.TH 9 1 .SH NAME 9, 9.rc, u, u.rc \- run Plan 9 or Unix commands .SH SYNOPSIS .B 9 .I cmd [ .I args \&... ] .PP .B . .B 9 (from .MR sh (1) ) .PP .B 9.rc .I cmd [ .I args \&... ] .PP .B . .B 9.rc (from .MR rc (1) ) .PP .B u .I cmd [ .I args \&... ] .PP .B . .B u (from .MR sh (1) ) .PP .B u.rc .I cmd [ .I args \&... ] .PP .B . .B u.rc (from .MR rc (1) ) .SH DESCRIPTION Because Plan 9 supplies commands with the same name as but different behavior than many basic Unix system commands (e.g., .BR grep , .BR sed , .BR mkdir , .BR rm ), it is not recommended to run with the Plan 9 bin directory ahead of the system directories. .PP .I 9 is a shell script that sets up a Plan 9 environment and runs .I cmd . It sets .B $PLAN9 if necessary and adds .B $PLAN9/bin to the beginning of .B $PATH before running .IR cmd . .PP If run with no arguments, .B 9 does not do anything, so it can be invoked from .IR sh -style shells using .B . .B 9 in order to make the current shell start running in the Plan 9 environment. .PP .I 9.rc is the same as .I 9 but written for use by the shell .MR rc (1) . .PP .I U and .I u.rc are the inverse of .I 9 and .IR 9.rc : they move .B $PLAN9/bin to the end of the path. .SH EXAMPLES Search for greek in the password file: .IP .EX $ 9 grep '[α-ζ]' /etc/passwd .EE .PP Start an .MR rc (1) with the Plan 9 commands in the path before the system commands, and then run the Unix .IR ls : .IP .EX $ 9 rc % u ls .EE .SH SOURCE .B \*9/bin/9 .br .B \*9/bin/9.rc .br .B \*9/bin/u .br .B \*9/bin/u.rc .SH SEE ALSO .MR intro (1) .SH BUGS Some shell configurations (notably, oh-my-zsh) define .B 9 as an alias for .B cd .BR \-9 , which makes the .I 9 command described here inaccessible. In such shells, it is necessary to .B unalias .B 9 in your initialization scripts.