Some examples of ready-to-dynamic-load builtins. Most of the examples given are reimplementations of standard commands whose execution time is dominated by process startup time. The exceptions are sleep, which allows you to sleep for fractions of a second, finfo, which provides access to the rest of the elements of the `stat' structure that `test' doesn't let you see, and pushd/popd/dirs, which allows you to compile them out of the shell. All of the new builtins in ksh93 that bash didn't already have are included here, as is the ksh `print' builtin. The configure script in the top-level source directory uses the support/shobj-conf script to set the right values in the Makefile, so you should not need to change the Makefile. If your system is not supported by support/shobj-conf, and it has the necessary facilities for building shared objects and support for the dlopen/dlsyn/dlclose/dlerror family of functions, please make the necessary changes to support/shobj-conf and send the changes to bash-maintainers@gnu.org. Loadable builtins are loaded into a running shell with enable -f filename builtin-name enable uses a simple reference-counting scheme to avoid unloading a shared object that implements more than one loadable builtin before all loadable builtins implemented in the object are removed. Many of the details needed by builtin writers are found in hello.c, the canonical example. There is no real `builtin writers' programming guide'. The file template.c provides a template to use for creating new loadable builtins.