diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index de32ec6..4285fbc 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -1695,7 +1695,9 @@ This has limitations, since recipe `c` is run with an entirely new invocation of ### Writing Recipes in Other Languages -Recipes that start with a `#!` are executed as scripts, so you can write recipes in other languages: +Recipes that start with `#!` are called shebang recipes, and are executed by +saving the recipe body to a file and running it. This lets you write recipes in +different languages: ```make polyglot: python js perl sh ruby @@ -1736,6 +1738,20 @@ Yo from a shell script! Hello from ruby! ``` +On Unix-like operating systems, including Linux and MacOS, shebang recipes are +executed by saving the recipe body to a file in a temporary directory, marking +the file as executable, and executing it. The OS then parses the shebang line +into a command line and invokes it, including the path to the file. For +example, if a recipe starts with `#!/usr/bin/env bash`, the final command that +the OS runs will be something like `/usr/bin/env bash +/tmp/PATH_TO_SAVED_RECIPE_BODY`. Keep in mind that different operating systems +split shebang lines differently. + +Windows does not support shebang lines. On Windows, `just` splits the shebang +line into a command and arguments, saves the recipe body to a file, and invokes +the split command and arguments, adding the path to the saved recipe body as +the final argument. + ### Safer Bash Shebang Recipes If you're writing a `bash` shebang recipe, consider adding `set -euxo pipefail`: