If an ; or & token was followed by an EOF token, pending here-documents were
left uninitialized. Execution would crash, either in the main shell process
for literal here-documents or in a child process for expanded
here-documents. In the latter case the problem is hard to detect apart from
the core dumps and log messages.
Side effect: slightly different retries on inputs where EOF is not
persistent.
Note that tools/regression/bin/sh/parser/heredoc6.0 still causes a similar
crash in a child process. The text passed to eval is malformed and should be
rejected.
Deliverables: Small and clean code (1,4 KSLOC vs GNU's 8,5 KSLOC),
lower memory usage than GNU grep, GNU compatibility,
BSD license.
TODO: Performance is somewhat behind GNU grep but it is only
significant for bigger searches. The reason is complex, the
most important factor is that GNU grep uses lots of
optimizations to improve the speed of the regex library.
First, we need a modern regex library (practically by adopting
TRE), add support for GNU-style non-standard regexes and then
reevalute the performance issues and look for bottlenecks. In
the meantime, for those, who need better performance, it is
possible to build GNU grep by setting WITH_GNU_GREP.
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
Obtained from: OpenBSD (http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/usr.bin/grep/),
freegrep (http://github.com/howardjp/freegrep)
Sponsored by: Google SoC 2008
Portbuild tests run by: kris, pav, erwin
Acknowledgements to: fjoe (as SoC 2008 mentor),
everyone who helped in reviewing and testing
test of newsyslog, as they were mainly made to test 'newsyslog -t',
but they do test the basic functionality.
The test 'framework' was based on dds@'s code in
src/tools/regression/bin/mv/.
Note that currently these tests are not fully correct for the
non-timestamp based rotation case, as it seems like newsyslog actually
by default keeps a file too much around.
MFC after: 3 weeks
expansion.
The comma operator is not listed in POSIX.1-2008 XCU 1.1.2.1 Arithmetic
Precision and Operations (referenced by XCU 2.6.4 Arithmetic Expansion) and
is therefore not required.
slice creation overrideable too, but there's a few problems doing that
for the duplicated partitions (s1 and s2), so just comment that it
needs work.
MFC after: 3 days
optionally with a header if "-h" is passed. Toast CPU time measurement
in the server for now. Remove -C and -T, since we now always report
both connections/sec and Gb/sec.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Example (in interactive mode):
cat <<EOF && )
The next command typed caused sh to segfault, because the state for the here
document was not reset.
Like parser_temp, this uses the fact that the parser is not re-entered.
If a command substitution contains a newline token, this no longer starts
here documents of outer commands. This way, we follow POSIX's idea of the
command substitution being a separate script more closely. It also matches
other shells better and is consistent with newline characters in quotes not
starting here documents.
The extension tested in parser/heredoc3.0 ($(cat <<EOF)\ntext\nEOF\n)
continues to be supported.
In particular, this change allows things like
cat <<EOF && echo `pwd`
(a `` command substitution after a here document)
which formerly silently used an empty file as the here document, because the
EOF of the inner command "pwd" also forced an empty here document.
Although "--" historically has not been required to be recognized for
certain special builtins that do not take options in POSIX, some other
implementations recognize options for them, requiring scripts to use "--" or
avoid operands starting with "-".
Operands starting with "-" can be avoided with eval by prepending a space,
and cannot occur with break, continue, exit, return and shift as they only
take numbers, nor with times as it does not take operands. With . and exec,
avoiding "-" is not so easy as it may require reimplementing the PATH
search; therefore the current proposal for POSIX is to require recognition
of "--" for them.
We continue to accept other strings starting with "-" as operands to . and
exec, and also "--" if it is alone to . (which would otherwise be invalid
anyway).
improperly from one of two instances of close(2) being called
simultaneously on both ends of a connected UNIX domain socket. The test
tool is slightly tweaked to improve failure modes, and while often does
trigger the problem, doesn't do so consistently due to the nature of the
race.
PR: kern/144061
Submitted by: Mikolaj Golub <to.my.trociny@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days
bottom of the manpages and order them consistently.
GNU groff doesn't care about the ordering, and doesn't even mention
CAVEATS and SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS as common sections and where to put
them.
Found by: mdocml lint run
Reviewed by: ru
These are git commits 36f0fa8fcbc8c7b2b194addd29100fb40e73e4e9 and
d6d06ff5c2ea0fa44becc5ef4340e5f2f15073e4 in dash.
Because this is the first code I'm importing from dash to expand.c, add the
Herbert Xu copyright notice which is in dash's expand.c.
When pathname expanding *\/, the CTLESC representing the quoted state was
erroneously taken as part of the * pathname component. This CTLESC was then
seen by the pattern matching code as escaping the '\0' terminating the
string.
The code is slightly different because dash converts the CTLESC characters
to backslashes and removes all the other CTL* characters to allow
substituting glob(3).
The effect of the bug was also slightly different from dash (where nothing
matched at all). Because a CTLESC can escape a '\0' in some way, whether
files were included despite the bug depended on memory that should not be
read. In particular, on many machines /*\/ expanded to a strict subset of
what /*/ expanded to.
Example:
echo /*"/null"
This should print /dev/null, not /*/null.
PR: bin/146378
Obtained from: dash
case1.0 tests POSIX requirements and one more for keywords in case
statements. The others test very special cases of command substitution.
These also work on stable/8.
This allows doing things like LC_ALL=C some_builtin to run a builtin under a
different locale, just like is possible with external programs. The
immediate reason is that this allows making printf(1) a builtin without
breaking things like LC_NUMERIC=C printf '%f\n' 1.2
This change also affects special builtins, as even though the assignment is
persistent, the export is only to the builtin (unless the variable was
already exported).
Note: for this to work for builtins that also exist as external programs
such as /bin/test, the setlocale() call must be under #ifndef SHELL. The
shell will do the setlocale() calls which may not agree with the environment
variables.
currently supporting sparc64. After a `make depend all` there are
three programs; testsoftfloat for testing against the SoftFloat in
src/lib/libc/softfloat for reference purposes, testemufloat for
testing the emulator source in src/lib/libc/sparc64/fpu and testfloat
for testing with the installed libc. Support for other architectures
can be added as needed.
PR: 144900
Submitted by: Peter Jeremy