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Author SHA1 Message Date
Johnothan King
69720a5576
Fix a few cases of missing CCFLAGS and LDFLAGS (#96)
src/*/*/Mamfile,
src/lib/libast/Makefile:
- There were a few instances where the CCFLAGS and LDFLAGS were missing
  in the Mamfiles and a Makefile. This commit fixes the problem by merging
  the changes from Debian's blhc.diff patch:
  f8fea737c9/debian/patches/blhc.diff
2020-07-27 10:10:19 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
6f50ff6497 disable 'vmstate' builtin when using system's malloc(3)
Related discussion:
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/95#issuecomment-664010969

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- When ksh is compiled to use the system's malloc(3) instead of AST
  vmalloc(3), the vmstate builtin returns either nothing or zero.
  Detect this as a regression test failure and refuse to run tests.
- Tweak iterations. Tests don't need 500 or 1000 runs for vmstate.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Do not compile in vmstate builtin when using system's malloc(3).
2020-07-26 20:39:22 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
a2f13c19f2 Fix typeset attributes -a, -A, -l, -u leaking out of subshells
If an array or upper/lowercase variable was declared with a null
initial value within a virtual/non-forked subshell, like:
	( typeset -a foo; ... )
	( typeset -A foo; ... )
	( typeset -l foo; ... )
	( typeset -u foo; ... )
then the type declaration leaked out of the subshell into the
parent shell environment, though without any values that may
subsequently have been assigned.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c: setall():
- When deciding whether to create a virtual subshell scope for a
  variable, use sh_assignok(), which was actually designed for the
  purpose, instead of _nv_unset(). This allows getting rid of a
  tangled mess of special-casing that never worked quite right.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/arrays.sh:
- Add regression tests checking that array declarations don't leak
  out of virtual subshells.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/attributes.sh:
- Add regression tests for combining the 'export' and 'readonly'
  attributes with every other possible typeset attribute on unset
  variables. This also includes a subshell leak test for each one.

Fixes: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/88
2020-07-26 02:41:12 +01:00
Johnothan King
1bc2c74c74
Fix how unrecognized options are handled in 'sleep' and 'suspend' (#93)
When a builtin is given an unrecognized option, the usage information
for that builtin should be shown as 'Usage: builtin-name options'. The
sleep and suspend builtins were an exception to this. 'suspend' would
not show usage information and sleep wouldn't exit on error:

$ suspend -e
/usr/bin/ksh: suspend: -e: unknown option
$ time sleep -e 1
sleep: -e: unknown option

real	0m1.00s
user	0m0.00s
sys	0m0.00s

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/sleep.c:
- Show usage information and exit when sleep is given an unknown
  option. This bugfix was backported from ksh2020: https://github.com/att/ast/pull/1024

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/trap.c:
- Use the normal method of parsing options with optget to fix the
  suspend builtin's test failure.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add the ksh2020 regression test for getting the usage information
  of each builtin. Enable all /opt/ast/bin builtins in a subshell
  since those should be tested as well (aside from getconf and uname
  because those builtins fallback to the real commands on error).
2020-07-26 02:18:49 +01:00
Johnothan King
8b5f11dcd7
Add support for multibyte characters to $IFS (#92)
Add support for multibyte characters to $IFS

This commit fixes BUG_MULTIBIFS, which had two bug reports in the ksh2020 branch.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/macro.c:
- Backport Eric Scrivner's fix for multibyte IFS characters (slightly modified
  for compatibility with C89). Explanation from https://github.com/att/ast/pull/737:

  Previously, the varsub method used for the macro expansion of $param, ${param},
  and ${param op word} would incorrectly expand the internal field separator (IFS)
  if it was a multibyte character. This was due to truncation based on the
  incorrect assumption that the IFS would never be larger than a single byte.

  This change fixes this issue by carefully tracking the number of bytes that
  should be persisted in the IFS case and ensuring that all bytes are written
  during expansion and substitution.

  Bug report: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/13

- Fixed another bug that caused multibyte characters with the same initial byte
  to be treated as the same character by the IFS. This bug was occurring because
  the first byte of a multibyte character wasn't being written to the stack when
  the IFS delimiter had the same initial byte:

  $ IFS=£
  $ v='§'
  $ set -- $v
  $ v="${1-}"
  $ echo "$v" | hd # The first byte should be c2, but it isn't due to the bug
  00000000  a7 0a                                             |..|
  00000002

  Bug report: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1372

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh:
- Add (reworked) regression tests from ksh2020 for the multibyte IFS bugs.
- Add a regression test for att/ast#1372 based on the reproducer.
2020-07-25 19:46:11 +01:00
Johnothan King
8c16f38a88
Fix an infinite loop related to $_ if ksh is /bin/sh (#90)
The following explanation is mostly taken from Tomas Klacko's report on
the old mailing list (which also contains a C program reproducer) [*]:

1. When ksh starts a binary, it sets its environment variable "_"
   to "*number*/path/to/binary". Where "number" is the pid of the
   ksh process.

2. The binary forks and the child executes a suid root shell script
   which begins with #!/bin/sh. For this bug to occur, ksh must be /bin/sh.

3. The ksh process interpreting the suid shell script leaves the "_"
   variable as not set (nv_getval(L_ARGNOD) returns NULL) because
   the "number" from step 1 is not the pid of its parent process.

4-5. Because "_" is not set and the script is suid root, an infinite
   loop occurs because when the SHELL environment variable contains
   "/bin/sh" pathshell() returns "/bin/sh". This becomes an infinite
   loop of /bin/sh /dev/fd/3 executing /bin/sh /dev/fd/3.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c: get_lastarg():
- Disable the check for if the "number" refers to the process id of
  the parent process.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/main.c: sh_main():
- Prevent an infinite loop when '$_' is not passed in from the environment.

Solaris applies this bugfix to their version of ksh:
https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland/blob/master/components/ksh93/patches/190-17432413.patch

[*]: https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01680.html
2020-07-24 01:20:26 +01:00
Johnothan King
6e515f1d45
Fix command substitutions run on the same line as a here-doc (#91)
When a command substitution is run on the same line as a here-document,
a syntax error occurs due to a regression introduced in ksh93u+ 2011-04-15:

true << EOF; true $(true)
EOF
syntax error at line 1: `<<EOF' here-document not contained within command substitution

The regression is caused by an error check that was added to make
the following script causes a syntax error (because the here-document
isn't completed inside of the command substitution):

$(true << EOF)
EOF

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/lex.c:
- Only throw an error when a here-document in a command substitution
  isn't completed inside of the command substitution.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/heredoc.sh:
- Add a regression test for running a command substitution on the
  same line as a here-document.
- Add a missed regression test for using here-documents in command
  substitutions. This is the original bug that was fixed in ksh93u+
  2011-04-15 (it is why the error message was added), but a regression
  test for here-documents in command substitutions wasn't added in
  that version.

This bugfix was backported from ksh93v- 2013-10-10-alpha.
2020-07-24 00:03:57 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
f207cd5787 Fix race conditions running external commands with job control on
When ksh is compiled with SHOPT_SPAWN (the default), which uses
posix_spawn(3) or vfork(2) (via sh_ntfork()) to launch external
commands, at least two race conditions occur when launching
external commands while job control is active. See:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ksh/+bug/1887863/comments/3
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@research.att.com/msg00717.html

The basic issue is that this performance optimisation is
incompatible with job control, because it uses a spawning mechanism
that doesn't copy the parent process' memory pages into the child
process, therefore no state that involves memory can be set before
exec-ing the external program. This makes it impossible to
correctly set the terminal's process group ID in the child process,
something that is essential for job control to work.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- Use sh_fork() instead of sh_ntfork() if job control is active.
  This uses fork(2), which is 30%-ish slower on most sytems, but
  allows for correctly setting the terminal process group.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/basic.sh:
- Add regression test for the race condition reported in #79.

src/cmd/INIT/cc.darwin:
- Remove hardcoded flag to disable SHOPT_SPAWN on the Mac.
  It should be safe to use now.

Fixes https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/79
2020-07-22 13:45:33 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
4e5f24e38c sh/xec.c: remove inactive and broken SHOPT_AMP code
This code has always been completely undocumented since it was
added sometime between 2002 and 2004[*]. No one (including Google)
knows what it's for and no one is likely to find out.

Not only that, it doesn't compile. If SHOPT_AMP is defined, then it
errors out on an undefined function `print_fun` and an undefined
member `shpath` of 'struct Shell_s'. So it's clear that the code
had been abandoned by its authors for some time as of 2012.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- Remove vestigial SHOPT_AMP stuff, whatever that was.

[*] Found out by searching multishell ksh93 repo:
    https://github.com/multishell/ksh93/
2020-07-22 13:38:34 +01:00
Johnothan King
e2d1b593ac
Merge dtksh patches from one of the CDE developers (#85)
This merges some fixes to support building dtksh with -DBUILD_DTKSH.
These patches were sent through private email from the CDE developer
Chase. The reason these patches were submitted is because Chase wishes
to include ksh in CDE as an up-to-date git submodule. Quote from Chase:
"... my priority is to get your new version into our code as a git
 submodule, and do it quickly before our code bases differ too widely."

Link to CDE project for anyone interested:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/cdesktopenv/

Although the patches were privately discussed, there are some public
emails on the CDE mailing list (links shortened due to long URLs):
ksh-chaos thread:   https://bit.ly/3hjJ83b
dtksh alias thread: https://bit.ly/3hkzKfJ

The main fix is for suid_exec, which is now told that /usr/dt is a
valid directory to run from via preprocessor flags. A patch for
Shift-JIS was also submitted, but it isn't in this commit because it
isn't an effective fix for the existing Shift-JIS bugs. I will be
giving that patch some more testing.

From: Chase <nicetrynsa@protonmail.ch>
Co-authored by: Johnothan King <johnothanking@protonmail.com>
2020-07-22 06:44:24 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
88e8fa67c6 Avoid crash due to broken optimisation in job locking [OpenSUSE]
This applies ksh93-jobs.dif from OpenSUSE. Source:
https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/openSUSE:Leap:42.3:Update/ksh

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/jobs.c:
- jog_init(): Save errno in case close(JOBTTY) fails. If cause of
  failure was interruption by a signal (EINTR), repeat close.
- job_kill(): Replace Red Hat fix for #35 with nicer OpenSUSE fix
  that doesn't add a goto before declaring variables. Re: ff358f34
2020-07-22 05:01:21 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
db72f41f4b Fix subshell file descriptor leak
A file descriptor (at least 3, can't reproduce for 4 and up) opened
with 'exec' or 'redirect' in a virtual/non-forked subshell survived
that subshell after exiting it:

    $ ksh -c '(redirect 3>&1); echo bug >&3'
    bug

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/io.c:
- Apply a patch from OpenSUSE (ksh93-redirectleak.dif). Source:
  https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/openSUSE:Leap:42.3:Update/ksh

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Add regression test.

Thanks to Marc Wilson for flagging this up.
2020-07-21 04:12:40 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
0c96f9749b tests/subshell.sh: fix a test for systems without /dev/fd/*
ksh's built-in test, [ and [[ commands treat /dev/fd/* specially:
e.g. 'test /dev/fd/0' returns true even if it doesn't physically
exist, as on e.g. HP-UX. However, external commands need it to
exist physically.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/subshell.sh:
- To decide whether to run a test with 'tee', use external 'test'
  command to check if /dev/stdout and /dev/fd/1 actually exist.
2020-07-21 01:12:15 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
bc8b36faba whence -a/type -a: report both function and built-in by same name
'whence -a' is documented to list all possible interpretations of a
command, but failed to list a built-in command if a shell function
by the same name exists or is marked undefined using 'autoload'.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/whence.c: whence():
- Refactor and separate the code for reporting functions and
  built-in commands so that both can be reported for one name.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c: sh_optwhence[]:
- Correct 'whence --man' to document that:
  * 'type' is equivalent to 'whence -v'
  * '-a' output is like '-v'

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Test 'whence -a' with these combinations:
  * a function, built-in and external command
  * an undefined/autoload function, built-in and external command

Fixes https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/83
2020-07-20 21:16:24 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
01c25cb14b whence -a: fix spurious 'undefined function' message
$ ksh -c 'whence -a printf'
	printf is a shell builtin
	printf is /usr/bin/printf
	printf is an undefined function

The third line should not appear.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/whence.c:
- Remove faulty extra check for undefined (= autoload) functions.
  This was already handled earlier, on lines 192-193.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add regression test.
- For previous 'whence -a' test, don't bother with shell function.

Fixes https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/26
2020-07-20 17:03:04 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
b2bdbef561 ksh -i: only print newline on EOF if really interactive
Some regression tests have to be run with the -i option, making the
shell behave (mostly) as if it is interactive. This causes ksh to
print a final newline upon EOF (Ctrl+D). This is functional if the
shell is really interactive, i.e. if standard input is on a
terminal and we're not running a shell script: it ensures that a
parent shell's prompt appears on a new line. But for tests like
   ksh -i -c 'testcommands'
or
   ksh -i <<EOF
   testcommands
   EOF
it's a minor annoyance. Adding an explicit 'exit' is an effective
workaround, but we might as well fix it.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/main.c: exfile(): done:
- If shell is "interactive", only print final newline if standard
  input is on a terminal and we're not running a -c script.
2020-07-20 16:29:43 +01:00
Johnothan King
bd88cc7f4f
Fix two crashes related to kshdb (#82)
This commit fixes two different crashes related to kshdb:
- When redirect is given an invalid file descriptor, a segfault
  no longer occurs. Reproducer:
  $ ksh -c 'redirect 9>&200000000000'

- Fix a crash due to free(3) being used on an invalid pointer.
  This can be reproduced with kshdb (commands from att/ast#582):
  $ git clone https://github.com/rocky/kshdb.git
  $ cd kshdb
  $ ksh autogen.sh
  $ echo "print hi there" > $HOME/.kshdbrc
  $ ./kshdb -L . test/example/dbg-test1.sh

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/misc.c: b_dot_cmd():
- The string pointed to by shp->st.filename must be able to be
  freed from memory with free(3), so duplicate the string with
  strdup(3).

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/io.c: sh_redirect():
- Show an error message when a file descriptor is invalid to
  fix a memory fault.
2020-07-19 23:42:12 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
36f55f1f85 bltins/whence.c: Revert accidentally included test (re: 3613da42)
Some temp debug code that tests a possible fix for #26 accidentally
snuck in to a completely unrelated commit. Sorry about that.
2020-07-19 06:42:53 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
e9c7ac70a7 remove unused 'is an exported alias' message (re: 80d9ae2b)
Commit 80d9ae2b removed the line that set the NV_EXPORT flag on an
alias when the obsolete ksh88 'alias -x' option was used. But it
turns out that flag actually did something: it caused 'whence -v'
to report the alias as an exported alias -- misleadingly, because
exported aliases have never actually exised in ksh93. Since '-x' no
longer sets that flag, that message is never printed.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/msg.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/path.h:
- Remove is_xalias[] = "%s is an exported alias for " message.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/whence.c:
- Remove dead code to check for (formerly) exported alias.
2020-07-19 06:21:14 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
5521c39a9b src/cmd/INIT/cc.darwin*: remove optimisation hacks (re: 37a9c345) 2020-07-17 22:26:51 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
37a9c34515 Optimise for small code by default
My tests with running shbench[*] on ksh binaries compiled by clang
and gcc yielded no performance difference between compiling with
'-O2' and '-Os'. So we might as well reduce ksh's size and memory
footprint by default.

[*] http://fossil.0branch.com/csb/
    https://github.com/ksh-community/shbench

src/cmd/INIT/make.probe:
- Change default gcc optimisation level from -O2 to -Os.
- Change default non-gcc optimisation level from -O to -Os.
2020-07-17 21:52:50 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
3613da4240 Remove unused libcoshell
The coshell(1) command, which is required for libcoshell to be
useful, is not known to be shipped by any distribution. It was
removed by the ksh-community fork and hence also by 93u+m (in
2940b3f5). The coshell facility as a whole is obsolete and
insecure. For a long time now, the statically linked libcoshell
library has been 40+ kilobytes of dead weight in the ksh binary.

Prior discussion (ksh2020): https://github.com/att/ast/issues/619

src/lib/libcoshell/*:
- Removed.

src/cmd/ksh93/*:
- Remove the SHOPT_COSHELL compiler option (which was enabled) and
  a lot of code that was conditional upon #ifdef SHOPT_COSHELL.

- init.c: e_version[]: Removing SHOPT_COSHELL changed the "J"
  feature identifier in ${.sh.version} to a lowercase "j", which
  was conditional upon SHOPT_BGX (background job extensions).
  But src/cmd/ksh93/RELEASE documents (at 08-12-04, on line 1188):
    | +SHOPT_BGX enables background job extensions. Noted by "J" in
    |  the version string when enabled. [...]
  That is the only available documentation. So change that "j" back
  to a "J", leaving the version string unchanged after this commit.

- jobs.c: job_walk(): We need to keep one 'job_waitsafe(SIGCHLD);'
  call that was conditional upon SHOPT_COSHELL; removing it caused
  a regression test failure in tests/sigchld.sh, 'SIGCHLD blocked
  for script at end of pipeline' (which means that until now, a ksh
  compiled without libcoshell had broken SIGCHLD handling.)

bin/package, src/cmd/INIT/package.sh:
- Don't export COSHELL variable.
2020-07-17 19:28:52 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
fbc6cd4286 Remove vestigial 3DFS support code (re: f88f302c)
Support for the long-dead 3DFS userland versioning file system was
already removed from ksh93 (although I'd overlooked some minor
things), but libast still supported it. This removes that too.

src/lib/libast/include/fs3d.h,
src/lib/libast/man/fs3d.3,
src/lib/libast/misc/fs3d.c:
- Removed.

bin/package,
src/cmd/INIT/package.sh:
- Remove attempted use of removed vpath builtin.

src/cmd/ksh93/*:
- Remove minor 3dfs vestiges.

src/lib/lib{ast,cmd,coshell}/*:
- Remove code supporting 3dfs.
2020-07-17 05:04:03 +01:00
Johnothan King
2db9953ae0
Fix three bugs in the sleep builtin (#77)
This commit backports the main changes to sh_delay from ksh93v-
and ksh2020, which fixes the following bugs:

- Microsecond amounts of less than one millisecond are no longer
  ignored. The following loop will now take a minimum of one
  second to complete:
  for ((i = 0; i != 10000; i++)) do
    sleep PT100U
  done

- 'sleep 30' no longer adds an extra 30 milliseconds to the total
  amount of time to sleep. This bug is hard to notice since 30
  milliseconds can be considered within the margin of error. The
  only reason why longer delays weren't affected is because the old
  code masked the bug when the interval is greater than 30 seconds:
  else if(n > 30)
  {
      sleep(n);
      t -= n;
  }
  This caused 'sleep -s' to break with intervals greater than 30
  seconds, so an actual fix is used instead of a workaround.

- 'sleep -s' now functions correctly with intervals of more than
  30 seconds as the new code doesn't need the old workaround. This
  is done by handling '-s' in sh_delay.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/sleep.c:
- Remove the replacement for sleep(3) from the sleep builtin.
- Replace the old sh_delay function with the newer one from ksh2020.
  The new function uses tvsleep, which uses nanosleep(3) internally.

src/cmd/ksh93/include/shell.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/edit.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/jobs.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/shell.3:
- Update sh_delay documentation and usage since the function now
  requires two arguments.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add a regression test for 'sleep -s' when the interval is greater
  than 30 seconds. The other bugs can't be tested for in a feasible
  manner across all systems:
  https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/pull/72#issuecomment-657215616
2020-07-17 05:00:28 +01:00
Johnothan King
ea5b25b93a
Fix some formatting errors, typos and other problems (#78)
Some notes:
- Removed a TODO note that was fixed in commit 43d9fbac.
- Removed a duplicate note about the '%l' time format in the changelog.
- Applied the following documentation fixes from Terrence J. Doyle:
  - https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01852.html
  - https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01856.html
- Fixed strange grammar in one of the error messages.
- Added missing options for rksh to the synopsis section.
- Applied a formatting fix from ksh93v- to the man page.
- Replaced a C99 line comment in src/lib/libast/comp/realpath.c with a
  proper comment that is valid in C89.
- Prioritize UTC over GMT in the documentation (missed by commit c9634e90).
- Add some extra information for 'ksh -R file' to the man page. This patch
  is from Red Hat: https://git.centos.org/rpms/ksh/blob/c8/f/SOURCES/ksh-20080202-manfix.patch
2020-07-16 22:27:00 +01:00
Johnothan King
03224ae3af
Make the 'history' and 'r' commands builtins (#76)
With this change no more preset aliases exist, so the preset alias
tables can be safely removed. All ksh commands can now be used
without 'unalias -a' removing them, even in interactive shells.
Additionally, the history and r commands are no longer limited to
being used in interactive shells.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/hist.c:
- Implement the history and r commands as builtins. Also guarantee
  lflag is set to one by avoiding 'lflag++'.

src/cmd/ksh93/Makefile,
src/cmd/ksh93/Mamfile,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/main.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/aliases.c:
- Remove the table of predefined aliases because the last few have
  been removed. During init the alias tree is now initialized the
  same way as the function tree.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c:
- Remove the bugfix for unsetting predefined aliases because it is
  now a no-op. Aliases are no longer able to have the NV_NOFREE
  attribute.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/alias.sh:
- Remove the regression test for unsetting predefined aliases since
  those no longer exist.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Update sh_opthist[] for 'hist --man', etc.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Remove the list of preset aliases since those no longer exist.
- Document history and r as builtins instead of preset aliases.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2020-07-16 18:56:49 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
17f81ebedb Load 'r' and 'history' default aliases on interactive only
These two default aliases are useful on interactive shells. In
scripts, they interfere with possible function or command names.

As of this commit, these final two default aliases are only loaded
for interactive shells, leaving zero default aliases for scripts.
This completes the project to get rid of misguided default aliases.

src/cmd/ksh93/include/shtable.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/aliases.c:
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- Add empty alias table shtab_noaliases[] for scripts.
- Rename inittree() to sh_inittree() and make it external.
- nv_init(), sh_reinit(): Initialise empty alias tree for scripts.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/main.c: sh_main():
- If interactive, reinitialise alias tree for interactive shells.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/alias.sh:
- To test default alias removal, launch shell with -i.
2020-07-16 06:44:05 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
a42ac7e77a Fix annoying usage/--help/--man message corruption
In a locale other than C/POSIX, ksh produces corrupted usage
messages for alternatives, e.g. this output of 'typeset -\?':
| Usage: typeset [-bflmnprstuxACHS] [-a[type]] [-i[base]] <..CUT..>
|                [-T[tname]] [-Z[n]] [name[=value]...]
|    Or:[name[=value]...]
| typeset[name[=value]...]
| [[name[=value]...]
| options[name[=value]...]
| ] -f [name...]

Correct output is:
| Usage: typeset [-bflmnprstuxACHS] [-a[type]] [-i[base]] <..CUT..>
|                [-T[tname]] [-Z[n]] [name[=value]...]
|    Or: typeset [ options ] -f [name...]

Similar corruption occurs in --help and --man output.
This bug is ancient: it's already in ksh 1993-12-28 s+.

ksh2020 has this fixed. A 'git bisect' run pinpointed the fix
to this commit, which fixes the ERROR_translating macro after
removing the AST-specific locale subsystem:
https://github.com/att/ast/commit/4abc061e
But making the same change in ksh 93u+m produced no results
(probably because we have not removed that subsystem).

However, disabling the use of translation macros in optget.sh
altogether (replacing them with dummies that were already coded in
a preprocessor directive fallback for a reduced standalone libast)
turns out to work. It's not as if there is actually any translation
anyway, so this effectively fixes this bug.

The actual cause of this bug remains mysterious, but should be
somewhere in the AST translation and/or locale subsystem.

src/lib/libast/misc/optget.c:
- Use fallback translation macros.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add regression tests for output of -?, --?x, --help and --man
  for a usage string with an alternative ("Or:") usage message.
  Before the fix, these failed when running the tests in the
  C.UTF-8 locale (as in 'bin/shtests -u builtins').
2020-07-16 05:13:53 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
8c7c60ec19 shellquoting: rm redundant iswprint() call (re: f9d28935)
A regression test failure was occurring on FreeBSD for
  bin/shtests -u builtins
because UTF-8 characters were wrongly encoded as bytes in the
C.UTF-8 locale. The cause is that iswprint() always returns false
on FreeBSD if the ksh-specific C.UTF-8 locale is active, as the OS
doesn't support it.

That iswprint() call is redundant anyway; the new is_invisible()
function now handles this.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/string.c: sh_fmtq():
- Remove redundant iswprint() test.
2020-07-16 01:13:59 +01:00
Johnothan King
01145a48dd
Handle the escape sequence for the End key (#75)
Many terminals (xterm being one example) give the Home and End keys
the escape sequences '^[[H' and '^[[F'. The first sequence is
handled in both editing modes by moving the cursor to start of
line, but ksh ignored the second sequence.

src/cmd/ksh93/edit/emacs.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/edit/vi.c:
- Add case labels for '^[[F' so that in both editing modes the End
  key moves the cursor to the end of the line.
2020-07-15 23:38:44 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
1fbbeaa19d Convert default typeset aliases to regular builtins
This converts the 'autoload', 'compound', 'float', 'functions',
'integer' and 'nameref' default aliases into regular built-in
commands, so that 'unalias -a' does not remove them. Shell
functions can now use these names, which improves compatibility
with POSIX shell scripts.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/aliases.c:
- Remove default typeset aliases.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/builtins.h:
- Add corresponding built-in command declarations. Typeset-style
  commands are now defined by a pointer range, SYSTYPESET ..
  SYSTYPESET_END. A couple need their own IDs (SYSCOMPOUND,
  SYSNAMEREF) for special-casing in sh/xec.c.
- Update 'typeset --man'.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c: b_typeset():
- Recognise the new builtin commands by argv[0]. Implement them by
  inserting the corresponding 'typeset' options into the argument
  list before parsing options. This may seem like a bit of a hack,
  but it is simpler, shorter, more future-proof and less
  error-prone than manually copying and adapting all the complex
  flaggery from the option parsing loop.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/parse.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- Recognise typeset-style commands by SYSTYPESET .. SYSTYPESET_END
  pointer range.
- Special-case 'compound' (SYSCOMPOUND) and 'nameref' (SYSNAMEREF)
  along with recognising the corresponding 'typeset' options.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Update to document the new built-ins.
- Since not all declaration commands are special built-ins now,
  identify declaration commands using a double-dagger "\(dd"
  character (which renders as '=' in ASCII) and disassociate their
  definition from that of special built-ins.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh:
- Adapt a regression test as there is no more 'integer' alias.
2020-07-15 20:54:06 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
45cfecfc1e tests/basic.sh: fix tests to work with xtrace (re: c5820aab) 2020-07-15 05:02:29 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
b1a4131123 Millisecond precision for 'times' builtin (re: 65d363fd, 5c677a4c)
Now that we have an iffe feature test for getrusage(3), introduced
in 70fc1da7, the millisecond-precision 'times' command from the
last version of ksh2020 can easily be backported.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/misc.c:
- Incorporate ksh2020 'times' command, with a couple of tweaks:
  * Use locale's radix point instead of '.'.
  * Pad seconds with initial zero if < 10.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Update version date for 'times --man'.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Update 'times' test for 3 digits after radix point.
2020-07-15 04:22:45 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
c5820aabc9 Fix $TIMEFORMAT zero-decimal and error behaviour (re: 70fc1da7)
The backported 'time' keyword code introduced a bug (shared by
ksh2020): the $TIMEFORMAT format sequences %0R, %0U and %0S output
a decimal fraction, acting as %1R, %1U and %1S.

A minor ksh2020 behaviour change that was also backported was that
the $TIMEFORMAT formatting no longer errored out on encountering an
invalid identifier, but continued. That behaviour is now reverted.

Neither of these two regressions occurred on older systems that
have to use times(3) instead of getrusage(2) or gettimeofday(2).

This commit also tweaks a regression test so that it doesn't fail
if the old times(3) interface is used.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c: p_time():
- (Fix indentation of a for loop.)
- On modern systems, when outputting the result of $TIMEFORMAT
  format sequences, only print fraction if precision is nonzero.
- On modern systems, when encountering an invalid format sequence,
  abort formatting in the same way as done for old systems.
- On old systems, initialise 'n' in a more readable way when used
  as the index for tm[].

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/basic.sh:
- Don't fail, but issue warning on old systems that use times(3).
  Otherwise, check milliseconds: with the ksh 'sleep' builtin,
  'TIMEFORMAT=%3R; time sleep .002' should always output '0.002'.
- Change regression test for TIMEFORMAT='%0S%' to check for the
  correct output, '0%', instead of checking for an error message.
2020-07-15 02:43:35 +01:00
Johnothan King
70fc1da73e
Fix the max precision of the 'time' keyword (#72)
This commit backports the required fixes from ksh2020 for using
millisecond precision with the 'time' keyword. The bugfix refactors
a decent amount of code to rely on the BSD 'timeradd' and
'timersub' macros for calculating the total amount of time elapsed
(as these aren't standard, they are selectively implemented in an
iffe feature test for platforms without them). getrusage(3) is now
preferred since it usually has higher precision than times(3) (the
latter is used as a fallback).

There are three other fixes as well:

src/lib/libast/features/time:
- Test for getrusage with an iffe feature test rather than
  assume _sys_times == _lib_getrusage.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- A single percent at the end of a format specifier is now
  treated as a literal '%' (like in Bash).
- Zero-pad seconds if seconds < 10. This was already done for
  the times builtin in commit 5c677a4c, although it wasn't
  applied to the time keyword.
- Backport the ksh2020 bugfix for the time keyword by using
  timeradd and timersub with gettimeofday (which is used with
  a timeofday macro). Prefer getrusage when it is available.
- Allow compiling without the 'timeofday' ifdef for better
  portability.
  This is the order of priority for getting the elapsed time:
  1) getrusage (most precise)
  2) times + gettimeofday (best fallback)
  3) only times (doesn't support millisecond precision)
  This was tested by using debug '#undef' statements in xec.c.

src/cmd/ksh93/features/time:
- Implement feature tests for the 'timeradd' and 'timersub'
  macros.
- Do a feature test for getrusage like in the libast time test.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/basic.sh:
- Add test for millisecond precision.
- Add test for handling of '%' at the end of a format specifier.
- Add test for locale-specific radix point.
2020-07-14 22:48:04 +01:00
Johnothan King
fc655f1a26
Restore 'set -b'/'set -o notify' functionality (#74)
'set -b' had no effect; it should cause the shell to notify job
state changes immediately instead of waiting for the next prompt.

This fixes a regression that was introduced in ksh93t 2008-07-25.
The bugfix is from: https://github.com/att/ast/pull/1089

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/jobs.c:
- Save the tty wait state and avoid changing it if TTYWAIT was
  already on to avoid breaking 'set -b'.
  The last 'sh_offstate' is inside of an '#if' directive because it
  is only required when ksh is compiled with SHOPT_COSHELL enabled.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Add a regression test for 'set -b' in interactive shells.
2020-07-14 22:00:28 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
39692fc3f6 tests/pty.sh: a couple of minor tweaks
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- init: Remove superfluous lineno=$LINENO assignments. They aren't
  needed if we avoid alias expansion on the err_exit function call.
- In the test "vi mode file name completion", append the main
  shell's PID to /tmp/fakehome to make a slightly less insecure
  temporary directory name. Unfortunately we cannot use $tmp as
  that uses $TMPDIR which may cause a false pass. (re: 4cecde1d)
2020-07-13 21:02:04 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
8ad56f90ab Add FreeBSD stty workaround for pty regression tests
Apparently, on FreeBSD, the stty command does not work correctly
for setting 'erase' or 'kill' on a pty pseudoterminal. I've no
idea whether the bug is in FreeBSD stty or in AST pty, but in any
case, a workaround is needed for the time being.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Save terminal state on init; set a trap to restore it on exit.
- Issue 'stty erase ^H kill ^X' on the real terminal before
  entering pty pseudoterminals.

Resolves #44.
2020-07-13 21:28:21 +02:00
Johnothan King
66c955bc8f
Fix a fork bomb when vi is run from a script and sent Ctrl-Z (#73)
This bug was reported on the old mailing list:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg00207.html

A fork bomb can occur when SIGTSTP is sent to the vi editor. Vi
must be launched from a script run with exec (tested with
BusyBox vi, nvi and vim):
$ cat /tmp/foo
vi /tmp/bar
echo end
$ ksh
$ chmod +x /tmp/foo
$ exec /tmp/foo
While in vi, send SIGTSTP using Ctrl-Z

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/fault.c:
- Only fork after Ctrl-Z if job control is available. The patch
  used checks 'job.jobcontrol' instead of 'SH_MONITOR':
  https://git.centos.org/rpms/ksh/blob/c8/f/SOURCES/ksh-20120801-forkbomb.patch
2020-07-13 19:10:23 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
84e2f6d92f tests/leaks.sh: workaround minor variation when run with shcomp
For unknown reasons, the test for a memory leak in 'read -C stat
<<< "$data"' can show an intermittent minor variation in memory
usage when run with shcomp on certain versions of macOS.

The reported variations are 48 bytes or 80 bytes. This is too small
to be the result of an actual memory leak in the tested command;
it is repeated 500 times so that any real leak should show a
difference of at least 500 bytes.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Add a tolerance of 128 bytes to get rid of the false failure.

Fixes #70 (hopefully).
2020-07-10 23:01:22 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
778fd6ca2d Fix possible crash due to failure to update shell FD state
This applies ksh-20100621-fdstatus.patch from Red Hat. Not very
much information is available, so this one is more or less taken
on faith. But it seems to make sense on the face of it: calling
sh_fcntl() instead of fcntl(2) directly makes the shell update its
internal file descriptor state more frequently.

It claims to fix Red Hat bug 924440. The report is currently closed
to the public: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=924440

However, Kamil Dudka at Red Hat writes:
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/67#issuecomment-656379993
| Yes, the summary of RHBZ#924440 is "crash in bestreclaim() after
| traversing a memory block with a very large size". We did not have
| any in house reproducer for the bug. The mentioned patch was
| provided and verified by a customer.

...and Marc Wilson dug up a Red Hat erratum containing this info:
https://download.rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2013-1599.html
| Previously, the ksh shell did not resize the file descriptor list
| every time it was necessary. This could lead to memory corruption
| when several file descriptors were used. As a consequence, ksh
| terminated unexpectedly. This updated version resizes the file
| descriptor list every time it is needed, and ksh no longer
| crashes in the described scenario. (BZ#924440)

No reproducer means no regression test can be added now.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/io.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- Change several fcntl(2) calls to sh_fcntl(). This function calls
  fcntl(2) and then updates the shell's file descriptor state.
2020-07-10 20:04:31 +01:00
Johnothan King
c4236cc295 Fix type names starting with lowercase 'a' (#69)
Type names that start with a lowercase 'a' cause an error when used:

$ typeset -T al=(typeset bar)
$ al foo=(bar=testset)
/usr/bin/ksh: al: : invalid variable name

The error occurs because when the parser checks for the alias
builtin (to set 'assignment' to two instead of one), only the first
letter of 'argp->argval' is checked (rather than the entire
string). This was fixed in ksh93v- by comparing argp->argval
against "alias", but in ksh93u+m the check can simply be removed
because it is only run when a builtin has the BLT_DCL flag. As of
04b9171, the alias builtin does not have that flag.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/parse.c:
- Remove the bugged check for the alias builtin.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/types.sh:
- Add a regression test for type names starting with a lowercase 'a'.
2020-07-10 17:54:51 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
f9d28935bb Fix UTF-8 shellquoting for xtrace, printf %q, etc.
This fixes an annoying issue in the shell's quoting algorithm
(used for xtrace (set -x), printf %q, and other things) for UTF-8
locales, that caused it to encode perfectly printable UTF-8
characters unnecessarily and inconsistently. For example:

$ (set -x; : 'aeu aéu')
+ : $'aeu a\u[e9]u'
$ (set -x; : 'aéu aeu')
+ : 'aéu aeu'
$ (set -x; : '正常終了 aeu')
+ : '正常終了 aeu'
$ (set -x; : 'aeu 正常終了')
+ : $'aeu \u[6b63]\u[5e38]\u[7d42]\u[4e86]'

This issue was originally reported by lijo george in May 2017:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01958.html

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/string.c:
- Add is_invisible() function that returns true if a character is a
  Unicode invisible (non-graph) character, excluding ASCII space.
  Ref.: https://unicode.org/charts/PDF/U2000.pdf
- Use a fallback in is_invisible() if we cannot use the system's
  iswprint(3); this is the case for the ksh C.UTF-8 locale if the
  OS doesn't support that. Fall back to a hardcoded blacklist of
  invisible and control characters and put up with not encoding
  nonexistent characters into \u[xxxx] escapes.
  Ref.: https://unicode.org/charts/PDF/U2000.pdf
- When deciding whether to switch to $'...' quoting mode (state=2),
  use is_invisible() instead of testing for ASCII 0-127 range.
- In $'...' quoting mode, use is_invisible() to decide whether to
  encode wide characters into \u[xxxx] escapes.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add regression tests for shellquoting Arabic, Japanese and Latin
  UTF-8 characters, to be run only in a UTF-8 locale. The Arabic
  sample text[*] contains a couple of direction markers that are
  expected to be encoded into \u[xxxx] escapes.

[*] source: https://r12a.github.io/scripts/tutorial/summaries/arabic
2020-07-10 05:55:11 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
588a1ff7ca Fix spurious warning output in KIA (-R) database file
The ksh -R option creates a cross-reference database that can be
parsed with a "C Query Language" (CQL) tool.
See cql-1994.pdf at: http://gsf.cococlyde.org/files

The -R option puts ksh in noexec mode as it parses the script, and
this can produce warnings as the syntax is parsed. The bug is that
these warnings can end up in the database file, corrupting it.

This applies a fix from Paulo Andrade, via Siteshwar Vashisht:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01952.html

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/parse.c:
- Terminate names with a zero character when writing database
  output.

A regression test is not very feasible because the majority of the
database output consists of cryptic IDs/hashes that vary depending
on the session and/or system and possibly other things.
2020-07-09 23:18:41 +01:00
Johnothan King
6930666234
Fix a syntax error when ((...)) is combined with redirections (#68)
This bugfix was backported from ksh93v- 2013-10-10-alpha.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/parse: item():
- The done label is placed after the 'inout' call for handling I/O
  redirections. This causes the command below to produce a syntax
  error because the '>' is not handled as a redirection operator
  after 'goto done':
  $ ((1+2)) > /dev/null
  /usr/bin/ksh: syntax error: `>' unexpected
  Moving the done label fixes the syntax error as 'inout' is now
  called to handle the redirection operator.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/arith.sh:
- Add a simple regression test.
2020-07-09 22:12:04 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
361fe1fcc3 Fix hash table memory leak when restoring PATH
There is a bug in path_alias() that may cause a memory leak when
clearing the hash table while setting/restoring PATH.

This applies a fix from Siteshwar Vashist:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01945.html

Note that, contrary to Siteshwar's analysis linked above, this bug
has nothing directly to do with subshells, forked or otherwise; it
can also be reproduced by temporarily setting PATH for a command,
for example, 'PATH=/dev/null true', and then doing a PATH search.

Modified analysis:
ksh maintains the value of PATH as a linked list. When a local
scope for PATH is created (e.g. in a virtual subshell or when doing
something like PATH=/foo/bar command ...), ksh duplicates PATH by
increasing the refcount for every element in the linked list by
calling the path_dup() and path_alias() functions. However, when
the state of PATH is restored, this refcount is not decreased. Next
time when PATH is reset to a new value, ksh calls the path_delete()
function to delete the linked list that stored the older path. But
the path_delete() function does not free elements whose refcount is
greater than 1, causing a memory leak.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: path_alias():
- Decrease refcount and free old item if needed.
  (The 'old' variable was already introduced in 99065353, but
  its value was never used there; this fixes that as well.)

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Add regression test. With the bug, setting/restoring PATH
  (which clears the hash table) and doing a PATH search 16 times
  causes about 1.5 KiB of memory to be leaked.
2020-07-09 18:34:15 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
5e7d335f2f Fix crash when listing indexed arrays with 'typeset -a'
There is a bug in print_scan() function that may cause ksh to crash
while listing indexed arrays. The crash happens in nv_search() when
called from print_scan().

This applies a fix from Siteshwar Vashist:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01944.html

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c:
- Call nv_scan() without the NV_IARRAY flag, even for a null scan.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/arrays.sh:
- Add regression test for 'typeset -a' crash and check output.
2020-07-09 16:42:16 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
a8f6d6b842 Fix crash due to double free() when sourcing multiple files
There is a bug in sh_eval() that may cause ksh to crash due to a
double free() after sourcing multiple files with '.' or 'source'
if a longjmp is triggered, e.g. by a syntax error.

This applies a fix from Siteshwar Vashist:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01943.html

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c: sh_eval():
- Zero file descriptor io_save after closing it. This prevents a
  double free() after returning from a longjmp.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/basic.sh:
- Add reproducer as regression test.
2020-07-09 15:35:07 +01:00
Johnothan King
9526b3fa08
Fix unexpected output from 'printf %T' with certain formats (#65)
This commit changes the behavior of four date formats accepted
by 'printf %()T' because the old behavior is not compatible with
modern implementations of date(1):
- %k and %l now return a blank-padded hour, the former based on a
  24-hour clock and the latter a 12-hour clock (these are common
  extensions present on Linux and *BSD).
- %f now returns a date with the format '%Y.%m.%d-%H:%M:%S'
  (BusyBox extension).
- %q now returns the quarter of the current year (GNU extension).

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Copy the date format documentation from date in libcmd to
  the printf man page (for documenting 'printf %T').

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add four regression tests for the changed date formats.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Remove inaccurate information about the date formats accepted by
  printf %T'. The KornShell uses a custom version of strftime(3)
  that isn't guaranteed to accepts the same formats as the native
  strftime function.

src/lib/libast/tm/tmxfmt.c:
- Change the behavior of %f, %k, %l and %q to the common behavior.
  %k and %l are implemented as aliases to %_H and %_I to avoid
  duplicating code.

src/lib/libcmd/date.c:
- Update the documentation for the AST date command since it is
  also affected by the changes to 'printf %T'.

Fixes #62
2020-07-09 05:08:28 +01:00
Johnothan King
e70925ce10
Fix memory leak on unset of associative array (#64)
Associative arrays weren't being properly freed from memory, which
was causing a memory leak.

This commit incorporates a patch and reproducer/regress test from:
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-users@lists.research.att.com/msg01016.html

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
- Properly free associative arrays from memory in nv_delete().

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- Add regression test.
2020-07-09 01:09:40 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
bf79131f40 Use vmstate for memory leak regress tests (re: ad9a9219)
'ps' does not always give reliable results; on macOS, 'ps' appears
to produce nondeterministic (i.e. randomly varying) results for
'vsz' and 'rss', making it unusable for memory leak tests. See:
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/pull/64#issuecomment-655094931
and further comments.

So let's compile in the vmstate builtin so that we can make sure to
measure things properly. It also reports bytes instead of 1024-byte
blocks, so smaller leaks can be detected.

To be decided: whether or not to disable the vmstate builtin for
release builds in order to save about 12K in the ksh binary.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Add vmstate to the list of builtins that are compiled in.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- getmem(): get size using: vmstate --format='%(busy_size)u'
  (Using busy_size instead of size seems to make more sense as it
  excludes freed blocks. See vmstate --man)
- Introduce a $unit variable for reporting leaks and set it to
  'bytes'; this makes it easier to change the unit in future.
- Since the tests are now more sensitive, initialise all variables
  before use to avoid false leak detections.
- The last test seemed to need a few more 'read' invocations in
  order to get memory usage to a steady state before the test.
2020-07-08 23:23:19 +01:00
Johnothan King
9a9da2c299
Fix use of strdup on a NULL pointer (#63)
The following set of commands can rarely cause a memory fault
when auditing[*] is enabled, although most of the time it will
simply cause ksh to write '(null)' to the auditing file in place
of a tty name:

$ [ -e /etc/ksh_audit ] || echo "/tmp/ksh_auditfile;$(id -u)" | sudo tee /etc/ksh_audit;
$ v=$(ksh  2> /dev/null +o rc -ic $'getopts a:bc: opt --man\nprint $?')
$ cat /tmp/ksh_auditfile
1000;1593599493;(null); getopts a:bc: opt --man

This happens because strdup is used unconditionally on the pointer
returned by 'ttyname', which can be NULL if stderr is closed. This
then causes 'hp->tty' to be set to null, as strdup returns NULL.
See https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1028

src/cmd/ksh93/edit/history.c:
- Make strdup duplicate 'notty' instead of NULL to prevent
  crashes.

[*] https://blog.fpmurphy.com/2008/12/ksh93-auditing-and-accounting.html
2020-07-06 21:51:44 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
300cd19987 Fix corrupt UTF-8 char processing & shellquoting after aborted read
If the processing of a multibyte character was interrupted in UTF-8
locales, e.g. by reading just one byte of a two-byte character 'ü'
(\303\274) with a command like:
	print -nr $'\303\274' | read -n1 g
then the shellquoting algorithm was corrupted in such a way that
the final quote in simple single-quoted string was missing. This
bug may have had other, as yet undiscovered, effects as well. The
problem was with corrupted multibyte character processing and not
with the shell-quoting routine sh_fmtq() itself.

Full trace and discussion at: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/5
(which is also an attempt to begin to understand the esoteric
workings of the libast mb* macros that process UTF-8 characters).

src/lib/libast/comp/setlocale.c: utf8_mbtowc():
- If called from the mbinit() macro (i.e. if both pointer
  parameters are null), reset the global multibyte character
  synchronisation state variable. This fixes the problem with
  interrupted processing leaving an inconsistent state, provided
  that mbinit() is called before processing multibyte characters
  (which it is, in most (?) places that do this). Before this fix,
  calling mbinit() in UTF-8 locales was a no-op.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/string.c: sh_fmtq():
- Call mbinit() before potentially processing multibyte characters.
  Testing suggests that this could be superfluous, but at worst,
  it's harmless; better be sure.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add regression test for shellquoting with 'printf %q' after
  interrupting the processing of a multibyte characeter with
  'read -n1'. This test only fails in a UTF-8 locale, e.g. when
  running: bin/shtests -u builtins SHELL=/buggy/ksh-2012-08-01

Fixes #5.
2020-07-05 19:24:41 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
2624b297fc 4 typo fixes: be use => be used 2020-07-05 07:48:01 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
1ca9286ab8 tests/pty.sh: disable 'process/terminal group exercise' for now
Apparently, pty doens't handle SIGTSTP correctly:
https://github.com/att/ast/issues/375
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/45#issuecomment-653789092

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Disable the 'process/terminal group exercise' regression test,
  which depends on correct SIGTSTP handling, until pty can be
  fixed.

Closes #45.
2020-07-04 23:31:40 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
b2382efd8b tests/shtests: rm debug command that snuck through (re: d7afb57c) 2020-07-04 17:40:07 +02:00
Johnothan King
658bba748e
Fix 'kill -INFO' on systems that support SIGINFO (#59)
src/cmd/ksh93/data/signals.c:
- SIGINFO was absent from the table of signals, which caused
  commands like 'kill -INFO $$' to fail even on platforms with
  SIGINFO (such as macOS and FreeBSD). Fix that by adding
  it to the signal table.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/signal.sh:
- Add a regression tests for using SIGINFO with the kill builtin.
  The test will only be run if the external kill command supports
  SIGINFO.
2020-07-04 15:57:47 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
d7afb57c49 shtests: use central temporary directory; add --keep option
This gets rid of repetitive code in test scripts to create their
own temporary directories. Instead, shtests exports a $tmp to each
test script that is a subdirectory of its own temporary directory.
This has the advantage of having all test script temporary
directories in one hierarchy. Along with a new option to keep
temporary files, this makes it easy to inspect them if wanted.

This does make the test scripts less self-contained as they now
depend on a temporary directory being exported as $tmp. But they
already depended on $SHELL being the shell to test, so they already
were not quite self-contained.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtests:
- Add -k/--keep option to keep temporary directory. Make the EXIT
  trap report its location instead of deleting it.
- For each test, create a subdirectory of $tmp (named after the
  test script plus the tested locale or 'shcomp') and export that
  subdirectory to the test script as its own $tmp.
- If -k is not given, delete each script's temporary files
  immediately after running it to minimise disk usage.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/*.sh:
- Don't make own temp directory.
- Refuse to run if $tmp is not set.
- Miscellaneous tweaks.
2020-07-04 01:28:08 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
fa70fc3f77 tests/pty.sh: misc tweaks
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Fix race condition in the test "raw Bourne mode literal tab
  characters with wide characters enabled" by adding 'd 10' to add
  a 10-millisecond delay before every write. Thanks to @JohnoKing:
  https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/pull/57#issuecomment-653617531
- Fix locale for test "raw Bourne mode backslash handling" (should
  be UTF-8, not UTF8) (re: a0dcdeea).
- Add a few more dummy # err_exit # comments to allow shtests to
  count the number of tests.
2020-07-03 21:59:58 +02:00
Johnothan King
a0dcdeeade Fix bugs with backslash escaping in interactive vi mode (#57)
This commit fixes the following bugs in the 'vi' editing mode
backslash escape feature. Ref.: Bolsky & Korn (1995), p. 113, which
states for \: "Similar to Control+V [...] except that it escapes
only the next Erase or Kill charactrer".

1. The vi mode now only escapes the next character if the last
   character input was a backslash, fixing the bug demonstrated at:
   https://asciinema.org/a/E3Rq3et07MMQG5BaF7vkXQTg0
2. Escaping backslashes are now disabled in vi.c if the vi mode is
   disabled (note that vi.c handles raw editing mode in UTF-8
   locales). This makes the behavior of the raw editing mode
   consistent in C/POSIX and UTF-8 locales.
3. An odd interaction with Backspace when the character prior to a
   separate buffer entered with Shift-C was a backslash has been
   fixed. Demonstration at: https://asciinema.org/a/314833
   ^? will no longer be output repeatedly when attempting to erase
   a separate buffer with a Backspace, although, to be consistent
   with vi(1), you still cannot backspace past it before escaping
   out of it. Ref.:
   https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/56#issuecomment-653586994

src/cmd/ksh93/edit/vi.c:
- Prevent a backslash from escaping the next input if the previous
  input wasn't a backslash. This is done by unsetting a variable
  named backslash if a backslash escaped a character. backslash is
  set to the result of c == '\\' when the user enters a new
  character.
- Disable escaping backslashes in the raw editing mode because
  it should not be enabled there.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Add some tests for how ksh handles backslashes in each
  editing mode to test for the bugs fixed by this commit.

Fixes #56.
2020-07-03 21:15:21 +02:00
Anuradha Weeraman
035a4cb3f4
Fix segfault if $PATH contains a .paths directory (#55)
ksh crashed if it encountered a .paths directory in any of the
directories in $PATH.

Ref: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ksh/+bug/1534855

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c: path_chkpaths():
- Refuse to read .paths if it's not a regular file
  or a symlink to a regular file.
2020-07-02 23:29:07 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
0c40e7c182 INIT/make.probe: change for GCC v10 based on official AST repo
In <https://github.com/att/ast/commit/d2771913>, GCC version 10 was
specifically special-cased for skipping the -nostartfiles flag
along with versions 7, 8, and 9. It seems more future-proof to
specifically include it for versions up to 6 and remove it for any
version 7 and up.

src/cmd/INIT/make.probe:
- Remove the -nostartfiles for all version of gcc > 7.
2020-07-03 00:16:37 +02:00
Johnothan King
db1d539d49
Fix ERE repetition expressions in [[ ... =~ ERE{x,y} ]] (#54)
Regular expressions that combine a repetition expression with
a parenthesized sub-expression throw a garbled syntax error:

$ [[ AATAAT =~ (AAT){2} ]]
ksh: syntax error: `~(E)(AAT){2} ]]
:'%Cred%h%Creseksh: syntax error: `~(E)(AAT){2} ]]
:'%Cred%h%Creseksh: syntax' unexpected

The syntax error occurs because ksh is not fully
accounting for '=~' when it runs into a curly bracket.
This fix disables the syntax error when the operator
is '=~' and adds handling for '(str){x}' (to allow for
more than one sub-expression). This bugfix and the
regression tests for it were backported from ksh93v-
2014-12-24-beta.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/lex.c:
- Do not trigger a syntax error for '{x}' when the operator
  is '=~' and add handling for multiple parentheses when
  combined with '{x}'.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bracket.sh:
- Add two tests from ksh93v- to test sub-expressions
  combined with the '{x}' quantifier.
2020-07-02 18:40:15 +01:00
Johnothan King
ad9a9219f0
Fix memory leak regression tests by using ps(1) (#50)
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/leaks.sh:
- This script was never actually running the regression
  tests because 'vmstate' isn't available as a builtin.
  While this can be fixed by adding vmstate to the builtin
  table, that has the downside of increasing the binary
  size of ksh. This commit replaces all usage of 'vmstate'
  with 'ps' and 'awk' as a different way to measure
  memory usage. The memory leaks regression tests are now
  always run.
- Rename old $n to $N due to new $n interfering with the old
  regression test.
- Add before and after results for the number of 1024-byte
  blocks leaked in each test.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2020-07-01 20:00:58 +01:00
Johnothan King
120aec25ba
Fix a crash when 'read -u' is given an invalid fd (#53)
File descriptors that are too far out of range will cause the
read builtin to crash. The following example will generate
two crashes:

$ ksh -c 'read -u 2000000' || ksh -c 'read -u-2000000'

The fix is to error out when the given file descriptor is out
of range. This bugfix is from Tomas Klacko, although it was
modified to use 'sh_iovalidfd' and reject numbers greater
than 'INT_MAX':
https://www.mail-archive.com/ast-developers@lists.research.att.com/msg01912.html
The question about 'shp->fdstatus[-1]' only applies to ksh93v-
(ksh93u+ doesn't have any references to 'shp->fdstatus[-1]').

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/read.c:
- File descriptors that are out of range should be rejected
  with an error message (like invalid file descriptors that
  are in range). The seemingly redundant check for negative
  numbers is there because out of range negative numbers also
  cause memory faults despite the later 'fd<0' check.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Add three tests for attempting 'read -u' on various invalid
  file descriptor numbers.
2020-07-01 18:14:10 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
3e14072768 package.sh: clean up FIFO properly (re: 936802f9)
Not cleaning up the FIFO broke 'grep -r' in the arch directory,
making it hang forever. So we need a better way of cleaning it up.

bin/package,
src/cmd/INIT/package.sh:
- Unlink the FIFO early after sleeping a second in the background.
  This works because the named directory entry is only needed to
  establish the pipe, not to keep it going.
2020-06-30 04:45:02 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
fa51a5ce3b Fix 'whence -a' regression test (re: 99065353)
The regression test failed on systems where 'chmod' exists at more
than one location, e.g. Slackware where it's at both /bin/chmod and
/usr/bin/chmod.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh: 'whence -a'/tracked aliases test:
- In the expected value, use modified 'whence -a -p chmod' output
  to get all of the paths to chmod.
- On failure, report both expected and actual values.
2020-06-30 01:43:25 +02:00
Johnothan King
1b5bc1802a
Fix the readonly builtin's scope in functions (#51)
* Fix the readonly builtin's scope in functions

This bug was first reported at https://github.com/att/ast/issues/881

'tdata.sh->prefix' is only set to the correct value when
'b_readonly' is called as 'export', which breaks 'readonly' in
functions because the correct scope isn't set. As a result, the
following example will only print a newline:

$ function show_bar { readonly foo=bar; echo $foo; }; show_bar

The fix is to move the required code out of the if statement for
'export', as it needs to be run for 'readonly' as well. This bugfix
is from https://github.com/att/ast/pull/906

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c:
- Set 'tdata.sh->prefix' to the correct value, otherwise 'readonly'
  uses the wrong scope.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add the regression test from ksh2020, modified to run in a
  subshell.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Add documentation of 'readonly' vs. 'typeset -r' difference:
  'readonly' does not create a function-local scope.

Co-authored-by: Martijn Dekker <martijn@inlv.org>
2020-06-29 19:09:20 +01:00
Johnothan King
10b6ba801d
Fix memory corruption when a compound variable is unset (#49)
The following set of commands ends with a memory fault under
certain circumstances because ksh attempts to free memory
twice, causing memory corruption:

$ testarray=(1 2)
$ compound testarray
$ unset testarray
$ eval testarray=

The fix is to make sure 'np->nvfun' is a valid pointer before
attempting to free memory in 'put_tree'. This patch is from
OpenSUSE: https://build.opensuse.org/package/view_file/shells/ksh/ksh93-nvtree-free.dif?expand=1

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvtree.c:
- Do not try to free memory when 'np->nvfun' and 'val'
  are false.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/comvar.sh:
- Add a regression test for the double free problem. The
  reproducer must be run from an executable script
  with 'ksh -c'.
2020-06-29 18:08:28 +01:00
Johnothan King
5135cf651c
Fix crashes caused by 'typeset -RF' (#47)
Variables created with 'typeset -RF' were being treated as
short integers, even though they are actually floating point
values. As a result the following example will cause a crash:

$ typeset -RF foo=1
$ test "$foo"

This is fixed by checking for 'NV_DOUBLE' with 'nv_isattr',
which prevents ksh from treating floating point values as
short integers due to '== NV_INT16P' excluding 'NV_DOUBLE'.
This bugfix was backported from ksh93v- 2013-10-10-alpha.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/array.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvdisc:
- Avoid treating floating point values as short integers by
  checking for 'NV_DOUBLE' with 'nv_isattr'.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/types.sh:
- Add a regression test for the 'typeset -RF' crash. The
  crash cannot be replicated if 'typeset -RF' sets 'foo'
  to zero.
2020-06-28 23:30:27 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
c870be9fea regress: avoid interference from systemwide /etc/ksh.kshrc
ksh, even non-interactive, loads /etc/ksh.kshrc by default. On
some systems this can be a problem, e.g. OpenBSD, which installs a
default /etc/ksh.kshrc which is designed for its version of pdksh.

Quoth sh.1:

    On systems that support a system wide /etc/ksh.kshrc
    initialization file, if the filename generated by the expansion
    of ENV begins with /./ or ././ the system wide initialization
    file will not be executed.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtests,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/options.sh,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Instead of emptying or unsetting ENV, ensure it is exported with
  a default value of /./dev/null so we skip loading the system-wide
  profile and load an empty user profile.
- Where a specific ENV path was required for the tests, prefix it
  with '/.' so it starts with '/./'.
2020-06-27 00:52:17 +02:00
Johnothan King
bb4745e897
Fix incorrect behavior of 'cd ../.foo' (#46)
The cd builtin was removing '.' from directory names when combined
with a preceding '../', which caused commands like 'cd ../.local'
to become 'cd ../local'. This patch fixes the problem by limiting
the extra handling to leading '..'. The bugfix comes from ksh93v-
2013-10-10-alpha, although this version is a shortened patch from
Solaris (as ksh93v- refactored a decent amount of the code for the
cd builtin).

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/cd_pwd.c:
- cd should only check for leading '..', as trying to handle a lone
  '.' only causes problems.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Add a regression test for this problem based on the test present in
  ksh93v- 2013-10-10-alpha.

Patch from Solaris:
https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland/blob/860d27f/components/ksh93/patches/270-23319761.patch
2020-06-26 23:36:29 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
eaaa0de74d tests/builtins.sh: change GMT to UTC before testing (re: c9634e90)
Apparently some systems are still configured to use GMT instead of
UTC after all. This included our own GitHub CI runner config.
Oops. This made the previous commit fail to pass the CI test run.

We can't win this one, it's got to be either one or the other.
UTC is the international standard on which civil time is based.
GMT is often taken as synonymous for UTC, but in navigation,
it can differ from UTC by up to 0.9 seconds. Ref.:
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Greenwich_Mean_Time&oldid=963422787
The more ambiguous term should not be the first preference.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Before checking 'printf %T now' output against 'date' output,
  change any ' GMT ' in the latter to ' UTC '.

.github/workflows/ci.yml:
- Set time zone to UTC, not GMT.
2020-06-26 13:42:06 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
c9634e908d tmdata: prioritise "UTC" over "GMT"
"UTC" is the modern name for what used to be "GMT", but ksh still
preferred GMT. On systems configured to use the UTC time zone, this
caused a 'printf %T' regression test failure in tests/builtins.sh
as the external 'data' utility will prefer UTC these days.

src/lib/libast/tm/tmdata.c:
- Reorder the name alternatives for UTC/GMT so that UTC is
  the first preference.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Report expected and actual values on 'printf %T' failure.

Related: #6
2020-06-26 13:25:40 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
8c705bf3b7 Fix behaviour of tabs in raw Bourne Shell-like editing mode
When neither '-o emacs' nor '-o vi' is active, there were a couple
of bugs with entering tab characters:
1. Tab completion was erroneously left active. The cause of this
   was that raw Bourne edit mode is handled by ed_viread() in vi.c
   on shells with wide character support, instead of the default
   ed_read() in edit.c, and the former failed to check if vi mode
   is active when processing tab characters.
2. When entering literal tab characters, the cursor was moved to
   the right only one character, instead of the amount of
   characters corresponding to the tab.

src/cmd/ksh93/edit/vi.c: getline():
- Before processing '\t' (tab) for command completion, check that
  the 'vi' shell option (SH_VI) is active.

src/cmd/ksh93/edit/edit.c: ed_virt_to_phys():
- When translating literal tabs to on-terminal spaces and when
  recalculating the cursor position, remove erroneous checks for
  SH_VI; this is also needed in raw Bourne mode. According to my
  own testing, this has no effect on emacs mode (knock on wood).

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Add two regression tests. An odd race condition reveals itself in
  either pty or in ksh's raw/Bourne edit mode; see comment in test.
  Effect is we have to expect either literal tabs or tabs expanded
  to spaces, until that is tracked down and fixed.

Fixes #43.
2020-06-26 11:34:02 +02:00
Johnothan King
4cecde1dd3 Fix buggy completion of ~/some in vi mode (#41)
This commit fixes the bug reported in:
https://github.com/att/ast/issues/682
The following sequence fails in vi mode because ksh looks in the
wrong part of the 'virtual' buffer:

$ touch ~/testfile
$ ls ~/test<tab>

The fix is to change 'virtual[i]' to 'virtual[last_virt]' in the
bugged section of code. The other changes are to make sure listing
files in a directory with something like 'ls /etc/<tab>' calls the
code for Ctrl+L to preserve 'ls /etc/' rather than try (and fail)
to complete the directory name, producing 'ls /etc\n/'. This bugfix
was backported from ksh93v- 2013-10-10-alpha.

src/cmd/ksh93/edit/vi.c
 - Backport the bugfix from ksh93v- 2013-10-10-alpha for this
   problem.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh
 - Add a regression test for this issue using pty, adjusted slightly
   for a fake home directory in /tmp.
2020-06-25 23:13:45 +02:00
Johnothan King
d41ec674c7 Fix some errors in the documentation and other minor issues (#42)
Somewhat notable changes in this commit:
- The 'set +r' bugfix (re: 74b41621) is now documented in the
  changelog.
- Missing options have been added to the synopsis section of the
  ksh man page.
- The minor formatting fix from https://github.com/ksh-community/ksh/pull/5
  has been applied to the ksh man page.
- A few fixes from https://github.com/att/ast/commit/5e747cfb
  have been applied to the ksh man page.
- The man page fixes from https://github.com/att/ast/pull/353
  have been applied, being:
  - An addition to document the behavior of 'set -H'.
  - A fix for the cd section appending rksh93.
  - A fix for some options being indented too far.
  - Removal of a duplicate section documenting '-D'.
  - Reordering the options for 'set' in alphabetical order.
  - A minor fix for the documentation of 'ksh -i'.
2020-06-25 19:31:51 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
43d9fbac1f tests/bracket.sh: disable 'test -N' tests due to noatime mounts
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bracket.sh:
- Disable tests for [[ -N ... ]] (test -N ...), because it is
  expected to break on systems where $TMPDIR (or even the entire
  root file system) is mounted with noatime for better performance.
  Ref.: https://opensource.com/article/20/6/linux-noatime
  (It also needs annoyingly long sleep times on older systems with
  a 1-second timestamp granularity.)
2020-06-25 14:28:37 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
2315f6687a Add regress test for fixed BUG_KUNSETIFS (re: 6f0e008c, 7b994b6a)
Modernish is no longer detecting BUG_KUNSETIFS, as I've just
discovered. Always nice when bugs spontaneously vanish...

A 'git reset HEAD~1'/recompile/retest loop reveals this bug was
fixed by 6f0e008c, as later modified by 7b994b6a.

So, let's make sure it stays fixed.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh:
- Add a couple of regression tests for BUG_KUNSETIFS presence,
  detection and known workaround, based on the same in modernish.
  Ref.: https://github.com/modernish/modernish/blob/3ddcbd13/lib/modernish/cap/BUG_KUNSETIFS.t
	https://github.com/modernish/modernish/blob/3ddcbd13/lib/modernish/tst/isset.t#L204-L222
2020-06-24 20:00:01 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
43c09c2d6f tests/pty.sh: disable 137(C) because it actually tests vi(1)
Testing the behaviour of an external editor, even the standard one,
is outside the scope of the ksh regression tests.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/pty.sh:
- Disable a test that invoked vi(1) and that failed, either
  intermittently or consistently, on too many systems because
  whatever vi(1) is installed locally doesn't write the string
  "/tmp/" exactly as and/or when expected.
2020-06-24 16:40:28 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
5c677a4c6c Refactor the new 'times' builtin; zero-pad seconds (re: 65d363fd)
The output format is now identical to mksh's except for
the locale-dependent radix point ('.' or ',').

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/misc.c:
- Output format tweak: pad seconds with initial zero if < 10.
- Use "too many operands" (e_toomanyops) error msg from 3ba4900e
  if there are operands, instead of "bad syntax" (e_badsyntax).
- Consolidate repetitive calculating and printing code
  into print_times().
- Get rid of some excessive variables.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
- Update regression tests to match the above.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- Update sh_opttimes[] version string.
2020-06-24 14:32:20 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
57ff4676eb Fix very silly bug in times builtin (re: 65d363fd)
Well, that's what I get for backporting code without properly
checking it over. There was an elementary math error in how the
times builtin calculated seconds:
	utime_sec = utime - utime_min;
which could cause output such as "1m98.38s" or "3m234.77s".

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/misc.c: b_times():
- Use fmod(), i.e. floating point modulus, to calculate seconds.
2020-06-24 07:47:57 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
d8fe061f4c shtests: count nonexistent tests as errors (re: c2eabc57)
When a nonexistent test script was given as an argument to
shtests, this was not counted as an error and shtests exited
successfully (with status 0).

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtests:
- Increase total error count if a test script is not found.
2020-06-24 00:53:59 +02:00
Johnothan King
0aa9e03f55
Fix process substitution combined with redirection (#40)
The code for handling process substitution with redirection was
never being run because IORAW is usually set when IOPROCSUB is
set. This commit fixes the problem by moving the required code
out of the !IORAW if statement. The following command now prints
'good' instead of writing 'ok' to a bizzare file:

$ ksh -c 'echo ok > >(sed s/ok/good/); wait'
good

This commit also fixes a bug that caused the process ID of the
asynchronous process to print when the shell was in interactive
mode. The following command no longer prints a process ID,
behaving like in Bash and zsh:

$ echo >(true)
/dev/fd/5

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/args.c:
 - Temporarily turn off the interactive state while in a process
   substitution to prevent the shell from printing the PID of
   the asynchronous process.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/io.c:
 - Move the code for process substitution with redirection into
   a separate if statement.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
 - Add two tests for both process substitution bugs fixed by this
   commit.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/shtests:
 - Update shtests with a patch from Martijn Dekker to use
   pretty-printing for the output from the times builtin (if it
   is available).

Fixes #2
2020-06-23 23:02:16 +01:00
Johnothan King
c1994b87f1
Fix nested functions ignoring prefixed variable assignments (#37)
This commit fixes the bug described in att/ast#32. The fix and
following explanation is from att/ast#467:

While copying variables from function's local scope to a new scope,
variable attributes were not copied. Such variables were not marked
to be exported in the new function. For e.g.

function f2 { env | grep -i "^foo"; }
function f1 { env | grep -i "^foo"; f2; }
foo=bar f1

prints 'foo=bar' only once, but it should print be twice.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
 - When variables from the local scope of a function are copied into
   the scope of a nested function, the attributes of the variables
   need to be copied as well.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/functions.sh:
 - Add regression tests from ksh2020 to check environment variables
   passed to functions.
2020-06-23 00:27:05 +01:00
Johnothan King
e0b326ae15
Fix a test failure for printf %T now on Linux (#38)
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
 - The output of 'printf %T now' and the external 'date'
   command aren't guaranteed to be the same unless $LC_ALL
   is set to 'C'. Set LC_ALL in these command substitutions
   to fix a spurious test failure on Linux.
2020-06-22 23:55:51 +01:00
Johnothan King
ff358f3464 Fix a crash when 'kill %%' and 'kill %+' are run (#35)
Ksh was trying to use the 'pw' variable as a valid pointer even
when it was NULL. This is fixed by doing the error check for
'pw' before doing anything else in 'job_kill'.

This bugfix is from Red Hat:
44e0a643a9/f/SOURCES/ksh-20130214-fixkill.patch

Fixes #34
2020-06-22 19:11:49 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
3ba4900e9c Make 'stop' and 'suspend' regular built-ins
The 'stop' and 'suspend' default aliases are now converted into
regular built-in commands so that 'unalias -a' does not remove
them, 'suspend' can do some sanity checks, and something like
	cmd=stop; $cmd $!
will now work.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/trap.c:
- b_kill(): Incorporate 'stop' functionality, which is simply
  setting the same flag and variable as '-s STOP' would have done.
- b_suspend(): Add simple builtin function that sends SIGSTOP to
  the main shell. Check for no operands, and refuse to suspend a
  login shell (which would leave the user stuck with no way out).
  Also check that 'kill' succeeds; if we're in an asynchronous
  subshell, it is possible the main shell no longer exists.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/aliases.c:
- Remove "stop" and "suspend" default aliases. (Why were these
  conditional upon SIGTSTP when they actually issued SIGSTOP?)

src/cmd/ksh93/include/builtins.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/msg.c:
- Add declarations of "stop" and "suspend" regular built-ins.
- Add option strings (AST manual/--man pages) for them.
- Add e_toomanyops ("too many operands") reusable error message for
  b_suspend(). Other new commands may want this at some point.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh.1:
- Remove "stop" and "suspend" default aliases.
- Document "stop" and "suspend" regular built-in commands.
2020-06-22 15:36:29 +02:00
Anuradha Weeraman
54da7fc202
Fix 'bin/package clean' deleting entire git repo (#32)
This appears to be originating from:

2755         *)      if      test ! -d $INSTALLROOT
2756                 then    INSTALLROOT=$PACKAGEROOT;

where INSTALLROOT=PACKAGEROOT and 'clean' deletes everything under
INSTALLROOT thus deleting the entire git repo. This only applies when
there's no arch/$HOSTTYPE directory due to the condition above.

bin/package,
src/cmd/INIT/package.sh:
- Delete arch/$HOSTTYPE as stated in the documentation
  for the clean action instead of $INSTALLROOT.
2020-06-22 00:59:55 +01:00
Anuradha Weeraman
de2b4a6f97
edit/edit.c: fix compiler warnings (#31)
This fixes compiler warnings for implicit-ints:
warning: return type defaults to 'int' [-Wimplicit-int]
 1854:     sh_tcgetattr(int fd, struct termios *tty)
 1863:     sh_tcsetattr(int fd, int cmd, struct termios *tty)

cmd/ksh93/edit/edit.c:
- Set the return type explicitly to int and align with the prototype
  declared in include/terminal.h.
2020-06-21 01:47:11 +01:00
Martijn Dekker
9d428f8f5e Fix erroneous fork after 'readonly PATH' in subshell (re: 102868f8)
After making PATH readonly in a virtual subshell (without otherwise
changing it, so the subshell is never forked), then the main shell
would erroneously fork into a background process immediately after
leaving the virtual subshell. This was caused by a bug in the
forking workaround that prevents changes in PATH in a virtual
subshell from clearing the parent shell's hash table.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c: nv_putval():
- If we're either setting or restoring PATH, do an additional check
  for the NV_RDONLY flag, which means the function was told to
  ignore the variable's readonly state. It is told to ignore that
  when restoring the parent shell state after exiting a virtual
  subshell. If we don't fork then, we don't fork the parent shell.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/subshell.sh:
- Add regression test verifying that no forking happens when making
  PATH readonly in a subshell.

Fixes #30.
2020-06-20 23:47:42 +02:00
Johnothan King
bd3e2a8001
Fix unreliable behavior when special vars are readonly or unset (#27)
src/cmd/ksh93/data/variables.c:
 - Running 'unset .sh.lineno' creates a memory fault, so fix that
   by giving it the NV_NOFREE attribute. This crash was happening
   because ${.sh.lineno} is an integer that cannot be freed from
   memory with free(3).

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
 - Tell _nv_unset to ignore NV_RDONLY when $RANDOM and $LINENO are
   restored from the subshell scope. This is required to fully
   restore the original state of these variables after a virtual
   subshell finishes.

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/typeset.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/subshell.c:
 - Disabled some optimizations for two instances of 'sh_assignok' to
   fix 'readonly' in virtual subshells and '(unset .sh.level)' in
   nested functions. This fixes the following variables when
   '(readonly $varname); enum varname=' is run:

   $_
   ${.sh.name}
   ${.sh.subscript}
   ${.sh.level}

   The optimization in question prevents sh_assignok from saving the
   original state of these variables by making the sh_assignok call
   a no-op. Ksh needs the original state of a variable for it to be
   properly restored after a virtual subshell has run, otherwise ksh
   will simply carry over any new flags (being NV_RDONLY in this case)
   from the subshell into the main shell.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/variables.sh:
 - Add regression tests from Martijn Dekker for setting special
   variables as readonly in virtual subshells and for unsetting
   special variables in general.

Fixes #4
2020-06-20 18:08:41 +01:00
Anuradha Weeraman
ee698e89d5
Fix compiler warning in INIT/ratz.c (#28)
src/cmd/INIT/ratz.c:
- Fix build warning:

  src/cmd/INIT/ratz.c:4741:2: warning: case label value exceeds maximum value for
   type
   4741 |  case 0241:
        |  ^~~~

  The character literal in the switch expression was being treated
  as a signed char while the case label 0241 is greater than 127,
  resulting in this warning.
2020-06-20 12:42:53 +01:00
Johnothan King
99065353b3 Fix 'whence -a' to print correct path for tracked alias (#25)
'whence -a' bases the path for tracked aliases on the user's
current working directory if an enabled ksh builtin of the same
name is also available. The following example will claim 'cat'
is in the user's current working directory:

$ whence -a cat
cat is a tracked alias for /usr/bin/cat
$ builtin cat
$ whence -a cat
cat is a shell builtin
cat is /usr/bin/cat
cat is a tracked alias for /current/working/directory/cat

This patch from ksh2020 fixes this problem by properly saving the
path of the tracked alias for use with 'whence -a', since
'path_pwd' (as implied by the function's name) only gets the users
current working directory, not the location of tracked aliases.
Ref.: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1049

This bug was originally reported by David Morano about two decades
ago to the AST team: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/954

src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/whence.c:
 - Print the actual path of a tracked alias, path_pwd doesn't
   have this functionality.

src/cmd/ksh93/include/name.h:
 - Add 'pathcomp' for saving the value of tracked aliases.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/path.c:
 - Save the value of tracked aliases for use by whence.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/builtins.sh:
 - Add a regression test for using 'whence -a' on tracked
   aliases with a builtin equivalent.
2020-06-19 14:03:58 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
876da711c0 data/builtins.c: fix typo in 'getopts' usage message 2020-06-18 12:12:15 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
57af42d968 data/builtins.c: tweaks for {exec,redirect} --man (re: 7b82c338)
src/cmd/ksh93/data/builtins.c:
- sh_optexec[], sh_optdirect[]: Move paragraphs on exit behaviour
  to the EXIT STATUS section, where people would look for them.
- sh_optexec[]: Since we modified b_exec() to support 'redirect',
  add "ksh93" to the credits to avoid blaming AT&T for our changes.
2020-06-18 11:52:32 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
8b51d12f4b data/builtins.c: cosmetic fix in comment 2020-06-18 03:40:29 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
3e3f6b0f12 Restore #22 'unset -f' fix minus segfault (re: b7932e87, 97511748)
Applying the fix for 'unset -f' exposed a crashing bug in lookup()
in sh/nvdisc.c, which is the function for looking up discipline
functions. This is what caused tests/variables.sh to crash.
Ref.: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/23#issuecomment-645699614

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/nvdisc.c: lookup():
- To avoid segfault, check that the function pointer nq->nvalue.rp
  is actually set before checking if nq->nvalue.rp->running==1.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/functions.sh:
- Uncomment the 'unset -f' fix from b7932e87.

Resolves #21 (again).
2020-06-18 02:48:51 +02:00
Martijn Dekker
975117485c Part revert #22 to undo memory fault (re: b7932e87)
The fix in sh/xec.c, which was backported from the ksh 93v- beta to
delay the actual removal of a running function that unsets itself,
caused a segfault in the variables.sh regression tests (see #23).

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
- Comment out the backported code pending a correct fix for #21.
  Now both types of functions silently fail to unset themselves
  (unless they're discipline functions).

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/functions.sh:
- Disable regression tests checking that the function was actually
  unset, pending a correct fix for #21.

Resolves: #23
Reopens: #21
2020-06-17 21:01:55 +02:00
Johnothan King
b7932e87b6
Fix two problems with 'unset -f' behavior (#22)
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/name.c:
 - Correct the check for when a function is currently running
   to fix a segmentation fault that occurred when a POSIX
   function tries to unset itself while it is running.
   This bug fix was backported from ksh93v-.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/xec.c:
 - If a function tries to unset itself, unset the function
   with '_nv_unset(np, NV_RDONLY)' to fix a silent failure.
   This fix was also backported from ksh93v-.

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/functions.sh:
 - Add four regression tests for when a function unsets itself.

Resolves #21
2020-06-17 18:26:43 +01:00