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Martijn Dekker 921bbcaeb7 Remove SHOPT_BASH; keep &> redir operator, '-o posix' option
On 16 June there was a call for volunteers to fix the bash
compatibility mode; it has never successfully compiled in 93u+.
Since no one showed up, it is now removed due to lack of interest.

A couple of things are kept, which are now globally enabled:

1. The &>file redirection shorthand (for >file 2>&1). As a matter
   of fact, ksh93 already supported this natively, but only while
   running rc/profile/login scripts, and it issued a warning. This
   makse it globally available and removes the warning, bringing
   ksh93 in line with mksh, bash and zsh.

2. The '-o posix' standard compliance option. It is now enabled on
   startup if ksh is invoked as 'sh' or if the POSIXLY_CORRECT
   variable exists in the environment. To begin with, it disables
   the aforementioned &> redirection shorthand. Further compliance
   tweaks will be added in subsequent commits. The differences will
   be fairly minimal as ksh93 is mostly compliant already.

In all changed files, code was removed that was compiled (more
precisely, failed to compile/link) if the SHOPT_BASH preprocessor
identifier was defined. Below are other changes worth mentioning:

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/bash.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/data/bash_pre_rc.sh:
- Removed.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/lexstates.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/shlex.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/lex.c:
- Globally enable &> redirection operator if SH_POSIX not active.
- Remove warning that was issued when &> was used in rc scripts.

src/cmd/ksh93/data/options.c,
src/cmd/ksh93/include/defs.h,
src/cmd/ksh93/sh/args.c:
- Keep SH_POSIX option (-o posix).
- Replace SH_TYPE_BASH shell type by SH_TYPE_POSIX.

src/cmd/ksh93/sh/init.c:
- sh_type(): Return SH_TYPE_POSIX shell type if ksh was invoked
  as sh (or rsh, restricted sh).
- sh_init(): Enable posix option if the SH_TYPE_POSIX shell type
  was detected, or if the CONFORMANCE ast config variable was set
  to "standard" (which libast sets on init if POSIXLY_CORRECT
  exists in the environment).

src/cmd/ksh93/tests/options.sh,
src/cmd/ksh93/tests/io.sh:
- Replace regression tests for &> and move to io.sh. Since &> is
  now for general use, no longer test in an rc script, and don't
  check that a warning is issued.

Closes: #9
Progresses: #20
2020-09-01 06:19:19 +01:00

631 lines
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This documents significant changes in the 93u+m branch of AT&T ksh93.
For full details, see the git log at: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh
Any uppercase BUG_* names are modernish shell bug IDs.
2020-09-01:
- The bash-style '&>file' redirection shorthand (for '>file 2>&1') is now
always recognised and not only when running rc/profile init scripts. It no
longer issues a warning. This brings ksh93 in line with mksh, bash and zsh.
- A long-form shell option '-o posix' has been added, which implements a
mode for better compatibility with the POSIX standard. It is automatically
turned on if ksh is invoked under the name 'sh'.
For now, it:
* disables the &> redirection shorthand
2020-08-19:
- Sped up the 'read' command on most systems by 15-25%. Fixed a hanging bug
on reading from a FIFO that could occur on macOS.
2020-08-17:
- 'command -p' incorrectly used the hash table entry (a.k.a. tracked alias)
for a command if its path was previously hashed. It has now been fixed so
it never consults the hash table.
2020-08-16:
- Fixed 'command -x' on macOS, Linux and Solaris by accounting for a 16-byte
argument alignment. If execution does fail, it now aborts with an internal
error message instead of entering an infinite retry loop.
2020-08-13:
- Fixed memory leaks and a crashing bug that occurred when defining and
running functions in subshells.
2020-08-11:
- Fixed an intermittent crash upon running a large number of subshells.
2020-08-10:
- A number of fixes have been applied to the printf formatting directives
%H and %#H (as well as the undocumented equivalents %(html)q and %(url)q):
1. Both formatters have been made multibyte/UTF-8 aware, and no longer
delete multibyte characters. Invalid UTF-8 byte sequences are rendered
as ASCII question marks.
2. %H no longer wrongly changes spaces to non-breaking spaces ( ).
3. %H now converts the single quote (') to '%#39;' instead of '''
which is not a valid entity in all HTML versions.
4. %#H failed to encode some reserved characters (e.g. '?') while encoding
some unreserved ones (e.g. '~'). It now percent-encodes all characters
except those 'unreserved' as per RFC3986 (ASCII alphanumeric plus -._~).
- Fixed a crash that occurred intermittently after running an external
command from a command substitution expanded from the $PS1 shell prompt.
2020-08-09:
- File name generation (a.k.a. pathname expansion, a.k.a. globbing) now
never matches the special navigational names '.' (current directory) and
'..' (parent directory). This change makes a pattern like .* useful; it
now matches all hidden files (dotfiles) in the current directory, without
the harmful inclusion of '.' and '..'.
2020-08-08:
- Argument checking in the 'redirect' builtin command (see 2020-06-11) has
been improved to error out before executing redirections. For example, an
error like 'redirect ls >foo.txt' now will not create 'foo.txt' and will
not leave your standard output permanently redirected to it.
2020-08-06:
- Added the '${.sh.pid}' variable as an alternative to Bash's '$BASHPID'.
This variable is set to the current shell's PID, unlike '$$' (which is
set to the parent shell's PID). In virtual subshells '${.sh.pid}' is not
changed from its previous value, while in forked subshells '${.sh.pid}'
is set to the subshell's process ID.
2020-08-05:
- Fixed a bug in functions that caused ksh to crash when an array with an
unset method was turned into a multidimensional array.
- Fixed a bug that caused scripts to continue running after over-shifting
in a function when the function call had a redirection.
- When generating shellquoted strings (such as with 'printf %q'), the
hexadecimal value of a quoted unprintable character was not protected with
square braces, e.g. 0x12 followed by '3' would be quoted as '\x123', which
is a different value. Such strings are now quoted like '\x[12]3' if the
next character is a hexadecimal digit.
2020-07-31:
- Fixed a bug that caused multidimensional associative arrays to be created
with an extra array member.
- Fixed a bug that caused the expansions of positional parameters $1 - $9,
as well as special parameters such as $? and $-, to corrupt any multibyte
characters immediately following the expansion if a UTF-8 locale is active.
2020-07-29:
- On a ksh compiled to use fork(2) to run external commands, a bug has been
fixed that caused signals (such as SIGINT, Ctrl+C) to be ignored within a
non-forked subshell after running an external command within that subshell.
2020-07-25:
- Fixed BUG_MULTIBIFS: Multibyte characters can now be used as IFS
delimiters. "$*" was incorrectly joining positional parameters on
the first byte of a multibyte character. This was due to truncation
based on the incorrect assumption the IFS would never be larger
than a single byte.
- Fixed a bug that caused the sleep builtin to continue after being given
an unrecognized option. 'sleep -: 1' will now show a usage message and
exit instead of sleep for one second.
- Fixed a bug that caused the 'typeset' variable attributes -a, -A, -l, and
-u to leak out of a subshell if they were set without assigning a value.
2020-07-23:
- Fixed an infinite loop that could occur when ksh is the system's /bin/sh.
- A command substitution that is run on the same line as a here-document
will no longer cause a syntax error.
2020-07-22:
- Fixed two race conditions when running external commands on
interactive shells with job control active.
2020-07-20:
- If a shell function and a built-in command by the same name exist,
'whence -a' and 'type -a' now report both.
- Fixed a bug that caused file descriptors opened with 'redirect' or 'exec'
to survive a subshell environment after exiting it.
2020-07-19:
- Fixed a crash that occurred in the '.' command when using kshdb.
- Fixed a crash that occurred when attempting to use redirection with an
invalid file descriptor.
2020-07-16:
- The 'history' and 'r' default aliases have been made regular built-ins,
leaving zero default aliases.
- Fixed a bug that caused 'sleep -s' to have no effect with intervals longer
than 30 seconds.
- The accuracy of the sleep builtin has been improved. It no longer ignores
microseconds and doesn't add extra milliseconds when the interval is less
than 31 seconds.
2020-07-15:
- The 'autoload', 'compound', 'float', 'functions', 'integer' and 'nameref'
default aliases have been converted 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.
- The End key escape sequence '^[[F' is now handled in the emacs and vi editing
modes. The End key moves the cursor to the end of the line (in contrast to
the Home key doing the opposite).
2020-07-14:
- Fixed a bug that caused 'set -b' to have no effect.
- Following the 'time' keyword, the 'times' builtin command now also
supports millisecond precision.
2020-07-13:
- Fixed a fork bomb that could occur when the vi editor was sent SIGTSTP
while running in a ksh script.
- Appending a lone percent to the end of a format specifier no longer
causes a syntax error. The extra percent will be treated as a literal
'%', like in Bash and zsh.
- The 'time' keyword now has proper support for millisecond precision.
Although this feature was previously documented, the 'time' keyword
only supported up to centisecond precision, which caused a command
like the one below to return '0.000' on certain operating systems:
$ TIMEFORMAT='%3R'; time sleep .003
- The 'time' keyword now zero-pads seconds less than ten (like mksh).
2020-07-10:
- Fixed a bug that caused types created with 'typeset -T' to throw an error
when used if the type name started with a lowercase 'a'.
- A potential crash due to memory corruption when using many file
descriptors has been fixed.
2020-07-09:
- Fixed a crash on syntax error when sourcing/dotting multiple files.
- Fixed a crash when listing indexed arrays.
- Fixed a memory leak when restoring PATH when temporarily setting PATH
for a command (e.g. PATH=/foo/bar command ...) or in a virtual subshell.
- Combining ((...)) with redirections no longer causes a syntax error
due to the parser handling '>' incorrectly.
- Fixed a bug that corrupted KIA/CQL cross-reference databases created using
ksh's -R option; shell warnings were wrongly included in the database file.
- The shell's quoting algorithm (used in xtrace, printf %q, and more) has been
fixed for UTF-8 (Unicode) locales; it no longer needlessly and inconsistently
encodes normal printable UTF-8 characters into hexadecimal \u[xxxx] codes.
2020-07-07:
- Four of the date formats accepted by 'printf %()T' have had their
functionality altered to the common behavior of date(1):
- '%k' and '%l' print the current hour with blank padding, the former
based on a 24-hour clock and the latter a twelve hour clock. These
are common extensions present on Linux and *BSD.
- '%f' prints a date with the format string '%Y.%m.%d-%H:%M:%S' (BusyBox).
- '%q' prints the quarter of the year (GNU).
2020-07-06:
- 'notty' is now written to the ksh auditing file instead of '(null)' if
the user's tty could not be determined.
- Unsetting an associative array no longer causes a memory leak to occur.
2020-07-05:
- In UTF-8 locales, fix corruption of the shell's internal string quoting
algorithm (as used by xtrace, 'printf %q', and more) that occurred when
the processing of a multibyte character was interrupted.
2020-07-03:
- Backslashes are no longer escaped in the raw Bourne Shell-like editing
mode in multibyte locales, i.e. backslashes are no longer treated like
Control-V if the emacs and vi modes are disabled.
- Deleting a backslash in vi mode with Control-H or Backspace now only
escapes a backslash if it was the previous input. This means erasing a
string such as 'ab\\\' will only cause the first backslash to escape a
Backspace as '^?', like in emacs mode.
- An odd interaction with Backspace when the last character of a separate
buffer created with Shift-C was '\' has been fixed. '^?' will no longer
be output repeatedly when attempting to erase a separate buffer with
a Backspace. Note that buffers created with Shift-C are not meant to be
erasable:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/vi.html#tag_20_152_13_49
- The 'kill' builtin now supports the SIGINFO signal (on operating systems
with support for SIGINFO).
2020-07-02:
- Fixed a crash that occurred if a directory named '.paths' existed in any
directory listed in $PATH. The fix was to only read '.paths' if it is a
regular file or a symlink to a regular file.
2020-06-30:
- 'read -u' will no longer crash with a memory fault when given an out of
range or negative file descriptor.
- The '=~' operator no longer raises an error if a regular expression
combines the '{x}' quantifier with a sub-expression.
2020-06-28:
- Variables created with 'typeset -RF' no longer cause a memory fault
when accessed.
- Unsetting an array that was turned into a compound variable will no
longer cause silent memory corruption.
- Variables created with 'readonly' in functions are now set to the
specified value instead of nothing. Note that 'readonly' does not
create a function-local scope, unlike 'typeset -r' which does.
2020-06-26:
- Changing to a directory that has a name starting with a '.' will no
longer fail if preceded by '../' (i.e. 'cd ../.local' will now work).
2020-06-24:
- Fixed buggy tab completion of tilde-expanded paths such as
~/some in 'vi' mode.
- In the raw/default Bourne Shell-like editing mode that occurs when neither
the 'emacs' nor the 'vi' shell option is active:
* tab completion is now correctly disabled, instead of enabled and broken;
* entering tab characters now moves the cursor the correct amount.
2020-06-23:
- Fixed a bug that caused combining process substitution with redirection
to create a bizarre file in the user's current working directory.
- Using process substitution while the shell is interactive no longer
causes the process ID of the asynchronous process to be printed.
2020-06-22:
- The 'stop' and 'suspend' default aliases have been converted into regular
built-in commands, so that 'unalias -a' does not remove them, 'suspend'
can do a couple of sanity checks, and something like
cmd=stop; $cmd $!
will now work. See 'stop --man' and 'suspend --man' for more information.
- Fixed a bug that caused the kill and stop commands to segfault when given
a non-existent job.
- Nested functions no longer ignore variable assignments that were prefixed
to their parent function, i.e. 'VAR=foo func' will now set $VAR to 'foo'
in the scope of any nested function 'func' runs.
2020-06-20:
- Fixed a bug that caused setting the following variables as readonly in
a virtual subshell to affect the environment outside of the subshell:
$_
${.sh.name}
${.sh.subscript}
${.sh.level}
$RANDOM
$LINENO
- Fixed two bugs that caused `unset .sh.lineno` to always produce a memory
fault and `(unset .sh.level)` to memory fault when run in nested
functions.
2020-06-18:
- A two decade old bug that caused 'whence -a' to base the path of
tracked aliases on the user's current working directory has been
fixed. Now the real path to tracked aliases is shown when '-a' is
passed to the whence command.
2020-06-17:
- A bug in 'unset -f' was fixed that prevented shell functions from
unsetting themselves while they were running. A POSIX function no longer
crashes when doing so, and a KornShell-style function no longer silently
ignores an 'unset -f' on itself. A function of either form now continues
running after unsetting itself, and is removed at the end of the run.
2020-06-16:
- Passing the '-d' flag to the read builtin will no longer cause the '-r'
flag to be discarded when 'read -r -d' is run.
- Fix BUG_CMDSPASGN: preceding a "special builtin"[*] with 'command' now
prevents preceding invocation-local variable assignments from becoming global.
[*] https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html#tag_18_14
2020-06-15:
- The 'source' alias has been converted into a regular built-in command.
- Functions that set variables in a virtual subshell will no longer affect
variables of the same name outside of the virtual subshell's environment.
- Terse usage messages written by builtin commands now point the user to
the --help and --man options for more information.
2020-06-14:
- 'read -S' is now able to correctly handle strings with double quotes
nested inside of double quotes.
2020-06-13:
- Fixed a timezone name determination bug on FreeBSD that caused the
output from `LC_ALL=C printf '%T' now` to print the wrong time zone name.
2020-06-11:
- Fixed a bug that caused running 'builtin -d' on a special builtin to
delete it. The man page for the 'builtin' command documents that special
builtins cannot be deleted.
- POSIX compliance fix: It is now possible to set shell functions named
'alias' or 'unalias', overriding the commands by the same names. In
technical terms, they are now regular builtins, not special builtins.
- The redirect='command exec' alias has been converted to a regular
'redirect' builtin command that only accepts I/O redirections, which
persist as in 'exec'. This means that:
* 'unlias -a' no longer removes the 'redirect' command;
* users no longer accidentally get logged out of their shells if
they type something intuitive but wrong, like 'redirect ls >file'.
- The undocumented 'login' and 'newgrp' builtin commands have been removed.
These replaced your shell session with the external commands by the same
name, as in 'exec'. If an error occurred (e.g. due to a typo), you would
end up immediately logged out.
If you do want this behaviour, you can restore it by setting:
alias login='exec login'
alias newgrp='exec newgrp'
2020-06-10:
- The 'hash' utility is now a regular builtin instead of an alias to
'alias -t --'. The functionality of the old command has been removed
from the alias builtin.
- Changing the hash table in a subshell will no longer affect the parent
shell's hash table. This fix applies to the hash utility and when the
PATH is reset manually.
- 'set +r' is no longer able to unset the restricted option. This change
makes the behavior of 'set +r' identical to 'set +o restricted'.
2020-06-09:
- The 'unalias' builtin will now return a non-zero status if it tries
to remove a previously set alias that is not currently set.
2020-06-08:
- Fix an issue with the up arrow key in Emacs editing mode.
Emacs editing mode is bugged in ksh93u+ and ksh2020. Let's
say you were to run the following commands after starting
a fresh instance of ksh:
$ alias foo='true'
$ unalias foo
If you type 'a' and then press the up arrow on your keyboard,
ksh will complete 'a' to `alias foo='true'` by doing a reverse
search for the last command that starts with 'a'.
Run the alias command again, then type 'u' and press the up
arrow key again. If ksh is in Vi mode, you will get `unalias foo`,
but in Emacs mode you will get `alias foo='true'` again.
All subsequent commands were ignored as ksh was saving the first
command and only based later searches off of it.
- If 'set -u'/'set -o nounset' is active, then the shell now errors out if a
nonexistent positional parameter such as $1, $2, ... is accessed, as other
shells do and POSIX requires. (This does *not* apply to "$@" and "$*".)
- If 'set -u'/'set -o nounset' is active, then the shell now errors out if $!
is accessed before the shell has launched any background process.
- Removed support for an obscure early 1990s Bell Labs file system research
project called 3DFS, which has not existed for decades. This removes:
- an obnoxious default alias 2d='set -f;_2d' that turned off your file name
wildcard expansion and then tried to run a nonexistent '_2d' command
- undocumented builtins 'vmap' and 'vpath' that only printed error messages
- a non-functional -V unary operator for the test and [[ commands
- If the last program run by a ksh script exits with a signal (e.g. crashed),
ksh itself now exits normally instead of repeating that same signal.
In addition, using 'exit x' for x > 256 no longer makes ksh issue a signal.
2020-06-06:
- The 'times' command is now a builtin command that conforms to POSIX
instead of an alias for the 'time' command. It displays the accumulated
user and system CPU times, one line with the times used by the shell and
another with those used by all of the shell's child processes.
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html#tag_18_27
- The default aliases command='command ' and nohup='nohup ' have been
removed because they caused breakage in an attempt to circumvent other
breakage which is being fixed. In the unlikely even that anyone still
needs alias substitution to continue on the command argument following
'command' or 'nohup', it's easy to set these aliases yourself.
2020-06-05:
- Fix a bug that caused special variables such as PATH, LANG, LC_ALL,
etc. to lose their effect after being unset in a subshell. For example:
(unset PATH; PATH=/dev/null; ls); : wrongly ran 'ls'
(unset LC_ALL; LC_ALL=badlocale); : failed to print a diagnostic
This also fixes BUG_KUNSETIFS: unsetting IFS in a subshell failed if IFS
was set to the empty value in the parent shell.
- Fix crashes on some systems, including at least a crash in 'print -v' on
macOS, by eliminating an invalid/undefined use of memccpy() on overlapping
buffers in the commonly used sfputr() function.
- Fix the ${.sh.subshell} level counter; it is no longer reset to zero when a
non-forked subshell happens to fork into a separate process for some reason
(an internal implementation detail that should be unnoticeable to scripts).
2020-06-04:
- Fix BUG_KBGPID: the $! special parameter was not set if a background job
(somecommand &) or co-process (somecommand |&) was launched as the only
command within a braces block with an attached redirection, for example:
{
somecommand &
} >&2
With the bug, $! was unchanged; now it contains the PID of somecommand.
2020-05-31:
- Fix a bug in autoloading functions. Directories in the path search list
which should be skipped (e.g. because they don't exist) did not interact
correctly with autoloaded functions, so that a function to autoload was
not always found correctly.
Details: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/1454
2020-05-30:
- Fix POSIX compliance of 'test'/'[' exit status on error. The command now
returns status 2 instead of 1 when given an invalid number or arithmetic
expression, e.g.:
[ 123 -eq 123x ]; echo $?
now outputs 2 instead of 1.
2020-05-29:
- Fix BUG_FNSUBSH: functions can now be correctly redefined and unset in
subshell environments (such as ( ... ), $(command substitutions), etc).
Before this fix, this was silently ignored, causing the function by the
same name from the parent shell environment to be executed instead.
fn() { echo mainsh; }
(fn() { echo subsh; }; fn); fn
This now correctly outputs "subsh mainsh" instead of "mainsh mainsh".
ls() { echo "ls executed"; }
(unset -f ls; ls); ls
This now correctly lists your directory and then prints "ls executed",
instead of printing "ls executed" twice.
- Fix a similar bug with aliases. These can now be correctly unset
in subshell environments.
2020-05-21:
- Fix truncating of files with the combined redirections '<>;file' and
'<#pattern'. The bug was caused by out-of-sync streams.
Details and discussion: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/61
- Patched code injection vulnerability CVE-2019-14868. As a result, you can
no longer use expressions in imported numeric environment variables; only
integer literals are allowed.
2020-05-20:
- Fix BUG_ISSETLOOP. Expansions like ${var+set} remained static when used
within a 'for', 'while' or 'until' loop; the expansions din't change along
with the state of the variable, so they could not be used to check whether a
variable is set within a loop if the state of that variable changed in the
course of the loop.
- Fix BUG_IFSISSET. ${IFS+s} always yielded 's', and [[ -v IFS ]] always
yielded true, even if IFS is unset. This applied to IFS only.
2020-05-19:
- Fix 'command -p'. The -p option causes the operating system's standard
utilities path (as output by 'getconf PATH') to be searched instead of $PATH.
Before this fix, this was broken on non-interactive shells as the internal
variable holding the default PATH value was not correctly initialised.
2020-05-16:
- Fix 'test -t 1', '[ -t 1 ]', '[[ -t 1 ]]' in command substitutions.
Standard output (file descriptor 1) tested as being on a terminal within a
command substitution, which makes no sense as the command substitution is
supposed to be catching standard output.
v=$(echo begincomsub
[ -t 1 ] && echo oops
echo endcomsub)
echo "$v"
This now does not output "oops".
2020-05-14:
- Fix syncing history when print -s -f is used. For example, the
following now correctly adds a 'cd' command to the history:
print -s -f 'cd -- %q\n' "$PWD"
Ref.: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/425
https://github.com/att/ast/pull/442
- Fix BUG_PUTIOERR: Output builtins now correctly detect
input/output errors. This allows scripts to check for a nonzero exit
status on the 'print', 'printf' and 'echo' builtins and prevent possible
infinite loops if SIGPIPE is ignored.
- Add a convenient bin/run_ksh_tests script to the source tree that
sets up the necessary environment and runs the ksh regression tests.
2020-05-13:
- Fix BUG_CASELIT: an undocumented 'case' pattern matching misbehaviour that
goes back to the original Bourne shell, but wasn't discovered until 2018.
If a pattern doesn't match as a pattern, it was tried again as a literal
string. This broke common validation use cases, e.g.:
n='[0-9]'
case $n in
( [0-9] ) echo "$n is a number" ;;
esac
would output "[0-9] is a number" as the literal string fallback matches the
pattern. As this misbehaviour was never documented anywhere (not for Bourne,
ksh88, or ksh93), and it was never replicated in other shells (not even in
ksh88 clones pdksh and mksh), it is unlikely any scripts rely on it.
Of course, a literal string fallback, should it be needed, is trivial to
implement correctly without this breakage:
case $n in
( [0-9] | "[0-9]") echo "$n is a number or the number pattern" ;;
esac
Ref.: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/476
- Fix BUG_REDIRIO: ksh used to redirect standard output by default when no
file descriptor was specified with the rarely used '<>' reading/writing
redirection operator. It now redirects standard input by default, as POSIX
specifies and as all other POSIX shells do. To redirect standard output
for reading and writing, you now need '1<>'.
Ref.: https://github.com/att/ast/issues/75
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html#tag_18_07_07