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1.\"
2.\" MAN PAGE COMMENTS to
3.\"
4.\" Chet Ramey
5.\" Information Network Services
6.\" Case Western Reserve University
4a11f206 7.\" chet.ramey@case.edu
9255ee31 8.\"
4a11f206 9.\" Last Change: Sun May 24 18:01:17 EDT 2015
9255ee31 10.\"
4a11f206 11.TH HISTORY 3 "2015 May 24" "GNU History 6.3"
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12.\"
13.\" File Name macro. This used to be `.PN', for Path Name,
14.\" but Sun doesn't seem to like that very much.
15.\"
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19.ds lp \fR\|(\fP
20.ds rp \fR\|)\fP
21.\" FnN return-value fun-name N arguments
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38.br
39..
40.SH NAME
41history \- GNU History Library
42.SH COPYRIGHT
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43.if t The GNU History Library is Copyright \(co 1989-2014 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.
44.if n The GNU History Library is Copyright (C) 1989-2014 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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45.SH DESCRIPTION
46Many programs read input from the user a line at a time. The GNU
47History library is able to keep track of those lines, associate arbitrary
48data with each line, and utilize information from previous lines in
49composing new ones.
50.PP
51.SH "HISTORY EXPANSION"
52.PP
53The history library supports a history expansion feature that
54is identical to the history expansion in
55.BR bash.
56This section describes what syntax features are available.
57.PP
58History expansions introduce words from the history list into
59the input stream, making it easy to repeat commands, insert the
60arguments to a previous command into the current input line, or
61fix errors in previous commands quickly.
62.PP
63History expansion is usually performed immediately after a complete line
64is read.
65It takes place in two parts.
66The first is to determine which line from the history list
67to use during substitution.
68The second is to select portions of that line for inclusion into
69the current one.
70The line selected from the history is the \fIevent\fP,
71and the portions of that line that are acted upon are \fIwords\fP.
72Various \fImodifiers\fP are available to manipulate the selected words.
73The line is broken into words in the same fashion as \fBbash\fP
74does when reading input,
75so that several words that would otherwise be separated
76are considered one word when surrounded by quotes (see the
77description of \fBhistory_tokenize()\fP below).
78History expansions are introduced by the appearance of the
79history expansion character, which is \^\fB!\fP\^ by default.
80Only backslash (\^\fB\e\fP\^) and single quotes can quote
81the history expansion character.
82.SS Event Designators
83.PP
84An event designator is a reference to a command line entry in the
85history list.
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86Unless the reference is absolute, events are relative to the current
87position in the history list.
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88.PP
89.PD 0
90.TP
91.B !
92Start a history substitution, except when followed by a
93.BR blank ,
94newline, = or (.
95.TP
96.B !\fIn\fR
97Refer to command line
98.IR n .
99.TP
100.B !\-\fIn\fR
cc88a640 101Refer to the current command minus
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102.IR n .
103.TP
104.B !!
105Refer to the previous command. This is a synonym for `!\-1'.
106.TP
107.B !\fIstring\fR
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108Refer to the most recent command
109preceding the current position in the history list
110starting with
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111.IR string .
112.TP
113.B !?\fIstring\fR\fB[?]\fR
cc88a640 114Refer to the most recent command
4a11f206 115preceding the current position in the history list
cc88a640 116containing
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117.IR string .
118The trailing \fB?\fP may be omitted if
119.I string
120is followed immediately by a newline.
121.TP
122.B \d\s+2^\s-2\u\fIstring1\fP\d\s+2^\s-2\u\fIstring2\fP\d\s+2^\s-2\u
123Quick substitution. Repeat the last command, replacing
124.I string1
125with
126.IR string2 .
127Equivalent to
128``!!:s/\fIstring1\fP/\fIstring2\fP/''
129(see \fBModifiers\fP below).
130.TP
131.B !#
132The entire command line typed so far.
133.PD
134.SS Word Designators
135.PP
136Word designators are used to select desired words from the event.
4a11f206 137A
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138.B :
139separates the event specification from the word designator.
140It may be omitted if the word designator begins with a
141.BR ^ ,
142.BR $ ,
143.BR * ,
144.BR \- ,
145or
146.BR % .
147Words are numbered from the beginning of the line,
148with the first word being denoted by 0 (zero).
149Words are inserted into the current line separated by single spaces.
150.PP
151.PD 0
152.TP
153.B 0 (zero)
154The zeroth word. For the shell, this is the command
155word.
156.TP
157.I n
158The \fIn\fRth word.
159.TP
160.B ^
161The first argument. That is, word 1.
162.TP
163.B $
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164The last word. This is usually the last argument, but will expand to the
165zeroth word if there is only one word in the line.
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166.TP
167.B %
168The word matched by the most recent `?\fIstring\fR?' search.
169.TP
170.I x\fB\-\fPy
171A range of words; `\-\fIy\fR' abbreviates `0\-\fIy\fR'.
172.TP
173.B *
174All of the words but the zeroth. This is a synonym
175for `\fI1\-$\fP'. It is not an error to use
176.B *
177if there is just one
178word in the event; the empty string is returned in that case.
179.TP
180.B x*
181Abbreviates \fIx\-$\fP.
182.TP
183.B x\-
184Abbreviates \fIx\-$\fP like \fBx*\fP, but omits the last word.
185.PD
186.PP
187If a word designator is supplied without an event specification, the
188previous command is used as the event.
189.SS Modifiers
190.PP
191After the optional word designator, there may appear a sequence of
192one or more of the following modifiers, each preceded by a `:'.
193.PP
194.PD 0
195.PP
196.TP
197.B h
198Remove a trailing file name component, leaving only the head.
199.TP
200.B t
201Remove all leading file name components, leaving the tail.
202.TP
203.B r
204Remove a trailing suffix of the form \fI.xxx\fP, leaving the
205basename.
206.TP
207.B e
208Remove all but the trailing suffix.
209.TP
210.B p
211Print the new command but do not execute it.
212.TP
213.B q
214Quote the substituted words, escaping further substitutions.
215.TP
216.B x
217Quote the substituted words as with
218.BR q ,
219but break into words at
220.B blanks
221and newlines.
222.TP
223.B s/\fIold\fP/\fInew\fP/
224Substitute
225.I new
226for the first occurrence of
227.I old
228in the event line. Any delimiter can be used in place of /. The
229final delimiter is optional if it is the last character of the
230event line. The delimiter may be quoted in
231.I old
232and
233.I new
234with a single backslash. If & appears in
235.IR new ,
236it is replaced by
237.IR old .
238A single backslash will quote the &. If
239.I old
240is null, it is set to the last
241.I old
242substituted, or, if no previous history substitutions took place,
243the last
244.I string
245in a
246.B !?\fIstring\fR\fB[?]\fR
247search.
248.TP
249.B &
250Repeat the previous substitution.
251.TP
252.B g
253Cause changes to be applied over the entire event line. This is
254used in conjunction with `\fB:s\fP' (e.g., `\fB:gs/\fIold\fP/\fInew\fP/\fR')
255or `\fB:&\fP'. If used with
256`\fB:s\fP', any delimiter can be used
257in place of /, and the final delimiter is optional
258if it is the last character of the event line.
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259An \fBa\fP may be used as a synonym for \fBg\fP.
260.TP
261.B G
262Apply the following `\fBs\fP' modifier once to each word in the event line.
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263.PD
264.SH "PROGRAMMING WITH HISTORY FUNCTIONS"
265This section describes how to use the History library in other programs.
266.SS Introduction to History
267.PP
268The programmer using the History library has available functions
269for remembering lines on a history list, associating arbitrary data
270with a line, removing lines from the list, searching through the list
271for a line containing an arbitrary text string, and referencing any line
272in the list directly. In addition, a history \fIexpansion\fP function
273is available which provides for a consistent user interface across
274different programs.
275.PP
276The user using programs written with the History library has the
277benefit of a consistent user interface with a set of well-known
278commands for manipulating the text of previous lines and using that text
279in new commands. The basic history manipulation commands are
280identical to
281the history substitution provided by \fBbash\fP.
282.PP
283If the programmer desires, he can use the Readline library, which
284includes some history manipulation by default, and has the added
285advantage of command line editing.
286.PP
287Before declaring any functions using any functionality the History
288library provides in other code, an application writer should include
289the file
290.FN <readline/history.h>
291in any file that uses the
292History library's features. It supplies extern declarations for all
293of the library's public functions and variables, and declares all of
294the public data structures.
295
296.SS History Storage
297.PP
298The history list is an array of history entries. A history entry is
299declared as follows:
300.PP
301.Vb "typedef void *" histdata_t;
302.PP
303.nf
304typedef struct _hist_entry {
305 char *line;
5bdf8622 306 char *timestamp;
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307 histdata_t data;
308} HIST_ENTRY;
309.fi
310.PP
311The history list itself might therefore be declared as
312.PP
313.Vb "HIST_ENTRY **" the_history_list;
314.PP
315The state of the History library is encapsulated into a single structure:
316.PP
317.nf
318/*
319 * A structure used to pass around the current state of the history.
320 */
321typedef struct _hist_state {
322 HIST_ENTRY **entries; /* Pointer to the entries themselves. */
323 int offset; /* The location pointer within this array. */
324 int length; /* Number of elements within this array. */
325 int size; /* Number of slots allocated to this array. */
326 int flags;
327} HISTORY_STATE;
328.fi
329.PP
330If the flags member includes \fBHS_STIFLED\fP, the history has been
331stifled.
332.SH "History Functions"
333.PP
334This section describes the calling sequence for the various functions
335exported by the GNU History library.
336.SS Initializing History and State Management
337This section describes functions used to initialize and manage
338the state of the History library when you want to use the history
339functions in your program.
340
341.Fn1 void using_history void
342Begin a session in which the history functions might be used. This
343initializes the interactive variables.
344
345.Fn1 "HISTORY_STATE *" history_get_history_state void
346Return a structure describing the current state of the input history.
347
348.Fn1 void history_set_history_state "HISTORY_STATE *state"
349Set the state of the history list according to \fIstate\fP.
350
351.SS History List Management
352
353These functions manage individual entries on the history list, or set
354parameters managing the list itself.
355
356.Fn1 void add_history "const char *string"
357Place \fIstring\fP at the end of the history list. The associated data
358field (if any) is set to \fBNULL\fP.
359
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360.Fn1 void add_history_time "const char *string"
361Change the time stamp associated with the most recent history entry to
362\fIstring\fP.
363
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364.Fn1 "HIST_ENTRY *" remove_history "int which"
365Remove history entry at offset \fIwhich\fP from the history. The
366removed element is returned so you can free the line, data,
367and containing structure.
368
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369.Fn1 "histdata_t" free_history_entry "HIST_ENTRY *histent"
370Free the history entry \fIhistent\fP and any history library private
371data associated with it. Returns the application-specific data
372so the caller can dispose of it.
373
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374.Fn3 "HIST_ENTRY *" replace_history_entry "int which" "const char *line" "histdata_t data"
375Make the history entry at offset \fIwhich\fP have \fIline\fP and \fIdata\fP.
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376This returns the old entry so the caller can dispose of any
377application-specific data. In the case
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378of an invalid \fIwhich\fP, a \fBNULL\fP pointer is returned.
379
380.Fn1 void clear_history "void"
381Clear the history list by deleting all the entries.
382
383.Fn1 void stifle_history "int max"
384Stifle the history list, remembering only the last \fImax\fP entries.
385
386.Fn1 int unstifle_history "void"
387Stop stifling the history. This returns the previously-set
388maximum number of history entries (as set by \fBstifle_history()\fP).
389history was stifled. The value is positive if the history was
390stifled, negative if it wasn't.
391
392.Fn1 int history_is_stifled "void"
393Returns non-zero if the history is stifled, zero if it is not.
394
395.SS Information About the History List
396
397These functions return information about the entire history list or
398individual list entries.
399
400.Fn1 "HIST_ENTRY **" history_list "void"
401Return a \fBNULL\fP terminated array of \fIHIST_ENTRY *\fP which is the
402current input history. Element 0 of this list is the beginning of time.
403If there is no history, return \fBNULL\fP.
404
405.Fn1 int where_history "void"
406Returns the offset of the current history element.
407
408.Fn1 "HIST_ENTRY *" current_history "void"
409Return the history entry at the current position, as determined by
410\fBwhere_history()\fP. If there is no entry there, return a \fBNULL\fP
411pointer.
412
413.Fn1 "HIST_ENTRY *" history_get "int offset"
414Return the history entry at position \fIoffset\fP, starting from
415\fBhistory_base\fP.
416If there is no entry there, or if \fIoffset\fP
417is greater than the history length, return a \fBNULL\fP pointer.
418
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419.Fn1 "time_t" history_get_time "HIST_ENTRY *"
420Return the time stamp associated with the history entry passed as the argument.
421
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422.Fn1 int history_total_bytes "void"
423Return the number of bytes that the primary history entries are using.
424This function returns the sum of the lengths of all the lines in the
425history.
426
427.SS Moving Around the History List
428
429These functions allow the current index into the history list to be
430set or changed.
431
432.Fn1 int history_set_pos "int pos"
433Set the current history offset to \fIpos\fP, an absolute index
434into the list.
435Returns 1 on success, 0 if \fIpos\fP is less than zero or greater
436than the number of history entries.
437
438.Fn1 "HIST_ENTRY *" previous_history "void"
439Back up the current history offset to the previous history entry, and
440return a pointer to that entry. If there is no previous entry, return
441a \fBNULL\fP pointer.
442
443.Fn1 "HIST_ENTRY *" next_history "void"
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444If the current history offset refers to a valid history entry,
445increment the current history offset.
446If the possibly-incremented history offset refers to a valid history
447entry, return a pointer to that entry;
448otherwise, return a \fBNULL\fP pointer.
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449
450.SS Searching the History List
451
452These functions allow searching of the history list for entries containing
453a specific string. Searching may be performed both forward and backward
454from the current history position. The search may be \fIanchored\fP,
455meaning that the string must match at the beginning of the history entry.
456
457.Fn2 int history_search "const char *string" "int direction"
458Search the history for \fIstring\fP, starting at the current history offset.
459If \fIdirection\fP is less than 0, then the search is through
460previous entries, otherwise through subsequent entries.
461If \fIstring\fP is found, then
462the current history index is set to that history entry, and the value
463returned is the offset in the line of the entry where
464\fIstring\fP was found. Otherwise, nothing is changed, and a -1 is
465returned.
466
467.Fn2 int history_search_prefix "const char *string" "int direction"
468Search the history for \fIstring\fP, starting at the current history
469offset. The search is anchored: matching lines must begin with
470\fIstring\fP. If \fIdirection\fP is less than 0, then the search is
471through previous entries, otherwise through subsequent entries.
472If \fIstring\fP is found, then the
473current history index is set to that entry, and the return value is 0.
474Otherwise, nothing is changed, and a -1 is returned.
475
476.Fn3 int history_search_pos "const char *string" "int direction" "int pos"
477Search for \fIstring\fP in the history list, starting at \fIpos\fP, an
478absolute index into the list. If \fIdirection\fP is negative, the search
479proceeds backward from \fIpos\fP, otherwise forward. Returns the absolute
480index of the history element where \fIstring\fP was found, or -1 otherwise.
481
482.SS Managing the History File
483The History library can read the history from and write it to a file.
484This section documents the functions for managing a history file.
485
486.Fn1 int read_history "const char *filename"
487Add the contents of \fIfilename\fP to the history list, a line at a time.
488If \fIfilename\fP is \fBNULL\fP, then read from \fI~/.history\fP.
489Returns 0 if successful, or \fBerrno\fP if not.
490
491.Fn3 int read_history_range "const char *filename" "int from" "int to"
492Read a range of lines from \fIfilename\fP, adding them to the history list.
493Start reading at line \fIfrom\fP and end at \fIto\fP.
494If \fIfrom\fP is zero, start at the beginning. If \fIto\fP is less than
495\fIfrom\fP, then read until the end of the file. If \fIfilename\fP is
496\fBNULL\fP, then read from \fI~/.history\fP. Returns 0 if successful,
497or \fBerrno\fP if not.
498
499.Fn1 int write_history "const char *filename"
500Write the current history to \fIfilename\fP, overwriting \fIfilename\fP
501if necessary.
502If \fIfilename\fP is \fBNULL\fP, then write the history list to \fI~/.history\fP.
503Returns 0 on success, or \fBerrno\fP on a read or write error.
504
505
506.Fn2 int append_history "int nelements" "const char *filename"
507Append the last \fInelements\fP of the history list to \fIfilename\fP.
508If \fIfilename\fP is \fBNULL\fP, then append to \fI~/.history\fP.
509Returns 0 on success, or \fBerrno\fP on a read or write error.
510
511.Fn2 int history_truncate_file "const char *filename" "int nlines"
512Truncate the history file \fIfilename\fP, leaving only the last
513\fInlines\fP lines.
514If \fIfilename\fP is \fBNULL\fP, then \fI~/.history\fP is truncated.
515Returns 0 on success, or \fBerrno\fP on failure.
516
517.SS History Expansion
518
519These functions implement history expansion.
520
521.Fn2 int history_expand "char *string" "char **output"
522Expand \fIstring\fP, placing the result into \fIoutput\fP, a pointer
523to a string. Returns:
524.RS
525.PD 0
526.TP
5270
528If no expansions took place (or, if the only change in
529the text was the removal of escape characters preceding the history expansion
530character);
531.TP
5321
533if expansions did take place;
534.TP
535-1
536if there was an error in expansion;
537.TP
5382
539if the returned line should be displayed, but not executed,
540as with the \fB:p\fP modifier.
541.PD
542.RE
543If an error ocurred in expansion, then \fIoutput\fP contains a descriptive
544error message.
545
546.Fn3 "char *" get_history_event "const char *string" "int *cindex" "int qchar"
547Returns the text of the history event beginning at \fIstring\fP +
548\fI*cindex\fP. \fI*cindex\fP is modified to point to after the event
549specifier. At function entry, \fIcindex\fP points to the index into
550\fIstring\fP where the history event specification begins. \fIqchar\fP
551is a character that is allowed to end the event specification in addition
552to the ``normal'' terminating characters.
553
554.Fn1 "char **" history_tokenize "const char *string"
555Return an array of tokens parsed out of \fIstring\fP, much as the
556shell might.
557The tokens are split on the characters in the
558\fBhistory_word_delimiters\fP variable,
559and shell quoting conventions are obeyed.
560
561.Fn3 "char *" history_arg_extract "int first" "int last" "const char *string"
562Extract a string segment consisting of the \fIfirst\fP through \fIlast\fP
563arguments present in \fIstring\fP. Arguments are split using
564\fBhistory_tokenize()\fP.
565
566.SS History Variables
567
568This section describes the externally-visible variables exported by
569the GNU History Library.
570
571.Vb int history_base
572The logical offset of the first entry in the history list.
573
574.Vb int history_length
575The number of entries currently stored in the history list.
576
577.Vb int history_max_entries
578The maximum number of history entries. This must be changed using
579\fBstifle_history()\fP.
580
cc88a640 581.Vb int history_wite_timestamps
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582If non-zero, timestamps are written to the history file, so they can be
583preserved between sessions. The default value is 0, meaning that
584timestamps are not saved.
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585The current timestamp format uses the value of \fIhistory_comment_char\fP
586to delimit timestamp entries in the history file. If that variable does
587not have a value (the default), timestamps will not be written.
5bdf8622 588
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589.Vb char history_expansion_char
590The character that introduces a history event. The default is \fB!\fP.
591Setting this to 0 inhibits history expansion.
592
593.Vb char history_subst_char
594The character that invokes word substitution if found at the start of
595a line. The default is \fB^\fP.
596
597.Vb char history_comment_char
598During tokenization, if this character is seen as the first character
599of a word, then it and all subsequent characters up to a newline are
600ignored, suppressing history expansion for the remainder of the line.
601This is disabled by default.
602
603.Vb "char *" history_word_delimiters
604The characters that separate tokens for \fBhistory_tokenize()\fP.
605The default value is \fB"\ \et\en()<>;&|"\fP.
606
607.Vb "char *" history_no_expand_chars
608The list of characters which inhibit history expansion if found immediately
609following \fBhistory_expansion_char\fP. The default is space, tab, newline,
610\fB\er\fP, and \fB=\fP.
611
612.Vb "char *" history_search_delimiter_chars
613The list of additional characters which can delimit a history search
614string, in addition to space, tab, \fI:\fP and \fI?\fP in the case of
615a substring search. The default is empty.
616
617.Vb int history_quotes_inhibit_expansion
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618If non-zero, double-quoted words are not scanned for the history expansion
619character or the history comment character. The default value is 0.
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620
621.Vb "rl_linebuf_func_t *" history_inhibit_expansion_function
622This should be set to the address of a function that takes two arguments:
623a \fBchar *\fP (\fIstring\fP)
624and an \fBint\fP index into that string (\fIi\fP).
625It should return a non-zero value if the history expansion starting at
626\fIstring[i]\fP should not be performed; zero if the expansion should
627be done.
628It is intended for use by applications like \fBbash\fP that use the history
629expansion character for additional purposes.
630By default, this variable is set to \fBNULL\fP.
631.SH FILES
632.PD 0
633.TP
634.FN ~/.history
635Default filename for reading and writing saved history
636.PD
637.SH "SEE ALSO"
638.PD 0
639.TP
640\fIThe Gnu Readline Library\fP, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey
641.TP
642\fIThe Gnu History Library\fP, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey
643.TP
644\fIbash\fP(1)
645.TP
646\fIreadline\fP(3)
647.PD
648.SH AUTHORS
649Brian Fox, Free Software Foundation
650.br
651bfox@gnu.org
652.PP
653Chet Ramey, Case Western Reserve University
654.br
4a11f206 655chet.ramey@case.edu
9255ee31
EZ
656.SH BUG REPORTS
657If you find a bug in the
658.B history
659library, you should report it. But first, you should
660make sure that it really is a bug, and that it appears in the latest
661version of the
662.B history
663library that you have.
664.PP
665Once you have determined that a bug actually exists, mail a
666bug report to \fIbug\-readline\fP@\fIgnu.org\fP.
667If you have a fix, you are welcome to mail that
668as well! Suggestions and `philosophical' bug reports may be mailed
669to \fPbug-readline\fP@\fIgnu.org\fP or posted to the Usenet
670newsgroup
671.BR gnu.bash.bug .
672.PP
673Comments and bug reports concerning
674this manual page should be directed to
4a11f206 675.IR chet.ramey@case.edu .