errexit (-e) processing. This solves a problem where 'make clean' would
fail with an unspecified error in certain automake-generated makefiles.
Reviewed by: no objections from -hackers...
MFC after: 2 weeks
When a child is receiving SIGSTOP, eval continues with the next
command. While that is correct for the interactive case (Control-Z
and you get the prompt back), it is wrong for a shellscript, which
just continues with the next command, never again waiting for the
stopped child. Noted when childs from cronjobs were stopped, just to
make more processes (by wosch).
The fix is not to return from a job wait when the wait returned for a
stopped child while in non-interactive mode. This bahaviour seems to
be what bash2 and ksh implement. I tested for correct behaviour for
finnaly killing the child with and without forgrounding it first.
When not foregrouding before killing, the shell continues with the
script, which is what the other shells do as well.
Reviewed by: Silence on -current
Serious fix still needed, see discussion on -current
(Subject: /bin/sh dumps core with here-document of 8bit text)
Problem in this code originally spotted by
Jun Kuriyama <kuriyama@FreeBSD.org>
growstackblock() sometimes relocates a stack_block considered empty
without properly relocating stack marks referencing that block.
The first call to popstackmark() with the unrelocated stack mark
as argument then causes sh to abort.
Relocating the relevant stack marks seems to solve this problem.
The patch changes the semantics of popstackmark() somewhat. It can
only be called once after a call to setstackmark(), thus cmdloop() in
main.c needs an extra call to setstackmark().
PR: bin/19983
Submitted by: Tor.Egge@fast.no
Reviewed by: Gerald Pfeifer <pfeifer@dbai.tuwien.ac.at>
case), so that it doesn't clash with the ncurses function of the same
name when linking statically with -ltermcap.
The linker only complains when -static is used, and it is not clear
whether this is a bug.
PR: bin/18104
Submitted by: Anatoly Vorobey <mellon@pobox.com>
spaces reserved by the header files it includes.
mkinit.c still produces C code with redundant declarations, although
they are more harmless since they automatically derived from the right
places.
in that revision as well as things I broke in that revision. A note-
worthy instance of the latter case was the inversion of -E and -V in the
subsection on Commandline Editing.