The changes in this commit allow ksh to be built and run with
ASan[*], although for now it only works under vmalloc. Example
command to build ksh with ASan:
$ bin/package make CCFLAGS='-O0 -g -fsanitize=address'
[*] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AddressSanitizer
src/cmd/INIT/mamake.c:
- Fix a few memory leaks in mamake. This doesn't fix all of the
memory leaks ASan complains about (there is one remaining in the
view() function), but it's enough to get ksh to build under ASan.
src/lib/libast/features/map.c,
src/lib/libast/misc/glob.c:
- Rename the ast globbing functions to _ast_glob() and
_ast_globfree(). Without this change the globbing tests fail
under ASan. See: 2c49eb6e
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/{init,io,nvtree,subshell}.c:
- Fix buffer overflows by using strncmp(3) instead of memcmp(3).
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Fix another invalid usage of memcmp by using strncmp instead.
This change is also in one of Red Hat's patches:
https://git.centos.org/rpms/ksh/blob/c8s/f/SOURCES/ksh-20120801-nv_open-memcmp.patch
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/230
While automagically importing/exporting ksh variable attributes via
the environment is probably a misfeature in general (now disabled
for POSIX standard mode), doing so with the readonly attribute is
particularly problematic. Scripts can take into account the
possibility of importing unwanted attributes by unsetting or
typesetting variables before using them. But there is no way for a
script to get rid of an unwanted imported readonly variable. This
is a possible attack vector with no possible mitigation.
This commit blocks both the import and the export of the readonly
attribute through the environment. I consider it a security fix.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c: env_import_attributes():
- Clear NV_RDONLY from imported attributes before applying them.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: sh_envgen():
- Remove NV_RDONLY from bitmask defining attributes to export.
This commit fixes a segmentation fault when an attempt was made to
unset the default KSH_VERSION variable prior any other nameref
activity such as creating another nameref or even reassigning the
nameref KSH_VERSION to something else.
(new shell without prior nameref activity)
$ nameref
KSH_VERSION=.sh.version
$ unset -n KSH_VERSION
Memory fault
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: _nv_unset():
- Add a 'Refdict' check before attempting to remove a value from it
as apparently one does not exist until some sort of nameref
activity occurs after shell startup as the default nameref of
'KSH_VERSION=.sh.version' does not create one.
The bugfix for BUG_CMDSPASGN backported in commit fae8862c caused
two regressions with the += operator:
1. The += operator did not append to variables. Reproducer:
$ integer foo=3
$ foo+=2 command eval 'echo $foo'
2
2. The += operator ignored the readonly attribute, modifying readonly
variables in the same manner as above. Reproducer
$ readonly bar=str
$ bar+=ing command eval 'echo $bar'
ing
Both of the regressions above were caused by nv_putval() failing to
clone the variable from the previous scope into the invocation-local
scope. As a result, 'foo+=2' was effectively 0 + 2 (since ksh didn't
clone 3). The first regression was noticed during the development of
ksh93v-, so to fix both bugs I've backported the bugfix for the
regression from the ksh93v- 2013-10-10 alpha version:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-users@lists.research.att.com/msg00369.html
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- To fix both of the bugs above, find the variable to modify with
nv_search(), then clone it into the invocation local scope. To
fix the readonly bug as well, this is done before the NV_RDONLY
check (otherwise np will be missing that attribute and be
incorrectly modified in the invocation-local scope).
- Update a nearby comment describing what sh_assignok() does (per this
comment: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/pull/249#issuecomment-811381759)
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add regression tests for both of the now fixed regressions,
loosely based on the regression tests in ksh93v-.
One area where readonly is still ineffective is the local
environment list for a command (preceding assignments) if that
command is not executed using exec(3) after fork(2). Builtin
commands are one example. The following succeeds but should fail:
(readonly v=1; v=2 true) # succeeds, but should fail
If the shell is compiled with SHOPT_SPAWN (the default) then this
also applies to external commands invoked with sh_ntfork():
(readonly v=1; v=2 env) # succeeds if SHOPT_SPAWN
This presents to the user as inconsitent behaviour because external
commands may be fork()ed under certain circumstances but not
others, depending on complex optimisations. One example is:
$ ksh -c 'readonly v=1; v=2 env'
ksh: v: is read only
$ ksh -c 'readonly v=1; v=2 env; :'
(bad: environment list is output, including 'v=2')
In the first command above, where 'v2=env' is the last command in
the -c script, the optimisation skips creating a scope and assigns
the environment list in the current scope.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_setlist():
- Add check for readonly. This requires searching for the variable
in the main tree using nv_search() before a locally scoped one is
added using nv_open(). Since nv_search() only works with plain
variable names, temporarily end the string at '='.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/readonly.sh:
- Add version check and fork the test command substitution subshell
on older versions that would otherwise abort the tests due to the
combination of an excessively low arithmetic recursion tolerance
and a bug that sometimes fails to restore the shell's arithmetic
recursion level.
Many of these changes are minor typo fixes. The other changes
(which are mostly compiler warning fixes) are:
NEWS:
- The --globcasedetect shell option works on older Linux kernels
when used with FAT32/VFAT file systems, so remove the note about
it only working with 5.2+ kernels.
src/cmd/ksh93/COMPATIBILITY:
- Update the documentation on function scoping with an addition
from ksh93v- (this does apply to ksh93u+).
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/emacs.c:
- Check for '_AST_ksh_release', not 'AST_ksh_release'.
src/cmd/INIT/mamake.c,
src/cmd/INIT/ratz.c,
src/cmd/INIT/release.c,
src/cmd/builtin/pty.c:
- Add more uses of UNREACHABLE() and noreturn, this time for the
build system and pty.
src/cmd/builtin/pty.c,
src/cmd/builtin/array.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvtype.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/suid_exec.c:
- Fix six -Wunused-variable warnings (the name.c nv_arrayptr()
fixes are also in ksh93v-).
- Remove the unused 'tableval' function to fix a -Wunused-function
warning.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/lex.c:
- Remove unused 'SHOPT_DOS' code, which isn't enabled anywhere.
https://github.com/att/ast/issues/272#issuecomment-354363112
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/misc.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/trap.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c:
- Add dictionary generator function declarations for former
aliases that are now builtins (re: 1fbbeaa1, ef1621c1, 3ba4900e).
- For consistency with the rest of the codebase, use '(void)'
instead of '()' for print_cpu_times.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c,
src/lib/libast/path/pathshell.c:
- Move the otherwise unused EXE macro to pathshell() and only
search for 'sh.exe' on Windows.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c,
src/lib/libast/include/ast.h:
- Add an empty definition for inline when compiling with C89.
This allows the timeval_to_double() function to be inlined.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/shlex.h:
- Remove the unused 'PIPESYM2' macro.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Add '# err_exit #' to count the regression test added in
commit 113a9392.
src/lib/libast/disc/sfdcdio.c:
- Move diordwr, dioread, diowrite and dioexcept behind
'#ifdef F_DIOINFO' to fix one -Wunused-variable warning and
multiple -Wunused-function warnings (sfdcdio() only uses these
functions when F_DIOINFO is defined).
src/lib/libast/string/fmtdev.c:
- Fix two -Wimplicit-function-declaration warnings on Linux by
including sys/sysmacros.h in fmtdev().
This commit adds an UNREACHABLE() macro that expands to either the
__builtin_unreachable() compiler builtin (for release builds) or
abort(3) (for development builds). This is used to mark code paths
that are never to be reached.
It also adds the 'noreturn' attribute to functions that never
return: path_exec(), sh_done() and sh_syntax(). The UNREACHABLE()
macro is not added after calling these.
The purpose of these is:
* to slightly improve GCC/Clang compiler optimizations;
* to fix a few compiler warnings;
* to add code clarity.
Changes of note:
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/io.c: outexcept():
- Avoid using __builtin_unreachable() here since errormsg can
return despite using ERROR_system(1), as shp->jmplist->mode is
temporarily set to 0. See: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1336
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Add a regression test for the ksh2020 bug referenced above.
src/lib/libast/features/common:
- Detect the existence of either the C11 stdnoreturn.h header or
the GCC noreturn attribute, preferring the former when available.
- Test for the existence of __builtin_unreachable(). Use it for
release builds. On development builds, use abort() instead, which
crahses reliably for debugging when unreachable code is reached.
Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
This commit adds '/* FALLTHROUGH */' comments to fix many
GCC warnings when compiling with -Wimplicit-fallthrough.
Additionally, the existing fallthrough comments have been
changed for consistency.
These are minor fixes I've accumulated over time. The following
changes are somewhat notable:
- Added a missing entry for 'typeset -s' to the man page.
- Add strftime(3) to the 'see also' section. This and the date(1)
addition are meant to add onto the documentation for 'printf %T'.
- Removed the man page the entry for ksh reading $PWD/.profile on
login. That feature was removed in commit aa7713c2.
- Added date(1) to the 'see also' section of the man page.
- Note that the 'hash' command can be used instead of 'alias -t' to
workaround one of the caveats listed in the man page.
- Use an 'out of memory' error message rather than 'out of space'
when memory allocation fails.
- Replaced backticks with quotes in some places for consistency.
- Added missing documentation for the %P date format.
- Added missing documentation for the printf %Q and %p formats
(backported from ksh2020: https://github.com/att/ast/pull/1032).
- The comments that show each builtin's options have been updated.
This removes #ifdefs checking for the existence of
SH_PLUGIN_VERSION (version check for dynamically loaded builtins)
and the SFIO identifiers SF_BUFCONST, SF_CLOSING, SF_APPENDWR,
SF_ATEXIT, all of which are defined by the bundled libast.
This commit fixes two interrelated problems.
1. The -v unary test/[/[[ operator is documented to test if a
variable is set. However, it always returns true for variable
names with a numeric attribute, even if the variable has not
been given a value. Reproducer:
$ ksh -o nounset -c 'typeset -i n; [[ -v n ]] && echo $n'
ksh: n: parameter not set
That is clearly wrong; 'echo $n' should never be reached and the
error should not occur, and does not occur on mksh or bash.
2. Fixing the previous problem revealed serious breakage in short
integer type variables that was being masked. After applying
that fix and then executing 'typeset -si var=0':
- The conditional assignment expansions ${var=123} and
${var:=123} assigned 123 to var, even though it was set to 0.
- The expansions ${var+s} and ${var:+n} incorrectly acted as if
the variable was unset and empty, respectively.
- '[[ -v var ]]' and 'test -v var' incorrectly returned false.
The problems were caused by a different storage method for short
ints. Their values were stored directly in the 'union Value'
member of the Namval_t struct, instead of allocated on the stack
and referred to by a pointer, as regular integers and all other
types do. This inherently broke nv_isnull() as this leaves no
way to distinguish between a zero value and no value at all.
(I'm also pretty sure it's undefined behaviour in C to check for
a null pointer at the address where a short int is stored.)
The fix is to store short ints like other variables and refer
to them by pointers. The NV_INT16P combined bit mask already
existed for this, but nv_putval() did not yet support it.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/test.c: test_unop():
- Fix problem 1. For -v, only check nv_isnull() and do not check
for the NV_INTEGER attribute (which, by the way, is also used
for float variables by combining it with other bits).
See also 5aba0c72 where we recently fixed nv_isnull() to
work properly for all variable types including short ints.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_putval():
- Fix problem 2, part 1. Add support for NV_INT16P. The code is
simply copied and adapted from the code for regular integers, a
few lines further on. The regular NV_SHORT code is kept as this
is still used for some special variables like ${.sh.level}.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c: b_typeset():
- Fix problem 2, part 2. Use NV_INT16P instead of NV_SHORT.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/attributes.sh:
- Add set/unset/empty/nonempty tests for all numeric types.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bracket.sh,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/comvar.sh:
- Update a couple of existing tests.
- Add test for [[ -v var ]] and [[ -n ${var+s} ]] on unset
and empty variables with many attributes.
src/cmd/ksh93/COMPATIBILITY:
- Add a note detailing the change to test -v.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Correct 'typeset -C' documentation. Variables declared as
compound are *not* initially unset, but initially have the empty
compound value. 'typeset' outputs them as:
typeset -C foo=()
and not:
typeset -C foo
and nv_isnull() is never true for them. This may or may not
technically be a bug. I don't think it's worth changing, but
it should at least be documented correctly.
The referenced commit neglected to add checks for strdup() calls.
That calls malloc() as well, and is used a lot.
This commit switches to another strategy: it adds wrapper functions
for all the allocation macros that check if the allocation
succeeded, so those checks don't need to be done manually.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- Add sh_malloc(), sh_realloc(), sh_calloc(), sh_strdup(),
sh_memdup() wrapper functions with success checks. Call nospace()
to error out if allocation fails.
- Update new_of() macro to use sh_malloc().
- Define new sh_newof() macro to replace newof(); it uses
sh_realloc().
All other changed files:
- Replace the relevant calls with the wrappers.
- Remove now-redundant success checks from 18529b88.
- The ERROR_PANIC error message calls are updated to inclusive-or
ERROR_SYSTEM into the exit code argument, so libast's error()
appends the human-readable version of errno in square brackets.
See src/lib/libast/man/error.3
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/history.c:
- Include "defs.h" to get access to the wrappers even if KSHELL is
not defined.
- Since we're here, fix a compile error that occurred with KSHELL
undefined by updating the type definition of hist_fname[] to
match that of history.h.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/enum.c:
- To get access to sh_newof(), include "defs.h" instead of
<shell.h> (note that "defs.h" includes <shell.h> itself).
src/cmd/ksh93/Mamfile:
- enum.c: depend on defs.h instead of shell.h.
- enum.o: add an -I. flag in the compiler invocation so that defs.h
can find its subsequent includes.
src/cmd/builtin/pty.c:
- Define one outofmemory() function and call that instead of
repeating the error message call.
- outofmemory() never returns, so remove superfluous exit handling.
Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
Huge typeset -L/-R adjustment length values were still causing
crashses on sytems with not enough memory. They should error out
gracefully instead of crashing.
This commit adds out of memory checks to all malloc/calloc/realloc
calls that didn't have them (which is all but two or three).
The stkalloc/stakalloc calls don't need the checks; it has
automatic checking, which is done by passing a pointer to the
outofspace() function to the stakinstall() call in init.c.
src/lib/libast/include/error.h:
- Change the ERROR_PANIC exit status value from ERROR_LEVEL (255)
to 77, which is what it is supposed to be according to the libast
error.3 manual page. Exit statuses > 128 for anything else than
signals are not POSIX compliant and may cause misbehaviour.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- To facilitate consistency, add a simple extern sh_outofmemory()
function that throws an ERROR_PANIC "out of memory".
src/cmd/ksh93/include/shell.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Remove now-redundant e_nospace[] extern message; it is now only
used in one place so it might as well be a string literal in
sh_outofmemory().
All other changed files:
- Verify the result of all malloc/calloc/realloc calls and call
sh_outofmemory() if they fail.
Additional adjustments to previous commit bdb9974 to correct
crashes when the max size of a justified string is requested.
This commit corrects the following:
Before (Ubuntu 64bit):
$ typeset -L $(((1<<31)-1)) s=h; typeset +p s
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
After:
$ typeset -L $(((1<<31)-1)) s=h; typeset +p s
typeset -L 2147483647 s
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_putval():
- Alter the variables size, dot, and append from int to unsigned
int to prevent unwanted negative values from being expressed.
- By creating size, dot, and append as unsigned ints; (unsigned)
type casting is avoided.
ksh crashed in various different and operating system-dependent
ways when attempting to create or apply justification strings
using typeset -L/-R/-Z, especially if large sizes are used.
The crashes had two immediate causes:
- In nv_newattr(), when applying justification attributes, a buffer
was allocated for the justified string that was exactly 8 bytes
longer than the original string. Any larger justification string
caused a buffer overflow (!!!).
- In nv_putval(), when applying existing attributes to a new value,
the corresponding memmove() either did not zero-terminate the
justified string (if the original string was longer than the
justified string) or could read memory past the original string
(if the original string was shorter than the justified string).
Both scenarios can cause a crash.
This commit fixes other minor issues as well, such as a mysterious
8 extra bytes allocated by several malloc/realloc calls. This may
have been some naive attempt to paper over the above bugs. It seems
no one can make any other kind of sense of it.
A readjustment bug with zero-filling was also fixed.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- nv_putval():
. Get rid of the magical +8 bytes for malloc and realloc. Just
allocate one extra byte for the terminating zero.
. Fix the memmove operation to use strncpy instead, so that
buffer overflows are avoided in both scenarios described above.
Also make it conditional upon a size adjustment actually
happening (i.e. if 'dot' is nonzero).
. Mild refactoring: combine two 'if(sp)' blocks into one;
declare variables only used there locally for legibility.
- nv_newattr():
* Replace the fatally broken "let's allocate string length + 8
bytes no matter the size of the adjustment" routine with a new
one based on work by @hyenias (see comments in #142). It is
efficient with memory, taking into account numeric types,
growing strings, and shrinking strings.
* Fix zero-filling in readjustment after changing the initial
size of a -Z attribute. If the number was zero, all zeros were
still skipped, leaving an empty string.
Thanks to @hyenias for originally identifying this breakage and
laying the groundwork for fixing nv_newattr(), and to @lijog for
the crash analysis that revealed the key to the nv_putval() fix.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/142
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/181
Many of the errors fixed in this commit are word repetitions
such as 'the the' and minor spelling errors. One formatting
error in the ksh man page has also been fixed.
This commit introduced the following bug, which is worse than the
one that commit fixed: it became impossible to alter the size of an
existing justified string attribute.
Thanks to @hyenias for catching this bug:
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/142#issuecomment-780931533
$ unset s; typeset -L 100 s=h; typeset +p s; typeset -L 5 s; typeset +p s
typeset -L 100 s
typeset -L 100 s
Expected output:
typeset -L 100 s
typeset -L 5 s
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Revert.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/attributes.sh:
- Revert: re-disable tests for minor attribute output regressions.
- Add a test for this bug and potential similar bugs.
Many compile-time options were broken so that they could not be
turned off without causing compile errors and/or regression test
failures. This commit now allows the following to be disabled:
SHOPT_2DMATCH # two dimensional ${.sh.match} for ${var//pat/str}
SHOPT_BGX # one SIGCHLD trap per completed job
SHOPT_BRACEPAT # C-shell {...,...} expansions (, required)
SHOPT_ESH # emacs/gmacs edit mode
SHOPT_HISTEXPAND # csh-style history file expansions
SHOPT_MULTIBYTE # multibyte character handling
SHOPT_NAMESPACE # allow namespaces
SHOPT_STATS # add .sh.stats variable
SHOPT_VSH # vi edit mode
The following still break ksh when disabled:
SHOPT_FIXEDARRAY # fixed dimension indexed array
SHOPT_RAWONLY # make viraw the only vi mode
SHOPT_TYPEDEF # enable typeset type definitions
Compiling without SHOPT_RAWONLY just gives four regression test
failures in pty.sh, but turning off SHOPT_FIXEDARRAY and
SHOPT_TYPEDEF causes compilation to fail. I've managed to tweak the
code to make it compile without those two options, but then dozens
of regression test failures occur, often in things nothing directly
to do with those options. It looks like the separation between the
code for these options and the rest was never properly maintained.
Making it possible to disable SHOPT_FIXEDARRAY and SHOPT_TYPEDEF
may involve major refactoring and testing and may not be worth it.
This commit has far too many tweaks to list. Notables fixes are:
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/options.c:
- Do not compile in the shell options and documentation for
disabled features (braceexpand, emacs/gmacs, vi/viraw), so the
shell is not left with no-op options and inaccurate self-doc.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/lexstates.c:
- Comment the state tables to associte them with their IDs.
- In the ST_MACRO table (sh_lexstate9[]), do not make the S_BRACE
state for position 123 (ASCII for '{') conditional upon
SHOPT_BRACEPAT (brace expansion), otherwise disabling this causes
glob patterns of the form {3}(x) (matching 3 x'es) to stop
working as well -- and that is ksh globbing, not brace expansion.
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/edit.c: ed_read():
- Fixed a bug: SIGWINCH was not handled by the gmacs edit mode.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_putval():
- The -L/-R left/right adjustment options to typeset do not count
zero-width characters. This is the behaviour with SHOPT_MULTIBYTE
enabled, regardless of locale. Of course, what a zero-width
character is depends on the locale, but control characters are
always considered zero-width. So, to avoid a regression, add some
fallback code for non-SHOPT_MULTIBYTE builds that skips ASCII
control characters (as per iscntrl(3)) so they are still
considered to have zero width.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtests:
- Export the SHOPT_* macros from SHOPT.sh to the tests as
environment variables, so the tests can check for them and decide
whether or how to run tests based on the compile-time options
that the tested binary was presumably compiled with.
- Do not run the C.UTF-8 tests if SHOPT_MULTIBYTE is not enabled.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/*.sh:
- Add a bunch of checks for SHOPT_* env vars. Since most should
have a value 0 (off) or 1 (on), the form ((SHOPT_FOO)) is a
convenient way to use them as arithmetic booleans.
.github/workflows/ci.yml:
- Make GitHub do more testing: run two locale tests (Dutch and
Japanese UTF-8 locales), then disable all the SHOPTs that we can
currently disable, recompile ksh, and run the tests again.
This fixes the following regressions marked TODO in attributes.sh:
$ typeset -L 13 bar; readonly bar; typeset -p bar
typeset -r -L 0 foo # exp.: typeset -r -L 13 foo
$ typeset -R 13 bar; readonly bar; typeset -p bar
typeset -r -R 0 bar # exp.: typeset -r -R 13 bar
$ typeset -Z 13 baz; readonly baz; typeset -p baz
typeset -r -Z 0 -R 0 baz # exp.: typeset -r Z 13 -R 13 baz
I've discovered that these were briefly fixed between fdb9781e (Red
Hat patch for typeset -xu/-xl) and 95fe07d8 (reversal of patch,
different -xu/-xl fix, but reintroduced these regressions).
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_newattr():
- Replace check from 95fe07d8 with a new one that combines its
approach with that of fdb9781e: do not change size (and hence
return early) if NV_RDONLY and/or NV_EXPORT are the only
attributes that are changing.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/attributes.sh:
- Enable the TODO regression tests.
This fixes part of https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/87:
Scalar arrays (-a) and associative arrays (-A) of a type created by
'enum' did not consistently block values not specified by the enum
type, yielding corrupted results.
An expansion of type "${array[@]}" yielded random numbers instead
of values for associative arrays of a type created by 'enum'.
This does not yet fix another problem: ${array[@]} does not yield
all values for associative enum arrays.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/enum.c: put_enum():
- Always throw an error if the value is not in the list of possible
values for an enum type. Remove incorrect check for the NV_NOFREE
flag. Whatever that was meant to accomplish, I've no idea.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/array.c: nv_arraysettype():
- Instead of sh_eval()ing a shell assignment, use nv_putval()
directly. Also use the stack (see src/lib/libast/man/stk.3)
instead of malloc to save the value; it's faster and will be
auto-freed at some point. This shortens the function and makes it
faster by not entering into a whole new shell context -- which
also fixes another problem: the error message from put_enum()
didn't cause the shell to exit for indexed enum arrays.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_setlist():
- Apply a patch from David Korn that correctly sets the data type
for associative arrays, fixing the ${array[@]} expansion yielding
random numbers. Thanks to @JohnoKing for the pointer.
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/87#issuecomment-662613887https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg00697.html
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/enum.sh:
- Add tests checking that invalid values are correctly blocked for
indexed and associative arrays of an enum type.
Makes progress on: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/87
This backports most of the Cdt (container data types) mechanism
from the ksh 93v- beta, based on ground work done by OpenSUSE:
https://build.opensuse.org/package/view_file/shells/ksh/ksh93-dttree-crash.dif
plus adaptations to match ksh 93u+m and an updated manual page
(src/lib/libast/man/cdt.3) added directly from the 93v- sources.
| Thu Dec 20 12:48:02 UTC 2012 - werner@suse.de
|
| - Add ksh93-dttree-crash.dif - Allow empty strings in (dt)trees
| (bnc#795324)
|
| Fri Oct 25 14:07:57 UTC 2013 - werner@suse.de
|
| - Rework patch ksh93-dttree-crash.dif
As usual, precious little information is available because the
OpenSUSE bug report is currently closed to the public:
https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795324
However, a cursory inspection suggests that this code contains
improvements to do with concurrent processing and related
robustness. The new cdt.3 manual page adds a lot about that.
This has been in production use on OpenSUSE for a long time,
so hopefully this will make ksh a little more stable again.
Only one way to find out: let's commit and test this...
BTW, to get a nice manual, use groff and ghostscript's ps2pdf:
$ groff -tman src/lib/libast/man/cdt.3 | ps2pdf - cdt.3.pdf
The forking fix implemented in 102868f8 and 9d428f8f, which stops
the main shell's hash table from being cleared if PATH is changed
in a subshell, can cause a significant performance penalty for
certain scripts that do something like
( PATH=... command foo )
in a subshell, especially if done repeatedly. This is because the
hash table is cleared (and hence a subshell forks) even for
temporary PATH assignments preceding commands.
It also just plain doesn't work. For instance:
$ hash -r; (ls) >/dev/null; hash
ls=/bin/ls
Simply running an external command in a subshell caches the path in
the hash table that is shared with a main shell. To remedy this, we
would have to fork the subshell before forking any external
command. And that would be an unacceptable performance regression.
Virtual subshells do not need to fork when changing PATH if they
get their own hash tables. This commit adds these. The code for
alias subshell trees (which was removed in ec888867 because they
were broken and unneeded) provided the beginning of a template for
their implementation.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c:
- struct subshell: Add strack pointer to subshell hash table.
- Add sh_subtracktree(): return pointer to subshell hash table.
- sh_subfuntree(): Refactor a bit for legibility.
- sh_subshell(): Add code for cleaning up subshell hash table.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- nv_putval(): Remove code to fork a subshell upon resetting PATH.
- nv_rehash(): When in a subshell, invalidate a hash table entry
for a subshell by creating the subshell scope if needed, then
giving that entry the NV_NOALIAS attribute to invalidate it.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: path_search():
- To set a tracked alias/hash table entry, use sh_subtracktree()
and pass the HASH_NOSCOPE flag to nv_search() so that any new
entries are added to the current subshell table (if any) and do
not influence any parent scopes.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c: b_alias():
- b_alias(): For hash table entries, use sh_subtracktree() instead
of forking a subshell. Keep forking for normal aliases.
- setall(): To set a tracked alias/hash table entry, pass the
HASH_NOSCOPE flag to nv_search() so that any new entries are
added to the current subshell table (if any) and do not influence
any parent scopes.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c: put_restricted():
- Update code for clearing the hash table (when changing $PATH) to
use sh_subtracktree().
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/cd_pwd.c:
- When invalidating path name bindings to relative paths, use the
subshell hash tree if applicable by calling sh_subtracktree().
- rehash(): Call nv_rehash() instead of _nv_unset()ting the hash
table entry; this is needed to work correctly in subshells.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Add leak tests for various PATH-related operations in the main
shell and in a virtual subshell.
- Several pre-existing memory leaks are exposed by the new tests
(I've confirmed these in 93u+). The tests are disabled and marked
TODO for now, as these bugs have not yet been fixed.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/subshell.sh:
- Update.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/66
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- The Empty macro (a constant pointer to the empty string) is already
defined in include/defs.h, so does not need to be repeated here.
Issuing typeset floating point numerics having a precision of 0
failed as the precision/size was being overwritten with the string
length of the value, e.g. 'typeset -F0 x=5.67' would result in
'typeset -F 4 x=5.6700' as len('5.67') is 4.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/nval.h:
- Created a symbolic name of NV_FLTSIZEZERO to respresent a float
having a precision/size of 0. NV_FLTSIZEZERO needs to be a
negative value.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c:
- In b_typeset(), added code to set tdata.argnum to NV_FLTSIZEZERO
for E, F, X options.
- In setall(), adjusted code to allow for tp->argnum to be negative.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_newattr():
- Adjusted option value only change code to handle NV_FLTSIZEZERO as
well as changed to directly setting np->nvsize instead of using
nv_setsize(np,size) as nv_setsize might contain conflicting and/or
redundant code.
- Added missing conditional check of '!(newatts&NV_INTEGER)' to
constrain the size==0 code block to justified strings as
NV_LJUST, NV_RJUST, or NV_ZFILL are only valid for strings if
NV_INTEGER is not set. This code block was mistakenly setting
the precision/size value to the length of the value of an
assignment for floats whereas it should only be performing
auto assignment length for justified strings.
'typeset -xu' and 'typeset -xl' would export the variable but fail
to change case in the value as the check between old and new
attributes did not provide the necesssary insight for lower or
upper case transcoding due to the lower or upper case attribute
being set within typeset.c prior to calling name.c nv_newattr
function.
Previous rhbz#1188377 patch added a conditional check for size==-1
which in effect caused the nv_newattr export code block return
optimization to never be executed as one cannot set any attributes
using the readonly builtin. By altering the size==-1 check to !trans
the export only optimization can run.
Also, the rhbz#1188377 patch altered new_attr function by setting
the new size to oldsize if run by the readonly builtin. The result
of setting size==oldsize allowed the succeeding if statement to
run more frequently and if size was a non-zero value resulted in
nv_setsize resetting the value to what it already was. Investigation
yielded that size was always 0 coming from the readonly builtin.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c:
- Remove the setting of tdata.argnum to -1 as it is not needed due to
existing name.c nv_newattr() logic.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_newattr():
- Corrected the export only check optimization by using !trans instead
of using size==-1.
- Removed previous condition check to set size=oldsize if coming from
the readonly builtin. nv_newattr already had existing logic to
prevent changing the size via nv_setsize as size is always 0 when
coming from readonly builtin.
'typeset -xu' and 'typeset -xl' would export the variable but fail
to change case in the value under certain conditions.
Original patch:
642af4d6/f/ksh-20120801-xufix.patch
This applies the patch essentially without change and adds a
regression test based on the reproducer provided in the RH bug.
Unfortunately there is no description of how the patch works and
it's a little obscure to me. As far as I can figure out, the cause
of the problem was that nv_newattr() erroneously processed a
nonexistent size option-argument such as what can be given to
options like typeset -F, e.g. typeset -F3 for 3 digits after the
dot. A nonexistent size argument is represented by the value of -1.
When using typeset -l or -u on a variable that cannot be changed
when the shell is in restricted mode, ksh crashed.
This fixed is inspired by this Red Hat fix, which is incomplete:
642af4d6/f/ksh-20120801-tpstl.patch
The crash was caused by the nv_shell() function. It walks though a
discipline function tree to get the pointer to the interpreter
associated with it. Evidently, the problem is that some pointer in
that walk is not set correctly for all special variables.
Thing is, ksh only has one shell language interpreter, and only one
global data structure (called 'sh') to keep its main state[*]. Yet,
the code is full of 'shp' pointers to that structure. Most (not
all) functions pass that pointer around to each other, accessing
that struct indirectly, ostensibly to account for the non-existent
possibility that there might be more than one interpreter state.
The "why" of that is an interesting cause for speculation that I
may get to sometime. For now, it is enough to know that, in the
code as it is, it matters not one iota what pointer to the shell
interpreter state is used; they all point to the same thing (unless
it's broken, as in this bug).
So, rather than fixing nv_shell() and/or associated pointer
assignments, this commit simply removes it, and replaces it with
calls to sh_getinterp(), which always returns a pointer to sh (see
init.c, where that function is defined as literally 'return &sh').
[*] Defined in shell.h, with the _SH_PRIVATE part in defs.h
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Remove nv_shell().
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- In all the discipline functions for special variables, initialise
shp using sh_getinterp() instead of nv_shell().
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh:
- Add regression test for typeset -l/-u on all special variables.
A memory leak occurred when typeset was used in a function called
from within a command substitution. This fix was backported from
the 93v- beta by Red Hat on 22 Jan 2014. Source:
642af4d6/f/ksh-20120801-memlik3.patch
src/cmd/ksh93/include/name.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c:
- Replace the nv_subsaved() function by the version from ksh 93v-.
This version frees a table from memory if the NV_TABLE flag is
passed in the new second parameter, a bitmask for flags (which
was oddly named 'table'; I've renamed it to 'flags').
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- nv_delete(): When calling nv_subsaved(), pass on the NV_TABLE
flag if given.
- table_unset(): Call nv_delete() with the NV_TABLE flag.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Add test based on the reproducer provided in Red Hat bug 1036470.
I now have access to some of the private bugs on the Red Hat bug
tracker. This one doesn't have a lot of information on the patch,
but it contains a good reproducer, so we can at least verify that
it works.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/array.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Apply the patch associated with Red Hat bug #921455. Source:
642af4d6/f/ksh-20120801-memlik.patch
This was applied to Red Hat's ksh on 04 Jul 2013.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Add leak tests for associative and indexed arrays in functions
based on the reproducer from rhbz#921455.
- Both tests still leak (though much less) when run in a locale
other than C. For now, temporarily set the locale to C and add
a TODO note. Perhaps another Red Hat patch is yet to fix this.
When exporting variables, ksh exports their attributes (such as
'integer' or 'readonly') in a magic environment variable called
"A__z" (string defined in e_envmarker[] in data/msg.c). Child
shells recognise that variable and restore the attributes.
This little-known feature is risky; the environment cannot
necessarily be trusted and that A__z variable is easy to manipulate
before or between ksh invocations, so you can cause a script's
variables to be of the wrong type, or readonly. Backwards
compatibility requires keeping it, at least for now. But it should
be disabled in the posix mode, as it violates POSIX.
To do this, we have to solve a catch-22 in init.c. We must parse
options to know whether to turn on posix mode; it may be specified
as '-o posix' on the command line. The option parsing loop depends
on an initialised environment[*], while environment initialisation
(i.e., importing attributes) should depend on the posix option.
The catch-22 can be solved because initialising just the values
before option parsing is enough to avoid regressions. Importing the
attributes can be delayed until after option parsing. That involves
basically splitting env_init() into two parts while keeping a local
static state variable between them.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- env_init():
* Split the function in two stages based on a new
'import_attributes' parameter. Import values in the first
stage; import attributes from A__z in the second (if ever).
Make the 'next' variable static as it keeps a state needed for
the attributes import stage.
* Single point of truth, greppability: don't hardcode "A__z" in
separate character comparisons, but use e_envmarker[].
* Fix an indentation error.
- sh_init(): When initialising the environment (env_init), don't
import the attributes from A__z yet; parse options first, then
import attributes only if posix option is not set.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- sh_envgen(): Don't export variable attributes to A__z if the
posix option is set.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/attributes.sh:
- Check that variable attributes aren't imported or exported
if the POSIX option is set.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Update.
This was the last item on the TODO list for -o posix for now.
Closes: #20
[*] If environment initialisation is delayed until after option
parsing, bin/shtests shows various regressions, including:
restricted mode breaks; the locale is not initialised properly
so that multibyte variable names break; $SHLVL breaks.
Since ksh 93u+m comes bundled with libast 20111111, there's no need
to support older versions, so this is another cleanup opportunity.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h:
- Throw an #error if AST_VERSION is undefined or < 20111111.
(Note that _AST_VERSION is the same as AST_VERSION, but the
latter is newer and preferred; see src/lib/libast/features/api)
All other changed files:
- Remove legacy code for versions older than the currently used
versions, which are:
_AST_VERSION 20111111
ERROR_VERSION 20100309
GLOB_VERSION 20060717
OPT_VERSION 20070319
SFIO_VERSION 20090915
VMALLOC_VERSION 20110808
SHOPT_ENV is an undocumented compile-time option implementing an
experimental method for handling environment variables, which is
implemented in env.h and env.c. There is no mention in the docs or
Makefile, and no mention in the mailing list archives. It adds no
new functionality, but at first glance it's a clean-looking
interface.
However, unfortunately, it's broken. Compiling with -DSHOPT_ENV
added to CCFLAGS causes bin/shtests to show these regressions:
functions.sh[341]: export not restored name=value function call -- expected 'base', got ''
functions.sh[1274]: Environment variable is not passed to a function
substring.sh[236]: export not restored name=value function call
variables.sh[782]: SHLVL should be 3 not 2
In addition, 'export' stops working on unset variables.
In the 93v- beta this code is still present, unchanged, though 93v-
made lots of incompatible changes. By the time ksh2020 noticed it,
it was no longer compiling, so it probably wasn't compiling in the
93v- beta either. Discussion: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/504
So the experiment was already abandoned by D. Korn and his team.
Meanwhile it was leaving sh/name.c with two versions of several
enviornment-related functions, and it's not clear which one is
actually compiled without doing detective work tracing header files
(most of the code was made conditional on _ENV_H, which is defined
in env.h, which is included by defs.h if SHOPT_ENV is defined).
This actively hinders understanding of the codebase. And any
changes to these functions would need to be implemented twice.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/env.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/env.c:
- Removed.
src/cmd/ksh93/DESIGN,
src/cmd/ksh93/Makefile,
src/cmd/ksh93/Mamfile:
- Update accordingly.
All other changed files:
- Remove deactivated code behind SHOPT_ENV and _ENV_H.
On 16 June there was a call for volunteers to fix the bash
compatibility mode; it has never successfully compiled in 93u+.
Since no one showed up, it is now removed due to lack of interest.
A couple of things are kept, which are now globally enabled:
1. The &>file redirection shorthand (for >file 2>&1). As a matter
of fact, ksh93 already supported this natively, but only while
running rc/profile/login scripts, and it issued a warning. This
makse it globally available and removes the warning, bringing
ksh93 in line with mksh, bash and zsh.
2. The '-o posix' standard compliance option. It is now enabled on
startup if ksh is invoked as 'sh' or if the POSIXLY_CORRECT
variable exists in the environment. To begin with, it disables
the aforementioned &> redirection shorthand. Further compliance
tweaks will be added in subsequent commits. The differences will
be fairly minimal as ksh93 is mostly compliant already.
In all changed files, code was removed that was compiled (more
precisely, failed to compile/link) if the SHOPT_BASH preprocessor
identifier was defined. Below are other changes worth mentioning:
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/bash.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/bash_pre_rc.sh:
- Removed.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/lexstates.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/shlex.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/lex.c:
- Globally enable &> redirection operator if SH_POSIX not active.
- Remove warning that was issued when &> was used in rc scripts.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/options.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/args.c:
- Keep SH_POSIX option (-o posix).
- Replace SH_TYPE_BASH shell type by SH_TYPE_POSIX.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- sh_type(): Return SH_TYPE_POSIX shell type if ksh was invoked
as sh (or rsh, restricted sh).
- sh_init(): Enable posix option if the SH_TYPE_POSIX shell type
was detected, or if the CONFORMANCE ast config variable was set
to "standard" (which libast sets on init if POSIXLY_CORRECT
exists in the environment).
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/options.sh,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Replace regression tests for &> and move to io.sh. Since &> is
now for general use, no longer test in an rc script, and don't
check that a warning is issued.
Closes: #9
Progresses: #20
This removes various blocks of uncommented experimental code that
was disabled using '#if 0' or '#if 1 ... #else' directives. It's
hard or impossible to figure out what the thoughts behind them
might have been, and we can really do without those distractions.
As of 8477d2ce, the mbwide() macro (which tests if we're in a
multibyte locale, i.e. UTF-8) is redefined as a constant 0 if we're
compiling without SHOPT_MULTIBYTE. See src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h
The other multibyte macros use mbwide() as well, so they all revert
to the single-byte fallbacks in that case, and the multibyte code
in them is never compiled. See src/lib/libast/include/ast.h
Consequently we can now do a bit of cleanup and get rid of many of
the '#if SHOPT_MULTIBYTE' directives, as the compiler optimiser
will happily remove the multibyte-specific code. This increases the
legibility of the ksh code.
I'm taking the opportunity to fix a few typos and whitespace
formatting glitches as well.
Four libast hash functions/macros (which ksh93 doesn't actually use)
were overridden with the following comment:
/*
* These following are for binary compatibility with the old hash library
* They will be removed someday
*/
This has been there for decades, and I just received word that they
cause problems for the dtksh (CDE) developers as dtksh does call
hashlook().
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Remove 'hashscope', 'hashfree', 'hashname' and 'hashlook'
compatibility overrides.
Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
An intermittent crash occurred after running many thousands of
virtual/non-forked subshells. One reproducer is a crash in the
shbench fibonacci.ksh test, as documented here:
f3d9e134/bench/fibonacci.ksh (L4-L10)
The apparent cause was the signed and insufficiently large 'short'
data type of 'curenv' and related variables which wrapped around to
a negative number when overflowing. These IDs are necessary for the
'wait' builtin to obtain the exit status from a background job.
This fix is inspired by a patch based on ksh 93v-:
https://build.opensuse.org/package/view_file/shells/ksh/ksh93-longenv.dif?expand=1https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/ksh/blob/f24/f/ksh-20130628-longer.patch
However, we change the type to 'unsigned int' instead of 'long'. On
all remotely modern systems, ints are 32-bit values, and using this
type avoids a performance degradation on 32-bit sytems. Making them
unsigned prevents an overflow to negative values.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/jobs.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/nval.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/shell.h:
- Change the types of the static global 'subenv' and the subshell
structure members 'curenv', 'jobenv', 'subenv', 'p_env' and
'subshell' to one consistent type, unsigned int.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/jobs.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/macro.c:
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvtype.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c:
- Updates to match new variable types.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/subshell.sh:
- Show wrong exit status in message on failure of 'wait' builtin.
Associative arrays weren't being properly freed from memory, which
was causing a memory leak.
This commit incorporates a patch and reproducer/regress test from:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-users@lists.research.att.com/msg01016.html
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Properly free associative arrays from memory in nv_delete().
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Add regression test.
Variables created with 'typeset -RF' were being treated as
short integers, even though they are actually floating point
values. As a result the following example will cause a crash:
$ typeset -RF foo=1
$ test "$foo"
This is fixed by checking for 'NV_DOUBLE' with 'nv_isattr',
which prevents ksh from treating floating point values as
short integers due to '== NV_INT16P' excluding 'NV_DOUBLE'.
This bugfix was backported from ksh93v- 2013-10-10-alpha.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/array.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvdisc:
- Avoid treating floating point values as short integers by
checking for 'NV_DOUBLE' with 'nv_isattr'.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/types.sh:
- Add a regression test for the 'typeset -RF' crash. The
crash cannot be replicated if 'typeset -RF' sets 'foo'
to zero.
After making PATH readonly in a virtual subshell (without otherwise
changing it, so the subshell is never forked), then the main shell
would erroneously fork into a background process immediately after
leaving the virtual subshell. This was caused by a bug in the
forking workaround that prevents changes in PATH in a virtual
subshell from clearing the parent shell's hash table.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_putval():
- If we're either setting or restoring PATH, do an additional check
for the NV_RDONLY flag, which means the function was told to
ignore the variable's readonly state. It is told to ignore that
when restoring the parent shell state after exiting a virtual
subshell. If we don't fork then, we don't fork the parent shell.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/subshell.sh:
- Add regression test verifying that no forking happens when making
PATH readonly in a subshell.
Fixes#30.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Correct the check for when a function is currently running
to fix a segmentation fault that occurred when a POSIX
function tries to unset itself while it is running.
This bug fix was backported from ksh93v-.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- If a function tries to unset itself, unset the function
with '_nv_unset(np, NV_RDONLY)' to fix a silent failure.
This fix was also backported from ksh93v-.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/functions.sh:
- Add four regression tests for when a function unsets itself.
Resolves#21
The b_hash() function duplicated much of its code from b_alias(),
while b_alias() retained some code to support being called as
'hash'. There is no reason why 'hash' and 'alias' can't be handled
with a single function, as is the case several other builtins. Note
that option parsing can easily be made dependent on the name the
command was invoked with (in this case, argv[0]=='h').
The new hash builtin's -r option cleared the hash table by
assigning to PATH its existing value, triggering its associated
discipline function (put_restricted() in init.c) which then
actually cleared the hash table. That's a bit of a hack. It's nicer
if we can just do that directly. This requires taking a static
handler function rehash() from init.c, which invalidates one hash
table entry, and making it available to the builtin.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/builtins.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/nval.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Merge b_hash() into b_alias().
- The -x option was still uselessly setting the NV_EXPORT flag.
Exported aliases were in ksh88 but were removed in ksh93.
- Rename rehash() handler function from init.c to nv_rehash
(avoiding a possible conflict with another rehash() in cd_pwd.c)
and move it to name.c just above nv_scan(), which it's meant to
be used with. Make it an extern so typeset.c can use it.
- b_alias(): Replace the PATH assignment by an nv_scan() call to
clear the hash table directly using the nv_rehash() handler.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- POSIX compliance fix: Remove BLT_SPC (special builtin) flag from
"alias" definition. 'alias' is specified as a regular builtin.
- sh_optalias[]: Fix uninformative -t option documentation.
- sh_opthash[]: Edit for conciseness and clarity.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Edit the 'alias -t' and 'hash' documentation.
- Remove the -- prefix from the 'alias' entry, which indicated that
it was supposed to be a declaration builtin like 'typeset', with
assignment-arguments expanding tildes and not being subject to
field splitting. However, my testing shows that 'alias' has never
actually behaved that way on ksh93. Even adding the BLT_DCL flag
in data/builtins.c doesn't seem to change that.
(cherry picked from commit afa68dca5c786daa13213973e8b0f9bf3a1dadf6)
This commit replaces the old hash alias with a proper builtin.
I based this builtin off of the code alias uses for handling
`alias -t --`, but with the hack for `--` removed as it has
no use in the new builtin. `alias -t --` will no longer work,
that hack is now gone.
While I was testing this builtin, I found a bug with hash tables
in non-forking subshells. If the hash table of a non-forking
subshell is changed, the parent shell's hash table is also changed.
As an example, running `(hash -r)` was resetting the parent shell's
hash table. The workaround is to force the subshell to fork if the
hash table will be changed.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c:
- Move the code for hash out of the alias builtin into a dedicated
hash builtin. `alias -t --` is no longer supported.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/aliases.c:
- Remove the old alias for hash from the table of predefined aliases.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Fix the broken entry for the hash builtin and add a man page for
the new builtin.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Replace the entry for the hash alias with a more detailed entry
for the hash builtin.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Force non-forking subshells to fork if the PATH is being reset
to workaround a bug with the hash tree.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/alias.sh:
- Add a regression test for resetting a hash table, then adding
a utility to the refreshed hash table.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/subshell.sh:
- Add regression tests for changing the hash table in subshells.
(cherry picked from commit d8428a833afe9270b61745ba3d6df355fe1d5499)
Aliases can now be correctly unset within subshell environments
(such as ( ... ), $(command substitutions), etc), as well as
non-subshell "shared" command substitutions (${ ...; }). Before,
attempts to unset aliases within these were silently ignored.
Prior discussion: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/108
Subshell alias trees are only referenced in a few places in the
code, *and* have always been broken, so this commit gets rid of the
whole notion of a subshell alias tree. Instead, there is now just
one flat alias tree, and subshells fork into a separate process
when aliases are set or unset within them. It is not really
conceivable that this could be a performance-sensitive operation,
or even a common one, so this is a clean fix with no downside.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h:
- Remove sh_subaliastree() definition.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c:
- Remove salias element (pointer to subshell alias tree) from
subshell struct.
- Remove sh_subaliastree() function.
- sh_subshell(): Remove alias subshell tree cleanup.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c:
- b_alias(): If in subshell, fork before setting alias.
- b_unalias(): If in subshell, fork before unsetting alias.
- unall(): Remove sh_subaliastree() call.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- nv_open(): Remove sh_subaliastree() call.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/subshell.sh:
- Add regression tests for unsetting or redefining aliases within
subshells.
(cherry picked from commit 12a15605b9521a2564a6e657905705a060e89095)