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. This bug was occurring because ksh was only doing a reverse search based on the first command that was completed using the up arrow. All subsequent commands were ignored as ksh was saving the first command and only based later searches off of it. NEWS: - Add instructions for reproducing this bug with the up arrow key and information about why this bug was happening in the first place. src/cmd/ksh93/edit/emacs.c: - Remove a bad check that was preventing ksh from using the latest input for reverse search. (cherry picked from commit 745b065487ad6bac693ec6f44752f96e87f9a63b) |
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bin | ||
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src | ||
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LICENSE.md | ||
NEWS | ||
README.md | ||
TODO |
KornShell 93u+m
This repository is used to develop bugfixes to the last stable release (93u+ 2012-08-01) of ksh93, formerly developed by AT&T Software Technology (AST). The sources in this repository were forked from the Github AST repository which is no longer under active development.
To see what's fixed, see NEWS and click on commit messages for full details.
To see what's left to fix, see TODO.
Policy
- No new features. Bug fixes only.
- No major rewrites. No refactoring code that is not fully understood.
- No changes in documented behaviour, except if required for compliance with the POSIX shell language standard which David Korn intended for ksh to follow.
- No 100% bug compatibility. Broken and undocumented behaviour gets fixed.
- No bureaucracy, no formalities. Just fix it, or report it: create issues, send pull requests. Every interested party is invited to contribute.
- To help increase everyone's understanding of this code base, fixes and significant changes should be fully documented in commit messages.
Why?
Between 2017 and 2020 there was an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to breathe new life into the KornShell by extensively refactoring the last unstable AST beta version (93v-). While that ksh2020 branch is now abandoned and still has many critical bugs, it also had a lot of bugs fixed. More importantly, the AST issue tracker now contains a lot of documentation on how to fix those bugs, which makes it possible to backport many of them to the last stable release instead.
In February 2020, having concluded the AST 93v- beta was too broken to base new work on, others decided to start a new fork based on the last stable 93u+ 2012-08-01 release. Unfortunately, as of June 2020, the new ksh-community organisation is yet to see any significant activity four months after its bootstrapping. I hope that will change; I am ready to join efforts with them at any time, as well as anyone else who wants to contribute.
The last stable ksh93 release from 2012 is the least buggy release currently available, but it still has many serious bugs. So it is well past time to start fixing those bugs, leave the rest of the code alone, and get an improved release out there.
Build
After cloning this repo, cd to the top directory of it and run:
./bin/package make
If you have trouble or want to tune the binaries, you may pass additional compiler and linker flags by appending it to the command shown above. E.g.:
./bin/package make \
SHELL=/bin/bash CCFLAGS="-xc99 -D_XPG6 -m64 -xO4" LDFLAGS="-m64"
For more information run
bin/package help
Many other commands in this repo self-document via the --help
, --man
and
--html
options; those that do have no separate manual page.
Test
After compiling, you can run the regression tests. Start by reading the information printed by:
./bin/shtests --man