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The Almquist shell (also known as A Shell, ash and sh) was originally Kenneth Almquist's clone of the SVR4-variant of the Bourne shell; it is a fast, small, POSIX-compatible Unix shell designed to replace the Bourne shell in later BSD distributions. By intention it did not feature line editing or command history mechanisms originally, because Almquist felt that such should be moved into the terminal driver. Current variants have emacs and vi modes. Derivatives of ash are installed as the default shell (/bin/sh) on FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly BSD and Minix. ash is also fairly popular in embedded Linux systems; its code was incorporated into the BusyBox catch-all executable often employed in this area. Debian's version of ash is known as Debian Almquist Shell (dash). Some Linux distributions also use a derivative of ash as the default shell, although Bash (Bourne Again Shell) is more popular. Ubuntu symlinks /bin/sh to the dash shell for faster script execution, but keeps Bash as the default login shell; Debian will be doing so as of the current testing release, Lenny. The following is extracted from the ash package information from Slackware:
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