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913 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martijn Dekker
66c37202fd SHOPT_SPAWN: rm unused job control code (re: f207cd57, 41ebb55a)
Since f207cd57, sh_ntfork() is never called if job.jobcontrol is
set (i.e. if job control is active on an interactive shell), so the
code that is only run if job.jobcontrol is set should be removed.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- Remove spawnveg() define that is unused as of 7b0e0776.
- sh_exec(): Simplify SHOPT_SPAWN preprocessor logic. As sh_fork()
  never returns a negative value, only run the parent<0 check after
  running sh_ntfork() -- that check already didn't happen when
  compiling ksh with SHOPT_SPAWN disabled.
- sh_ntfork(): Remove signal and terminal handling (with race
  condition) that was only run with job.jobcontrol set.
2021-04-10 18:10:27 +01:00
Johnothan King
23964f89c6
sh.1: Backport login shell addition from ksh93v- (#266)
This small addition to the man page adds a description for the
-l (login shell) option. It was mentioned on the old mailing list:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-users@lists.research.att.com/msg00299.html
2021-04-10 14:17:12 +01:00
Johnothan King
5461f11968
Fix handling of '--posix' and '--default' (#265)
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/args.c: sh_argopts():
- Remove special-casing for --posix (see also data/builtins.c) and
  move the case -5: to the case ':' instead, so this option is
  handled like all other long options. This change fixes two bugs:
  1. 'set --posix' had no effect on the letoctal or braceexpand
     options. Reproducer:
       $ set --posix
       $ [[ -o braceexpand ]]; echo $?
       0
       $ [[ -o letoctal ]]; echo $?
       1
  2. 'ksh --posix' could not run scripts correctly because it
     wrongly enabled '-c'. Reproducer:
       $ ksh --posix < <(echo 'exit 0')
       ksh: -c requires argument
       Usage: ksh [--posix] [arg ...]
       Help: ksh [ --help | --man ] 2>&1
- Don't allow 'set --default' to unset the restricted option.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/options.sh:
- Add regression tests for the bugs described above, using -o posix
  and --posix.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/restricted.sh:
- Add a regression test for 'set --default' in rksh.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2021-04-09 23:26:07 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
cb67a01b45 lex.c: simplify fmttoken() by using the stack (re: 3255aed2)
Using the stack makes it impossible for future buffer overflows to
occur. It also simplifies fmttoken() by eliminating the need to
declare a local buffer and pass a pointer to that as an argument.

For info: man src/lib/libast/man/stak.3
2021-04-09 17:36:29 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
0538719e07 tests/basic.sh: fix embarrassing typo (re: 4a846a9d) 2021-04-09 04:06:54 +01:00
Johnothan King
504cbda269
Fix 'printf %T' ignoring the current locale in LC_TIME (#263)
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
2021-04-09 03:49:48 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
4a846a9d19 tests/basic.sh: ensure use of correct tmp directory 2021-04-09 03:28:05 +01:00
hyenias
3255aed2c4
lex.c: Fix buffer overflow in debug sh_lex and sh_syntax (#262)
fmttoken() needs a minimal char[4] token buffer passed to it.

Originally reported by: Jakub Wilk <jwilk@jwilk.net>
Original bug report: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=879464

The following code lines from fmttoken() yield a n=3 for SYMSEMI as
n=1 from the start, e.g. 'for <>;'.

        case SYMSEMI:
                if(tok[0]=='<')
                        tok[n++] = '>';
                sym = ';';
                break;
        default:
                sym = 0;
        }
        tok[n++] = sym;
}
tok[n] = 0;

n[0]='<'
n[1]='>'
n[2]=';'
n[3]=0 # <-- BUFFER overflow as the passed character buffers have a size of 3

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/lex.c:
- DBUG: sh_lex(): Adjust char tokstr[3] to char tokstr[4]
- sh_syntax(): Adjust char tokbuf[3] to char tokbuf[4]
2021-04-09 02:47:21 +01:00
Johnothan King
a065558291
Fix more compiler warnings, typos and other minor issues (#260)
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().
2021-04-08 19:58:07 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
ecf260c282 SHOPT_SPAWN: Fix 'not found' error message inconsistency
There's an annoying inconsistency in error messages if ksh is
compiled with SHOPT_SPAWN. One way to trigger it:

$ /usr/local/bin/ksh -c '/tmp/nonexistent'
/usr/local/bin/ksh: /tmp/nonexistent: not found
$ /usr/local/bin/ksh -c '/tmp/nonexistent; :'
/usr/local/bin/ksh: /tmp/nonexistent: not found [No such file or directory]

In the first variant, as an optimisation, ksh went straight to
exec'ing the command without forking first. In the second variant,
sh_ntfork() was used.

The first variant is done in path_exec(), path.c, line 1049:
	errormsg(SH_DICT,ERROR_exit(ERROR_NOENT),e_found,arg0);

The second one is in sh_ntfork(), xec.c, line 3654:
	errormsg(SH_DICT,ERROR_system(ERROR_NOENT),e_found+4);

In both cases, the e_found message is only used if errno==ENOENT,
so the extra '[No such file or directory]' message generated by
ERROR_system() is pointless as that will never change for that
message.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c: sh_ntfork():
- Use ERROR_exit() instead of ERROR_system() for the e_found
  message to avoid the superfluous addition.
2021-04-08 16:46:47 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
2e5b625915 Allow path-bound builtins on restricted shells
If a system administrator prefixes /opt/ast/bin to the path and
then invokes the shell in restricted mode, they clearly intend for
the user to run those AST utilities.

Similarly, if a system administrator sets a PATH for a restricted
shell that includes libraries listed in the .paths file, they must
have intended for the user to use those loadable built-ins, as they
will be associated with the pathnames of their respective
libraries. Since the user cannot change PATH or use the builtin
command, they still cannot load just any built-in they choose.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c:
- Remove SH_RESTRICTED check when handling path-bound builtins
  or dynamic libaries containining builtins in $PATH.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add test verifying a restricted user can use /opt/ast/bin/cat
  via a PATH search.

Progresses: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/138
2021-04-08 14:48:29 +01:00
Johnothan King
0cd8646361
Backport bugfix for BUG_CSUBSTDO from ksh93v- 2012-08-24 (#259)
This commit fixes BUG_CSUBSTDO, which could break stdout inside of
non-forking command substitutions. The breakage only occurred when
stdout was closed outside of the command substitution and a file
descriptor other than stdout was redirected in the command substitution
(such as stderr). Thanks to the ast-open-history repo, I was able to
identify and backport the bugfix from ksh93v- 2012-08-24.

This backport may fix other bugs as well. On 93v- 2012-08-24 it
fixed the regression below, though it was not triggered on 93u+(m).
  src/cmd/ksh93/tests/heredoc.sh
  487 print foo > $tmp/foofile 
  488 x=$( $SHELL 2> /dev/null 'read <<< $(<'"$tmp"'/foofile) 2> /dev/null;print -r "$REPLY"') 
  489 [[ $x == foo ]] || err_exit '<<< $(<file) not working' 

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/io.c: sh_open():
- If the just-opened file descriptor exists in sftable and is
  flagged with SF_STRING (as in non-forking command substitutions,
  among other situations), then move the file descriptor to a
  number >= 10.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Add a regression test for BUG_CSUBSTDO, adapted from the one in
  modernish.
2021-04-08 13:24:17 +01:00
Johnothan King
b2a7ec032f
Add LC_TIME to the supported locale variables (#257)
The current version of 93u+m does not have proper support for the
LC_TIME variable. Setting LC_TIME has no effect on printf %T, and
if the locale is invalid no error message is shown:
    $ LC_TIME=ja_JP.UTF-8
    $ printf '%T\n' now
    Wed Apr  7 15:18:13 PDT 2021
    $ LC_TIME=invalid.locale
    $ # No error message

src/cmd/ksh93/data/variables.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/variables.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- Add support for the $LC_TIME variable. ksh93v- attempted to add
  support for LC_TIME, but the patch from that version was extended
  because the variable still didn't function correctly.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh:
- Add LC_TIME to the regression tests for LC_* variables.
2021-04-08 13:06:22 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
3667aa4f71 Make readonly variables exportable again (re: 264ba48b)
$ /usr/local/bin/ksh -c 'readonly v=1; export v'
/usr/local/bin/ksh: export: v: is read only

Every POSIX shell (even zsh, as of 5.8) allows this. So did ksh,
until the referenced commit.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c: setall():
- Allow setting attributes on a readonly variable if any of
  NV_ASSIGN (== NV_NOFREE), NV_EXPORT or NV_RDONLY are the only
  flag bits that are set. This allows readonly, export, typeset -r,
  typeset -x, and typeset -rx on variable arguments without an
  assignment. Note that NV_ASSIGN is set for the first variable
  argument even though it is not an assignment, so we must allow
  it. The logic (or lack thereof) of that is yet to be worked out.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/readonly.sh:
- Tests.

Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/258
2021-04-08 06:40:25 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
d0a5cab1ab cleanup: remove another old and unused experiment
This experiment, the initialisation of which was disabled with '#if
0', defines a bunch of integer type commands as special builtins.
Most are boring as they define variables just like normal integers:
pid_t, size_t, etc.

One is interesting: mode_t is a type that automatically converts
from a octal permission bits (e.g. 755) to a mode string like
u+rwx,g+rw,o+rw. That's not a compelling enough use case to
permanently define a special and immutable builtin though.

stat_t is odd: it takes a file name as an argument and fills the
variable with stat information, but it is base64 encoded binary
data and there doesn't seem to be anything that can parse it.

Anyway, none of this is going to be enabled, so we should get rid.
2021-04-08 05:28:20 +01:00
Johnothan King
a28507e0b1
Apply new CentOS fix for strdup null-test bug (re: 7afb30e) (#255)
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.
2021-04-08 05:26:16 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
0e41899b3d INIT: add generic cc.linux wrapper
Renamed: src/cmd/INIT/cc.linux.i386 -> src/cmd/INIT/cc.linux

This ensures that architectures like ARM also use the default Linux
wrapper. This is needed because they may need -D_LARGEFILE64_SOURCE
to compile correctly.

On ARM processors, this fixes at least this regression:

	io.sh[243]: long seek not working

Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/253
2021-04-08 04:00:09 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
997ad43bbf Properly fix $LINENO crash on ARM (re: 23b7a163) and other bugs
The typecast fix was insufficient, avoiding the crash only when
compiling with optimisation disabled. The real problem is that
put_lineno() was passed a misaligned pointer, and that the value
didn't actually contain a double but a string. The bug occurred
when restoring the LINENO value upon exiting a virtual subshell.

Thanks to Harald van Dijk for figuring out the fix.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c: nv_restore():
- When restoring a special variable as defined by nv_cover(),
  do not pass either the np->nvflag bits or NV_NOFREE. Why?
  * The np->nvflag bits are not needed. They are also harmful
    because they may include the NV_INTEGER bit. This is set
    when the value is numeric. However, nv_getval() always
    returns the value in string form, converting it if it is
    numeric. So the NV_INTEGER flag should never be passed
    to nv_putval() when it uses the result of nv_getval().
  * According to nval.3, the NV_NOFREE flag stops nv_putval() from
    creating a copy of the value. But this should be unnecessary
    because the earlier _nv_unset(mp,NV_RDONLY|NV_CLONE) should
    ensure there is no previous value. In addition, the NV_NOFREE
    flag triggered another bug that caused the value of SECONDS to
    be corrupted upon restoring it when exiting a virtual subshell.
- When restoring a regular variable, copy the entire nvalue union
  and not just the 'cp' member. In practice this worked because
  no current member of the nvalue union is larger than a pointer.
  However, there is no guarantee it will stay that way.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Add disabled test for a memory leak that was discovered in the
  course of dealing with this bug. The fix doesn't introduce or
  influence it. It will have to be dealt with later.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/locale.sh:
- Add test for restoring locale on leaving virtual subshell.
  https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/253#issuecomment-815290154

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh:
- Test against corruption of SECONDS on leaving virtual subshell.
  https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/253#issuecomment-815191052

Co-authored-by: Harald van Dijk <harald@gigawatt.nl>
Progresses: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/253
2021-04-08 00:56:09 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
23b7a163f7 Fix implicit typecast mess in $LINENO discipline functions
On Ubuntu arm7, two variables.sh regression tests crashed with a
bus error (SIGBUS) in init.c on line 720 while testing $LINENO:

707 static void put_lineno(Namval_t* np,const char *val,int flags,Namfun_t *fp)
708 {
709	register long n;
710	Shell_t *shp = sh_getinterp();
711	if(!val)
712	{
713		fp = nv_stack(np, NIL(Namfun_t*));
714		if(fp && !fp->nofree)
715			free((void*)fp);
716		_nv_unset(np,NV_RDONLY);
717		return;
718	}
719	if(flags&NV_INTEGER)
720		n = *(double*)val;
721	else
722		n = sh_arith(shp,val);
723	shp->st.firstline += nget_lineno(np,fp)+1-n;
724 }

Apparently, gcc on arm7 doesn't like the implicit typecast from
double to long.

Those three $LINENO discipline functions are generally a mess of
implicit typecasts between Sfdouble_t, double, long and int.

Line numbers are internally stored as int. The discipline functions
need to use Sfdouble_t for API compatibility.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c: nget_lineno(), put_lineno(), get_lineno():
- Get rid of unnecessary implicit typecasts by adjusting the types
  of local variables.
- Make the typecasts that are done explicit.

Progresses: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/253
2021-04-07 15:53:23 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
6b9a668f98 package: fix detection of 64-bit architectures
On some systems (such as Ubuntu on ARM), the output of `file`
contains a build hash, such as:

    SomeExecutable: ELF 32-bit LSB shared object, ARM, EABI5
    version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, interpreter
    /lib/ld-linux-armhf.so.3, for GNU/Linux 3.2.0,
    BuildID[sha1]=8934dd61657aac875c190535066466849687a56b,
    not stripped

This build hash can contain the string '64', which caused package
to wrongly detect a 64-bit architecture.

bin/package, src/cmd/INIT/package.sh:
- Export LC_ALL=C to ensure 'file' output in English.
- To detect a 64-bit architecture, require the string "64-bit", "64
  bit" or "64bit" in 'file' output. The letters 'i' and 't' cannot
  occur in a hexadecimal hash, so hopefully that is safe enough. It
  is impossible to make this method completely safe, so in the long
  term it should be replaced.

Progresses: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/253
2021-04-07 01:28:17 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
6b9703ffdd Backport bugfixes for arrays of 'enum' types from ksh 93v- beta
These fixes are applied rather blindly as no one has yet managed to
understand the almost entirely uncommented arrays and variables
handling code (arrays.c, name.c, nvdisc.c, nvtree.c, nvtype.c).
Hopefully we'll figure all that out at some point. In the meantime
these backported fixes appear to work fine, and these bugs impact
the usability of 'enum', so I'm just going to have to violate my
own policy and backport these fixes without understanding them.
Thanks to @JohnoKing for putting in a lot of work tracing these.

Further discussion at: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/87

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/array.c:
- nv_arraysettype():
  * Further simplify the function. After my initial simplification
    of it (re: 5491fe97), I don't believe there's actually a need
    to save a duplicate copy of the value. Use the pointer returned
    by nv_getval() directly to restore the value.
  * Cope with a null value (nv_getval() returning a NULL pointer).
    This is needed for compatibility with the backported fix in
    nvtype.c (below).
- array_putval(): If the array's value pointer (up->cp) is a
  pointer to the empty string, it is set to NULL before calling
  nv_putv() to prevent an empty string from being deleted. Backport
  a fix from 93v- that restores the pointer to the empty string if
  the NV_NOFREE attribute is set. Removing it somehow causes these
  regressions:
	enum.sh[86]: ${array[@]} doesn't yield all values for
	associative enum arrays (expected 'green blue blue red
	yellow green red orange'; got 'green blue blue  yellow
	green  orange')
	enum.sh[94]: unsetting associative enum array does not work
	(got 'Color_t -A Colors=([foo]=red [rood]=red)')
	enum.sh[116]: assigning first enum element to indexed array
	failed (expected 'red red'; got 'BUG BUG')
- nv_associative(): Do not increase the 'nelem' (number of
  elements) value of the array's 'header' struct if the array is
  associative and of an enum type. The original 93v- fix only
  checked for the NV_INTEGER attribute, but backporting that caused
  several regressions. Using a debug output command I've determined
  that the exact value of 'type' is somehow consistently set to
  0x26 if the array is associative and of an enum type, which is
  NV_INTEGER | NV_LTOU | NV_RJUST as defined in include/nval.h. I
  cannot find where/how that value is determined. In any case this
  fix, based on but more specific than the 93v- one, appears to
  work fine. Removing it somehow causes this regression:
	enum.sh[94]: unsetting associative enum array does not work
	(got 'Color_t -A Colors=()')

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvtype.c: nv_settype():
- Another fix backported from 93v-. If the variable is an array,
  also set the type of element 0 of that array using a call to
  nv_arraysettype(). The value may be null. Removing this somehow
  causes this regression:
	enum.sh[94]: unsetting associative enum array does not work
	(got 'Color_t -A Colors=()')

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/enum.sh:
- Add tests for all the bugs fixed here, plus some hypothetical
  bugs (e.g., do the same tests for indexed enum type arrays as for
  associative enum type arrays, even though indexed enum type
  arrays didn't have all the same problems).

Co-authored-by: Johnothan King <johnothanking@protonmail.com>
Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/87
2021-04-06 06:33:32 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
db2b1affdf Fix unsetting array element after expanding array subscript range
Simple reproducer:
set -A arr a b c d; : ${arr[1..2]}; unset arr[1]; echo ${arr[@]}

Output:
a

Expected output:
a c d

The ${arr[1..2]} expansion broke the subsequent 'unset' command
so that it unsets element 1 and on, instead of only 1.

This regression was introduced in nv_endsubscript() on 2009-07-31:
https://github.com/ksh93/ast-open-history/commit/c47896b4/src/cmd/ksh93/sh/array.c

That change checks for the ARRAY_SCAN attribute which enables
processing ranges of array elements instead of single array
elements, and restores it after. That restore is evidently not
correct as it causes the subsequent unset command to malfunction.

If we revert that change, the bug disappears and the regression
tests show no failures. However, I don't know what this was meant
to accomplish and what other bug we might introduce by reverting
this. However, no corresponding regression test was added along
with the 2009-07-31 change, nor is there any corresponding message
in the changelog. So this looks to be one of those mystery changes
that we'll never know the reason for.

Since we currently have proof that this change causes breakage and
no evidence that it fixes anything, I'll go ahead and revert it
(and add a regression test, of course). If that causes another
regression, hopefully someone will find it at some point.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/array.c: nv_endsubscript():
- Revert the 2009-07-31 change that saves/restores the ARRAY_SCAN
  attribute.
- Keep the 'ap' pointer as it is now used by newer code. Move the
  declaration up to the beginning of the block, as is customary.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- Cosmetic change: remove an unused array_scan() macro that I found
  when grepping the code for ARRAY_SCAN. The macro was introduced
  in version 2001-06-01 but the code that used it was replaced in
  version 2001-07-04, without removing the macro itself.

Resolves: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/254
2021-04-05 22:16:57 +01:00
Johnothan King
56b530c433
Fix bell character handling when redrawing command line (#250)
To set a window title in bash and zsh, the $PS1 prompt can be set
with the title placed between $'\E]0;' and $'\a':

set -o emacs    # Or vi mode
typeset -A fmt=(
        [start_title]=$'\E]0;'
        [end_title]=$'\a'
)
PS1="${fmt[start_title]}$(hostname): $(uname)${fmt[end_title]}\$ "

This also works in ksh unless the shell receives SIGWINCH. With a
$PS1 that sets a window title, the prompt breaks until two
interrupts are received. This is caused by ed_setup() skipping
$'\a' (the bell character) when setting up the e_prompt buffer
which is an edited version of the final line of the PS1 prompt for
use when redrawing the command line.

One fix would be to avoid cutting out the bell character. But if
the prompt contains a bell, we only want the terminal to beep when
a new prompt is printed, and not upon refreshing the command line,
e.g. when receiving SIGWINCH or pressing Ctrl+L.

To avoid the problem, this commit adds code that cuts out sequences
of the form ESC ] <number> ; <text> BELL from the prompt redraw
buffer altogether. They are not needed there because these
sequences will already have taken effect when the full prompt was
printed by io_prompt().

This commit also adds a tweak that should improve the recognition
of other escape sequences to count their length.

src/cmd/ksh93/edit/edit.c: ed_setup():
- When preparing the e_prompt buffer, cut out dtterm/xterm
  Operating System Commands that set window/icon title, etc.
  See: https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html
- When counting the length of escape sequences in that part of PS1,
  try to recognize some more types of sequences. These changes are
  part of a ksh2020 patch: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/399

src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Document that any '!' in escape sequences in the PS1 prompt needs
  to be changed to '!!'. To avoid breaking compatibility, this
  requirement is documented instead of backporting the changes to
  io_prompt() from https://github.com/att/ast/issues/399 which try
  to remove that requirement for specific escape sequences.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2021-04-05 08:06:53 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
ee34a96b8f tests/pty.sh: try to fix another intermittent GitHub CI fail 2021-04-05 07:42:12 +01:00
hyenias
264ba48bdd
Hardening of readonly variables (#239)
Ksh currently restricts readonly scalar variables from having their
values directly changed via a value assignment. However, since ksh
allows variable attributes to be altered, the variable's value can
be indirectly altered. For instance, if TMOUT=900 (for a 15 minute
idle timeout) was set to readonly, all that is needed to alter the
value of TMOUT from 900 to 0 is to issue 'typeset -R1 TMOUT',
perhaps followed by a 'typeset -i TMOUT' to turn off the shell's
timeout value.

In addition, there are problems with arrays. The following is
incorrectly allowed:

        typeset -a arr=((a b c) 1)
        readonly arr
        arr[0][1]=d

        arr=(alphas=(a b c);name=x)
        readonly arr.alphas
        arr.alphas[1]=([b]=5)

        arr=(alphas=(a b c);name=x)
        readonly arr.alphas
        arr.alphas[1]=(b)

        typeset -C arr=(typeset -r -a alphas=(a b c);name=x)
        arr.alphas[1]=()

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c: setall():
- Relocate readonly attribute check higher up the code and widen
  its application to issue an error message if the pre-existing
  name-pair has the readonly bit flag set.
- To avoid compatibility problems, don't check for readonly if
  NV_RDONLY is the only attribute set (ignoring NV_NOFREE). This
  allows 'readonly foo; readonly foo' to keep working.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/array.c: nv_endsubscript():
- Apply a readonly flag check when an array subscript or append
  assignment occurs, but allow type variables (typeset -T) as they
  utilize '-r' for 'required' sub-variables.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/readonly.sh:
- New file. Create readonly tests that validate the warning message
  and validate that the readonly variable did not change.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/streval.c:
- Bump MAXLEVEL from 9 to 1024 as a workaround for arithmetic
  expansion, avoiding a spurious error about too much recursion
  when the readonly.sh tests are run. This change is backported
  from ksh 93v-.
  TODO: debug a spurious increase in arithmetic recursion level
  variable when readonly.sh tests with 'typeset -i' are run.
  That is a different bug for a different commit.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2021-04-05 06:43:19 +01:00
Johnothan King
c4f980eb29
Introduce usage of __builtin_unreachable() and noreturn (#248)
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>
2021-04-05 00:28:24 +01:00
Johnothan King
56913f8c2a
Fix bugs related to 'uname -d' in the 'uname' builtin (#251)
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'.
2021-04-04 22:18:43 +01:00
Johnothan King
ca2443b58c
cd - shouldn't ignore $OLDPWD when in a new scope (#249)
This bug was first reported at <https://github.com/att/ast/issues/8>.
The 'cd' command currently takes the value of $OLDPWD from the
wrong scope. In the following example 'cd -' will change the
directory to /bin instead of /tmp:

    $ OLDPWD=/bin ksh93 -c 'OLDPWD=/tmp cd -'
    /bin

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/cd_pwd.c:
- Use sh_scoped() to obtain the correct value of $OLDPWD.
- Fix a use-after-free bug. Make the 'oldpwd' variable a static
  char that points to freeable memory. Each time cd is used, this
  variable is freed if it points to a freeable memory address and
  isn't also a pointer to shp->pwd.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: path_pwd():
- Simplify and add comments.
- Scope $PWD properly.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Backport the ksh2020 regression tests for 'cd -' when $OLDPWD is
  set.
- Add test for $OLDPWD and $PWD after subshare.
- Add test for $PWD after 'cd'.
- Add test for possible memory leak.
- Add testing for 'unset' on OLDPWD and PWD.

src/cmd/ksh93/COMPATIBILITY:
- Add compatibility note about changes to $PWD and $OLDPWD.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2021-04-02 01:19:19 +01:00
Johnothan King
ed478ab7e3
Fix many GCC -Wimplicit-fallthrough warnings (#243)
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.
2021-03-30 21:49:20 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
f30da49564 tests/array2.sh: fix broken tests 2021-03-30 15:38:29 +01:00
Johnothan King
f66a10a8c3
tests/variables.sh: Fix locale tests (#247)
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh: LC_* error tests:
- Since operating systems validate locale strings differently,
  try a few different bad locale strings to find one that makes
  setlocale(2) fail, fixing test failures on OpenBSD and Debian.
- Restore warning removed in aed5c6d7, issuing it if none of the
  bad locale strings produce a diagnostic.
- Reenable test for diagnostic message disabled in aed5c6d7.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2021-03-30 14:53:08 +01:00
Johnothan King
113a9392ff
Fix vi mode crashes when going back one word (#246)
This bug was originally reported at <https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1467>.
A crash can occur when using the 'b' or 'B' vi mode commands to go back
one word. I was able to reproduce these crashes with 100% consistency on
an OpenBSD virtual machine when ksh is compiled with -D_std_malloc.
Reproducer:
    $ set -o vi
    $ asdf <ESC> <b or B>

The fix is based on Matthew DeVore's analysis:
> I suspect this is caused by this line:
>> while (vi_isalph(tcur_virt) && tcur_virt >= first_virt) --tcur_virt;
> which is in the b codepath. It checks vi_isalph(tcur_virt) before checking
> if tcur_virt is in range. These two clauses should be reversed. Note that
> line 316 is a similar check for pressing B, and there the tcur_virt value
> is checked first.

src/cmd/ksh93/edit/vi.c:
- Check tcur_virt before using isalph() or isblank() to fix both crashes.
  At the start of the backword() while loop this check was performed
  twice, so the redundant check has been removed.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Add a regression test for the b, B, w and W editor commands.
2021-03-30 11:25:20 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
f8de1f111d Fix compiler warnings and regression test failure (re: fc2d5a60)
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/test.c:
- Fix the following compiler warnings from clang:
  test.c:554:11: warning: assigning to 'char *' from 'const char []'
  discards qualifiers
  [-Wincompatible-pointer-types-discards-qualifiers]
                                e_msg = e_badop;
                                      ^ ~~~~~~~
  test.c:556:11: warning: assigning to 'char *' from 'const char []'
  discards qualifiers
  [-Wincompatible-pointer-types-discards-qualifiers]
                                e_msg = e_unsupported_op;
                                      ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  test.c:560:1: warning: control may reach end of non-void function
  [-Wreturn-type]

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Fix regression test by updating error message text.
2021-03-27 22:30:14 +00:00
Johnothan King
fc2d5a6019
test foo =~ foo should fail with exit status 2 (#245)
When test is passed the '=~' operator, it will silently fail with
exit status 1:
    $ test foo =~ foo; echo $?
    1
This bug is caused by test_binop reaching the 'NOTREACHED' area of
code. The bugfix was adapted from ksh2020:
https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1152

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/test.c: test_binop():
- Error out with a message suggesting usage of '[[ ... ]]' if '=~'
  is passed to the test builtin.
- Special-case TEST_END (']]') as that is not really an operator.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2021-03-27 21:51:16 +00:00
Johnothan King
767d23b3fe
Fix FreeBSD timezone name determination again (re: 9f43f8d1, d7c94707) (#244)
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).
2021-03-26 19:36:13 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
b4dba2ea62 tests/sigchld.sh: try to fix intermittent CI fail (re: 712261c8)
Every so often, a commit's GitHub CI run throws the following
regression test failure:

    sigchld.sh[57]: expected '2 background' -- got '3' (DELAY=0.02)

When I re-run the job, the failure usually goes away.

In 712261c8 the DELAY variable was changed from 0.2 to 0.02 to
speed up the first SIGCHLD test. It's possible the GitHub CI
runners are just too slow or too heavily loaded for that.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/sigchld.sh:
- Restore 0.2 value for 'float DELAY'.
2021-03-25 02:47:17 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
181e87d228 Update #include-related dependencies in Mamfiles
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.
2021-03-25 01:55:59 +00:00
Johnothan King
4c7c5803bd
Add NOECHOE and TEST_L to the list of SHOPT options (#242)
src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/print.c:
- Rename the unlisted and misleadingly named SHOPT_ECHOE option
  (which disables, not enables, 'echo -e') to SHOPT_NOECHOE.

src/cmd/ksh93/SHOPT.sh:
- Add the SHOPT_NOECHOE and SHOPT_TEST_L compile time options to
  the list of SHOPT options. Since there is a probe for TEST_L,
  set it to probe (empty) by default. NOECHE is off by default.

src/cmd/ksh93/features/options:
- Small bugfix: Allow SHOPT_TEST_L to be manually enabled on
  systems that don't support '$(whence -p test) -l /foo'.
- Add a comment describing the SHOPT_MULTIBYTE feature test and
  separate it from the SHOPT_DEVFD test.
2021-03-24 20:14:17 +00:00
Johnothan King
f361d6ed3f
bltins/enum.c: Fix integer truncation in put_enum (#241)
This bugfix comes from <https://github.com/att/ast/pull/711>.
Eric Scrivner provided the following explanation for the fix:

> Coverity identified an issue with integer truncation in
> `put_enum`. The function was truncating the return values of
> `strcasecmp` and `strcmp` from an `int` to an `unsigned short`
> when assigning them to the local variable `n`. Since either of
> these methods can return a value that is not in the set `{0, 1,
> -1}` the later check if `n == 0` could spuriously evaluate to
> true. For example, in the case where either function returned
> `-65536`.

> The fix is simply to change `n` from an `unsigned short` to an
> `int` to avoid the possibility of truncation. Since the only
> purpose of `n` is the store the return values of these checks,
> this does not have any side effects.
2021-03-24 08:25:04 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
21d591dbd8 parse.c: rm overlooked SHOPT_BASH stuff (re: 921bbcae)
That bit of code supported bash's redundant 'function foo()'
function declaration syntax (with both the 'function' keyword
and the '()') which is a syntax error on ksh, as it should be.
2021-03-23 20:03:18 +00:00
Johnothan King
22e044c339
Fix compile when using tcc >0.9.27 (#238)
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
2021-03-23 14:46:58 +00:00
Johnothan King
ca3ec2000c
Linux bugfixes for globcasedetect (re: 71934570) (#240)
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.
2021-03-23 13:59:02 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
bd38c8049d shtests: make aliases work again for shcomp tests (re: aed5c6d7)
Moving the 'err_exit' and 'warning' alias definitions in the
regression tests to one _common file introduced a bug: they are no
longer expanded at compile time when the tests are run with shcomp,
resulting in a 'command not found' (at best) on trying to execute
one. shcomp requires that the alias definitions need to be present
in the file itself. But that means maintaining 50-odd copies again.
I'd rather add a hack to shtests to avoid this.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtests:
- Before running a test with shcomp, physically concatenate _common
  and the test script together into a temporary file, minus the '.'
  command that includes _common, and compile that with shcomp.
2021-03-23 03:49:32 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
88d7a62b4d cleanup: fix redundant NOT_USED macro redefinition (re: 733f70e9)
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.
2021-03-23 02:44:01 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
9ee82b83e0 globcasedetect: add Cygwin note to COMPATIBILITY (re: 71934570)
Ref.: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/commit/71934570#commitcomment-48574903
2021-03-23 00:33:27 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
af07bb6aa3 globcasedetect: add 'set --man' self-doc (re: 71934570) 2021-03-22 19:42:08 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
71934570bf Add --globcasedetect shell option for globbing and completion
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.
2021-03-22 18:45:19 +00:00
Martijn Dekker
71bfe0283d libast: consolidate errno ID fallbacks into error.h
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.
2021-03-22 14:55:16 +00:00
Johnothan King
814b5c6890
Fix various minor problems and update the documentation (#237)
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.
2021-03-21 14:39:03 +00:00
Johnothan King
2d7e9a0d6d
Fix the CI build by removing _c99_in_the_wild code (re: 38f2b94f) (#236)
src/lib/libast/sfio/sfcvt.c:
- The C99 code formerly behind '#if _c99_in_the_wild' broke the CI
  build:
  https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/runs/2158627969 (failing build)
  https://github.com/JohnoKing/ksh/runs/2158860590 (build after revert)
  Since this code wasn't used before that commit, it has been removed
  to fix the CI build.
2021-03-21 12:53:19 +00:00