I'm now taking another small step towards extricating this build
system from the long-dead AT&T AST universe.
This commit modifies/reduces the tool called proto. AT&T used proto
for two purposes:
1. To convert ANSI C code to a form compatible with ancient
(pre-ANSI) K&R C compilers using extremely complex macro
voodo. It was similarly capable of translating to C++.
Theoretically, this entire code base should compile on
anything from a 1980s K&R C compiler to a modern C++ compiler.
In practice, given the massive amount of bit rot we inherited,
I am 99.9% sure that this has been broken for many years.
2. To automagically insert license comments into source files
based on an extremely complicated license database system.
(In all-too-typical AT&T fashion, this second function of
proto is completely unrelated to the first.)
Function 2 has now been removed because, unlike the AT&T legal
department, I don't think it's worth going to unspeakably extreme
lengths to avoid maintaining license information in source code
files by hand.
In the process, proto.c was cleaned up to look halfway like actual
C code, but it's still processed code: most macros have been
expanded to their numeric value, all comments were stripped, etc.
So don't expect to understand this code. The actual source code is
in these two directories in the ast-open-history repo:
https://github.com/ksh93/ast-open-history/tree/master/src/cmd/protohttps://github.com/ksh93/ast-open-history/tree/master/src/lib/libpp
Meanwhile, nobody wants to compile ksh with a pre-ANSI K&R C
compiler in 2021 -- and there's no good reason to be compatible
with C++ because standard C compilers are universally available.
So, proto will go away when I manage to figure out how to pry it
loose from the innards of this build system.
src/lib/libast/port/astlicense.c:
- Removed. This is al the license handling code that was
incorporated in proto.c in stripped form. It was not used
anywhere else, and the environment where it was useful is gone.
src/cmd/INIT/proto.c:
- Cleanup to make this halfway maintainable: indentation, huge
blocks of empty lines, #line directives, etc.
- Delete all the code corresponding to astlicense.c. This was
actually easy as it was in a discrete block.
- proto(), pppopen(): Remove 'license'/'notice' and 'options'
arguments.
- main(): Remove processing of -l (license) and -o (license
options) flags.
**/Mamfile:
- Update all the proto invocations to remove the -l and -o flags.
bin/package, src/cmd/INIT/package.sh:
- Delete the 'copyright' command, which used the -l and -o
options to tell proto to extract copyright information from
*.lic/*.def files in lib/package.
COPYRIGHT:
- Added. This has the information from 'bin/package copyright', with
the copyright years corrected to plausible values as the AST code
used the current year (2021) for all of them. It adds ksh 93u+m
copyright and contributor information at the top as well.
(Yes, some of the lines in the old non-AT&T copyright notices
are clipped. This is the actual output of the 'bin/package
copyright' command as generated by 'proto' in the AST
distribution. For all that extreme complexity, they couldn't even
reproduce the notices correctly. But it's officially sanctioned
by AT&T in exactly this form, so there you have it.)
lib/package/**:
- Removed. All these files are now obsolete and redundant.
This commit fixes an issue with how ksh was obtaining the value of
NGROUPS_MAX. On some systems this setting can be changed (e.g., on
illumos adding 'set ngroups_max=32' to /etc/system then rebooting
changes NGROUPS_MAX from 16 to 32). Ksh was using NGROUPS_MAX with
the assumption it's a static value, which could cause issues on
systems where it isn't static. This bugfix is inspired by the one
from <b1362c3a5>, although it
has been expanded a bit to account for OPEN_MAX as well.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c, src/lib/libcmd/fds.c:
- Rename the getconf() macro to astconf_long() and move it to ast.h
to prevent redundancy. Other sections of the code have been
modified to use this macro for astconf() to account for
dynamic settings.
- An equivalent macro for unsigned long values (astconf_ulong) has
been added.
- Prefer sysconf(3) where available. It has better performance as it
returns a numeric value directly instead of via string
conversion.
- The astconf_long and astconf_ulong macros have been documented in
the ast(3) man page.
Turns out there is a bona fide, honest-to-goodness use case for
matching '.' and '..' in globbing after all. It's when globbing is
used as the backend mechanism for file name completion in
interactive shell editors. A tab invisibly adds a * at the end of
the word to the left of your cursor and the resulting pattern is
expanded. In 5312a59d, this broke for '.' and '..'.
Typing '.' followed by two tabs should result in a menu that
includes './' and '../'. Typing '..' followed by a tab should
result in '../', (or a menu that includes it if there are files
with names starting with '..'). This is the behaviour in 93u+ and
we should maintain this.
To restore this functionality without reintroducing the harmful
behaviour fixed in the referenced commits, we should special-case
this, allowing '.' and '..' to match only for file name completion.
src/lib/libast/include/glob.h:
- Fix an inaccurate comment: the GLOB_COMPLETE flag is used for
command completion, not file name completion. This is very clear
from reading the path_expand() function in sh/expand.c.
- Add new GLOB_FCOMPLETE flag for file name completion.
src/lib/libast/misc/glob.c:
- Adapt flags mask to fit the new flag.
- glob_dir(): If GLOB_FCOMPLETE is passed, allow '.' and '..' to
match even if expanded from a pattern.
- Clarify the fix from aad74597 with an extended comment based on
<https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/146#issuecomment-790991990>.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/expand.c: path_expand():
- If we're in the SH_FCOMPLETE (file name completion) state, then
pass the new GLOB_FCOMPLETE flag to AST glob(3).
Fixes: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/372
Thanks to @fbrau for the bug report.
The "fd is first arg to poll()" and "fd is second arg to poll()" tests
use write() but don't include the system header in which that function
is declared, leading to "error: implicit declaration of function 'write'
is invalid in C99'" when trying to compile the test. By including the
header, the test can now compile and run as intended.
The "mmap is worth using" test uses memcpy but doesn't include the
system header in which that function is declared, leading to
"error: implicitly declaring library function 'memcpy'" when trying
to compile the test. By including the header, the test can now
compile and run as intended.
On macOS, the result is still negative. The test seems to time
using mmap and another method and only picks mmap if it's faster.
Editing the test to print out timing information on a few runs, I
see that mmap is 2–3✕ slower than the other method:
$ for i in $(seq 1 5); do ./mmap_worth_using; done
/* mmtm=11 rdtm=3 */
/* 4*mmtm=44 3*rdtm=9 */
/* 4*mmtm=44 5*rdtm=15 */
/* mmtm=9 rdtm=5 */
/* 4*mmtm=36 3*rdtm=15 */
/* 4*mmtm=36 5*rdtm=25 */
/* mmtm=10 rdtm=4 */
/* 4*mmtm=40 3*rdtm=12 */
/* 4*mmtm=40 5*rdtm=20 */
/* mmtm=12 rdtm=4 */
/* 4*mmtm=48 3*rdtm=12 */
/* 4*mmtm=48 5*rdtm=20 */
/* mmtm=12 rdtm=4 */
/* 4*mmtm=48 3*rdtm=12 */
/* 4*mmtm=48 5*rdtm=20 */
If you passed CC=/some/compiler, the build broke on macOS because the
cc.darwin compiler wrapper wasn't used. Among other things, this
wrapper adds a -D_lib_memccpy flag, defining _lib_memccpy as 1
during the build. That was used to override a false negative result
of the lib_memccpy feature test. This commit fixes that feature
test instead, so it correctly returns positive on macOS.
Thanks to Ryan Smith (@ryandesign) for the bug report and for the
fix to the lib_memccpy test.
src/lib/libast/features/lib:
- Fix the lib_memccpy feature test. It was checking the result of
mmap(2) incorrectly, resulting in the test crashing on macOS.
Failure does not return NULL, it returns MAP_FAILED which is
usually -1.
src/cmd/INIT/cc.darwin*:
- Removed. Any other flags in these wrappers are either related to
building dynamic libraries, which is not currently supported, or
were determined to be unnecessary. See the GitHub issue for
discussion. This now makes it possible to pass `CC` to use any
compiler you like on the Mac. Notes:
- Apple's -D_ast_int8_t=int64_t is a no-op; another AST feature
test already defines _ast_int8_t a 64-bit integer type, even on
32-bit systems (on which it is defined as 'long long').
- The -search_paths_first linker flag is the default since 2010.
But even on my museum-grade Power Mac G5 with Mac OS X 10.3
(from 2004), it builds and runs just fine without.
- DCLK_TCK=100 is a no-op as even that ancient Mac system already
defines it as 100. Plus, it's not even actually used.
If a need is found for any of these, please report this in a new
issue so I can special-case it elsewhere in the code.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/373
The head and tail builtins don't correctly handle files that lack
newlines[*]:
$ print -n foo > /tmp/bar
$ /opt/ast/bin/head -1 /tmp/bar # No output
$ print -n 'foo\nbar' > /tmp/bar
$ /opt/ast/bin/tail -1 /tmp/bar
foo
bar$
This commit backports the required changes from ksh93v- to handle files
without a newline in the head and tail builtins. (Also note that the
required fix to sfmove was already backported in commit 1bd06207.)
src/lib/libcmd/{head,tail}.c:
- Backport the relevant ksh93v- code for handling files
without newlines.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add a few regression tests for using 'head -1' and 'tail -1' on a file
missing and ending newline.
[*]: https://www.illumos.org/issues/4149
List of changes:
- Fixed some -Wuninitialized warnings and removed some unused variables.
- Removed the unused extern for B_login (re: d8eba9d1).
- The libcmd builtins and the vmalloc memfatal function now handle
memory errors with 'ERROR_SYSTEM|ERROR_PANIC' for consistency with how
ksh itself handles out of memory errors.
- Added usage of UNREACHABLE() where it was missing from error handling.
- Extend many variables from short to int to prevent overflows (most
variables involve file descriptors).
- Backported a ksh2020 patch to fix unused value Coverity issues
(https://github.com/att/ast/pull/740).
- Note in src/cmd/ksh93/README that ksh compiles with Cygwin on
Windows 10 and Windows 11, albeit with many test failures.
- Add comments to detail some sections of code. Extensive list of
commits related to this change:
ca2443b5, 7e7f1372, 2db9953a, 7003aba4, 6f50ff64, b1a41311,
222515bf, a0dcdeea, 0aa9e03f, 61437b27, 352e68da, 88e8fa67,
bc8b36fa, 6e515f1d, 017d088c, 035a4cb3, 588a1ff7, 6d63b57d,
a2f13c19, 794d1c86, ab98ec65, 1026006d
- Removed a lot of dead ifdef code.
- edit/emacs.c: Hide an assignment to avoid a -Wunused warning. (See
also https://github.com/att/ast/pull/753, which removed the assignment
because ksh2020 removed the !SHOPT_MULTIBYTE code.)
- sh/nvdisc.c: The sh_newof macro cannot return a null pointer because
it will instead cause the shell to exit if memory cannot be allocated.
That makes the if statement here a no-op, so remove it.
- sh/xec.c: Fixed one unused variable warning in sh_funscope().
- sh/xec.c: Remove a fallthrough comment added in commit ed478ab7
because the TFORK code doesn't fall through (GCC also produces no
-Wimplicit-fallthrough warning here).
- data/builtins.c: The cd and pwd man pages state that these builtins
default to -P if PATH_RESOLVE is 'physical', which isn't accurate:
$ /opt/ast/bin/getconf PATH_RESOLVE
physical
$ mkdir /tmp/dir; ln -s /tmp/dir /tmp/sym
$ cd /tmp/sym
$ pwd
/tmp/sym
$ cd -P /tmp/sym
$ pwd
/tmp/dir
The behavior described by these man pages isn't specified in the ksh
man page or by POSIX, so to avoid changing these builtin's behavior
the inaccurate PATH_RESOLVE information has been removed.
- Mamfiles: Preserve multi-line errors by quoting the $x variable.
This fix was backported from 93v-.
(See also <a7e9cc82>.)
- sh/subshell.c: Remove set but not used sp->errcontext variable.
In iffe tests, some C functions are found in system libraries, but
then are not declared by the system headers on some systems because
the expected standards macros aren't defined, causing the system
headers to hide the function declarations. This may cause warnings
about invalid implicit function declarations in some tests (which
only show up if you export IFFEFLAGS=-d1), but may also cause false
negative test results. The iffe tests should be given the same
environment that their test results are going to be used in.
libast's first-run and most central feature test, 'standards',
figures out what standards macros need to be used on the current
system to get the system headers to declare the expected
functionality. All code that links to libast depends on the header
generated by this feature test. So iffe should use this result for
the tests as well, as soon as it's available (which is early in
libast's compilation cycle).
Concrete example: on Cygwin, in src/cmd/builtin/features/pty, the
'lib ptsname' test detects ptsname(3) in the system library, but
the output{...}end block that uses the _lib_ptsname feature test
result throws an 'implicit function definition' warning because
Cygwin's stdlib.h does not define this function without the
appropriate standards macros being defined first.
src/cmd/INIT/iffe.sh:
- If ${INSTALLROOT}/src/lib/libast/FEATURE/standards is available,
incorporate it directly into iffe's own block of compiler
massaging macros. Do not use #include as the necessary -I flags
are not added for every test.
- Centrally define the iffe version once, not twice.
- Update and tweak getopts self-documentation (iffe --man).
- While we're here, add macOS/Darwin's DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH to the
supported dynamic library search variables. On macOS, this is
normally disabled by System Integrity Protection, plus this
distribution uses static libraries at build time, so this is for
completeness' sake and not much else. This was ported from
@lkujaw's fork: 48ff054429
(thanks to @JohnoKing for pointing it out).
src/lib/libast/features/standards:
- Add a comment. This is to update the file's timestamp, ensuring
that everything will be recompiled after this commit.
src/lib/libast/features/standards:
- Add heuristic (u_long availability) for systems that hide rather
than reveal functionality in the presence of _POSIX_SOURCE, etc.
- Define _DARWIN_C_SOURCE, like _GNU_SOURCE, to enable the full
range of definitions on macOS systems.
- Due to the above, remove MACH (macOS)-specific hack.
- These changes ported from https://github.com/att/ast/pull/1492 -
thanks to Lev Kujawski (@lkujaw). His PR indicates that this
fixes the standards macros on UnixWare, too. Therefore, no longer
exclude UnixWare from standards macros (re: ff70c27f).
src/lib/libast/comp/conf.sh:
- Promote the 'op' member in Conf_t (struct Conf_s) from short to
int. This allows some Darwin/macOS values, now exposed, to fit
that would otherwise be truncated, namely:
_CS_DARWIN_USER_CACHE_DIR 65538
_CS_DARWIN_USER_DIR 65536
_CS_DARWIN_USER_TEMP_DIR 65537
Thus, the following AST getconf values are now correct on macOS:
$ /opt/ast/bin/getconf | grep ^DARWIN
DARWIN_USER_CACHE_DIR=/var/folders/nx/(REDACTED)/C/
DARWIN_USER_DIR=/var/folders/nx/(REDACTED)/0/
DARWIN_USER_TEMP_DIR=/var/folders/nx/(REDACTED)/T/
src/lib/libast/features/tty:
- Include <sys/ioctl.h> if available. This silences a compiler
warning in src/lib/libast/misc/procopen.c about an invalid
implicit declaration of ioctl(2).
This commit ports over two of Andy Fiddaman's bugfixes to conf.sh
on illumos:
- The compiler isn't passed on to an invocation of iffe. The bugfix is
from this commit: <63563232>
- The getconf builtin is missing several parameters on illumos.
Reproducer:
$ /opt/ast/bin/getconf ADDRESS_WIDTH
getconf: Invalid argument (ADDRESS_WIDTH) # Should output '64'
This bug occurs because conf.sh expects GNU sed and fails to work
properly with other sed implementations. The bugfix and original bug
report can be found here:
https://www.illumos.org/issues/14044ba443cfd
Vmalloc is incompatible with Cygwin, but the code to disable it on
Cygwin did not work properly, somehow causing the build to freeze
at a seemingly unrelated point (i.e., when iffe feature tests
attempt to write to sfstdout).
Vmalloc has wasted my time for the last time, so now it's getting
disabled by default even on development builds and you'll have to
pass -D_AST_vmalloc in CCFLAGS to enable it for testing purposes.
This commit has a few other build tweaks as well.
src/lib/libast/features/vmalloc:
- tst map_malloc: Remove no-op #if __CYGWIN__ block which was in
the #else clause of another #if __CYGWIN__ block.
- Output block ('cat{'):
- Instead of disabling vmalloc for certain systems, disable it
unless _AST_vmalloc is defined.
- To disable it, set _AST_std_malloc as well as _std_malloc, just
to be sure.
src/lib/libast/vmalloc/malloc.c:
- Remove ineffective Cygwin special-casing.
src/lib/libcmd/vmstate.c:
- This is only useful for vmalloc, so do not pointlessly compile it
if vmalloc is disabled.
src/lib/libast/man/vmalloc.3:
- Add deprecation notice.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/360
Ksh segfaults on M1 Macs, apparently because Apple's compiler
optimizer can't cope with overriding bzero(3) with libast's
implementation (though it's nothing more than "memset(b, 0, n);").
Apple has disabled libast's bzero function since 2018-12-04:
https://opensource.apple.com/source/ksh/ksh-27/patches/src__lib__libast__comp__omitted.c.diff.auto.html
src/lib/libast/comp/omitted.c:
- Only fall back to the libast bzero function if the OS lacks an
implementation of bzero.
- Remove the bzero undef since this fallback is only reached if the
OS doesn't have bzero.
NEWS:
- Add compat info for macOS on ARM64. This notes that macOS
Monterey can now compile and run ksh, although there is one
regression test failure:
builtins.sh[345]: printf %H: invalid UTF-8 characters
(expected %3F%C2%86%3F%3F%3F; got %3F%C2%86%3F%3Fv%3F%3F)
Thanks to @DesantBucie for the report and the testing.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/329
The -d flag implemented in the rm builtin is completely broken. No
matter what you do it refuses to remove directories, even if -r is
also passed. Reproducer:
$ mkdir /tmp/empty
$ PATH=/opt/ast/bin rm -d /tmp/empty
rm: /tmp/empty: directory
$ PATH=/opt/ast/bin rm -dr /tmp/empty
rm: /tmp/empty: directory not removed [Is a directory]
Additionally, the description of 'rm -d' in the man page contradicts
how it's specified in <https://www.austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=802>.
The ksh93v- rm builtin fixed nearly all of these issues, so I've
backported it to 93u+m and applied one additional fix for 'rm -rd'.
src/lib/libcmd/rm.c:
- Backported the fixes from the ksh93v- rm builtin's -d flag when
used on empty directories.
- Backported the man page update for rm(1) from ksh93v-.
- The ksh93v- rm builtin had one additional bug that caused the -r
option to fail when combined with -d. This was fixed by
overriding -d if -r is also passed.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add regression tests for the rm builtin's -d option.
This commit adds support for 'stty size' to the stty builtin, as
defined in <https://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=1053>. The size
mode is used to display the terminal's number of rows and columns.
Note that stty isn't included in the default list of builtin
commands; testing this addition requires adding CMDLIST(stty) to
the table of builtins in src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c.
src/lib/libcmd/stty.c:
- Add support for the size mode to the stty builtin. This mode is
only used to display the terminal's number of rows and columns,
so error out if any arguments are given that attempt to set the
terminal size.
This was:
/*
* -lcmd specific workaround to handle
* fts_namelen
* fts_pathlen
* fts_level
* changing from [unsigned] short bit to [s]size_t
*
* ksh (or any other main application) that pulls in -lcmd
* at runtime may result in old -last running with new -lcmd
* which is not a good situation (tm)
*
* probably safe to drop after 20150101
*/
According to the version check in fts_fix.c, this change occurred
in the libast API version 2010-01-02, which is also the API version
of the bundled libast (see src/lib/libast/misc/state.c).
src/lib/libcmd/fts_fix.{c,h}:
- Removed.
src/lib/libcmd/{chgrp,chmod,cksum,cp,rm}.c:
- Change uses of fts_fix.h to fts.h from libast.
src/lib/libcmd/Mamfile:
- Update accordingly.
The documentation for the supported unit suffixes for options
accepting numeric arguments was woefully outdated in 'head --man'
and 'tail --man'.
A quick look at the very short head(1) code shows that it does not
know or care about unit suffixes at all – it leaves that to libast
optget(3) which in turn calls strtoll() which is implemented in
strtoi.h where the multiplier suffixes are handled.
Note that on GNU head/tail, single-letter suffixes use power-of-2
units, e.g. k == KiB, etc. Libast used to do the same but this is
not standards compliant and AT&T changed/fixed this in 2011. From
libast/RELEASE:
10-04-11 string/strtoi.h: k (1000) and ki (1024) now differentiated
(They didn't mention the same change applies to all handled units.)
Note that the tail(1) builtin is currently not compiled in by
default. This can be changed in src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c.
src/lib/libcmd/head.c, src/lib/libcmd/tail.c:
- Update the internal head/tail man pages to reflect what is
handled in strtoi.h.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/319
I don't expect anyone else to actually use ksh93 on a museum-grade
Power Mac G5 running Mac OS X 10.3.7, but ancient platforms are
great bug and compatibility testing tools. These tweaks restore the
ability to build on that platform.
Also, to avoid a strange path search bug on that platform and
possibly other ancient ones, set SHOPT_DYNAMIC to 0 in SHOPT.sh.
The last commit still failed to build on macOS M1. That va_listval
macro keeps causing trouble. It's an AST thing that is defined in
src/lib/libast/features/common. That looks like some incredibly
opaque attempt to make it compatible with everything, and clearly
it no longer works properly on all systems. I don't dare touch it,
though. That code looks like any minimal change will probably break
the build on some system or other.
src/lib/libast/features/hack:
- Add feature test to check if that macro needs (0) no workaround,
or (1) the workaround from the 93v- beta, or (2) the FreeBSD one.
Whichever version compiles first, it will use. If none does, this
test will not output a value, which will be treated as 0.
src/lib/libast/hash/hashalloc.c,
src/lib/libast/string/tokscan.c:
- Update to use the result of the hack feature test.
src/lib/libast/Mamfile:
- Update for new #include dependencies.
hyenias writes, re the referenced commit:
> This has caused my Ubuntu 18.04 ARMv7 to fail to compile.
>
> /dev/shm/ksh/src/lib/libast/hash/hashalloc.c: In function 'hashalloc':
> /dev/shm/ksh/src/lib/libast/hash/hashalloc.c:156:11: error:
> incompatible types when assigning to type 'va_list * {aka
> __va_list *}' from type 'va_list {aka __va_list}'
> tmpval = va_listval(va_arg(ap, va_listarg));
> ^
> In file included from ./ast_common.h:192:0,
> from /dev/shm/ksh/src/lib/libast/include/ast_std.h:37,
> from /dev/shm/ksh/src/lib/libast/include/ast.h:36,
> from /dev/shm/ksh/src/lib/libast/hash/hashlib.h:34,
> from /dev/shm/ksh/src/lib/libast/hash/hashalloc.c:33:
> /dev/shm/ksh/src/lib/libast/hash/hashalloc.c:157:16: error:
> incompatible type for argument 2 of '__builtin_va_copy'
> va_copy(ap, tmpval);
> ^
> /dev/shm/ksh/src/lib/libast/hash/hashalloc.c:157:16: note: expected
> '__va_list' but argument is of type 'va_list * {aka __va_list *}'
> mamake [lib/libast]: *** exit code 1 making hashalloc.o
> mamake: *** exit code 1 making lib/libast
> mamake: *** exit code 1 making all
> package: make done at Fri May 14 06:10:16 EDT 2021 in
> /dev/shm/ksh/arch/linux.arm
src/lib/libast/hash/hashalloc.c,
src/lib/libast/string/tokscan.c:
- Revert the FreeBSD fix.
- Backport a conditional workaround for clang from ksh 93v- beta.
On some systems, the following won't compile because of the way the
macros are defined in the system headers:
va_copy(ap, va_listval(va_arg(ap, va_listarg)));
The error from clang is something like:
.../hashalloc.c:155:16: error: non-const lvalue reference to type
'__builtin_va_list' cannot bind to a temporary of type 'va_list'
(aka 'char *')
va_copy(ap, va_listval(va_arg(ap, va_listarg)));
~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
./ast_common.h:200:23: note: expanded from macro 'va_listval'
#define va_listval(p) (p)
^
.../include/stdarg.h:27:53: note: expanded from macro 'va_copy'
#define va_copy(dest, src) __builtin_va_copy(dest, src)
^~~
1 error generated.
mamake [lib/libast]: *** exit code 1 making hashalloc.o
This commit backports a FreeBSD build fix from:
https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=255308
Thanks to Chase <nicetrynsa@protonmail.ch> for the bug report.
src/lib/libast/hash/hashalloc.c,
src/lib/libast/string/tokscan.c:
- Store va_listval() result in variable and pass that to va_copy().
This adds a #pragma to disable -Wdeprecated-register* on newer
versions of clang. We could remove all use of the register keyword
instead, as modern compilers ignore it. But it's not harmful, and
for the time being I prefer not to do doing any reformatting or
changing the historic character of this code base.
The #pragmas are removed from src/lib/libast/include/ast.h, because
they're better placed in src/lib/libast/features/common which
generates ast_common.h which is included by everything.
* https://clang.llvm.org/docs/DiagnosticsReference.html#wdeprecated-register
Noteworthy changes:
- The man pages have been updated to fix a ton of instances of
runaway underlining (this was done with `sed -i 's/\\f5/\\f3/g'`
commands). This commit dramatically increased in size because
of this change.
- The documentation for spawnveg(3) has been extended with
information about its usage of posix_spawn(3) and vfork(2).
- The documentation for tmfmt(3) has been updated with the changes
previously made to the man pages for the printf and date builtins
(though the latter builtin is disabled by default).
- The shell's tracked alias tree (hash table) is now documented in
the shell(3) man page.
- Removed the commented out regression test for an ERRNO variable
as the COMPATIBILITY file states it was removed in ksh93.
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
This commit fixes three problems with getconf pathbound builtin:
1. The -l/--lowercase option did not change all variable names to
lower case.
2. The -q/--quote option now quotes all string values. Previously,
it only quoted string values that had a space or other
non-shellsafe character.
3. The -c/--call, -n/--name and -s/--standard options matched all
variable names provided by 'getconf -a', even if none were
actual matches.
Additionally, references to the confstr and sysconf functions have
been updated to reference section 3 of the man pages instead of
section 2.
src/lib/libast/port/astconf.c:
- Previously, only values that had spaces in them were quoted. Change
that behavior to quote all string values by using the FMT_ALWAYS
flag. Bug report: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1173
- Not all variable names were printed in lowercase by 'getconf -l'.
Fix it by adding a few missing instances of fmtlower.
Bug report: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1171
- Add the missing code to the '#if _pth_getconf_a' block to handle
-c/-n/-s while parsing the OS's native 'getconf -a' output. This
approach reuses code for name matching from other parts of
astconflist(). Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/279
src/lib/libcmd/getconf.c:
- Update the documentation to note the -q flag only quotes strings.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bulitins.sh:
- Add regression tests for the getconf bugs fixed in this commit.
Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
Path-bound builtins on ksh (such as /opt/ast/bin/cat) break some
basic assumptions about paths in the shell that should hold true,
e.g., that a path output by whence -p or command -v should actually
point to an executable command. This commit should fix the
following:
1. Path-bound built-ins (such as /opt/ast/bin/cat) can now be
executed by invoking the canonical path (independently of the
value of $PATH), so the following will now work as expected:
$ /opt/ast/bin/cat --version
version cat (AT&T Research) 2012-05-31
$ (PATH=/opt/ast/bin:$PATH; "$(whence -p cat)" --version)
version cat (AT&T Research) 2012-05-31
In the event an external command by that path exists, the
path-bound builtin will now override it when invoked using the
canonical path. To invoke a possible external command at that
path, you can still use a non-canonical path, e.g.:
/opt//ast/bin/cat or /opt/ast/./bin/cat
2. Path-bound built-ins will now also be found on a PATH set
locally using an assignment preceding the command, so something
like the following will now work as expected:
$ PATH=/opt/ast/bin cat --version
version cat (AT&T Research) 2012-05-31
The builtin is not found by sh_exec() because the search for
builtins happens long before invocation-local preceding
assignments are processsed. This only happens in sh_ntfork(),
before forking, or in sh_fork(), after forking. Both sh_ntfork()
and sh_fork() call path_spawn() to do the actual path search, so
a check there will cover both cases.
This does mean the builtin will be run in the forked child if
sh_fork() is used (which is the case on interactive shells with
job.jobcontrol set, or always after compiling with SHOPT_SPAWN
disabled). Searching for it before forking would mean
fundamentally redesigning that function to be basically like
sh_ntfork(), so this is hard to avoid.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: path_spawn():
- Before doing anything else, check if the passed path appears in
the builtins tree as a pathbound builtin. If so, run it. Since a
builtin will only be found if a preceding PATH assignment
temporarily changed the PATH, and that assignment is currently in
effect, we can just sh_run() the builtin so a nested sh_exec()
invocation will find and run it.
- If 'spawn' is not set (i.e. we must return), set errno to 0 and
return -2. See the change to sh_ntfork() below.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- sh_exec(): When searching for built-ins and the restricted option
isn't active, also search bltin_tree for names beginning with a
slash.
- sh_ntfork(): Only throw an error if the PID value returned is
exactly -1. This allows path_spawn() to return -2 after running a
built-in to tell sh_ntfork() to do the right things to restore
state.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/parse.c: simple():
- When searching for built-ins at parse time, only exclude names
containing a slash if the restricted option is active. This
allows finding pointers to built-ins invoked by literal path like
/opt/ast/bin/cat, as long as that does not result from an
expansion. This is not actually necessary as sh_exec() will also
cover this case, but it is an optimisation.
src/lib/libcmd/getconf.c:
- Replace convoluted deferral to external command by a simple
invocation of the path to the native getconf command determined
at compile time (by src/lib/libast/comp/conf.sh). Based on:
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/138#issuecomment-816384871
If there is ever a system that has /opt/ast/bin/getconf as its
default native external 'getconf', then there would still be an
infinite recursion crash, but this seems extremely unlikely.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/138
Previous discussion: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/485
If ksh attempts to execute a non-executable command found in the
PATH, in some instances the error message and return status are
incorrect. In the example below, ksh returns with exit status 126
when using the -c execve(2) optimization or when using fork(2) in
an interactive shell. However, using posix_spawn(3) causes the exit
status to change:
$ echo 'print cannot execute' > /tmp/x
# Runs command with spawnveg (i.e., posix_spawn or vfork)
$ ksh -c 'PATH=/tmp; x; echo $?'
ksh: x: not found
127
# Runs command with execve
$ ksh -c 'PATH=/tmp; x'; echo $?
ksh: x: cannot execute [Permission denied]
126
# Runs command with fork
$ ksh -ic 'PATH=/tmp; x; echo $?'
ksh: x: cannot execute [Permission denied]
126
Since 'x' is in the PATH but can't be executed, the correct exit
status is 126, not 127. It's worth noting this bug doesn't cause
the regression tests to fail with ksh93u+m, but it does cause one
test to fail when run under dtksh:
path.sh[706]: Long nonexistent command name: got status 126, ''
This commit backports various fixes for this bug from ksh2020, with
additional fixes applied (since there were still some additional
issues the ksh2020 patch didn't fix). The lacking regression test
for exit status 126 in path.sh has been rewritten to test for more
scenarios where ksh failed to return the correct error message
and/or exit status. I can also confirm with this patch applied the
path.sh regression tests now pass when run under dtksh.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c:
- Add a comment to path_absolute() describing 'oldpp' is the
current pointer in the while loop and 'pp' is the next pointer.
Backported from:
a6cad450
- The patch from ksh2020 didn't fix this bug in the SHOPT_SPAWN
code (because ksh2020 prefers fork(2)), so issues with the exit
status could still occur when using spawnveg. To fix this, always
set 'noexec' to the value of errno if can_execute fails. Before
this fix, errno was discarded if 'pp' was a null pointer and
can_execute failed.
- If a command couldn't be executed and the error wasn't ENOENT,
save errno in a 'not_executable' variable. If an executable
command couldn't be found in the PATH, exit with status 126 and
set errno to the saved value. This was based on a ksh2020 bugfix,
but it has been reworked a little bit to fix a bug that caused a
mismatch between the error message shown and errno. Example with
a non-executable file in PATH:
$ nonexec
ksh2020: nonexec: cannot execute [No such file or directory]
The ksh2020 patch: <https://github.com/att/ast/pull/493>
- Backport a ksh2020 bugfix for directories in the PATH when
running one of the added regression tests on OpenBSD:
https://github.com/att/ast/pull/767
src/cmd/ksh93/data/msg.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/shell.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/{path,xec}.c:
- If a command name is too long (ENAMETOOLONG), then it wasn't
found in the PATH. For that case return exit status 127, like
for ENOENT.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/path.sh:
- Replace the old test with a new set of more extensive tests.
These tests check the error message and exit status when ksh
attempts to run a command using any of the following:
- execve(2), used with the last command run with -c (*A tests).
- posix_spawn(3)/vfork(2), used in noninteractive scripts (*B tests).
- fork(2), used in interactive shells with job control (*C tests).
- command -x (*D tests).
- exec(1) (*E tests).
- Add a regression test from ksh2020 for attempting to execute a
directory:
https://github.com/att/ast/pull/758
src/lib/libast/include/ast.h,
src/lib/libast/include/wait.h:
- Avoid bitshifts in macros for static error codes. The return
values of command not found and exec related errors are static
values and should not require any macro magic for calculation.
Backported from: c073b102
- Simplify EXIT_* and W* macros to use 8 bits.
src/lib/libast/tm/tmlocale.c:
- Load the locale set by LC_TIME or LC_ALL if it hasn't been loaded
before or if it was loaded previously but isn't the current locale.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/locale.sh:
- Add a regression test using the nl_NL.UTF-8 and ja_JP.UTF-8 locales.
Fixes: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/261
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 is an update to one of Red Hat's patches. The strdup change is
from CentOS:
https://git.centos.org/rpms/ksh/blob/c8s/f/SOURCES/ksh-20120801-annocheck.patch
The reason why gcc (and also clang) optimize out the null check is
because the glibc string.h header gives 's' a nonnull attribute (in
other words, this is a glibc compatibility bug, not a compiler bug).
Clang gives the following informative warning when compiling strdup:
> /home/johno/GitRepos/KornShell/ksh/src/lib/libast/string/strdup.c:66:10: warning: nonnull parameter 's' will evaluate to 'true' on
> return (s && (t = oldof(0, char, n = strlen(s) + 1, 0))) ? (char*)memcpy(t, s, n) : (char*)0;
> ^ ~~
> /usr/include/string.h:172:35: note: declared 'nonnull' here
> __THROW __attribute_malloc__ __nonnull ((1));
> ^
> /usr/include/sys/cdefs.h:303:44: note: expanded from macro '__nonnull'
> # define __nonnull(params) __attribute__ ((__nonnull__ params))
The proper fix is to rename the function in strdup.c to
'_ast_strdup'. This avoids the string.h conflict and fixes the Red
Hat bug. I've also made a similar change to getopt.c, since clang
was throwing a nonnull warning there as well.
src/lib/libast/features/map.c (which generates FEATURE/map which is
indirectly included by everything) is updated to always map getopt
to _ast_getopt and strdup to _ast_strdup.
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 fixes a bug in the ksh uname builtin's -d option that could
change the output of -o (I was only able to reproduce this on Linux):
$ builtin uname
$ uname -o
GNU/Linux
$ uname -d
(none)
$ uname -o
(none)
I identified this patch from ksh2020 as a fix for this bug:
<https://github.com/att/ast/pull/1187>
The linked patch was meant to fix a crash in 'uname -d', although I've
had no luck reproducing it: <https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1184>
src/lib/libcmd/uname.c:
- Pass correct buffer to getdomainname() while executing uname -d.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add a regression test for the reported 'uname -d' crash.
- Add a regression test for the output of 'uname -o' after 'uname -d'.
- To handle potential crashes when running the regression tests in older
versions of ksh, fork the command substitutions that run 'uname -d'.
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.
src/lib/libast/tm/tminit.c:
- Commit 9f43f8d1, in addition to backporting fixes from ksh93v-, also
backported this bug:
$ printf '%(%Z)T' now
PPT # Should be PDT
Reapply the ksh2020 bugfix to fix the %Z time
format again.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add a regression test so this bug (hopefully) isn't backported from
ksh93v- again).
I grepped for #include changes in all the commits and compared
that to the changes in the Mamfiles. I found 7 commits that don't
update the Mamfiles with the appropriate dependencies while
adding #includes, as I only learned how this works after having
worked with this code for some time.
This commit adds the missing Mamfile updates for the
corresponding #include changes in the following commits:
06e721c3, 65d363fd, 70fc1da7, 79d19458, b1a41311, bb4d6a2e,
db71b3ad, and this commit.
Additionally:
src/lib/libast/comp/setlocale.c:
- Change include errno.h to error.h to use EILSEQ fallback if
needed; remove corresponding #ifdef (re: 4dcf5c50, 71bfe028).
src/cmd/ksh93/Mamfile:
- Fix a broken dependency on libast FEATURE/float (re: 72968eae).
We can't use 'prev' for a file that was not mentioned before in
the same Mamfile, we have to use a 'make'...'done' on the first
mention. Add subdependencies matching those in libast/Mamfile.
This allows ksh to be compiled with versions of tcc that define
__dso_handle in libtcc1.a, i.e., versions as of this commit:
https://repo.or.cz/tinycc.git/commit/dd60b20c
Older versions of tcc still fail to compile ksh, although now they
fail after reaching the libdll feature test. I'm not sure if fixing
that is feasible since even if I hack out the failing libdll
feature test, ksh fails to link with a '__dso_handle' error.
src/lib/libast/comp/atexit.c,
src/lib/libast/features/lib,
src/lib/libast/vmalloc/vmexit.c:
- From what I've been able to gather the only OSes with support
for on_exit are Linux and SunOS 4. However, on_exit takes two
arguments, so the macro that defines it as taking one argument
is incorrect. Since Solaris (SunOS 5) no longer has this call
and the macro breaks on Linux, the clean fix is to remove it
(atexit(3) is used instead).
src/lib/libast/include/ast.h:
- When compiling with tcc on FreeBSD, pretend to be gcc 2.95.3
instead of gcc 9.3.0. This stops /usr/include/math.h from
activating gcc 3.0+ math compiler builtins that don't exist on
tcc, while still identifying as gcc which is needed to avoid
other FreeBSD system header breakage.
src/cmd/builtin/Mamfile,
src/cmd/builtin/features/pty,
src/lib/libdll/Mamfile,
src/lib/libdll/features/dll:
- tcc forbids combining the -c compiler flag with -l* linker flags.
Use the -lm flag in the iffe feature tests instead of the
Mamfiles. This avoids iffe combining -lm with the -c flag.
src/lib/libast/vmalloc/malloc.c:
- Fix failure to compile with -D_std_malloc.
This patch is from OpenSUSE:
https://build.opensuse.org/package/view_file/shells/ksh/ksh93-malloc-hook.dif
As it turns out tcc needs this change to build ksh with
-D_std_malloc, so it has been applied.
Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/232
src/lib/libast/features/lib,
src/lib/libast/path/pathicase.c:
- FAT32 file systems on Linux don't support FS_CASEFOLD_FL, which
caused globbing to break. Reproducer using a UEFI boot partition:
$ echo /boot/eF*
/boot/eF*
This is fixed by checking for FAT attributes with ioctl, then
checking for FS_CASEFOLD_FL if that fails.
- The check for FS_CASEFOLD_FL didn't work correctly; I still wasn't
able to get --globcasedetect to work on a case-insensitive ext4
folder. Fix that by adding missing parentheses.
The NOT_USED() macro is already defined in ast.h (which is included
by shell.h) as an alias of NoP(). So it's better to apply the fix
to NoP() so it takes effect for both verrsions, for libast and ksh.
One of the best-kept secrets of libast/ksh93 is that the code
includes support for case-insensitive file name generation (a.k.a.
pathname expansion, a.k.a. globbing) as well as case-insensitive
file name completion on interactive shells, depending on whether
the file system is case-insensitive or not. This is transparently
determined for each directory, so a path pattern that spans
multiple file systems can be part case-sensitive and part case-
insensitive. In more precise terms, each slash-separated path name
component pattern P is treated as ~(i:P) if its parent directory
exists on a case-insensitive file system. I recently discovered
this while dealing with <https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/223>.
However, that support is dead code on almost all current systems.
It depends on pathconf(2) having a _PC_PATH_ATTRIBUTES selector.
The 'c' attribute is supposedly returned if the given directory is
on a case insensitive file system. There are other attributes as
well (at least 'l', see src/lib/libcmd/rm.c). However, I have been
unable to find any system, current or otherwise, that has
_PC_PATH_ATTRIBUTES. Google and mailing list searches yield no
relevant results at all. If anyone knows of such a system, please
add a comment to this commit on GitHub, or email me.
An exception is Cygwin/Windows, on which the "c" attribute was
simply hardcoded, so globbing/completion is always case-
insensitive. As of Windows 10, that is wrong, as it added the
possibility to mount case-sensitive file systems.
On the other hand, this was never activated on the Mac, even
though macOS has always used a case-insensitive file like Windows.
But, being UNIX, it can also mount case-sensitive file systems.
Finally, Linux added the possibility to create individual case-
insensitive ext4 directories fairly recently, in version 5.2.
https://www.collabora.com/news-and-blog/blog/2020/08/27/using-the-linux-kernel-case-insensitive-feature-in-ext4/
So, since this functionality latently exists in the code base, and
three popular OSs now have relevant file system support, we might
as well make it usable on those systems. It's a nice idea, as it
intuitively makes sense for globbing and completion behaviour to
auto-adapt to file system case insensitivity on a per-directory
basis. No other shell does this, so it's a nice selling point, too.
However, the way it is coded, this is activated unconditionally on
supported systems. That is not a good idea. It will surprise users.
Since globbing is used with commands like 'rm', we do not want
surprises. So this commit makes it conditional upon a new shell
option called 'globcasedetect'. This option is only compiled into
ksh on systems where we can actually detect FS case insensitivity.
To implement this, libast needs some public API additions first.
*** libast changes ***
src/lib/libast/features/lib:
- Add probes for the linux/fs.h and sys/ioctl.h headers.
Linux needs these to use ioctl(2) in pathicase(3) (see below).
src/lib/libast/path/pathicase.c,
src/lib/libast/include/ast.h,
src/lib/libast/man/path.3,
src/lib/libast/Mamfile:
- Add new pathicase(3) public API function. This uses whatever
OS-specific method it can detect at compile time to determine if
a particular path is on a case-insensitive file system. If no
method is available, it only sets errno to ENOSYS and returns -1.
Currently known to work on: macOS, Cygwin, Linux 5.2+, QNX 7.0+.
- On systems (if any) that have the mysterious _PC_PATH_ATTRIBUTES
selector for pathconf(2), call astconf(3) and check for the 'c'
attribute to determine case insensitivity. This should preserve
compatibility with any such system.
src/lib/libast/port/astconf.c:
- dynamic[]: As case-insensitive globbing is now optional on all
systems, do not set the 'c' attribute by default on _WINIX
(Cygwin/Windows) systems.
- format(): On systems that do not have _PC_PATH_ATTRIBUTES, call
pathicase(3) to determine the value for the "c" (case
insensitive) attribute only. This is for compatibility as it is
more efficient to call pathicase(3) directly.
src/lib/libast/misc/glob.c,
src/lib/libast/include/glob.h:
- Add new GLOB_DCASE public API flag to glob(3). This is like
GLOB_ICASE (case-insensitive matching) except it only makes the
match case-insensitive if the file system for the current
pathname component is determined to be case-insensitive.
- gl_attr(): For efficiency, call pathicase(3) directly instead of
via astconf(3).
- glob_dir(): Only call gl_attr() to determine file system case
insensitivity if the GLOB_DCASE flag was passed. This makes case
insensitive globbing optional on all systems.
- glob(): The options bitmask needs to be widened to fit the new
GLOB_DCASE option. Define this centrally in a new GLOB_FLAGMASK
macro so it is easy to change it along with GLOB_MAGIC (which
uses the remaining bits for a sanity check bit pattern).
src/lib/libast/path/pathexists.c:
- For efficiency, call pathicase(3) directly instead of via
astconf(3).
*** ksh changes ***
src/cmd/ksh93/features/options,
src/cmd/ksh93/SHOPT.sh:
- Add new SHOPT_GLOBCASEDET compile-time option. Set it to probe
(empty) by default so that the shell option is compiled in on
supported systems only, which is determined by new iffe feature
test that checks if pathicase(3) returns an ENOSYS error.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/options.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/shell.h:
- Add -o globcasedetect shell option if compiling with
SHOPT_GLOBCASEDET.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/expand.c: path_expand():
- Pass the new GLOB_DCASE flag to glob(3) if the
globcasedetect/SH_GLOBCASEDET shell option is set.
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/completion.c:
- While file listing/completion is based on globbing and
automatically becomes case-insensitive when globbing does, it
needs some additional handling to make a string comparison
case-insensitive in corresponding cases. Otherwise, partial
completions may be deleted from the command line upon pressing
tab. This code was already in ksh 93u+ and just needs to be
made conditional upon SHOPT_GLOBCASEDET and globcasedetect.
- For efficiency, call pathicase(3) directly instead of via
astconf(3).
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Document the new globcasedetect shell option.
In various places in libast and libcmd there are preprocessor
fallbacks like this, for systems that don't define all the commonly
used errno value IDs:
#ifndef ENOSYS
#define ENOSYS EINVAL
#endif
and many others. It is better to have these all in one place so
they are not duplicated and we don't risk inconsistencies when
adding new code.
src/lib/libast/include/error.h includes the OS's <errno.h>, so it
is the logical file to move all these fallbacks into.
Quite possibly there is no remotely current system that needs any
of these, but they won't do any harm either.
Most files already use <error.h> directly or indirectly. Four
needed new #include <error.h> directives to use the fallbacks if
needed. The libast Mamfile is updated to make those files depend on
that header.
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.
src/lib/libast/sfio/sfcvt.c:
- The C99 code formerly behind '#if _c99_in_the_wild' broke the CI
build:
2158627969 (failing build)
2158860590 (build after revert)
Since this code wasn't used before that commit, it has been removed
to fix the CI build.
In 2021, it seems like it's about time to join the 21st century
and officially require fork(2). In practice this was already the
case as the legacy code was unmaintained and didn't compile.
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/edit.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/history.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/deparse.c:
- Remove experimental code protected by '#ifdef future'.
No one is going to do anything with this, it's just clutter.
src/lib/libast/sfio/sfcvt.c:
- In 2021, it might be time to actually start using some C99
features were available. Change two checks for a _c99_in_the_wild
macro to actual checks for C99, enabling the use of fpclassify().
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/219
The fix for '.' and '..' in regular globbing broke '.' and '..' in
globstar. No globstar pattern that contains '.' or '..' as any
pathname component still matched. This commit fixes that.
This commit also makes symlink/** mostly work, which it never has
done in any ksh93 version. It is correct and expected that symlinks
found by patterns are not resolved, but symlinks were not resolved
even when specified as explicit non-pattern pathname components.
For example, /tmp/** breaks if /tmp is a symlink (e.g. on macOS),
which looks like a bug.
src/lib/libast/include/glob.h,
src/lib/libast/misc/glob.c: glob_dir():
- Make symlink/** work. we can check if the string pointed to by
pat is exactly equal to *. If so, we are doing regular globbing
for that particular pathname element, and it's okay to resolve
symlinks. If not (if it's **), we're doing globstar and we should
not be matching symlinks.
- Let's also introduce proper identification of symlinks (GLOB_SYM)
and not lump them in with other special files (GLOB_DEV).
- Fix the bug with literal '.' and '..' components in globstar
patterns. In preceding code, the matchdir pointer gets set to the
complete glob pattern if we're doing globstar for the current
pathname element, null if not. The pat pointer gets set to the
elements of the pattern that are still left to be processed;
already-done elements are trimmed from it by increasing the
pointer. So, to do the right thing, we need to make sure that '.'
or '..' is skipped if, and only if, it is the final element in
the pattern (i.e., if pat does not contain a slash) and is not
specified literally as '.' or '..', i.e., only if '.' or '..' was
actually resolved from a glob pattern. After this change,
'**/.*', '**/../.*', etc. do the right thing, showing all your
hidden files and directories without undesirable '.' and '..'
results; '.' and '..' are skipped as final elements, unless you
literally specify '**/.', '**/..', '**/foo/bar/..', etc.
src/cmd/ksh93/COMPATIBILITY:
- Note the symlink/** globstar change.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Try to document the current globstar behaviour more exhausively.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/glob.sh:
- Add tests. Try to cover all the corner cases.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtests:
- Since tests in glob.sh do not use err_exit, they were not
counted. Special-case glob.sh for counting the tests: count the
lines starting with a test_* function call.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/146
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/edit.c: ed_read():
- The loop that handles SIGWINCH assumes sfpkrd will return and
set errno to EINTR if ksh is sent SIGWINCH. This only occurs
when select(2) is used to wait for input, so tell sfpkrd to
use select if possible. This is only done if the last argument
given to sfpkrd is '2', which should avoid regressions.
src/lib/libast/sfio/sfpkrd.c: sfpkrd():
- Always use select if the last argument is 2. This allows
sfpkrd() to intercept SIGWINCH when necessary.
Fixes: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/202