksh''.
  • If the output looks like @(#)MIRBSD KSH R49 2014/01/11, then you have ''mksh''.
  • A ''zsh'' invoked as ''ksh'' sets ZSH_VERSION, not KSH_VERSION.
  • [http://www.kornshell.com/ Home Page For The KornShell Command And Programming Language]
  • wp:korn shell