Yes (Unix)


yes is a command on Unix and Unix-like operating systems, which outputs an affirmative response, or a user-defined string of text continuously until killed.

Overview

By itself, the yes command outputs 'y' or whatever is specified as an argument, followed by a newline repeatedly until stopped by the user or otherwise killed; when piped into a command, it will continue until the pipe breaks. However, if the user enters a string after 'yes,' yes will output the string the same as it would 'y,' similar to echo.
The version of yes bundled in GNU coreutils was written by David MacKenzie.
The command is available as a separate package for Microsoft Windows as part of the GnuWin32 project and the UnxUtils collection of native Win32 ports of common GNU Unix-like utilities.

Uses

yes can be used to send an affirmative response to any command that would otherwise request one, thereby causing the command to run non-interactively.
Piping yes to a command with many user-confirmation prompts will automatically answer all of those prompts with "yes".
The following commands

$ yes | sudo apt install foobar

will answer the prompts for confirmation with y, effectively installing foobar with sudo apt without any prompts.
This usage may be obsolete today, as most commands that would request response from the user have either a 'force' option or an 'assume-yes' option.
As an example, the following:

$ rm -f *.txt

is functionally equivalent to

$ yes | rm *.txt

The yes command in conjunction with the head command can be used to generate large volume files for means of testing. For example, executing

$ yes 1234567 | head -1000 > file

results in a file consisting of 1000 lines each consisting of eight characters.
yes can be used as an easy way of generating CPU load, for example in 2006, the yes command received publicity for being a means to test whether or not a user's MacBook is affected by the "Intermittent Shutdown Syndrome" bug, where a MacBook would randomly shut off without any user input. By running the yes command indefinitely twice via Terminal under Mac OS X, users were able to max out their computer's CPU, and thus see if the failure was heat related.

Implementation and performance

yes has been implemented with small differences between operating systems and different OS implementations perform different ranging from some MiB/s to dozens of GiB/s.