metadata
license: gpl
tags:
- linux
- bash
pretty_name: bash commands
Bash & Linux CLI Dataset
What This Dataset Is
A supervised fine-tuning (SFT) dataset that teaches a language model to produce correct Bash commands, shell scripts, and Linux CLI operations — including Arch Linux and Ubuntu/Debian specifics. The assistant responses are executable commands or scripts that directly accomplish the user's stated task. Explanatory rows describe what a given command does, its key flags, and caveats.
Sources (provenance-tracked)
| Source | Type | Content |
|---|---|---|
| Embedded corpus (345 entries) | Static | Bash builtins ( |
| GNU Bash Reference Manual | Fetched + cached | Official Bash 5.3 reference (builtins, expansions, syntax) |
| Arch Wiki — Bash | Fetched + cached | Arch-specific Bash configuration and tips |
| Arch Wiki — Pacman | Fetched + cached | Package management operations |
| Greg's Wiki — BashPitfalls | Fetched + cached | Common scripting mistakes and correct alternatives |
| Greg's Wiki — BashFAQ | Fetched + cached | Frequently asked Bash scripting questions |
Embedded corpus categories
| Category | Count | Description |
|---|---|---|
builtin |
~55 | All major Bash builtins (cd, echo, read, export, trap, set, declare, getopts, history, etc.) |
syntax |
~40 | Quoting, expansion, redirection, pipes, heredocs, process substitution, globbing, parameter expansion, control flow (if, for, while, case, select) |
command |
~100 | grep, sed, awk, find, xargs, sort, cut, tr, curl, rsync, ssh, tar, chmod, git, docker, systemctl, journalctl, etc. |
scripting |
~25 | Strict mode, functions, argument parsing, temp files, lock files, retry patterns, arrays, associative arrays |
arch |
~35 | pacman operations, AUR (yay/paru), makepkg, mkinitcpio, reflector, NetworkManager, kernel management |
ubuntu |
~35 | apt/dpkg, Snaps, PPAs, ufw, netplan, do-release-upgrade, update-alternatives, Flatpak |
System prompts
SYSTEM_CMD— Produce the exact command or script. Use best-practice flags, POSIX-compatible syntax where possible,&&for chaining. No commentary unless asked.SYSTEM_EXPLAIN— Explain what a command does, its key flags, and caveats, in 1–3 sentences.SYSTEM_SCRIPT— Write a complete runnable script with#!/usr/bin/env bash,set -euo pipefail, and proper error handling.
Row kinds
nl_to_cmd— Natural language task → exact command(s).nl_to_cmd_alt— Alternative phrasing of the same task → same command.cmd_to_explain— Command string → plain-English description.
Augmentation kinds
none— Direct from embedded or fetched corpus.distro_slot— Generic command reframed with "on Arch Linux" or "on Ubuntu" suffix in the user prompt; same assistant answer.oversample— Same assistant answer, user prompt rewritten with a different NL template from a bank of 10 phrasings.
Scale
| Mode | Typical Row Count |
|---|---|
Base (no --augment) |
~5,100 |
--augment --target-rows 1000000 |
1,000,000 |
What This Dataset Is NOT
- Not a Bash tutorial or course. Rows are isolated Q&A pairs, not sequential lessons. There is no curriculum ordering or prerequisite tracking.
- Not shell-agnostic. Commands target Bash specifically. Zsh, Fish, and POSIX
shmay diverge on syntax ([[ ]], arrays,shopt, process substitution). The dataset does not flag Bash-only constructs. - Not a complete man-page replacement. Coverage prioritizes commonly used flags and patterns. Obscure options and corner-case behaviors of each command are not exhaustively documented.
- Not distro-neutral. Arch and Ubuntu rows use distro-specific package managers (
pacman,apt), init systems, and config paths. They will produce incorrect commands on Fedora, Alpine, or other distributions. - Not a system administration runbook. It teaches individual commands and short scripts, not multi-step infrastructure deployment, monitoring strategy, or incident response procedures.
- Not validated against a specific Bash version. Most syntax targets Bash 4.4+ / 5.x. Some constructs (
${var,,},${var^^},declare -A,mapfile) require Bash 4.0 or later and will fail on older systems. - Not safety-filtered. Destructive commands (
rm -rf,dd,mkfs) appear as valid answers. No refusal patterns or warnings are included. Apply your own safety layer if needed.