I would have chosen the EOF markers, but they are no longer available
AFAICS, so output "<<HERE" and "<<XHERE" instead.
(NOTE: These changes only affect DEBUG output.)
demanded by POSIX.
- A redirection error is only fatal (meaning the execution of a shell script is
terminated) for special built-ins. Previously it was fatal for all shell
builtins, causing problems like the one reported in PR 88845.
- Variable assignments remain in effect for special built-ins.
- Option or operand errors are only fatal for special built-ins.
This change also makes errors from 'fc' non-fatal (I could not find any reasons
for this behaviour).
Somewhat independently from the above down-grade the error handling in the
shift built-in if the operand is bigger than $# from an error() call (which is
now fatal) to a return 1. I'm not sure if this should be considered a POSIX
"operand error", however this change is needed for now as we trigger that error
while building libncurses. Comparing with other shells, zsh does the same as
our sh before this change (write a diagnostic, return 1), bash behaves as our
sh after this commit (no diagnostic, return 1) and ksh93 and NetBSD's sh treat
it as a fatal error.
all column-headers to print in lowercase by default. I was in too
much of a rush in committing 1.75, and didn't notice that the case
had changed. This time I did considerably more testing, and used
'diff' instead of just quickly eyeballing the results...
Apologies. I expect this means the dunce cap is mine for awhile.
If this doesn't work, I'll just drop back to 1.72 and hide under
my desk for awhile.
the user specifies a keyword which is an alias to some other keyword.
E.g.: stat (for state) or pcpu (for %cpu)..
Submitted by: Kostik Belousov
MFC plans: "soon"
is just ". file" according to POSIX, however many other shells allow
arguments to be passed after the file. For compatibility (we even use that
feature in buildworld) additional arguments are not considered to be an
error, even though this shell does not do anything with the arguments at all.
new member to struct builtincmd and set it to 1 if -s was specified. This
is done because there are cases where special builtins must be treated
differently from other builtins.
Obtained from: NetBSD (builtins.def part)
flag to use a time other than modtime (-c, -u, or -U), the output would
actually be sorted by the specified time rather than size. This does
alter the behavior in the case where both -S and -t are specified. Now,
-S is always preferred. Previously, -t was preferred if one of -c, -u, or
-U was specified, and -S was preferred otherwise. Perhaps -S and -t should
override each other (last one specified wins).
output-format keyword, and the keyword they picked is an alias to
some other keyword. E.g.: ps -o stat=Zustand $$
('stat' is defined as an alias for 'state')
PR: bin/57833
MFC after: 3 weeks
The tcsh 6.14 uses libiconv to convert catalogs to appropriate charset
dynamically. However, we don't have libiconv in our tree. So, I made
some hack to load libiconv dynamically. If libiconv is available, you
can use catalogs for more locales than the locales which catalog is
actually installed.
To use this feature, you need to symlink catalogs to appropriate
locales. You can do this by installing ports/shells/tcsh_nls.
Reviewed by: arch (no objection)
MFC after: 1 week
automatically it is possible wait4(2) returns -1 and sets
errno = ECHILD if there were forked children. A user can
set such signal handler e.g. via ``trap "" 20'', see a PR
for the test case. Deal with this case and mark a job as
JOBDONE.
PR: bin/90334
Submitted by: bde
MFC after: 4 weeks
This makes a difference for the trap builtin, where after "trap '' 0" we
printed "trap -- quit". This is wrong, because an empty action means to reset
the action to the default. A side effect of this commit is that empty
variables are now printed as "variable=''" instead of just "variable=".
itself and its children. Instead of calling times() (as implied by POSIX) this
implementation directly calls getrusage() to get the times because this is more
convenient.
files is too much and hard to follow. Instead, make the -I option
just mean "do not automatically set -A for root". That is, if -A
is explicitly set, -I is ignored. Also, document -I in usage().
(The ls.c diff is better viewed relative to rev. 1.80.)
No objection: mux
Silence from: mnag
MFC after: 3 days
set +o can be used to reload previous settings, for this to work disabled
options must be printed as well or otherwise options that were set in the mean
time won't be turned off.
To avoid an excessively long output line I formatted the output to print only
six options per line.
Submitted by: Jilles Tjoelker
PR: 73500
ckrealloc and ckfree (added), respectively. sh jumps out of the signal handler
using longjmp which is obviously a bad idea during malloc calls.
Note: I think there is still a small race here because volatile sig_atomic_t
only guarantees atomic reads and writes while we're doing increments and
decrements.
Protect a setmode call with INT{ON,OFF} as it calls malloc internally.
PR: 45478
Patch from: Nate Eldredge
earlier, and more gracefully. Previously, this combination would be
ignored early in the code where permissions are tested and fail later
with a very unhelpful "permission denied" error.
Instead, test for this flag in the same block that generates the
"override?" messages for read-only files, but instead of trying
to guess what the user has in mind, generate an error and exit.
Update the man page to reflect this new behavior.
Not objected to by: freebsd-hackers@
termination with set -e if a command fails in a loop body inside a function
with an explicitely tested exit status, eg
f() {
for i in 1 2 3; do
false
done
}
f || true
Briefly reviewed by: cracauer
two cases of unwanted termination with set -e:
* if-commands containing several commands separated by semicolons, eg
if false; false; then [...]
* functions with an explicitely tested exit status that contain a failing
command which is not the last one, eg
f() {
false
false
}
f || true
PR: 77067, 85267
Briefly reviewed by: cracauer
and linting procedure:
1. Remove useless sub-expression:
- if (*start || (!ifsspc && start > string && (nulonly || 1))) {
+ if (*start || (!ifsspc && start > string)) {
The sub-expression "(nulonly || 1)" always evaluates to true and
according to CVS logs seems to be just a left-over from some
debugging and introduced by accident. Removing the sub-expression
doesn't change semantics and a code inspection showed that the
variable "nulonly" is also not necessary here in any way (and the
expression would require fixing instead of removing).
2. Remove dead code:
- if (backslash && c == '\\') {
- if (read(STDIN_FILENO, &c, 1) != 1) {
- status = 1;
- break;
- }
- STPUTC(c, p);
- } else if (ap[1] != NULL && strchr(ifs, c) != NULL) {
+ if (ap[1] != NULL && strchr(ifs, c) != NULL) {
Inspection of the control and data flow showed that variable
"backslash" is always false (0) when the "if"-expression is
evaluated, hence the whole block is effectively dead code.
Additionally, the skipping of characters after a backslash is already
performed correctly a few lines above, so this code is also not
needed at all. According to the CVS logs and the ASH 0.2 sources,
this code existed in this way already since its early days.
3. Cleanup Style:
- ! trap[signo][0] == '\0' &&
+ ! (trap[signo][0] == '\0') &&
The expression wants to ensure the trap is not assigned the empty
string. But the "!" operator has higher precedence than "==", so the
comparison should be put into parenthesis to form the intended way of
expression. Nevertheless the code was effectively not really broken
as both particular NUL comparisons are semantically equal, of course.
But the parenthesized version is a lot more intuitive.
4. Remove shadowing variable declaration:
- char *q;
The declaration of symbol "q" hides another identical declaration of
"q" in the same context. As the other "q" is already reused multiple
times and also can be reused again without negative side-effects,
just remove the shadowing declaration.
5. Just small cosmetics:
- if (ifsset() != 0)
+ if (ifsset())
The ifsset() macro is already coded by returning the boolean result
of a comparison operator, so no need to compare this boolean result
again against a numerical value. This also aligns the macros usage to
the remaining existing code.
Reviewed by: stefanf@
This includes adding support for ACLs into cp(1) and mv(1) userspace
utilities.
For mv(1), if _PC_ACL_EXTENDED is in effect for the source AND destination
operands, the destination file's ACLs shall reflect the source.
For cp(1), if _PC_ACL_EXTENDED is in effect for both source and destination
operands, and -p has been specified, the ACLs from the source shall be
preserved on the destination.
MFC after: 1 month
converting the stat() call to a lstat() call, which will cover the
situation. One can exercise this bug by referring a dangling link with
something like */the-link.
Approved by: re (scottl)
Submitted by: Simon 'corecode' Schubert [corecode fs ei tum de]
Obtained from: NetBSD via DragonFlyBSD (NetBSD rev. 1.51 and DragonFly
rev. 1.6)
MFC After: 3 days
promised by the Argument List Processing section introduction.
What follows the option in the options list is its long name,
not its argument (as is the case for the -c option). Also
sort references in the SEE ALSO section.
Approved by: re (blanket)
sort(1). This functionality is provided by the -S option now, and it
is useful even though a similar effect is achievable with sort(1),
since the latter doesn't work in combination with -h. This option is
also present in NetBSD, OpenBSD, and GNU fileutils, so there's clearly
a demand for it.
Noticed by: asmodai
have this option with identical semantics (sorting large files first).
-r can be used to reverse the sort if that is desired.
PR: 81625
Submitted by: Kostas Blekos <mplekos@physics.upatras.gr>, keramida