This fixes the following:
1. 'set --posix' now works as an equivalent of 'set -o posix'.
2. The posix option turns off braceexpand and turns on letoctal.
Any attempt to override that in a single command such as 'set -o
posix +o letoctal' was quietly ignored. This now works as long
as the overriding option follows the posix option in the command.
3. The --default option to 'set' now stops the 'posix' option, if
set or unset in the same 'set' command, from changing other
options. This allows the command output by 'set +o' to correctly
restore the current options.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- To make 'set --posix' work, we must explicitly list it in
sh_set[] as a supported option so that AST optget(3) recognises
it and won't override it with its own default --posix option,
which converts the optget(3) string to at POSIX getopt(3) string.
This means it will appear as a separate entry in --man output,
whether we want it to or not. So we might as well use it as an
example to document how --optionname == -o optionname, replacing
the original documentation that was part of the '-o' description.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/args.c: sh_argopts():
- Add handling for explitit --posix option in data/builtins.c.
- Move SH_POSIX syncing SH_BRACEEXPAND and SH_LETOCTAL from
sh_applyopts() into the option parsing loop here. This fixes
the bug that letoctal was ignored in 'set -o posix +o letoctal'.
- Remember if --default was used in a flag, and do not sync options
with SH_POSIX if the flag is set. This makes 'set +o' work.
src/cmd/ksh93/include/argnod.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/msg.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/args.c: sh_printopts():
- Do not potentially translate the 'on' and 'off' labels in 'set
-o' output. No other shell does, and some scripts parse these.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c: sh_init():
- Turn on SH_LETOCTAL early along with SH_POSIX if the shell was
invoked as sh; this makes 'sh -o' and 'sh +o' show expected
options (not that anyone does this, but correctness is good).
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/shell.h:
- The state flags were in defs.h and most (but not all) of the
shell options were in shell.h. Gather all the shell state and
option flag definitions into one place in shell.h for clarity.
- Remove unused SH_NOPROFILE and SH_XARGS option flags.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/options.sh:
- Add tests for these bugs.
src/lib/libast/misc/optget.c: styles[]:
- Edit default optget(3) option self-documentation for clarity.
Several changed files:
- Some SHOPT_PFSH fixes to avoid compiling dead code.
With this patch, the Korn shell can now guarantee that calls to
sleep on systems using the select or poll method always result in
the system clock advancing by that much time, assuming no
interruptions. This compensates for deficiencies in certain
systems, including SCO UnixWare.
Discussion: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/pull/174
src/lib/libast/tm/tvsleep.c:
- Ensure that at least the time requested to sleep has elapsed
for the select and poll methods.
- Simplify the logic of calculating the time remaining to
sleep and handle the case of an argument of greater than
10e9 nanoseconds being passed to tvsleep.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/sleep.c:
- Eliminate the check for EINTR to handle other cases wherein
we have not slept enough.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh:
- Improve the diagnostic message when the sleep test fails.
- Revise the SECONDS function test to expect that we always
sleep for at least the time specified.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/functions.h:
- Redirect ps stderr to /dev/null. UnixWare ps prints an error
message about not being able to find the controlling terminal
when shtests output is piped, but we are only using ps to find
the PID.
This makes ksh 93u+m build on the following system:
$ uname -a
QNX qnx 6.5.0 2010/07/09-14:44:03EDT x86pc x86
Thanks to polarhome.com for providing the QNX shell account.
There are a number of regressions left to work out:
arrays.sh[636]: copying a large array fails
bracket.sh[129]: /tmp/ksh93.shtests.1753215026.6923/bracket.C/original should be older than /tmp/ksh93.shtests.1753215026.6923/bracket.C/newer
bracket.sh[132]: /tmp/ksh93.shtests.1753215026.6923/bracket.C/newer should be newer than /tmp/ksh93.shtests.1753215026.6923/bracket.C/original
builtins.sh[683]: real_t1 not found after parent directory renamed in subshell
functions.sh[1023]: cannot handle comsub depth > 256 in function
io.sh[252]: <# not working for pipes
io.sh[337]: read -n3 from pipe not working
io.sh[346]: read -n3 from fifo failed -- expected 'a', got 'abc'
io.sh[349]: read -n1 from fifo failed -- expected 'b', got 'd'
io.sh[379]: should have timed out
io.sh[380]: line1 should be 'prompt1: '
io.sh[381]: line2 should be line2
io.sh[382]: line3 should be 'prompt2: '
io.sh[406]: LC_ALL=C read -n2 from pipe 'a bcd' failed -- expected 'a bcd', got 'ab cd'
io.sh[406]: LC_ALL=C.UTF-8 read -n2 from pipe 'a bcd' failed -- expected 'a bcd', got 'ab cd'
jobs.sh[86]: warning: skipping subshell job control test due to non-compliant 'ps'
pty.sh[105]: POSIX sh 026(C): line 120: expected "(Stopped|Suspended)", got EOF
pty.sh[128]: POSIX sh 028(C): line 143: expected "(Stopped|Suspended) \(SIGTTIN\)", got EOF
pty.sh[151]: POSIX sh 029(C): line 166: expected "(Stopped|Suspended) \(SIGTTOU\)", got EOF
signal.sh[310]: kill -TERM $$ failed, required termination by signal 'EXIT'
signal.sh[310]: kill -VTALRM $$ failed, required termination by signal 'EXIT'
signal.sh[310]: kill -PIPE $$ failed, required termination by signal 'EXIT'
(The io.sh failures mean libast sfpkrd() is not working.)
src/lib/libast/obsolete/spawn.c:
- Removed. Didn't compile due to wrong number of arguments to
spawnve(2), but is obsolete and unused.
src/lib/libast/comp/localeconv.c:
- The initialisation of two static 'struct lconv' variables was
done in a way that depended on OS headers declaring the struct
members in a certain order. This holds on most systems, but not
on QNX, and POSIX does not actually specify the order at all:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/locale.h.html
So each member must be initialised by name. But C89 does not
support initialising struct members by name, so we have to do it
using an initialiser function that simply assigns the values.
src/lib/libast/comp/spawnveg.c:
- Fix for systems without either P_DETACH or _P_DETACH.
src/lib/libast/features/vmalloc,
src/lib/libast/vmalloc/vmmopen.c,
src/lib/libast/Mamfile:
- Add test for sys/shm.h header. If it doesn't exist, as it doesn't
on QNX, use the stub vmmapopen() as the real one won't compile.
(Mamfile: Add dependency on FEATURE/vmalloc to vmmopen.c.)
src/lib/libast/vmalloc/malloc.c:
- Remove superfluous externs that are already provided by either
AST or system headers. The 'void cfree' extern caused a build
failure on QNX because cfree() is of type int on QNX.
src/lib/libast/comp/conf.tab:
- Remove check for _map_spawnve; src/lib/libast/RELEASE says it was
removed.
That OpenSUSE patch introduced a bug: file descriptors other than 1
that were globally redirected using 'exec' or 'redirect' no longer
survived a ${ shared-state; } command substitution.
Related: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/128
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/io.c:
- Add check for shp->subshare to the OpenSUSE patch.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Add test.
.github/workflows/ci.yml:
- Go back to wrapping the regression tests in script(1).
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Never mind about the stty builtin.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Refuse to run if there isn't a functioning tty.
- Make sure stty(1) works on /dev/tty by redirecting stdin.
So, the pty regression tests on the Linux GitHub runner all failed.
Let's test an assumption: the reason is that we need the stty
builtin to properly set the pty state, because the OS-provided stty
command does not work if there is no real tty.
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Compile in the stty built-in. This adds about 20k to the binary
for a command that most users rarely need and even more rarely
need to be built in, so only compile it in on non-release builds.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Skip the tests if we cannot either use the stty builtin or change
the state of the real terminal to be compatible with the tests.
The Mac runner is still broken: intermittent pipe- and
signal-related regressions that do not occur on any real Mac.
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/runs/1892358749
.github/workflows/ci.yml:
- Remove the macOS runner.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Do not skip pty tests if there is no tty. (On FreeBSD with no
tty, the tty builtin would need to be enabled in builtins.c.)
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bracket.sh:
- Don't be noisy when skipping unavailable locales.
It is desirable to be able to run the tests on a system without
a functioning tty. Since this distribution comes with its own
pseudo-tty facility, pty, it should be possible to run the few
tests that require a tty on the pseudo-tty instead. I've verified
that they fail as expected on older ksh93.
Discussion: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/pull/171
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/basic.sh,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bracket.sh:
- Remove tests that require a tty.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Put them here, adapted to work as interactive pty scripts.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtests:
- No longer refuse to run if there is no functioning tty.
.github/workflows/ci.yml:
- Since the tests no longer require a tty, no longer use script(1)
to get a pseudo-tty. Let's see if this works...
- Re-enable the Mac runner (re: 14632361). Maybe it has improved.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh: Read vsz from UnixWare's ps
UnixWare's ps reports an accurate virtual size, so collecting that is
preferable to trying to parse the real resident size.
The GitHub runners apparently provide a non-working /dev/tty. To
avoid failures and confusion, shtests shold refuse to run the tests
and tell people to use script(1) to simulate a tty. On Linux, it
goes like this:
script -q -e -c 'bin/shtests --your-options-here'
On macOS and FreeBSD, the invocation is:
script -q /dev/null bin/shtests --your-options-here
The NetBSD and OpenBSD variants of script(1) need different
invocations again. They also don't pass down the command's exit
status, so would need a workaround for that.
It would be nice if we could use pty for this as this comes with
the distribution, so would work the same on every OS, but it seems
to be broken for this use case.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtest:
- Use 'test -t 1' with stdout (fd 1) redirected to /dev/tty to
ensure the tty is actually on a terminal.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/basic.sh:
- Remove superflous check for tty. All tests run through shtests.
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/pull/171
src/cmd/ksh93/features/externs: ARG_EXTRA_BYTES detection:
- Improve detection of extra bytes per argument: on every loop
iteration, recalculate the size of the environment while taking
the amount extra bytes we're currently trying into account. Also
count arguments (argv[]) as they are stored in the same buffer.
On 64-bit Linux with glibc, this now detects 9 extra bytes per
argument instead of 8. An odd number (literally and figuratively)
but apparently it needs it; I do think my method is correct now.
On 64-bit Solaris and macOS, this still detects 8 extra bytes.
(On 64-bit Linux with musl C library, it detects 0 bytes. Nice.)
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: path_xargs():
- Remove the kludge subtracting twice the size of the environment.
With the feature test fixed, this should no longer fail on Linux.
- Take into account the size of the final null element in the
argument and environment lists.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/path.sh:
- Do not use awk for the test due to breakage in the system awks
on Solaris/Illumos (hangs) and AIX & UnixWare (drops arguments).
Instead, use (wait for it...) ksh. It's a bit slower, but works.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bracket.sh:
- Read the list of installed locales to ensure the locale to be tested
actually exists on the system under test.
- Produce a warning diagnostic for skipped locales.
- Additionally test the en_US.ISO8859-1 and en_US.UTF-8 locales.
Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
src/cmd/ksh93/features/math.sh:
- Specify ast_float.h within iffehdrs instead of math.h, so that iffe
will pick up on macro substitutions within libast. This should make
any future efforts to remedy floating point behavior easier as well.
- Always include ast_float.h within the generated math header file,
not just on IA64 platforms.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/arith.sh:
- Test pow(1.0,-Inf) and pow(1.0,NaN) for IEEE compliance as well.
- Test the exponentiation operator (**) in addition, as streval.c,
which processes the same, calls pow() separately.
src/lib/libast/features/float:
- Test the IEEE compliance of the underlying math library's pow()
function and substitute macros producing compliant behavior if
necessary.
If I haven't missed anything, this should make the non-interactive
aspects of job control in scripts work as expected, except for the
"<command unknown>" issue in the output of 'bg', 'fg' and 'jobs'
(which is not such a high priority as those commands are really
designed for interactive use).
Plus, I believe I now finally understand what these three are for:
* The job.jobcontrol variable is set to nonzero by job_init() in
jobs.c if, and only if, the shell is interactive *and* managed to
get control of the terminal. Therefore, any changing of terminal
settings (tcsetpgrp(3), tty_set()) should only be done if
job.jobcontrol is nonzero. This commit changes several checks for
sh_isoption(SH_INTERACTIVE) to checks for job.jobcontrol for
better consistency with this.
* The state flag, sh_isstate(SH_MONITOR), determines whether the
bits of job control that are relevant for both scripts and
interactive shells are active, which is mostly making sure that a
background job gets its own process group (setpgid(3)).
* The shell option, sh_isoption(SH_MONITOR), is just that. When the
user turns it on or off, the state flag is synched with it. It
should usually not be directly checked for, as the state may be
temporarily turned off without turning off the option.
Prior discussion:
https://www.mail-archive.com/austin-group-l@opengroup.org/msg06456.html
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c, src/cmd/ksh93/sh/args.c:
- Move synching the SH_MONITOR state flag with the SH_MONITOR
shell option from b_set() (the 'set' builtin) to sh_applyopts()
which is indirectly called from b_set() and is also used when
parsing the shell invocation command line. This ensures -m is
properly enabled in both scenarios.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/jobs.c:
- job_init(): Do not refuse to initialise job control on
non-interactive shells. Instead, skip everything that should only
be done on interactive shells (i.e., everything to do with the
terminal). This function is now even more of a mess than it was
before, so refactoring may be desirabe at some point.
- job_close(), job_set(), job_reset(), job_wait(): Do not reset the
terminal process group (tcsetpgrp()) if job.jobcontrol isn't on.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- sh_exec(): TFORK: For SIGINT handling, check the SH_MONITOR
state flag, not the shell option.
- sh_exec(): TFORK: Do not turn off the SH_MONITOR state flag in
forked children. The non-interactive part of job control should
stay active. Instead, turn off the SH_INTERACTIVE state flag so
we don't get interactive shell behaviour (i.e. job control noise
on the terminal) in forked subshells.
- _sh_fork(), sh_ntfork(): Do not reset the terminal process group
(tcsetpgrp()) if job.jobcontrol isn't on. Do not turn off the
SH_MONITOR state flag in forked children.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c: sh_subfork():
- Do not turn off the monitor option and state in forked subshells.
The non-interactive part of job control should stay active.
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/misc.c: b_bg():
- Check isstate(SH_MONITOR) instead of sh_isoption(SH_MONITOR) &&
job.jobcontrol before throwing a 'no job control' error.
This fixes a minor bug: fg, bg and disown could quietly fail.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/jobs.sh:
- Add tests for 'fg' with job control IDs (%%, %1) in scripts.
- Add test checking that a background job launched from a subsell
with job control enabled correctly becomes the leader of its own
process group.
Makes progress on: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/119
Another longstanding whopper of a bug in basic ksh93 functionality:
run a ${ shared-state; } command substitution twice and job control
promptly loses track of all your running jobs. New jobs are tracked
again until you run another two shared-state command substitutions.
This is in at least 93t+, 93u-, 93u+, 93v- and ksh2020.
$ sleep 300 &
[1] 56883
$ jobs # OK
[1] + Running sleep 300 &
$ v=${ echo hi1; }
$ jobs # OK
[1] + Running sleep 300 &
$ v=${ echo hi2; }
$ jobs # Nothing!
$ fg
ksh: fg: no such job
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c: sh_subshell():
- The current environment number shp->curenv (a.k.a. sh.curenv) was
not being restored if the virtual subshell we're leaving is of
the shared-state command substitution variety as it was wrongly
considered to be part of the environment that didn't need
restoring. This caused it to be out of sync with shp->jobenv
(a.k.a. sh.jobenv) which did get restored from savedcurenv.
Restore both from savedcurenv at the same time for any subshell.
(How these numbers are used exactly remains to be discovered.)
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/jobs.sh:
- Added, with a test for this bug to start it off. There is no
other test script where job control fits, and a lot more related
fixes are anticipated: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/119
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/enum.c:
- enum_type[]: Fix typos; minor edit for style.
- enum_type[], enuminfo(): Make the list of supported values
comma-separated, instead of using a comma at the start of each.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvtype.c:
- sh_opttype[]: Fix typos.
It was easier than expected to fix this one. The many regression
test failures caused by disabling it were all due to one bug:
'typeset -p' output broke when building without this option.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvtree.c: nv_attribute():
- In this function to print the attributes of a name-value pair,
move four lines of code out of #if SHOPT_FIXEDARRAY...#endif that
were inadvertently moved into the #if block in ksh93 2012-05-18.
See the changes to nvtree.c in this multishell repo commit:
https://github.com/multishell/ksh93/commit/aabab56a
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Update/rewrite 'typeset -a' documentation.
- Make it adapt to SHOPT_FIXEDARRAY.
- Fix a few typos.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/arrays2.sh:
- Only one regression test needs a SHOPT_FIXEDARRAY check.
.github/workflows/ci.yml:
- Disable SHOPT_FIXEDARRAY when regression-testing without SHOPTs.
- Enable xtrace, add ':' commands for traced comments. This should
make the CI runner output logs a little more readable.
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.
src/lib/libast/misc/optget.c:
- Add screen* (which includes tmux) and dtterm* (CDE terminal) to
the glob pattern deciding whether to use ANSI boldface sequences.
- Don't bother parsing the env var if stderr is not on a terminal.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Extend self-documentation documentation; document how optget(3)
uses the ERROR_OPTIONS env var to control boldface output.
- Tweaks and minor edits.
This fixes a bug in libast optget()'s use of emphasis in the
display of --man(uals) via standard error on a terminal.
Symptom:
$ printf --man 2>&1 | more
(ok; emphasis disabled, no escape codes shown)
$ printf --man
(ok; emphasis correctly displayed)
$ printf --man 2>&1 | more
(whoops; emphasis not disabled; escape codes garble 'more' output)
The problem was that the state.emphasis variable was not
initialised and, when set to one, was never reset again
(except through the use of the --api, --html or --nroff option).
The source code also reveals an undocumented feature: if the
environment variable $ERROR_OPTIONS contains 'noemphasi', emphasis
is forced off, else if it contains 'emphasi', it's forced on.
Other characters (such as the final 's' of emphasis) are ignored.
This was also broken (forcing off didn't work) and is now fixed.
src/lib/libast/misc/optget.c:
- Do not assume that enabling emphasis is forever; re-initialise
the state on every relevant getopts invocation.
- Increase the number of terminals on which emphasis is displayed
using ANSI escape codes. (This is a hack and we should ask the OS
for the correct codes, but never mind -- ANSI is now universal.)
The >;word and <>;word redirection operators cannot be used with
the 'exec' builtin, but the 'redirect' builtin (which used to be
an alias of 'command exec') permitted them. However, they do not
have the documented effect of the added ';'. So this commit blocks
those operators for 'redirect' as they are blocked for 'exec'.
It also tweaks redirect's error message if a non-redirection
argument is encountered.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/parse.c: simple():
- Set the lexp->inexec flag for SYSREDIR (redirect) as well as
SYSEXEC (exec). This flag is checked for in sh_lex() (lex.c) to
throw a syntax error if one of these two operators is used.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1, src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Documentation tweaks.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c, src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/misc.c:
- When 'redirect' gives an 'incorrect syntax' (e_badsyntax) error
message, include the first word that was found not to be a valid
redirection. This is simply the first argument, as redirections
are removed from the arguments list.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Update test to reflect new error message format.
Now that the Make Abstract Machine files are maintained manually
and not generated automatically, unused variables are an annoying
distraction -- and there are many.
But the language/format is very simple and very parseable using
shell, awk, etc. -- so this was easy to automate. All variables are
declared with 'setv' and they are used if an expansion of the form
${varname} exists (the braces are mandatory in Mamfiles).
bin/Mamfile_rm_unused_vars:
- Added for reference and future use.
src/*/*/Mamfile:
- Remove all unused 'setv' variable declarations.
Permanent redirections of that form broke in subshells when used
with the 'redirect' command, because I had overlooked one instance
where the new 'redirect' builtin needs to match the behaviour of
the 'exec' builtin.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh: sh_exec():
- Do not restore file descriptors in (virtual) subshells for
'redirect' just as this isn't done for 'exec'.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Add regression test for this bug.
- Complete the test for f9427909 which I committed prematurely.
Fixes: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/167
This is some nonsense: redirections that store a file descriptor
greater than 9 in a variable, like {var}<&2 and the like, stopped
working if brace expansion was turned off. '{var}' is not a brace
expansion as it doesn't contain ',' or '..'; something like 'echo
{var}' is always output unexpanded. And redirections and brace
expansion are two completely unrelated things. It wasn't documented
that these redirections require the -B/braceexpand option, either.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/lex.c: sh_lex():
- Remove incorrect check for braceexpand option before processing
redirections of this form.
src/cmd/ksh93/COMPATIBILITY:
- Insert a brief item mentioning this.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Correction: these redirections do not yield a file descriptor >
10, but > 9, a.k.a. >= 10.
- Add a brief example showing how these redirections can be used.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Add a quick regression test.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/args.c: sh_argprocsub():
- Fix compiler warnings with SHOPT_DEVFD on by including "io.h".
- Without SHOPT_DEVFD, the FIFO code didn't consider that libast's
pathtemp(3) may also fail and return null. Add a check for this.
It was trivial to crash ksh by making an autoloaded function
definition file autoload itself, causing a stack overflow due to
infinite recursion. This commit adds loop detection that stops a
function that is being autoloaded from autoloading itself either
directly or indirectly, without removing the ability of autoloaded
function definition files to autoload other functions.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: funload():
- Detect loops by checking if the path of a function to be
autoloaded was already added to a new internal static tree,
and if not, adding it while the function is being loaded.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/path.sh:
- Add regression test.
- Tweak a couple of others to be freeze- and crash-proof.
NEWS:
- Add this fix + a forgotten entry for the previous fix (6f3b23e6).
Fixes: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/136
Reproducer from @Saikiran-m:
| ~# sh -c `perl -e 'print "a"x100000'`
| genunix: NOTICE: core_log: sh[1221] core dumped: /var/cores/core.sh.0.1602153496
| Memory fault(coredump)
The crash was in trying to decide whether the name was suitable for
autoloading as a function on $FPATH. This calls strmatch() to check
the name against a regex for valid function name. But the libast
regex code is not designed optimally and uses too much recursion,
limiting the length of the strings it's able to cope with.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: path_search():
- Before calling strmatch(), check that the name is shorter than
256 bytes. The maximum length of file names on Linux and macOS is
255 bytes, so an autoload function can't have a name longer than
that anyway.
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/path.sh:
- Add test for this bug.
- Tweak 'command -x' test to not leave a hanging process on Ctrl+C.
Fixes: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/144
Well, that commit was based on a silly oversight: of course it's
necessary to pass ${KSH_RELFLAGS} to the feature tests too as they
use this flag to determine whether to enable or disable vmalloc.
On further analysis I think the annoying warnings can be solved in
a different way. Quotes (single or double) in 'exec -' commands
don't seem to be special to mamake at all; it looks like they are
passed on to the shell as is. So Mamfile variables are expanded and
the expansions backslash-escaped the same way regardless of quotes.
Which means we can make the shell remove the unwanted level of
backslashes by using double instead of single quotes.
src/*/*/Mamfile:
- On iffe commands, restore ${KSH_RELFLAGS}, using double quotes to
group the compiler command as one argument to iffe.
This reverts an OpenSUSE patch ("libast/comp/conf.sh: apply limits
detection fixes for Linux"). It broke the build on Alpine Linux
with the musl C library (see also e245856f).
This time it was failing on a 64-bit Debian Linux system with very
few and short environment variables. Sigh.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c:
- Combine the strategy from 63979488 with that of 8f5235a5.
That fix turned out to be insufficient as NixOS has huge
environment variable lists because (due to each software package
being installed in its own directory tree) it has to keep dozens
of directories in variables like XDG_CONFIG_DIRS and others.
The 'command -x' regression test was failing on NixOS.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c:
- Different strategy. Leave twice the size of the existing
environment free.
Hopefully this will deal with ksh crashing in macOS Terminal.app
once and for all. Trigger: press Command-F to open the find bar,
then press Esc to close it, then press Esc again. Result: crash
somewhere random in the job control code.
Turns out macOS Terminal.app apparently (and wrongly) sends <Esc>
followed by <Ctrl+L> to the terminal, which ksh takes as a sequence
for clearing the screen. The related crash ultimately traced back
to the code for that in emacs.c. The other crash was in the code
for double-ESC file name completion.
This commit also fixes a non-robust invocation of the 'tput'
command by using the direct path found in $(getconf PATH).
src/cmd/ksh93/features/cmds:
- Remove unused tests for the presence of commands
(newgrp,test,id,wc,cut,logname,pfexec).
- Replace 'cmd tput' test by 'pth tput' which will find its path
in $(getconf PATH) and store that path as the macro value.
- Add two tests to determine if 'tput' supports terminfo and/or
termcap codes. (FreeBSD still requires old termcap codes.)
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/emacs.c: escape():
- Fix a crash in the code for double-ESC completion. Check if the
cursor is on a non-zero position; this caused a bus error
(invalid address access) in the subsequent ed_expand call.
- For <Esc><Ctrl+L> (clear screen), fix the strange crash in macOS
Terminal by not using sh_trap() to invoke "tput clear", which
causes ksh itself to invoke that command. ksh apparently doesn't
cope with doing this while SIGWINCH (window size change signal)
is sent by Terminal. The fix is to just use the C standard
system(3) function to invoke tput. This invokes tput via /bin/sh,
but what the hey. (Note that ksh also ran any function or alias
called 'tput' instead of the real command, and that is now also
fixed.)
- Use the new _pth_tput test result to invoke tput with the
hardcoded default system path, increasing robustness.
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/edit.c: ed_setup():
- Use the new _pth_tput test result to invoke tput with the
hardcoded default system path, increasing robustness.
- When getting the escape code for "cursor up", use the new
_tput_terminfo and _tput_termcap test results to determine which
kind of command code to send. This fixes it on FreeBSD.
src/cmd/INIT/iffe.sh:
- Fix "standard system directories" for the cmd test, which were
hardcoded as bin, /etc, /usr/bin, /usr/etc, /usr/ucb. That's both
unportable and antiquated. Replace this with the path output by
'getconf PATH'.
- Add fixes from modernish for 'getconf PATH' output to compensate
for bugs/shortcomigns in NixOS and AIX. Source:
https://github.com/modernish/modernish/blob/9e4bf5eb/lib/modernish/aux/defpath.sh
Ref.: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/65512
src/lib/libast/comp/conf.tab: PATH:
- Add the NixOS and AIX default path fixes here too; this fixes
'command -p' and the builtin 'getconf PATH' on these systems.
bin/package, src/cmd/INIT/package.sh:
- Re-support being launched with just the command name 'package' in
the command line (if the 'package' command is in $PATH). At least
one other script in the build system does this. (re: 6cc2f6a0)
- Go back three levels (../../..) if we were invoked from
arch/*/bin/package, otherwise we won't find src/cmd/ksh93/SHOPT.sh.
Something similar was previously done in 07cc71b8 from a Debian
patch, and eventually reverted; it redefined the ast atomic
functions asoincint() and asodecint() to be gcc-specific. This
imports the upstream version from the ksh 93v- beta instead.
This commit is based on an OpenSUSE patch:
https://build.opensuse.org/package/view_file/shells/ksh/ksh93-joblock.dif
src/cmd/ksh93/include/jobs.h:
- Replace job locking mechanism with the 93v- version which uses
the atomic libast functions asoincint(), asogetint() and
asodecint(). See: src/lib/libast/man/aso.3
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/jobs.c: job_subsave():
- Revert gcc optimiser bug workaround from c258a04f.
It should now be unnecessary.
I got one intermittent regression test failure due to 'argument
list too long' on a Debian x86_64 system.
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: path_xargs():
- Leave extra argument space for systems that need extra bytes:
1KiB per extra byte, with a minimum of 2KiB (the old value).