If job control is not enabled, background jobs started with ... & ignore
SIGINT and SIGQUIT so that they are not affected by such signals that are
intended for the foreground job. However, this should not prevent
reassigning a different action for these signals (as if the shell invocation
inherited these signal actions from its parent).
Austin group issue #751
Example:
{ trap - INT; exec sleep 10; } & wait
A Ctrl+C should terminate the sleep command.
user. Kqueue now saves the ucred of the allocating thread, to
correctly decrement the counter on close.
Under some specific and not real-world use scenario for kqueue, it is
possible for the kqueues to consume memory proportional to the square
of the number of the filedescriptors available to the process. Limit
allows administrator to prevent the abuse.
This is kernel-mode side of the change, with the user-mode enabling
commit following.
Reported and tested by: pho
Discussed with: jmg
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
The getpgrp() call is unnecessary: if there is no job control then the
result was not used at all and if there is job control then we are not a
subshell and our process group ID is equal to our process ID (rootpid).
Formerly, return always returned from a function if it was called from a
function, even if there was a closer dot script. This was for compatibility
with the Bourne shell which only allowed returning from functions.
Other modern shells and POSIX return from the function or the dot script,
whichever is closest.
Git 1.8.4's rebase --continue depends on the POSIX behaviour.
Reported by: Christoph Mallon, avg
The change in r238888 was incomplete. It was still possible for a trapped
signal to arrive before the shell went to sleep (sigsuspend()) because a
check was missing or because the signal arrived before in_waitcmd was set.
On SMP, this bug sometimes caused the builtins/wait4.0 test to take 1 second
to execute; it then might or might not fail. On UP, the test almost always
failed.
The erflag argument was only used by old-style (``) command substitutions.
We can remove it and handle the special case in the command substitution
code.
NEOF needs to be a non-null pointer distinct from valid union node pointers.
It is not dereferenced.
The new NEOF is much like SIG_ERR except that it is an object pointer
instead of a function pointer.
The variable tokpushback can now be static.
ps(1) utility, e.g. "ps -O fib".
bin/ps/keyword.c:
Add the "fib" keyword and default its column name to "FIB".
bin/ps/ps.1:
Add "fib" as a supported keyword.
sys/compat/freebsd32/freebsd32.h:
sys/kern/kern_proc.c:
sys/sys/user.h:
Add the default fib number for a process (p->p_fibnum)
to the user land accessible process data of struct kinfo_proc.
Submitted by: Oliver Fromme <olli@fromme.com>, gibbs
As per POSIX, a simple command must have at least one redirection,
assignment word or command word.
These occured in rare cases such as eval "f()" .
The extension of allowing no commands inside { }, if, while, for, etc.
remains.
POSIX does not require ++ and -- in arithmetic. It is probably more useful
to reject them than to treat ++x and --x as x silently.
Note that the behaviour of increment and decrement can be obtained via
(x+=1), ((x+=1)-1), (x-=1) and ((x-=1)+1).
PR: bin/176444
If a job is specified to 'wait', wait for it to complete. Formerly, in
interactive mode, the job was deleted if it stopped.
If no jobs are specified in interactive mode, 'wait' still waits for all jobs
to complete or stop.
In non-interactive mode, WUNTRACED is not passed to wait3() so stopped jobs
are not detected.
PR: bin/181435
and CIFS file attributes as BSD stat(2) flags.
This work is intended to be compatible with ZFS, the Solaris CIFS
server's interaction with ZFS, somewhat compatible with MacOS X,
and of course compatible with Windows.
The Windows attributes that are implemented were chosen based on
the attributes that ZFS already supports.
The summary of the flags is as follows:
UF_SYSTEM: Command line name: "system" or "usystem"
ZFS name: XAT_SYSTEM, ZFS_SYSTEM
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM
This flag means that the file is used by the
operating system. FreeBSD does not enforce any
special handling when this flag is set.
UF_SPARSE: Command line name: "sparse" or "usparse"
ZFS name: XAT_SPARSE, ZFS_SPARSE
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SPARSE_FILE
This flag means that the file is sparse. Although
ZFS may modify this in some situations, there is
not generally any special handling for this flag.
UF_OFFLINE: Command line name: "offline" or "uoffline"
ZFS name: XAT_OFFLINE, ZFS_OFFLINE
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_OFFLINE
This flag means that the file has been moved to
offline storage. FreeBSD does not have any special
handling for this flag.
UF_REPARSE: Command line name: "reparse" or "ureparse"
ZFS name: XAT_REPARSE, ZFS_REPARSE
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT
This flag means that the file is a Windows reparse
point. ZFS has special handling code for reparse
points, but we don't currently have the other
supporting infrastructure for them.
UF_HIDDEN: Command line name: "hidden" or "uhidden"
ZFS name: XAT_HIDDEN, ZFS_HIDDEN
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_HIDDEN
This flag means that the file may be excluded from
a directory listing if the application honors it.
FreeBSD has no special handling for this flag.
The name and bit definition for UF_HIDDEN are
identical to the definition in MacOS X.
UF_READONLY: Command line name: "urdonly", "rdonly", "readonly"
ZFS name: XAT_READONLY, ZFS_READONLY
Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY
This flag means that the file may not written or
appended, but its attributes may be changed.
ZFS currently enforces this flag, but Illumos
developers have discussed disabling enforcement.
The behavior of this flag is different than MacOS X.
MacOS X uses UF_IMMUTABLE to represent the DOS
readonly permission, but that flag has a stronger
meaning than the semantics of DOS readonly permissions.
UF_ARCHIVE: Command line name: "uarch", "uarchive"
ZFS_NAME: XAT_ARCHIVE, ZFS_ARCHIVE
Windows name: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE
The UF_ARCHIVED flag means that the file has changed and
needs to be archived. The meaning is same as
the Windows FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE attribute, and
the ZFS XAT_ARCHIVE and ZFS_ARCHIVE attribute.
msdosfs and ZFS have special handling for this flag.
i.e. they will set it when the file changes.
sys/param.h: Bump __FreeBSD_version to 1000047 for the
addition of new stat(2) flags.
chflags.1: Document the new command line flag names
(e.g. "system", "hidden") available to the
user.
ls.1: Reference chflags(1) for a list of file flags
and their meanings.
strtofflags.c: Implement the mapping between the new
command line flag names and new stat(2)
flags.
chflags.2: Document all of the new stat(2) flags, and
explain the intended behavior in a little
more detail. Explain how they map to
Windows file attributes.
Different filesystems behave differently
with respect to flags, so warn the
application developer to take care when
using them.
zfs_vnops.c: Add support for getting and setting the
UF_ARCHIVE, UF_READONLY, UF_SYSTEM, UF_HIDDEN,
UF_REPARSE, UF_OFFLINE, and UF_SPARSE flags.
All of these flags are implemented using
attributes that ZFS already supports, so
the on-disk format has not changed.
ZFS currently doesn't allow setting the
UF_REPARSE flag, and we don't really have
the other infrastructure to support reparse
points.
msdosfs_denode.c,
msdosfs_vnops.c: Add support for getting and setting
UF_HIDDEN, UF_SYSTEM and UF_READONLY
in MSDOSFS.
It supported SF_ARCHIVED, but this has been
changed to be UF_ARCHIVE, which has the same
semantics as the DOS archive attribute instead
of inverse semantics like SF_ARCHIVED.
After discussion with Bruce Evans, change
several things in the msdosfs behavior:
Use UF_READONLY to indicate whether a file
is writeable instead of file permissions, but
don't actually enforce it.
Refuse to change attributes on the root
directory, because it is special in FAT
filesystems, but allow most other attribute
changes on directories.
Don't set the archive attribute on a directory
when its modification time is updated.
Windows and DOS don't set the archive attribute
in that scenario, so we are now bug-for-bug
compatible.
smbfs_node.c,
smbfs_vnops.c: Add support for UF_HIDDEN, UF_SYSTEM,
UF_READONLY and UF_ARCHIVE in SMBFS.
This is similar to changes that Apple has
made in their version of SMBFS (as of
smb-583.8, posted on opensource.apple.com),
but not quite the same.
We map SMB_FA_READONLY to UF_READONLY,
because UF_READONLY is intended to match
the semantics of the DOS readonly flag.
The MacOS X code maps both UF_IMMUTABLE
and SF_IMMUTABLE to SMB_FA_READONLY, but
the immutable flags have stronger meaning
than the DOS readonly bit.
stat.h: Add definitions for UF_SYSTEM, UF_SPARSE,
UF_OFFLINE, UF_REPARSE, UF_ARCHIVE, UF_READONLY
and UF_HIDDEN.
The definition of UF_HIDDEN is the same as
the MacOS X definition.
Add commented-out definitions of
UF_COMPRESSED and UF_TRACKED. They are
defined in MacOS X (as of 10.8.2), but we
do not implement them (yet).
ufs_vnops.c: Add support for getting and setting
UF_ARCHIVE, UF_HIDDEN, UF_OFFLINE, UF_READONLY,
UF_REPARSE, UF_SPARSE, and UF_SYSTEM in UFS.
Alphabetize the flags that are supported.
These new flags are only stored, UFS does
not take any action if the flag is set.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Reviewed by: bde (earlier version)
Replace the RESET blocks with regular functions and a reset() function that
calls them all.
This code generation tool is unusual and does not appear to provide much
benefit. I do not think isolating the knowledge about which modules need to
be reset is worth an almost 500-line build tool and wider scope for
variables used by the reset functions.
Also, relying on reset functions is often wrong: the cleanup should be done
in exception handlers so that no stale state remains after 'command eval'
and the like.
These cleanup operations are not needed because they are already performed
after an optimized command substitution (whether there was an error or not).
Although using -i with -c does not seem very useful, it seems inappropriate
to read commands from the terminal in this case.
Side effect: if the -s -c extension is used and the -s option is turned off
using 'set +s' during the interactive part, the shell now exits after an
error or interrupt. Note that POSIX only specifies -s as option to sh, not
to set.
See also Austin Group issue #718.
This is required by POSIX, at least for pids that are not known child
processes.
Other problems with job specifications still cause wait to abort with
exit status 2.
PR: 176916
This is only part of the PR; the behaviour for unknown/invalid pids/jobs
remains unchanged (aborts the builtin with status 2).
PR: 176916
Submitted by: Vadim Goncharov
This reverts commit r247274.
As maintainer of sh, I disapprove of this feature addition.
It is too specific and can be done without easily using find(1) or stat(1).
I will add some hints to the test(1) man page shortly.
In general, FreeBSD sh is not the place to invent new shell language
features. This is how it has been maintained and adding features randomly
does not work with that.
The new syntax (e.g. [ FILE1 -ntca FILE2 ]) looks cryptic to me.
* Work around kernel bugs that cause a spurious [EINTR] return if a
debugger (such as truss(1)) is attached.
* Write an error message if an error other than [EINTR] occurs.
PR: bin/178664
The linked list of stack marks may cause problems if the allocation stack is
used between an exception and a higher-level popstackmark(), as it may then
touch a stack mark that is local to a function which has returned.
Also, the adjustment compares to a pointer passed to realloc(), which is
undefined behaviour.
Instead of adjusting stack marks when reallocating stack blocks, ensure that
such an adjustment is never necessary by fixing a small piece of memory in
place at a stack mark. This also simplifies the code.
To avoid the problems reported in bin/175922, it remains necessary to call
setstackmark() after popstackmark() if the stack mark remains in use.
* If read -t times out, return status as if interrupted by SIGALRM
(formerly 1).
* If a trapped signal interrupts read, return status 128+sig (formerly 1).
* If [EINTR] occurs but there is no trap, retry the read (for example
because of a SIGWINCH in interactive mode).
* If a read error occurs, write an error message and return status 2.
As before, a variable assignment error returns 2 and discards the remaining
data read.
the free(3) of mntbuf ... again. There's no point in doing
useless extra work when we're about to exit.
See also r240565.
Not reading file history: uqs
If the bs= expr operand is specified and no conversions other than sync,
noerror, or notrunc are requested, the data returned from each input
block shall be written as a separate output block.
In particular, when both bs=size and conv=sparce were specified, the
resulted file was fully filled, instead of sparce.
PR: standards/177742
Submitted by: Matthew Rezny <mrezny@hexaneinc.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Add an empty line in usage() according to style(9)
PR: bin/177076
Submitted by: Fernando <fernando.apesteguia@gmail.com>
Approved by: cperciva (mentor)
While here:
- use NULL in the context of pointers
- use memset instead of bzero throughout the file
- free memory to appease clang static analyzer
Found by: Coverity Scan (the UNINIT one)
This allows mapping a tape drive in a changer (as reported by
'chio status') to a sa(4) driver instance by comparing the
serial numbers.
The designators can be ASCII (which is printed out directly), binary
(which is printed in hex format) or UTF-8, which is printed in either
native UTF-8 format if the terminal can support it, or in %XX notation
for non-ASCII characters. Thanks to Hiroki Sato <hrs@> for the
explaining UTF-8 printing and example UTF-8 printing code.
chio.h: Modify the changer_element_status structure to add new
fields and definitions from the SMC3r16 spec.
Rename the original CHIOGSTATUS ioctl to OCHIOGTATUS and
define a new CHIOGSTATUS ioctl.
Clean up some tab/space issues.
chio.c: For the 'status' subcommand, print the designator field
if it is supplied by a device.
scsi_ch.h: Add new flags for DVCID and CURDATA to the READ
ELEMENT STATUS command structure.
Add a read_element_status_device_id structure
for the data fields in the new standard. Add new
unions, dt_or_obsolete and voltage_devid, to hold
and address data from either SCSI-2 or newer devices.
scsi_ch.c: Implement support for fetching device IDs with READ
ELEMENT STATUS data.
Add new arguments to scsi_read_element_status() to
allow the user to request the DVCID and CURDATA bits.
This isn't compiled into libcam (it's only an internal
kernel interface), so we don't need any special
handling for the API change.
If the user issues the new CHIOGSTATUS ioctl, copy all of
the available element status data out. If he issues the
OCHIOGSTATUS ioctl, we don't copy the new fields in the
structure.
Fix a bug in chopen() that would result in the peripheral
never getting unheld if chgetparams() failed.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Submitted by: Po-Li Soong
MFC After: 1 week
This compiler flag enforces that that people either mark variables
static or use an external declarations for the variable, similar to how
-Wmissing-prototypes works for functions.
Due to the fact that Yacc/Lex generate code that cannot trivially be
changed to not warn because of this (lots of yy* variables), add a
NO_WMISSING_VARIABLE_DECLARATIONS that can be used to turn off this
specific compiler warning.
Announced on: toolchain@
Introduce an explicit close of the output descriptor so that work done
on close is accounted for in the summary output triggered at exit
(implicit close()s occur after atexit() hooks).
This is useful because some devices such as cfi(4) may perform
signficant work after a close occurs (e.g. erasing and rewriting a
block of flash).
Use non-blocking I/O to write as much as the pipe will accept (often 64K,
but it can be as little as 4K), avoiding the need for the ugly PIPESIZE
constant. If PIPESIZE was set too high, a deadlock would occur.
It now passes WARNS=7 with clang on i386.
GCC 4.2.1 does not understand setjmp() properly so will always trigger
-Wuninitialized. I will not add the volatile keywords to suppress this.
In some other shells, things like $((a);(b)) are command substitutions.
Also, there are shells that have an extension ((ARITH)) that evaluates an
arithmetic expression and returns status 1 if the result is zero, 0
otherwise. This extension may lead to ambiguity with two subshells starting
in sequence.
u_long. Before this change it was of type int for syscalls, but prototypes
in sys/stat.h and documentation for chflags(2) and fchflags(2) (but not
for lchflags(2)) stated that it was u_long. Now some related functions
use u_long type for flags (strtofflags(3), fflagstostr(3)).
- Make path argument of type 'const char *' for consistency.
Discussed on: arch
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
If syntactically invalid job identifiers are to be taken as jobs that exited
with status 127, this should not apply to options, so that we can add
options later if need be.
This ensures 'return' in a trap returns the correct status to the caller.
If evalskip is not set or if it is overridden by a previous evalskip, keep
the old behaviour of restoring the exit status from before the trap.
access, birth, change and modify times of two files, instead of only
being able to compare modify times. The builtin test in sh(1) will
automagically acquire the same expansion.
Approved by: grog
MFC after: 2 weeks
If a stack mark is set while the current stack block is empty, the stack
block may move later on (because of realloc()) and the stack mark needs to
be updated. This updating does not happen after popstackmark() has been
called; therefore, call setstackmark() again if the stack mark is still
being used.
For some reason, this only affects a few users. I cannot reproduce it. The
situation seems quite rare as well because an empty stack block would
usually be freed (by popstackmark()) before execution reaches a
setstackmark() call.
PR: 175922
Tested by: KT Sin
Now it outputs fixed files, which use constants provided by the C standard
library to determine appropriate values for the target machine.
Before, mksyntax inspected the host machine which resulted in subtle
breakage if e.g. char is signed on the host and unsigned on the target such
as when cross-compiling on x86 for ARM.
Tested using -funsigned-char on amd64. Compiling build-tools without it and
sh itself with it causes various tests to fail without this change but not
with this change. With consistent -funsigned-char, tests pass with or
without this change.
The mksyntax program could be removed and syntax.c and syntax.h committed to
the repository.
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon
MFC after: 2 weeks
ISO/IEC 9899:1999 (E) 5.2.1p3 guarantees that the values of the characters
0123456789 are contiguous.
The generated syntax.c and syntax.h remain the same.
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon
Expand here documents at the same point other redirections are expanded but
use a non-fork subshell environment (like simple command substitutions) for
compatibility. Substitition errors result in an empty here document like
before.
As a result, a fork is avoided for short (<4K) expanded here documents.
Unexpanded here documents (with quoted end marker after <<) are not affected
by this change. They already only forked when >4K.
Side effects:
* Order of expansion is slightly different.
* Slow expansions are not executed in parallel with the redirected command.
* A non-fork subshell environment is subtly different from a forked process.
set an exclusive advisory lock on stdout. This will be used to guarantee
orderly writing to METALOG.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Obtained from: NetBSD (mason)
Otherwise with '-v' we print out the file name as if it was copied:
/tmp/2gb-card/M0132.CTG not overwritten
/mnt/DCIM/CANONMSC/M0132.CTG -> /tmp/2gb-card/M0132.CTG
If a loop contained certain commands (such as redirected compound commands),
the temporary memory for the redirection was not freed between iterations of
the loop but only after the loop.
Put a stackmark in evaltree(), freeing memory whenever a node has been
evaluated. Some other stackmarks are then redundant; remove them.
Example:
while :; do { :; } </dev/null; done
command name of a thread from a multi-threaded process that doesn't have
an available argument list (such as kernel processes) and threads display
is enabled via -H.
Reviewed by: alfred, delphij, eric@vangyzen.net
MFC after: 1 week
Instead of rechecking relative paths for all hashed utilities after a cd,
track if any utility in cmdtable depends on a relative path in PATH.
If there is such a utility, cd clears the entire table.
As a result, the '*' in hash no longer happens.
Accessing sys_siglist directly requires rtld to copy it from libc to the sh
executable's BSS. Also, strsignal() will put in the signal number for
unknown signals (FreeBSD-specific) so we need not do that ourselves.
Unfortunately, there is no function for sys_signame.
If there is a write error on stdout, a message will be printed (to stderr)
and the exit status will be changed to 2 if it would have been 0 or 1.
PR: bin/158206
if (exists AND (NOT f_option) AND
((not_writable AND input_is_terminal) OR i_option))
prompt
in particular, add the test for input_is_terminal
PR: bin/173039
Submitted by: Mark Johnston <markjdb@gmail.com>
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 3 days
* The last character is not displayed.
* If the alias ends with itself (as a word), an infinite memory-eating loop
occurs.
If an alias is defined initially, a space is appended to avoid recursion but
this did not happen when an alias was later modified.
PR: bin/173418
Submitted by: Daniel F.
MFC after: 1 week
sorting order for time and name with the -t option. IEEE Std 1003.2
(POSIX.2) mandates that the -t option sort in descending order, and
that if two files have the same timestamp, they should be sorted in
ascending order of their names. The -r flag reverses both of these
sort orders, so they're never the same. This creates significant
problems for sequentially named files stored on FAT file systems,
where it can be impossible to list them in the order in which they
were created.
Add , (comma) option to print file sizes grouped and separated by
thousands using the non-monetary separator returned by localeconv(3),
typically a comma or period.
MFC after: 14 days
Although sufficient memory is available for a longer string in cmdname,
this is undefined behaviour anyway.
Side effect: for alignment reasons, an additional byte of memory is
allocated per hashed command.
In addition to adding missing `static' keywords:
- bin/dd: Pull in `extern.h' to guarantee consistency with source file.
- libexec/rpc.rusersd: Move shared globals into an extern.h.
- libexec/talkd: Move `debug' and `hostname' into extern.h.
- usr.bin/cksum: Put counters in extern.h, as they are used by ckdist/mtree.
- usr.bin/m4: Move `end_result' into extern.h.
- usr.sbin/services_mkdb: Move shared globals into an extern.h.
In addition to adding `static' where possible:
- bin/date: Move `retval' into extern.h to make it visible to date.c.
- bin/ed: Move globally used variables into ed.h.
- sbin/camcontrol: Move `verbose' into camcontrol.h and fix shadow warnings.
- usr.bin/calendar: Remove unneeded variables.
- usr.bin/chat: Make `line' local instead of global.
- usr.bin/elfdump: Comment out unneeded function.
- usr.bin/rlogin: Use _Noreturn instead of __dead2.
- usr.bin/tset: Pull `Ospeed' into extern.h.
- usr.sbin/mfiutil: Put global variables in mfiutil.h.
- usr.sbin/pkg: Remove unused `os_corres'.
- usr.sbin/quotaon, usr.sbin/repquota: Remove unused `qfname'.
This self-written compiler warning, which is hopefully going to be
committed into LLVM sources soon, warns about potentially missing
`static' keywords, similar to -Wmissing-prototypes.
- bin/pax: Move external declaration of chdname and s_mask into extern.h.
- bin/setfacl: Move setfacl.c-specific stuff out of setfacl.h.
- sbin/mount_fusefs: Remove char *progname; use getprogname().
- others: add `static' where possible.
This reduces code duplication and code size.
/usr/bin/printf is not affected.
Side effect: different error messages when certain builtins are passed
invalid options.
help tools understand that we're not leaking it.
PR: bin/171634
Submitted by: Erik Cederstrand <erik@cederstrand.dk>
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 3 days