doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
- CHILD_MAX: document new meaning and action when variable is set
+
+ 9/5
+ ---
+redir.c
+ - redir_varassign: call stupidly_hack_special_variables after
+ assigning fd number to specified variable, so we can use constructs
+ like {BASH_XTRACEFD}>foo. Suggested by Pierre Gaston
+ <pierre.gaston@gmail.com>
+
+ 9/8
+ ---
+expr.c
+ - readtok: invalidate previous contents of `curlval' before freeing
+ and reallocating tokstr (which, chances are, will get the same
+ pointer as before and render curlval inconsistent). Fixes other
+ bug reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+ 9/9
+ ---
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - rl_username_completion_function: protect call to setpwent() with
+ #ifdef (HAVE_GETPWENT)/#endif. Fixes bug reported by
+ Gerd Hofmann <gerd.hofmann.nbg@googlemail.com>
+
+lib/readline/display.c
+ - rl_message: second and subsequent calls to rl_message can result in
+ local_prompt being overwritten with new values (e.g., from the
+ successive calls displaying the incremental search string). Need
+ to free before overwriting if it's not the same as the value saved
+ in saved_local_prompt. Fixes memory leak reported by
+ Wouter Vermaelen <vermaelen.wouter@gmail.com>
+
+lib/readline/{terminal.c,rlprivate.h}
+ - move CUSTOM_REDISPLAY_FUNC and CUSTOM_INPUT_FUNC defines from
+ terminal.c to rlprivate.h so other files can use them
+
+expr.c
+ - expr_streval: if noeval is non-zero, just return 0 right away,
+ short-circuiting evaluation completely. readtok will leave curtok
+ set correctly without re-entering the evaluator at all. Rest of
+ fix for bug reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
--- /dev/null
+ 2/14/2011
+ ---------
+[bash-4.2 released]
+
+ 2/15
+ ----
+lib/glob/gmisc.c
+ - fix wmatchlen and umatchlen to avoid going past the end of the
+ string on an incomplete bracket expression that ends with a
+ NUL. Partial fix for bug reported by Clark Wang <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+
+ 2/16
+ ----
+subst.h
+ - new string extract flag value: SX_WORD. Used when calling
+ extract_dollar_brace_string to skip over the word in
+ ${param op word} from parameter_brace_expand
+
+subst.c
+ - change parameter_brace_expand to add SX_WORD to flags passed to
+ extract_dollar_brace_string
+ - change parameter_brace_expand to use SX_POSIXEXP for all non-posix
+ word expansion operators that treat single quotes as special, not
+ just % and #
+ - change extract_dollar_brace_string to initialize dolbrace_state to
+ DOLBRACE_WORD if SX_WORD flag supplied and we shouldn't use
+ DOLBRACE_QUOTE. Fixes bug reported by Juergen Daubert <jue@jue.li>
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - document the exact expansions here strings undergo
+
+ 2/17
+ ----
+lib/readline/vi_mode.c
+ - make sure that `dd', `cc', and `yy' call vidomove_dispatch from
+ rl_domove_read_callback. Fixes bug reported by Clark Wang
+ <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+
+lib/readline/callback.c
+ - make sure _rl_internal_char_cleanup is called after the
+ vi-motion callbacks (rl_vi_domove_callback) in rl_callback_read_char.
+ Companion to above fix
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - make sure that the text describing the rhs of the == and =~
+ operators to [[ states that only the quoted portion of the pattern
+ is matched as a string
+
+ 2/18
+ ----
+lib/glob/gmisc.c
+ - better fix for umatchlen/wmatchlen: keep track of the number of
+ characters in a bracket expression as the value to increase
+ matchlen by if the bracket expression is not well-formed. Fixes
+ bug reported by Clark Wang <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+
+subst.c
+ - change expand_string_for_rhs so that it sets the W_NOSPLIT2 flag
+ in the word flags. We will not perform word splitting or quote
+ removal on the result, so we do not want to add quoted nulls if
+ we see "" or ''. Fixes bug reported by Mike Frysinger
+ <vapier@gentoo.org>
+
+ 2/19
+ ----
+variables.c
+ - new function, int chkexport(name), checks whether variable NAME is
+ exported and remakes the export environment if necessary. Returns
+ 1 if NAME is exported and 0 if not
+ - call chkexport(name) to get tzset to look at the right variable in
+ the environment when modifying TZ in sv_tz. Don't call tzset if
+ chkexport doesn't indicate that the variable is exported
+
+variables.h
+ - new extern declaration for chkexport
+
+
+{parse.y,builtins/printf.def}
+ - call sv_tz before calling localtime() when formatting time strings
+ in prompt strings or using printf. Fixes bug reported by
+ Dennis Williamson <dennistwilliamson@gmail.com>
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - modify fix of 2/9 to add casts when those variables are passed to
+ functions; some compilers throw errors instead of warnings. Report
+ and fix from Joachim Schmitz <jojo@schmitz-digital.de>
+
+support/shobj-conf
+ - add a stanza for nsk on the Tandem from Joachim Schmitz
+ <jojo@schmitz-digital.de>
+
+{shell,lib/readline/shell}.c
+ - Tandem systems should use getpwnam (getlogin()); for some reason
+ they don't do well with using getuid(). Fix from Joachim Schmitz
+ <jojo@schmitz-digital.de>
+
+ 3/1
+ ---
+variables.c
+ - make sure that the return value from find_variable is non-null
+ before trying to use it in chkexport. Fixes bug reported by
+ Evangelos Foutras <foutrelis@gmail.com>
+
+ 3/3
+ ---
+parse.y
+ - when adding $$ to the current token buffer in read_token_word(),
+ don't xmalloc a buffer for two characters and then strcpy it, just
+ copy the characters directly into the token buffer. Fix from
+ Michael Whitten <mfwitten@gmail.com>
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - fix expand_word_unsplit to add the W_NOSPLIT2 flag to the word to
+ be expanded, so "" doesn't add CTLNUL. Similar to fix of 2/18 to
+ expand_string_for_rhs. Fixes bug reported by Nathanael D. Noblet
+ <nathanael@gnat.ca> and Matthias Klose <doko@debian.org>
+
+parse.y
+ - fix extended_glob case of read_token_word to allocate an extra
+ space in the buffer for the next character read after the extended
+ glob specification if it's a CTLESC or CTLNUL. Report and fix from
+ Michael Witten <mfwitten@gmail.com>
+ - fix shell expansions case of read_token_word to allocate an extra
+ space in the buffer for the next character read after the shell
+ expansion if it's a CTLESC or CTLNUL. Report and fix from
+ Michael Witten <mfwitten@gmail.com>
+ - TENTATIVE: fix read_token_word to reduce the amount of buffer space
+ required to hold the translated and double-quoted value of $"..."
+ strings. Report and fix from Michael Witten <mfwitten@gmail.com>
+ - change code around got_character and got_escaped_character labels to
+ make sure that we call RESIZE_MALLOCED_BUFFER before adding the
+ CTLESC before a CTLESC or CTLNUL, and before adding the character if
+ we're not adding a CTLESC. Report and fix from
+ Michael Witten <mfwitten@gmail.com>
+
+subst.c
+ - new param flags value, PF_ASSIGNRHS, mirrors W_ASSIGNRHS, noting that
+ parameter expansion is on rhs of assignment statement. That inhibits
+ word splitting
+ - change param_expand to call string_list_dollar_at with quoted == 1
+ if PF_ASSIGNRHS is set, so it will quote IFS characters in the
+ positional parameter before separating them with the first char of
+ $IFS. This keeps the rhs from being split inappropriately. Fixes
+ bug reported by Andres Perera <andres.p@zoho.com>
+
+ 3/4
+ ---
+lib/readline/bind.c
+ - add a missing free of `names' in rl_function_dumper. Bug report
+ and fix from Michael Snyder <msnyder@vmware.com>
+
+ 3/5
+ ---
+lib/readline/rltty.c
+ - change rl_deprep_terminal so it uses fileno (stdin) for the tty fd
+ if rl_instream is not set, like rl_prep_terminal
+
+ 3/6
+ ---
+lib/readline/display.c
+ - fix rl_message to use a dynamically-allocated buffer instead of a
+ fixed-size buffer of 128 chars for the `local message prompt'. Bug
+ report and fix from Micah Cowan <micah@cowan.name>
+
+ 3/7
+ ---
+jobs.c
+ - add sentinel to wait_sigint_handler so it only sets wait_sigint_received
+ if waiting_for_child is non-zero; otherwise, it restores the old
+ SIGINT handler and sends itself the SIGINT
+ - set waiting_for_child around the calls to waitchld that use it to
+ synchronously wait for a process
+ - change logic that decides whether or not the child process blocked
+ or handled SIGINT based on whether or not waitpid returns -1/EINTR
+ and the shell receives a SIGINT and the child does not exit. If
+ the child later exits due to SIGINT, cancel the assumoption that it
+ was handled
+ - instead of testing whether or not the child exited due to SIGINT
+ when deciding whether the shell should act on a SIGINT it received
+ while waiting, test whether or not we think the child caught
+ SIGINT. If it did, we let it go (unless the shell has it trapped);
+ if it did not catch it, the shell acts on the SIGINT. Fix from
+ Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>, bug report originally
+ from Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com>
+
+ 3/8
+ ---
+shell.c
+ - initialize no_line_editing to 1 if READLINE is not defined -- we
+ can't have line editing without readline
+
+ 3/12
+ ----
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - add SIGHUP to the set of signals readline handles
+
+lib/readline/doc/rltech.texi
+ - document that SIGHUP is now part of the set of signals readline
+ handles
+
+lib/readline/input.c
+ - if _rl_caught_signal indicates that read() was interrupted by a
+ SIGHUP or SIGTERM, return READERR or EOF as appropriate
+ - call rl_event_hook, if it's set, if call to read in rl_getc
+ returns -1/EINTR. If rl_event_hook doesn't do anything, this
+ continues the loop as before. This handles the other fatal
+ signals
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - add a couple of QUIT; calls to execute_disk_command and
+ execute_simple_command to improve responsiveness to interrupts
+ and fatal signals
+
+input.c
+ - rearrange getc_with_restart so that the return values from read()
+ are handled right
+
+parse.y
+ - don't need to set terminate_immediately in yy_stream_get, since
+ getc_with_restart checks for terminating signals itself
+ - since readline returns READERR on SIGHUP or SIGTERM, don't need
+ to set terminate_immediately. Still doesn't handle other
+ signals well -- will have to check that some more
+
+bashline.c
+ - new function, bash_event_hook, for rl_event_hook. Just checks for
+ terminating signals and acts on them using CHECK_TERMSIG.
+ - set rl_event_hook to bash_event_hook
+
+builtins/read.def
+ - take out setting terminate_immediately; add calls to CHECK_TERMSIG
+ after read calls
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - move the text describing the effect of negative subscripts used to
+ reference indexed array elements to the paragraphs describing
+ ${parameter[subscript]}, since that's where they are implemented.
+ Pointed out by Christopher F. A. Johnson <cfajohnson@gmail.com>
+
+arrayfunc.[ch],subst.c
+ - array_expand_index now takes a new first argument: a SHELL_VAR *
+ of the array variable being subscripted. Can be used later to fully
+ implement negative subscripts
+
+ 3/14
+ ----
+lib/glob/glob.c
+ - fix mbskipname to not turn the directory entry name into a wide char
+ string if the conversion of the pattern to a wide char string fails
+ - fix mbskipname to call skipname if either the pattern or the filename
+ can't be converted into a wide-char string
+
+lib/glob/xmbsrtowcs.c
+ - fix xdupmbstowcs2 to handle return value of 0 from mbsnrtowcs and
+ short-circuit with failure in that case. Fixes bug reported by
+ Roman Rakus <rrakus@redhat.com>
+
+ 3/15
+ ----
+bashline.c
+ - new variable, bash_filename_quote_characters to store the value
+ assigned to rl_filename_quote_characters so it can be restored
+ if changed.
+ - change bashline_reset and attempt_shell_completion to restore
+ rl_filename_quote_characters if not set to default
+
+ 3/22
+ ----
+lib/glob/glob.c
+ - wdequote_pathname falls back to udequote_pathname if xdupmbstowcs
+ fails to convert the pathname to a wide-character string
+
+lib/glob/xmbsrtowcs.c
+ - xdupmbstowcs2: change to fix problem with leading '\\' (results in
+ nms == 0, which causes it to short-circuit with failure right
+ away). Fixes bug pointed out by Werner Fink <werner@suse.de>
+ - xdupmbstowcs2: compensate for mbsnrtowcs returning 0 by taking the
+ next single-byte character and going on
+ - xdupmbstowcs2: change memory allocation to increase by WSBUF_INC
+ bytes; try to avoid calls to realloc (even if they don't actually
+ result in more memory being allocated)
+
+ 3/24
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - slightly modify BASH_SUBSHELL description based on complaint from
+ Sam Liddicott <sam@liddicott.com>
+
+ 3/25
+ ----
+trap.c
+ - change free_trap_strings to not call free_trap_string for signals
+ that are being ignored, like reset_or_restore_signal_handlers.
+ Fixes bug reported by Satoshi Takahashi <blue3waters@gmail.com>
+
+ 3/26
+ ----
+lib/readline/rltypedefs.h
+ - remove old Function/VFunction/CPFunction/CPPFunction typedefs as
+ suggested by Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
+
+lib/readline/rlstdc.h
+ - move defines for USE_VARARGS/PREFER_STDARG/PREFER_VARARGS from
+ config.h.in to here because declaration of rl_message in
+ readline.h uses the defines. This makes it hard for another packages
+ to use after the header files are installed, since config.h is not
+ one of the installed files. Suggested by Tom Tromey
+ <tromey@redhat.com>
+
+ 3/27
+ ----
+print_cmd.c
+ - change indirection_string from a static buffer to a dynamic one
+ managed by indirection_level_string(), so we don't end up truncating
+ PS4. Suggested by Dennis Williamson <dennistwilliamson@gmail.com>
+
+lib/readline/shell.c
+ - change sh_set_lines_and_columns to use static buffers instead of
+ allocating the buffers to pass to setenv/putenv
+
+lib/readline/terminal.c
+ - change _rl_get_screen_size to not call sh_set_lines_and_columns if
+ ignore_env == 0
+ - _rl_sigwinch_resize_terminal: new function to just retrieve terminal
+ size, ignoring environment
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - new external declaration for _rl_sigwinch_resize_terminal() (currently
+ unused)
+
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - rl_sigwinch_handler: set _rl_caught_signal to SIGWINCH
+ - rl_sigwinch_handler: don't immediately call rl_resize_terminal; just
+ leave _rl_caught_signal set for RL_CHECK_SIGNALS to handle
+ - _rl_signal_handler: call rl_resize_terminal if sig == SIGWINCH.
+ Should fix hang when sending multiple repeated SIGWINCH reported by
+ Henning Bekel <h.bekel@googlemail.com>
+
+ 3/29
+ ----
+lib/sh/snprintf.c
+ - include math.h for any defines for isinf/isnan
+ - use code from gnulib documentation to implement isinf/isnan if they
+ are not defined
+
+configure.in
+ - don't check for isinf or isnan; c99 says they're macros anyway
+
+config.h.in
+ - remove defines for ISINF_IN_LIBC and ISNAN_IN_LIBC, no longer used
+ by snprintf.c
+
+ 4/2
+ ---
+braces.c
+ - brace_gobbler: fix to understand double-quoted command substitution,
+ since the shell understands unquoted comsubs. Fixes bug reported
+ by Michael Whitten <mfwitten@gmail.com>
+
+lib/readline/display.c
+ - include <pc.h> on MDOS
+ - get and set screen size using DJGPP-specific calls on MSDOS
+ - move cursor up clear screen using DJGPP-specific calls
+ - don't call tputs on DJGPP; there is no good terminfo support
+
+lib/readline/terminal.c
+ - include <pc.h> on MDOS
+ - get and set screen size using DJGPP-specific calls on MSDOS
+ - use DJGPP-specific initialization on MSDOS, zeroing all the
+ _rl_term_* variables
+ - don't call tputs on DJGPP; there is no good terminfo support
+ DJGPP support from Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
+
+ 4/6
+ ---
+
+config-top.h
+ - change DEFAULT_PATH_VALUE to something more useful and modern
+
+ 4/8
+ ---
+tests/printf2.sub
+ - make sure LC_ALL and LC_CTYPE are set so LANG assignment takes effect.
+ Reported by Cedric Arbogast <arbogast.cedric@gmail.com>
+
+ 4/11
+ ----
+include/chartypes.h
+ - fix a couple of dicey defines (though ones that don't cause any
+ compiler warnings) in IN_CTYPE_DOMAIN
+
+doc/{bashref.texi,bash.1}
+ - add note referring to duplicating file descriptors in sections
+ describing redirecting stdout and stderr and appending to stdout
+ and stderr. Suggested by Matthew Dinger <mdinger.bugzilla@gmail.com>
+
+pcomplete.c
+ - it_init_helptopics: new function to support completing on help topics,
+ not just builtins
+ - it_helptopics: new programmable completion list of help topics
+ - build list of helptopic completions in gen_action_completions on
+ demand
+
+pcomplete.h
+ - new extern declaration for it_helptopics
+
+builtins/complete.def
+ - the `helptopic' action now maps to CA_HELPTOPIC intead of CA_BUILTIN,
+ since there are more help topics than just builtins. Suggested by
+ Clark Wang <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+
+ 4/12
+ ----
+print_cmd.c
+ - fix print_arith_for_command to add a call to PRINT_DEFERRED_HEREDOCS
+ before ending the body of the command, so heredocs get attached to
+ the right command instead of to the loop. From gentoo bug 363371
+ http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=363371
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - change coproc_pidchk to unset the appropriate shell variables when
+ the (currently single) known coproc pid terminates
+ - cleanup and new functions to fully support multiple coprocesses when
+ and if I decide to go there
+
+ 4/13
+ ----
+print_cmd.c
+ - fix print_group_command to add a call to PRINT_DEFERRED_HEREDOCS
+ after call to make_command_string_internal before printing closing
+ `}'
+ - fix make_command_string_internal to add a call to
+ PRINT_DEFERRED_HEREDOCS after recursive call to
+ make_command_string_internal in case cm_subshell before printing
+ closing `)'
+
+ 4/14
+ ----
+print_cmd.c
+ - change overlapping strcpy in named_function_string to memmove
+
+sig.h
+ - UNBLOCK_SIGNAL: convenience define, same as UNBLOCK_CHILD, just
+ restores an old signal mask
+
+trap.c
+ - set_signal: instead of setting the signal handler to SIG_IGN while
+ installing the new trap handler, block the signal and unblock it
+ after the new handler is installed. Fixes bug reported by Roman
+ Rakus <rrakus@redhat.com>
+
+ 4/15
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - make it clear that enabling monitor mode means that all jobs run in
+ separate process groups
+
+ 4/18
+ ----
+builtins/fc.def
+ - update fix of 4/15/2010 to not take saved_command_line_count into
+ account when stepping down the history list to make sure that
+ last_hist indexes something that is valid. Fixes bug reported by
+ <piuma@piumalab.org>
+
+ 4/19
+ ----
+builtins/fc.def
+ - fc_gethnum: make sure the calculation to decide the last history
+ entry is exactly the same as fc_builtin. Fixes bug uncovered by
+ fix of 4/18 to stop seg fault
+
+ 4/22
+ ----
+lib/readline/terminal.c
+ - change _rl_enable_meta_key to set a flag indicating that it sent the
+ enable-meta sequence
+ - _rl_disable_meta_key: new function to turn off meta mode after we
+ turned it on with _rl_enable_meta_key
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - extern declaration for _rl_disable_meta_key
+
+configure.in
+ - if not cross-compiling, set CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD from any CFLAGS inherited
+ from the environment. Fixes HP/UX build problem reported by
+ "Daniel Richard G." <skunk@iSKUNK.ORG>
+
+ 4/26
+ ----
+config-top.h
+ - define MULTIPLE_COPROCS to 0 so the code is still disabled but easy
+ to enable via configure option or editing this file
+
+ 4/29
+ ----
+lib/sh/eaccess.c
+ - freebsd provides faccessat, with the same misfeature as their eaccess
+ and access implementations (X_OK returns true for uid==0 regardless
+ of the actual file permissions), so reorganize code to check the
+ file permissions as with eaccess. Report and fix from Johan Hattne
+ <johan.hattne@utsouthwestern.edu>
+
+ 5/2
+ ---
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - add forward reference to `Pattern Matching' from `Pathname
+ Expansion', suggested by Greg Wooledge <wooledg@eeg.ccf.org>
+
+ 5/5
+ ---
+pcomplib.c
+ - the bash_completion project now distributes over 200 completions
+ for various programs, with no end in sight, so increase the value
+ of COMPLETE_HASH_BUCKETS from 32 to 128
+
+pathexp.c
+ - quote_string_for_globbing: make sure CTLESC quoting CTLESC is
+ translated into \<CTLESC> even if the flags include QGLOB_REGEXP.
+ We don't want to process the second CTLESC as a quote character.
+ Fixes bug reported by Shawn Bohrer <sbohrer@rgmadvisors.com>
+
+ 5/6
+ ---
+builtins/printf.def
+ - change PRETURN to not call fflush if ferror(stdout) is true
+ - if a call to one of the stdio functions or printstr leaves
+ ferror(stdout) true, and PRETURN is going to be called, let PRETURN
+ print the error message rather than doubling up the messages. Fixes
+ problem reported by Roman Rakus <rrakus@redhat.com>
+
+ 5/9
+ ---
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - add note to the effect that lists inside compound command can be
+ terminated by newlines as well as semicolons. Suggested by
+ Roman Byshko <rbyshko@gmail.com>
+
+ 5/10
+ ----
+subst.c
+ - remove_quoted_nulls: fix problem that caused it to skip over the
+ character after a CTLNUL, which had the effect of skipping every
+ other of a series of CTLNULs. Fixes bug reported by
+ Marten Wikstrom <marten.wikstrom@keystream.se>
+
+ 5/11
+ ----
+subst.c
+ - extract_process_subst: add SX_COMMAND flag to call to
+ extract_delimited_string, since we're expanding the same sort of
+ command as command substitution. Fixes bug reported in Ubuntu
+ bug 779848
+
+ 5/12
+ ----
+configure.in
+ - set the prefer_shared and prefer_static variables appropriately
+ depending on the value of $opt_static_link
+
+aclocal.m4
+ - AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY: change to not prefer shared versions of the
+ libraries it's searching for if the prefer_shared variable is "no".
+ Fixes problem reported by Cedric Arbogast <arbogast.cedric@gmail.com>
+
+ 5/13
+ ----
+lib/readline/readline.c
+ - _rl_internal_teardown: add call to _rl_disable_meta_key to make the
+ meta key active only for the duration of the call to readline()
+ - _rl_internal_setup: move call to _rl_enable_meta_key here from
+ readline_initialize_everything so the meta key is active only for
+ the duration of the call to readline(). Suggestion from Miroslav
+ Lichvar <mlichvar@redhat.com>
+
+builtins/help.def
+ - help_builtin: change strncmp to strcmp so that `help read' no longer
+ matches `readonly'. Suggested by Clark Wang <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+
+config.h.in
+ - add define for GLIBC21, checked using jm_GLIBC21 as part of the tests
+ for libintl
+
+lib/malloc/malloc.c
+ - internal_free: don't use the cached value of memtop when deciding
+ whether or not to adjust the break and give memory back to the kernel
+ when using the GNU C library, since glibc uses sbrk for its own
+ internal purposes. From Debian bug 614815, reported by Samuel
+ Thibault <samuel.thibault@gnu.org>
+
+aclocal.m4
+ - BASH_STRUCT_WEXITSTATUS_OFFSET: change AC_RUN_IFELSE to AC_TRY_RUN
+ to avoid warning about not using AC_LANG_SOURCE
+
+ 5/14
+ ----
+bashline.[ch]
+ - two new functions, bashline_set_event_hook and bashline_reset_event_hook,
+ to set rl_event_hook to bash_event_hook and back to NULL, respectively
+ - don't set rl_event_hook unconditionally
+
+sig.c
+ - termsig_sighandler: if the shell is currently interactive and
+ readline is active, call bashline_set_event_hook to cause
+ termsig_handler to be called via bash_event_hook when the shell
+ returns from the signal handler
+
+ 5/15
+ ----
+lib/readline/display.c
+ - _rl_col_width: Mac OS X has a bug in wcwidth: it does not return 0
+ for UTF-8 combining characters. Added workaround dependent on
+ MACOSX. Fixes problem pointed out by Thomas De Contes
+ <d.l.tDecontes@free.fr>
+
+ 5/16
+ ----
+lib/readline/rlmbutil.h
+ - WCWIDTH: wrapper for wcwidth that returns 0 for Unicode combining
+ characters on systems where wcwidth is broken (e.g., Mac OS X).
+
+lib/readline/{complete,display,mbutil}.c
+ - use WCWIDTH instead of wcwidth
+
+ 5/17
+ ----
+lib/readline/display.c
+ - update_line: after computing ofd and nfd, see whether the next
+ character in ofd is a zero-width combining character. If it is,
+ back ofd and nfd up one, so the base characters no longer compare
+ as equivalent. Fixes problem reported by Keith Winstein
+ <keithw@mit.edu>
+
+lib/readline/nls.c
+ - _rl_utf8locale: new flag variable, set to non-zero if the current
+ locale is UTF-8
+ - utf8locale(): new function, returns 1 if the passed lspec (or the
+ current locale) indicates that the locale is UTF-8. Called from
+ _rl_init_eightbit
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - extern declaration for _rl_utf8locale
+
+locale.c
+ - locale_utf8locale: new flag variable, set to non-zero if the current
+ locale is UTF-8 (currently unused)
+ - locale_isutf8(): new function, returns 1 if the passed lspec (or the
+ current locale) indicates that the locale is UTF-8. Should be called
+ whenever the locale or LC_CTYPE value is modified
+
+aclocal.m4
+ - BASH_WCWIDTH_BROKEN: new test for whether or not wcwidth returns
+ zero-width characters like unicode combining characters as having
+ display length 1; define WCWIDTH_BROKEN in this case
+
+config.h.in
+ - WCWIDTH_BROKEN: new define
+
+lib/readline/rlmbutil.h
+ - change WCWIDTH macro to use _rl_utf8locale and the full range of
+ Unicode combining characters (U+0300-U+036F)
+
+ 5/19
+ ----
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - _rl_search_context: new member, prevc, will hold character read
+ prior to lastc
+
+lib/readline/isearch.c
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: if the character causes us to index into
+ another keymap, save that character in cxt->prevc
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: if we index into another keymap, but don't
+ find a function that's special to i-search, and the character that
+ caused us to index into that keymap would have terminated the
+ search, push back cxt->prevc and cxt->lastc to make it appear as
+ if `prevc' terminated the search, and execute lastc as a command.
+ We have to push prevc back so we index into the same keymap before
+ we read lastc. Fixes bug report from Davor Cubranic
+ <cubranic@stat.ubc.ca>
+
+ 5/20
+ ----
+expr.c
+ - expr_bind_variable: pay attention to the return value from
+ bind_variable and check whether or not we should error out due to
+ a readonly or noassign variable. Fixes bug reported by Eric
+ Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
+
+ 5/26
+ ----
+
+lib/readline/search.c
+ - include histlib.h for ANCHORED_SEARCH defines
+ - rl_history_search_flags: new variable, holds ANCHORED_SEARCH flag for
+ the duration of a history search
+ - rl_history_search_reinit: takes a new flags variable, defines whether
+ or not the search is anchored; assigned to rl_history_search_flags
+ - rl_history_serarch_reinit: if ANCHORED_SEARCH flag passed, add ^ to
+ beginning of search string; otherwise search string is unmodified
+ - rl_history_search_internal: set rl_point appropriately based on
+ whether or not rl_history_search_flags includes ANCHORED_SEARCH
+ - rl_history_substr_search_forward: new function, for non-anchored
+ substring search forward through history for string of characters
+ preceding rl_point
+ - rl_history_substr_search_backward: new function, for non-anchored
+ substring search backward through history for string of characters
+ preceding rl_point. Original code from Niraj Kulkarni
+ <kulkarniniraj14@gmail.com>
+
+lib/readline/readline.h
+ - extern declarations for rl_history_substr_search_{for,back}ward
+
+lib/readline/funmap.c
+ - history-substring-search-forward: new bindable command, invokes
+ rl_history_substr_search_forward
+ - history-substring-search-backward: new bindable command, invokes
+ rl_history_substr_search_backward
+
+lib/readline/doc/{rluser.texi,readline.3}
+ - document history-substring-search-forward and
+ history-substring-search-backward
+
+ 5/27
+ ----
+{nojobs,jobs}.c
+ - add support for DONT_REPORT_SIGTERM so that the shell doesn't print
+ a message when a job exits due to SIGTERM since that's the default
+ signal sent by the kill builtin. Suggested by Marc Herbert
+ <mark.herbert@gmail.com>
+
+config-top.h
+ - DONT_REPORT_SIGTERM: new user-modifiable setting. Commented out
+ by default
+
+ 5/28
+ ----
+lib/readline/bind.c
+ - _rl_skip_to_delim: skip to a closing double quote or other delimiter,
+ allowing backslash to quote any character, including the delimiter
+ - rl_parse_and_bind: call _rl_skip_to_delim instead of using inline
+ code
+ - rl_parse_and_bind: allow quoted strings as the values of string
+ variables. Variable values without double quotes have trailing
+ whitespace removed (which still allows embedded whitespace, for
+ better or worse). Fixes problem with string variables not matching
+ in `set' command if values happen to have trailing spaces or tabs
+ (debian bash bug #602762), but introduces slight incompatibility.
+
+ 5/29
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - clarify unset description to specify that without options, a
+ variable, then a shell function if there is no variable by that
+ name, is unset. Fixes discrepancy reported by Mu Qiao
+ <qiaomuf@gentoo.org>
+
+ 6/4
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - clarify description of LINES and COLUMNS (and checkwinsize shopt
+ option) to make it clear that only interactive shells set a
+ handler for SIGWINCH and update LINES and COLUMNS. Original
+ report submitted by Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
+
+arrayfunc.c
+ - expand_compound_array_assignment: defer expansion of words between
+ parens when performing compound assignmnt to an associative array
+ variable
+ - assign_compound_array_list: perform the same expansions when doing
+ a compound array assignment to an associative array variable as
+ when doing a straight array index assignment. The idea is that
+ foo=( [ind1]=bar [ind2]=quux)
+ is the same as
+ foo[ind1]=bar ; foo[ind2]=quux
+
+ This fixes problems with double-expansion and quote removal being
+ performed on the array indices
+
+ 6/13
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - Add a little text to make it clear that the locale determines how
+ range expressions in glob patterns are handled.
+
+
+ 6/21
+ ----
+builtins/read.def
+ - display a message and return error status if -a is used with an
+ existing associative array. Fixes bug reported by Curtis Doty
+ <curtis@greenkey.net>
+
+ 6/24
+ ----
+{jobs,nojobs}.c
+ - non-interactive shells now react to the setting of checkwinsize
+ and set LINES and COLUMNS after a foreground job exits. From a
+ suggestion by Leslie Rhorer <lrhorer@satx.rr.com>
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - checkwinsize: remove language saying that only interactive shells
+ check the window size after each command
+
+lib/readline/histfile.c
+ - history_backupfile: new file, creates a backup history file name
+ given a filename (appending `-')
+ - history_do_write: when overwriting the history file, back it up
+ before writing. Restore backup file on a write error. Suggested
+ by chkno@chkno.net
+
+bashline.c
+ - find_cmd_name: two new arguments, return the start and end of the
+ actual text string used to find the command name, without taking
+ whitespace into account
+ - attempt_shell_completion: small changes to make sure that completion
+ attempted at the beginning of a non-empty line does not find a
+ programmable completion, even if the command name starts at point
+ - attempt_shell_completion: small change to make sure that completion
+ does not find a progcomp when in whitespace before the command
+ name
+ - attempt_shell_completion: small change to make sure that completion
+ does not find a progcomp when point is at the first character of a
+ command name, even when there is leading whitespace (similar to
+ above). Fixes problems noted by Ville Skytta <ville.skytta@iki.fi>
+
+subst.c
+ - brace_expand_word_list: since the individual strings in the strvec
+ returned by brace_expand are already allocated, don't copy them to
+ newly-allocated memory when building the WORD_LIST, just use them
+ intact
+
+locale.c
+ - locale_mb_cur_max: cache value of MB_CUR_MAX when we set or change
+ the locale to avoid a function call every time we need to read it
+
+shell.h
+ - new struct to save shell_input_line and associated variables:
+ shell_input_line_state_t
+ - add members of sh_parser_state_t to save and restore token and the
+ size of the token buffer
+
+parse.y
+ - {save,restore}_input_line_state: new functions to save and restore
+ shell_input_line and associated variables
+ - {save,restore}_parser_state: add code to save and restore the token
+ and token buffer size
+ - xparse_dolparen: call save_ and restore_input_line_state to avoid
+ problems with overwriting shell_input_line when we recursively
+ call the parser to parse a command substitution. Fixes bug
+ reported by Rui Santos <rsantos@grupopie.com>
+
+include/shmbutil.h
+ - use locale_mb_cur_max instead of MB_CUR_MAX in ADVANCE_CHAR and
+ similar macros
+
+lib/glob/smatch.c
+ - rangecmp,rangecmp_wc: change to take an additional argument, which
+ forces the use of strcoll/wscoll when non-zero. If it's 0, a new
+ variable `glob_asciirange' controls whether or not we use strcoll/
+ wscoll. If it's non-zero, we use straight C-locale-like ordering.
+ Suggested by Aharon Robbins <arnold@skeeve.com>
+
+ 6/30
+ ----
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_pipeline: make sure the lastpipe code is protected by
+ #ifdef JOB_CONTROL. Fixes problem reported by Thomas Cort
+ <tcort@minix3.org>
+
+ 7/2
+ ---
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - EXPERIMENTAL: remove setting of _rl_interrupt_immediately around
+ completion functions that touch the file system. Idea from Jan
+ Kratochvil <jan.ktratochvil@redhat.com> and the GDB development
+ team
+
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - rl_signal_handler: if we're in callback mode, don't interrupt
+ immediately on a SIGWINCH
+
+ 7/3
+ ---
+bashline.c
+ - set_directory_hook: and its siblings are a new set of functions to
+ set, save, and restore the appropriate directory completion hook
+ - change callers to use {set,save,restore}_directory_hook instead of
+ manipulating rl_directory_rewrite_hook directly
+ - dircomplete_expand: new variable, defaults to 0, if non-zero causes
+ directory names to be word-expanded during word and filename
+ completion
+ - change {set,save,restore}_directory_hook to look at dircomplete_expand
+ and change rl_directory_completion_hook or rl_directory_rewrite_hook
+ appropriately
+
+bashline.h
+ - extern declaration for set_directory_hook so shopt code can use it
+
+ 7/6
+ ---
+builtins/shopt.def
+ - globasciiranges: new settable shopt option, makes glob ranges act
+ as if in the C locale (so b no longer comes between A and B).
+ Suggested by Aharon Robbins <arnold@skeeve.com>
+
+ 7/7
+ ---
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - document new `globasciiranges' shopt option
+
+ 7/8
+ ---
+builtins/shopt.def
+ - direxpand: new settable option, makes filename completion expand
+ variables in directory names like bash-4.1 did.
+ - shopt_set_complete_direxpand: new function, does the work for the
+ above by calling set_directory_hook
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - document new `direxpand' shopt option
+
+ 7/15
+ ----
+lib/readline/isearch.c
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: when adding character to search string, use
+ cxt->lastc (which we use in the switch statement) instead of c,
+ since lastc can be modified earlier in the function
+
+ 7/18
+ ----
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - _rl_search_context: add another member to save previous value of
+ (multibyte) lastc: pmb is to mb as prevc is to lastc
+
+lib/readline/isearch.c:
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: if a key sequence indexes into a new keymap,
+ but doesn't find any bound function (k[ind].function == 0) or is
+ bound to self-insert (k[ind].function == rl_insert), back up and
+ insert the previous character (the one that caused the index into a
+ new keymap) and arrange things so the current character is the next
+ one read, so both of them end up in the search string. Fixes bug
+ reported by Clark Wang <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: a couple of efficiency improvements when adding
+ characters to the isearch string
+
+ 7/24
+ ----
+lib/readline/isearch.c
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: save and restore cxt->mb and cxt->pmb
+ appropriately when in a multibyte locale
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - correct description of {x}>file (and other redirection operators
+ that allocate a file descriptor) to note the the fd range is
+ greater than or equal to 10. Fixes problem reported by
+ Christian Ullrich
+
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - rl_signal_handler: don't interrupt immediately if in callback mode
+
+lib/readline/callback.c
+ - rl_callback_read_char: install signal handlers only when readline
+ has control in callback mode, so readline's signal handlers aren't
+ called when the application is active (e.g., between the calls to
+ rl_callback_handler_install and rl_callback_read_char). If the
+ readline signal handlers only set a flag, which the application
+ doesn't know about, the signals will effectively be ignored until
+ the next time the application calls into the readline callback
+ interface. Fixes problem of calling unsafe functions from signal
+ handlers when in callback mode reported by Jan Kratochvil
+ <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - fix_assignment_words: when in Posix mode, the `command' builtin
+ doesn't change whether or not the command name it protects is an
+ assignment builtin. One or more instances of `command'
+ preceding `export', for instance, doesn't make `export' treat its
+ assignment statement arguments differently. Posix interpretation
+ #351
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - document new Posix-mode behavior of `command' when preceding builtins
+ that take assignment statements as arguments
+
+builtins/printf.def
+ - printstr: if fieldwidth or precision are < 0 or > INT_MAX when
+ supplied explicitly (since we take care of the `-' separately),
+ clamp at INT_MAX like when using getint(). Fixes issue reported
+ by Ralph Coredroy <ralph@inputplus.co.uk>
+
+ 7/25
+ ----
+lib/readline/chardefs.h
+ - isxdigit: don't define if compiling with c++; declared as a c++
+ template function. Fixes bug reported by Miroslav Lichvar
+ <mlichvar@redhat.com>
+
+builtins/printf.def
+ - getint: if garglist == 0, return whatever getintmax returns (0).
+ Fixes bug reported by Ralph Coredroy <ralph@inputplus.co.uk>
+
+ 7/28
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - minor changes to the descriptions of the cd and pushd builtins
+
+lib/sh/zread.c
+ - zsyncfd: change variable holding return value from lseek to
+ off_t. Bug report and fix from Gregory Margo <gmargo@pacbell.net>
+
+ 8/1
+ ---
+expr.c
+ - don't check for division by 0 when in a context where no evaluation
+ is taking place. Fixes bug reported by dnade.ext@orange-ftgroup.com
+
+ 8/6
+ ---
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_command_internal: the parent branch of the subshell code
+ (where the child calls execute_in_subshell) should not close all
+ open FIFOs with unlink_fifo_list if it's part of a shell function
+ that's still executing. Fixes bug reported by Maarten Billemont
+ <lhunath@lyndir.com>
+
+ 8/9
+ ---
+builtins/common.c
+ - get_exitstat: return EX_BADUSAGE (2) on a non-numeric argument
+
+builtins/return.def
+ - return_builtin: just call get_exitstat to get the return status,
+ let it handle proper parsing and handling of arguments. Fixes
+ issue most recently raised by Linda Walsh <bash@tlinx.org>.
+ Reverses change from 9/11/2008 (see above)
+
+ 8/16
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - clean up `set -e' language to make it clearer that any failure of
+ a compound command will cause the shell to exit, not just subshells
+ and brace commands
+
+ 8/17
+ ----
+configure.in
+ - make the various XXX_FOR_BUILD variables `precious' to autoconf to
+ avoid stale data
+ - change how CC_FOR_BUILD is initialized when cross-compiling and not,
+ but do not change behavior
+ - initialize CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD to -g when cross-compiling
+ - initialize LIBS_FOR_BUILD to $(LIBS) when not cross-compiling, empty
+ when cross-compiling
+ - create AUTO_CFLAGS variable to hold basic CFLAGS defaults; used when
+ CFLAGS not inherited from environment (like effect of old
+ auto_cflags variable)
+ - substitute LIBS_FOR_BUILD into output Makefiles
+ [changes inspired by bug report from Nathan Phillip Brink
+ <ohnobinki@ohnopublishing.net> -- gentoo bug 378941]
+
+builtins/Makefile.in
+ - substitute LIBS_FOR_BUILD from configure, not strictly initialized
+ to $(LIBS)
+
+ 8/27
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - minor changes to the here string description to clarify the
+ expansions performed on the word
+
+support/shobj-conf
+ - handle compilation on Lion (Mac OS X 10.7/darwin11) with changes
+ to darwin stanzas. Fixes readline bug reported by Vincent
+ Sheffer <vince.sheffer@apisphere.com>
+
+lib/sh/strtrans.c
+ - ansic_wshouldquote: check a string with multi-byte characters for
+ characters that needs to be backslash-octal escaped for $'...'
+ - ansic_shouldquote: if is_basic fails for one character, let
+ ansic_wshouldquote examine the rest of the string and return what
+ it returns. From a patch sent by Roman Rakus <rrakus@redhat.com>
+
+ 8/30
+ ----
+lib/sh/strtrans.c
+ - ansic_quote: changes to quote (or not) multibyte characters. New
+ code converts them to wide characters and uses iswprint to check
+ valid wide chars. From a patch sent by Roman Rakus
+ <rrakus@redhat.com>
+
+ 9/7
+ ---
+lib/sh/shquote.c
+ - sh_backslash_quote: change to be table-driven so we can use a
+ different table if we want to
+ - sh_backslash_quote: takes a second char table[256] argument;
+
+externs.h
+ - sh_backslash_quote: add second argument to function prototype
+
+bashline.c,braces.c,parse.y,builtins/printf.def
+ - change callers of sh_backslash_quote to add second argument
+
+bashline.c
+ - filename_bstab: table of characters to pass to sh_backslash_quote;
+ characters with value 1 will be backslash-quoted
+ - set_filename_bstab: turn on characters in filename backslash-quote
+ table according to passed string argument
+ - call set_filename_bstab every time rl_filename_quote_characters is
+ assigned a value
+ - bash_quote_filename: call sh_backslash_quote with filename_bstab
+ as second argument. This allows other characters in filenames to
+ be quoted without quoting, for instance, a dollar sign in a shell
+ variable reference
+
+ 9/8
+ ---
+bashline.c
+ - complete_fullquote: new variable, controls table passed to
+ sh_backslash_quote. If non-zero (the default), the standard set
+ of shell metacharacters -- as in bash versions up to and including
+ bash-4.2 -- gets backslash-quoted by the completion code. If zero,
+ sh_backslash_quote gets the table with the characters in the
+ variable reference removed, which means they are removed from the
+ set of characters to be quoted in filenames
+
+ 9/10
+ ----
+bashline.c
+ - bash_filename_stat_hook: new function, designed to expand variable
+ references in filenames before readline passes them to stat(2)
+ to determine whether or not they are a directory
+
+ 9/15
+ ----
+builtins/declare.def
+ - if assign_array_element fails due to a bad (or empty) subscript, mark
+ it as an assignment error and don't attempt any further processing
+ of that declaration. Fixes segfault bug reported by Diego Augusto
+ Molina <diegoaugustomolina@gmail.com>
+
+ 9/19
+ ----
+expr.c
+ - exppower: replace the simple exponentiation algorithm with an
+ implementation of exponentiation by squaring. Inspired by report
+ from Nicolas ARGYROU <nargy@yahoo.com>
+
+bashline.c
+ - bash_quote_filename: check for rtext being non-null before
+ dereferencing it
+ - set_saved_history: operate_and_get_next assumes that the previous
+ line was added to the history, even when the history is stifled and
+ at the max number of entries. If it wasn't, make sure the history
+ number is incremented properly. Partial fix for bug reported by
+ gregrwm <backuppc-users@whitleymott.net>
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi},lib/readline/doc/{hsuser,rluser}.texi
+ - minor editorial changes inspired by suggestions from
+ Roger Zauner <rogerx.oss@gmail.com>
+
+ 9/20
+ ----
+lib/intl/localealias.c
+ - read_alias_file: close resource leak (fp) when returning on error
+
+ 9/22
+ ----
+execute_command.c
+ - execute_intern_function: implement Posix interpretation 383 by making
+ it an error to define a function with the same name as a special
+ builtin when in Posix mode.
+ http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=383#c692
+
+ 9/25
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - formatting and some content changes from Benno Schulenberg
+ <bensberg@justemail.net>
+ - document new posix-mode behavior from interp 383 change of 9/22
+
+ 9/30
+ ----
+execute_cmd.c
+ - shell_execve: add strerror to error message about executable file
+ that shell can't execute as a shell script. From suggestion by
+ daysleeper <daysleeper@centrum.cz>
+
+ 10/1
+ ----
+bashhist.c
+ - maybe_add_history: act as if literal_history is set when parser_state
+ includes PST_HEREDOC, so we save the bodies of here-documents just
+ as they were entered. Fixes bug reported by Jonathan Wakely
+ <bugs@kayari.org>
+ - bash_add_history: make sure that the second and subsequent lines of
+ a here document don't have extra newlines or other delimiting
+ chars added, since they have the trailing newline preserved, when
+ `lithist' is set and history_delimiting_chars isn't called
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_command_internal: avoid fd exhaustion caused by using
+ process substitution in loops inside shell functions by using
+ copy_fifo_list and close_new_fifos (). Fixes debian bash bug
+ 642504
+
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - new variable, rl_filename_stat_hook, used by append_to_match. If
+ filename completion is desired, and rl_filename_stat_hook points
+ to a function, call that function to expand the filename in an
+ application-specific way before calling stat.
+
+bashline.c
+ - bash_default_completion: if variable completion returns a single
+ match, use bash_filename_stat_hook and file_isdir to determine
+ whether or not the variable name expands to a directory. If it
+ does, set the filename_append_character to `/'. This is not
+ perfect, so we will see how it works out. Adds functionality
+ requested by Peter Toft <pto@linuxbog.dk> and Patrick Pfeifer
+ <patrick@pfeifer.de>
+ - rl_filename_stat_hook: assigned bash_filename_stat_hook, so things
+ like $HOME/Downloads (after completion) have a slash appended.
+ In general, this causes the stat hook to be called whenever
+ filename completion is appended. Adds functionality requested by
+ Patrick Pfeifer <patrick@pfeifer.de>
+
+lib/readline/readline.h
+ - new extern declaration for rl_filename_stat_hook
+
+lib/readline/doc/rltech.texi
+ - rl_directory_rewrite_hook: now documented
+ - rl_filename_stat_hook: document
+
+pcomplete.c
+ - gen_action_completions: in the CA_DIRECTORY case, turn off
+ rl_filename_completion_desired if it was off before we called
+ rl_filename_completion_function and we didn't get any matches.
+ Having it on causes readline to quote the matches as if they
+ were filenames. Adds functionality requested by many,
+ including Clark Wang <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+
+assoc.[ch]
+ - assoc_replace: new function, takes the same arguments as
+ assoc_insert, but returns the old data instead of freeing it
+ - assoc_insert: if the object returned by hash_insert doesn't have
+ the same value for its key as the key passed as an argument, we
+ are overwriting an existing value. In this case, we can free the
+ key. Fixes bug reported by David Parks <davidparks21@yahoo.com>
+
+ 10/5
+ ----
+print_cmd.c
+ - indirection_level_string: small change to only re-enable `x'
+ option after calling decode_prompt_string if it was on before. In
+ normal mode, it will be, but John Reiser <jreiser@bitwagon.com>
+ has a novel use for that code in conjunction with a pre-loaded
+ shared library that traces system call usage in shell scripts
+
+ 10/10
+ -----
+Makefile.in
+ - Fix from Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> to avoid trying to
+ build y.tab.c and y.tab.h with two separate runs of yacc if
+ parse.y changes. Problem with parallel makes
+ - Fix from Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> to avoid subdirectory
+ builds each trying to make version.h (and all its dependencies)
+
+lib/sh/Makefile.in
+ - remove some dependencies on version.h where it doesn't make sense
+
+variables.c
+ - initialize_shell_variables: while reading the environment, a shell
+ running in posix mode now checks for SHELLOPTS being readonly (it
+ gets set early on in main()) before trying to assign to it. It
+ saves an error message and the variable gets parsed as it should.
+ Fixes bug reported by Len Giambrone <Len.Giambrone@intersystems.com>
+
+ 10/14
+ -----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - add to the "duplicating file descriptors" description that >&word
+ doesn't redirect stdout and stderr if word expands to `-'
+ - add to the "appending standard output and standard error"
+ description a note that >&word, where word is a number or `-',
+ causes other redirection operators to apply for sh and Posix
+ compatibility reasons. Suggested by Greg Wooledge
+ <wooledg@eeg.ccf.org>
+
+ 10/15
+ -----
+pcomplete.c
+ - change pcomp_filename_completion_function to only run the filename
+ dequoting function in the cases (as best as it can figure) where
+ readline won't do it via rl_filename_completion_function. Based
+ on reports from <lolilolicon@gmail.com>
+
+ 10/19
+ -----
+bashline.c
+ - attempt_shell_completion: add call to set_directory_hook() to make
+ sure the rewrite functions are correct. It's cheap and doesn't
+ hurt
+ - command_word_completion_function: if completing a command name that
+ starts with `.' or `..', temporarily suppress the effects of the
+ `direxpand' option and restore the correct value after calling
+ rl_filename_completion_function. If it's enabled, the directory
+ name will be rewritten and no longer match `./' or `../'. Fixes
+ problem reported by Michael Kalisz <michael@kalisz.homelinux.net>
+
+ 10/22
+ -----
+builtins/history.def
+ - push_history: make sure remember_on_history is enabled before we
+ try to delete the last history entry -- the `history -s' command
+ might not have been saved. Fixes bug reported by
+ lester@vmw-les.eng.vmware.com
+
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - rl_callback_read_char: add calls to a macro CALLBACK_READ_RETURN
+ instead of straight return; add same call at end of function.
+ Placeholder for future work in deinstalling signal handlers when
+ readline is not active
+
+ 10/25
+ -----
+expr.c
+ - exp2: catch arithmetic overflow when val1 == INTMAX_MIN and val2 == -1
+ for DIV and MOD and avoid SIGFPE. Bug report and pointer to fix
+ from Jaak Ristioja <jaak.ristioja@cyber.ee>
+ - expassign: same changes for arithmetic overflow for DIV and MOD
+
+ 10/28
+ -----
+subst.c
+ - parameter_brace_expand: allow pattern substitution when there is an
+ expansion of the form ${var/} as a no-op: replacing nothing with
+ nothing
+ - parameter_brace_patsub: don't need to check for PATSUB being NULL;
+ it never is
+
+flags.c
+ - if STRICT_POSIX is defined, initialize history_expansion to 0, since
+ history expansion (and its treatment of ! within double quotes) is
+ not a conforming posix environment. From austin-group issue 500
+
+lib/readline/histexpand.c
+ - history_expand: when processing a string within double quotes
+ (DQUOTE == 1), make the closing double quote inhibit history
+ expansion, as if the word were outside double quotes. In effect,
+ we assume that the double quote is followed by a character in
+ history_no_expand_chars. tcsh and csh seem to do this. This
+ answers a persistent complaint about history expansion
+
+ 10/29
+ -----
+make_cmd.c
+ - make_arith_for_command: use skip_to_delim to find the next `;'
+ when breaking the string between the double parens into three
+ separate components instead of a simple character loop. Fixes
+ bug reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+ 11/2
+ ----
+Makefile.in
+ - make libbuiltins.a depend on builtext.h to serialize its creation
+ and avoid conflict between multiple invocations of mkbuiltins.
+ Fix from Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
+
+ 11/5
+ ----
+findcmd.c
+ - user_command_matches: if stat(".", ...) returns -1, set st_dev
+ and st_ino fields in dotinfo to 0 to avoid same_file matches
+ - find_user_command_in_path: check stat(2) return the same way
+
+lib/glob/glob.c
+ - glob_vector: don't call strlen(pat) without checking pat == 0
+ - glob_dir_to_array: make sure to free `result' and all allocated
+ members before returning error due to malloc failure
+ - glob_vector: make sure to free `nextname' and `npat' on errors
+ (mostly when setting lose = 1)
+ - glob_vector: if flags & GX_MATCHDIRS but not GX_ALLDIRS, make
+ sure we free `subdir'
+ - glob_filename: when expanding ** (GX_ALLDIRS), make sure we
+ free temp_results (return value from glob_vector)
+
+lib/glob/xmbsrtowcs.c
+ - xdupmbstowcs: fix call to realloc to use sizeof (char *) instead
+ of sizeof (char **) when assigning idxtmp
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - print_index_and_element: return 0 right away if L == 0
+ - is_dirname: fix memory leak by freeing `temp'
+ - time_command: don't try to deref NULL `command' when assigning
+ to `posix_time'
+ - shell_execve: null-terminate `sample' after READ_SAMPLE_BUF so it's
+ terminated for functions that expect that
+
+builtins/read.def
+ - read_builtin: don't call bind_read_variable with a potentially-null
+ string
+
+pcomplete.c
+ - gen_command_matches: don't call dispose_word_desc with a NULL arg
+ - gen_compspec_completions: fix memory leak by freeing `ret' before
+ calling gen_action_completions (tcs, ...). happens when
+ performing directory completion as default and no completions
+ have been generated
+ - gen_progcomp_completions: make sure to set foundp to 0 whenever
+ returning NULL
+ - it_init_aliases: fix memory leak by freeing alias_list before
+ returning
+
+bashline.c
+ - command_word_completion_function: don't call restore_tilde with a
+ NULL directory_part argument
+ - bash_directory_expansion: bugfix: don't throw away results of
+ rl_directory_rewrite_hook if it's set and returns non-zero
+ - bind_keyseq_to_unix_command: free `kseq' before returning error
+
+arrayfunc.c
+ - assign_array_element_internal: make sure `akey' is freed if non-null
+ before returning error
+ - assign_compound_array_list: free `akey' before returning error
+ - array_value_internal: free `akey' before returning error
+ - unbind_array_element: free `akey' before returning error
+
+subst.c
+ - array_length_reference: free `akey' before returning error in case
+ of expand_assignment_string_to_string error
+ - array_length_reference: free `akey' after call to assoc_reference
+ - skip_to_delim: if skipping process and command substitution, free
+ return value from extract_process_subst
+ - parameter_brace_substring: free `val' (vtype == VT_VARIABLE) before
+ returning if verify_substring_values fails
+ - parameter_brace_expand: remove two duplicate lines that allocate
+ ret in parameter_brace_substring case
+ - parameter_brace_expand: convert `free (name); name = xmalloc (...)'
+ to use `xrealloc (name, ...)'
+ - parameter_brace_expand: free `name' before returning when handling
+ ${!PREFIX*} expansion
+ - split_at_delims: fix memory leak by freeing `d2' before returning
+
+redir.c
+ - redirection_error: free `filename' if the redirection operator is
+ REDIR_VARASSIGN by assigning allocname
+
+eval.c
+ - send_pwd_to_eterm: fix memory leak by freeing value returned by
+ get_working_directory()
+
+builtins/cd.def
+ - change_to_directory: fix memory leak by freeing return value from
+ resetpwd()
+ - cd_builtin: fix memory leak by freeing value returned by dirspell()
+ - cd_builtin: fix memory leak by freeing `directory' if appropriate
+ before overwriting with return value from resetpwd()
+
+builtins/type.def
+ - describe_command: free `full_path' before overwriting it with return
+ value from sh_makepath
+
+builtins/complete.def
+ - compgen_builtin: fix memory leak by calling strlist_dispose (sl)
+ before overwriting sl with return value from completions_to_stringlist
+
+builtins/hash.def
+ - list_hashed_filename_targets: fix memory leak by freeing `target'
+
+make_cmd.c
+ - make_arith_for_command: free `init', `test', and `step' before
+ returning error on parse error
+
+jobs.c
+ - initialize_job_control: don't call move_to_high_fd if shell_tty == -1
+
+general.c
+ - check_dev_tty: don't call close with an fd < 0
+ - legal_number: deal with NULL `string' argument, return invalid
+
+lib/sh/fmtulong.c
+ - fmtulong: if the `base' argument is invalid, make sure we index
+ buf by `len-1' at maximum
+
+print_cmd.c
+ - print_deferred_heredocs: don't try to dereference a NULL `cstring'
+ - cprintf: make sure to call va_end (args)
+
+variables.c
+ - push_dollar_vars: fix call to xrealloc to use sizeof (WORD_LIST *)
+ instead of sizeof (WORD_LIST **)
+
+lib/sh/zmapfd.c
+ - zmapfd: if read returns error, free result and return -1 immediately
+ instead of trying to reallocate it
+
+ 11/6
+ ----
+execute_cmd.c
+ - cpl_reap: rewrote to avoid using pointer after freeing it; now builds
+ new coproc list on the fly while traversing the old one and sets the
+ right values for coproc_list when done
+
+ 11/12
+ -----
+builtins/set.def
+ - if neither -f nor -v supplied, don't allow a readonly function to
+ be implicitly unset. Fixes bug reported by Jens Schmidt
+ <jens.schmidt35@arcor.de>
+
+lib/readline/callback.c
+ - change CALLBACK_READ_RETURN to clear signal handlers before returning
+ from rl_callback_read_char so readline's signal handlers aren't
+ installed when readline doesn't have control. Idea from Jan
+ Kratochvil <jan.ktratochvil@redhat.com> and the GDB development
+ team
+
+pcomplete.h
+ - COPT_NOQUOTE: new complete/compgen option value
+
+builtins/complete.def
+ - noquote: new complete/compgen option; will be used to disable
+ filename completion quoting
+
+pcomplete.c
+ - pcomp_set_readline_variables: pay attention to COPT_NOQUOTE; turns
+ of rl_filename_quoting_desired if set; turns it on if unset (value
+ is inverted, since default is on)
+
+doc/bash.1,lib/readline/doc/rluser.texi
+ - document new -o noquote option to complete/compgen/compopt
+
+pathexp.c
+ - quote_string_for_globbing: if QGLOB_REGEXP, make sure characters
+ between brackets in an ERE bracket expression are not inappropriately
+ quoted with backslashes. This is a pretty substantial change,
+ should be stressed when opening bash up for alpha and beta tests.
+ Fixes bug pointed out by Stephane Chazleas
+ <stephane_chazelas@yahoo.fr>
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - document that regexp matches can be inconsistent when quoting
+ characters in bracket expressions, since usual quoting characters
+ lose their meaning within brackets
+ - note that regular expression matching when the pattern is stored
+ in a shell variable which is quoted for expansion causes string
+ matching
+
+redir.h
+ - RX_SAVEFD: new flag value; notes that a redirection denotes an
+ fd used to save another even if it's not >= SHELL_FD_BASE
+
+redir.c
+ - do_redirection_internal: when deciding whether or not to reset the
+ close-on-exec flag on a restored file descriptor, trust the value
+ of redirect->flags & RX_SAVCLEXEC even if the fd is < SHELL_FD_BASE
+ if the RX_SAVEFD flag is set
+ - add_undo_redirect: set the RX_SAVEFD flag if the file descriptor
+ limit is such that the shell can't duplicate to a file descriptor
+ >= 10. Fixes a limitation that tripped a coreutils test reported
+ by Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>
+
+ 11/19
+ -----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi},lib/readline/doc/hsuser.texi
+ - make it clear that bash runs HISTFILESIZE=$HISTSIZE after reading
+ the startup files
+ - make it clear that bash runs HISTSIZE=500 after reading the
+ startup files
+ - make it clear that setting HISTSIZE=0 causes commands to not be
+ saved in the history list
+ - make it clear that setting HISTFILESIZE=0 causes the history file
+ to be truncated to zero size
+
+variables.c
+ - sv_histsize: change so setting HISTSIZE to a value less than 0
+ causes the history to be `unstifled'
+ - sv_histsize: change so setting HISTFILESIZE to a value less than 0
+ results in no file truncation
+ - make it clear that numeric values less than 0 for HISTFILESIZE or
+ HISTSIZE inhibit the usual functions
+
+ 11/23
+ -----
+parse.y
+ - save_input_line_state: add missing `return ls' at the end, since the
+ function is supposed to return its argument. Pointed out by
+ Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
+
+builtins/read.def
+ - skip over NUL bytes in input, as most modern shells seem to. Bug
+ report by Matthew Story <matt@tablethotels.com>
+
+lib/readline/vi_mode.c
+ - rl_vi_replace: set _rl_vi_last_key_before_insert to invoking key
+
+ 11/25
+ -----
+builtins/read.def
+ - read_builtin: if xrealloc returns same pointer as first argument,
+ don't bother with the remove_unwind_protect/add_unwind_protect pair
+ - read_builtin: set a flag (`reading') around calls to zread/zreadc
+ and readline()
+ - sigalrm: change to set flag (`sigalrm_seen') and only longjmp if
+ currently in read(2) (reading != 0)
+ - CHECK_ALRM: new macro, checks sigalrm_seen and longjmps if non-zero,
+ behavior of old SIGALRM catching function
+ - read_builtin: call CHECK_ALRM in appropriate places while reading
+ line of input. Fixes bug reported by Pierre Gaston
+ <pierre.gaston@gmail.com>
+
+lib/readline/vi_mode.c
+ - rl_vi_replace: initialize characters before printing characters in
+ vi_replace_keymap to their default values in vi_insertion_keymap,
+ since we're supposed to be in insert mode replacing characters
+ - rl_vi_replace: call rl_vi_start_inserting to set last command to
+ `R' for undo
+ - rl_vi_replace: set _rl_vi_last_key_before_insert to `R' for future
+ use by _rl_vi_done_inserting
+ - vi_save_insert_buffer: new function, broke out code that copies text
+ into vi_insert_buffer from _rl_vi_save_insert
+ - _rl_vi_save_replace: new function, saves text modified by
+ rl_vi_replace (using current point and vi_replace_count to figure
+ it out) to vi_replace_buffer
+ - _rl_vi_save_insert: call vi_save_insert_buffer
+ - _rl_vi_done_inserting: if _rl_vi_last_key_before_insert == 'R', call
+ _rl_vi_save_replace to save text modified in replace mode (uses
+ vi_save_insert_buffer)
+ - _rl_vi_replace_insert: new function, replaces the number of chars
+ in vi_insert_buffer after rl_point with contents ov vi_insert_buffer
+ - rl_vi_redo: call _rl_vi_replace_insert if last command == 'R' and
+ there's something in vi_insert_buffer. Fixes bug with `.' not
+ redoing the most recent `R' command, reported by Geoff Clare
+ <g.clare@opengroup.org> in readline area on savannah
+
+ 11/26
+ -----
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - RL_SIG_RECEIVED(): evaluate to non-zero if there is a pending signal
+ to be handled
+ - RL_SIGINT_RECEIVED(): evaluate to non-zero if there is a pending
+ SIGINT to be handled
+
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - remove all mention of _rl_interrupt_immediately
+ - rl_completion_matches: check RL_SIG_RECEIVED after each call to
+ the entry function, call RL_CHECK_SIGNALS if true to handle the
+ signal
+ - rl_completion_matches: if RL_SIG_RECEIVED evaluates to true, free
+ and zero out the match_list this function allocated
+ - rl_completion_matches: if the completion entry function is
+ rl_filename_completion_function, free the contents of match_list,
+ because that function does not keep state and will not free the
+ entries; avoids possible memory leak pointed out by
+ Garrett Cooper <yanegomi@gmail.com>
+ - gen_completion_matches: if RL_SIG_RECEIVED evalutes to true after
+ calling rl_attempted_completion_function, free the returned match
+ list and handle the signal with RL_CHECK_SIGNALS; avoids
+ possible memory leak pointed out by Garrett Cooper
+ <yanegomi@gmail.com>
+ - gen_completion_matches: if RL_SIG_RECEIVED evaluates to true after
+ calling rl_completion_matches, free the returned match list and
+ handle the signal with RL_CHECK_SIGNALS
+
+lib/readline/util.c
+ - rl_settracefp: new utility function to set the tracing FILE *
+
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - _rl_sigcleanup: pointer to a function that will be called with the
+ signal and a void * argument from _rl_handle_signal
+ - _rl_sigcleanarg: void * that the rest of the code can set to have
+ passed to the signal cleanup function
+ - _rl_handle_signal: if _rl_sigcleanup set, call as
+ (*_rl_sigcleanup) (sig, _rl_sigcleanarg)
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - extern declarations for _rl_sigcleanup and _rl_sigcleanarg
+
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - _rl_complete_sigcleanup: signal cleanup function for completion code;
+ calls _rl_free_match_list on _rl_sigcleanarg if signal == SIGINT
+ - rl_complete_internal: before calling display_matches if what_to_do
+ == `?', set _rl_sigcleanup to _rl_complete_sigcleanup so the match
+ list gets freed on SIGINT; avoids possible memory leak pointed out
+ by Garrett Cooper <yanegomi@gmail.com>
+ - rl_complete_internal: in default switch case, call _rl_free_match_list
+ before returning to avoid memory leak
+
+doc/bashref.texi
+ - start at a set of examples for the =~ regular expression matching
+ operator, touching on keeping the pattern in a shell variable and
+ quoting portions of the pattern to remove their special meaning
+
+ 12/1
+ ----
+lib/glob/gmisc.c
+ - extglob_pattern: new function, returns 1 if pattern passed as an
+ argument looks like an extended globbing pattern
+
+lib/glob/glob.c
+ - skipname: return 0 immediately if extglob_pattern returns non-zero,
+ let the extended globbing code do the right thing with skipping
+ names beginning with a `.'
+ - mbskipname: return 0 immediately if extglob_pattern returns non-zero,
+ let the extended globbing code do the right thing with skipping
+ names beginning with a `.'. Fixes bug reported by Yongzhi Pan
+ <panyongzhi@gmail.com>
+
+ 12/2
+ ----
+lib/glob/smatch.c
+ - patscan, patscan_wc: no longer static so other parts of the glob
+ library can use them, renamed to glob_patscan, glob_patscan_wc
+
+lib/glob/glob.c
+ - extern declarations for glob_patscan, glob_patscan_wc
+ - wchkname: new function, does skipname on wchar_t pattern and dname,
+ old body of mbskipname after converting to wide chars
+ - extglob_skipname: new function, checks all subpatterns in an extglob
+ pattern to determine whether or not a filename should be skipped.
+ Calls skipname for each subpattern. Dname is only skipped if all
+ subpatterns indicate it should be. Better fix for bug reported by
+ Yongzhi Pan <panyongzhi@gmail.com>
+ - wextglob_skipname: wide-char version of extglob_skipname, calls
+ wchkname instead of calling back into mbskipname for each
+ subpattern to avoid problems with char/wchar_t mismatch
+ - skipname: call extglob_skipname if extglob_pattern returns non-zero
+ - mbskipname: call wextglob_skipname if extglob_pattern returns non-zero
+ - mbskipname: short-circuit immediately if no multibyte chars in
+ pattern or filename
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_cond_node: added parens to patmatch assignment statement to
+ make intent clearer
+
+ 12/3
+ ----
+configure.in,config.h.in
+ - check for imaxdiv, define HAVE_IMAXDIV if present
+
+expr.c
+ - expassign, exp2: use imaxdiv if available. Doesn't help with checks
+ for overflow from 10/25
+
+ 12/6
+ ----
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - compute_lcd_of_matches: if we're ignoring case in the matches, only
+ use what the user typed as the lcd if it matches the first match
+ (after sorting) up to the length of what was typed (if what the
+ user typed is longer than the shortest of the possible matches, use
+ the shortest common length of the matches instead). If it doesn't
+ match, use the first of the list of matches, as if case were not
+ being ignored. Fixes bug reported by Clark Wang
+ <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+
+ 12/7
+ ----
+builtins/cd.def
+ - cd_builtin: add code to return error in case cd has more than one
+ non-option argument, conditional on CD_COMPLAINS define (which is
+ not defined anywhere)
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - note that additional arguments to cd following the directory name
+ are ignored. Suggested by Vaclav Hanzl <hanzl@noel.feld.cvut.cz>
+
+ 12/10
+ -----
+lib/readline/input.c
+ - rl_read_key: don't need to increment key sequence length here; doing
+ it leads to an off-by-one error
+
+lib/readline/macro.c
+ - rl_end_kbd_macro: after off-by-one error with rl_key_sequence_length
+ fixed, can decrement current_macro_index by rl_key_sequence_length
+ (length of key sequence that closes keyboard macro)
+
+lib/readline/readline.c
+ - _rl_dispatch_subseq: fix extra increment of rl_key_sequence_length
+ when ESC maps to a new keymap and we're converting meta characters
+ to ESC+key
+ - _rl_dispatch_subseq: better increment of rl_key_sequence_length
+ before we dispatch to a function in the ISFUNC case (where the
+ second increment above should have happened)
+ - rl_executing_keyseq: the full key sequence that ended up executing
+ a readline command. Available to the calling application, maintained
+ by _rl_dispatch_subseq, indexed by rl_key_sequence_length
+ - rl_executing_key: the key that was bound to the currently-executing
+ readline command. Same as the `key' argument to the function
+
+lib/readline/readline.h
+ - rl_executing_keyseq: extern declaration
+ - rl_executing_key: extern declaration
+ - rl_key_sequence_length: declaration moved here from rlprivate.h,
+ now part of public interface
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - new extern declaration for _rl_executing_keyseq_size, buffer size
+ for rl_executing_keyseq
+
+lib/readline/doc/rltech.texi
+ - documented new variables: rl_executing_key, rl_executing_keyseq,
+ rl_key_sequence_length
+
+ 12/13
+ -----
+bashline.c
+ - bash_execute_unix_command: replace ad-hoc code that searches
+ cmd_xmap for correct command with call to rl_function_of_keyseq
+ using rl_executing_keyseq; now supports key sequences longer
+ than two characters. Fixes bug reported by Michael Kazior
+ <kazikcz@gmail.com>
+
+ 12/15
+ -----
+make_cmd.c
+ - make_function_def: don't null out source_file before calling
+ make_command so it can be used later on when the function definition
+ is executed
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_intern_function: second argument is now FUNCTION_DEF *
+ instead of COMMAND *
+ - execute_command_internal: call execute_intern_function with the
+ new second argument (the entire FUNCTION_DEF instead of just the
+ command member)
+ - execute_intern_function: if DEBUGGER is defined, call
+ bind_function_def before calling bind_function, just like
+ make_function_def does (might be able to take out the call in
+ make_function_def depending on what the debugger does with it).
+ Fixes bug reported by <dethrophes@motd005>
+
+expr.c
+ - more minor changes to cases of INTMAX_MIN % -1 and INTMAX_MIN / 1;
+ fix typos and logic errors
+
+ 12/16
+ -----
+bashline.c
+ - find_cmd_start: change flags to remove SD_NOSKIPCMD so it skips over
+ command substitutions and doesn't treat them as command separators
+ - attempt_shell_completion: instead of taking first return from
+ find_cmd_name as command name to use for programmable completion,
+ use loop to skip over assignment statements. Fixes problem reported
+ by Raphael Droz <raphael.droz+floss@gmail.com>
+ - attempt_shell_completion: if we don't find a command name but the
+ command line is non-empty, assume the other words are all assignment
+ statements and flag that point is in a command position so we can
+ do command name completion
+ - attempt_shell_completion: if the word being completed is the first
+ word following a series of assignment statements, and the
+ command line is non-empty, flag that point is in a command position
+ so we can do command name completion
+
+lib/readline/history.c
+ - history_get_time: atol -> strtol
+
+ 12/18
+ -----
+parse.y
+ - parser_in_command_position: external interface to the
+ command_token_position macro for use by other parts of the shell,
+ like the completion mechanism
+
+externs.h
+ - extern declaration for parser_in_command_position
+
+ 12/19
+ -----
+
+builtins/read.def
+ - read_builtin: make sure all calls to bind_read_variable are passed
+ a non-null string. Fixes bug reported by Dan Douglas
+ <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+bashline.c
+ - attempt_shell_completion: mark that we're in a command position if
+ we're at the start of the line and the parser is ready to accept
+ a reserved word or command name. Feature most recently suggested
+ by Peng Yu <pengyu.ut@gmail.com>
+
+ 12/21
+ -----
+lib/readline/bind.c
+ - _rl_escchar: return the character that would be backslash-escaped
+ to denote the control character passed as an argument ('\n' -> 'n')
+ - _rl_isescape: return 1 if character passed is one that has a
+ backslash escape
+ - _rl_untranslate_macro_value: new second argument: use_escapes, if
+ non-zero translate to backslash escapes where possible instead of
+ using straight \C-x for control character `x'. Change callers
+ - _rl_untranslate_macro_value: now global
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - _rl_untranslate_macro_value: extern declaration
+
+lib/readline/{macro.c,readline.h}
+ - rl_print_last_kbd_macro: new bindable function, inspired by patch
+ from Mitchel Humpherys
+
+lib/readline/funmap.c
+ - print-last-kbd-macro: new bindable command, bound to
+ rl_print_last_kbd_macro
+
+lib/readline/doc/{rluser.texi,readline.3},doc/bash.1
+ - print-last-kbd-macro: document.
+
+lib/readline/text.c
+ - _rl_insert_next: if we're defining a macro, make sure the key gets
+ added to the macro text (should really audit calls to rl_read_key()
+ and make sure the right thing is happening for all of them)
+
+bashline.[ch]
+ - print_unix_command_map: new function, prints all bound commands in
+ cmd_xmap using rl_macro_dumper in a reusable format
+
+builtins/bind.def
+ - new -X option: print all keysequences bound to Unix commands using
+ print_unix_command_map. Feature suggested by Dennis Williamson
+ (2/2011)
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - document new `bind -X' option
+
+ 12/24
+ -----
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - add a couple of sentences to the description of the case modification
+ operators making it clearer that each character of parameter is
+ tested against the pattern, and that the pattern should only attempt
+ to match a single character. Suggested by Bill Gradwohl
+ <bill@ycc.com>
+
+ 12/28
+ -----
+shell.c
+ - init_noninteractive: instead of calling set_job_control(0) to
+ unconditionally turn off job control, turn on job control if
+ forced_interactive or jobs_m_flag is set
+ - shell_initialize: call initialize_job_control with jobs_m_flag as
+ argument so `bash -m script' enables job control while running the
+ script
+
+jobs.c
+ - initialize_job_control: if the `force' argument is non-zero, turn on
+ job control even if the shell is not currently interactive
+ (interactive == 0)
+
+ 12/29
+ -----
+
+flags.h
+ - new extern declaration for jobs_m_flag
+
+builtins/{cd,set}.def,doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - added text clarifying the descriptions of cd -L and -P, suggested by
+ Padraig Brady <p@draigbrady.com>
+ - slight change to the description of `set -P' about resolving symbolic
+ links
+
+lib/readline/doc/rluser.texi
+ - Added an example to the programmable completion section: _comp_cd,
+ a completion function for cd, with additional verbiage. Text
+ includes a reference to the bash_completion project
+
+ 1/1/2012
+ --------
+jobs.c
+ - set_job_status_and_cleanup: note that a job is stopped due to
+ SIGTSTP (any_tstped) if job_control is set; there's no need to
+ test interactive
+
+ 1/5
+ ---
+quit.h
+ - LASTSIG(): new macro, expands to signal number of last terminating
+ signal received (terminating_signal or SIGINT)
+
+trap.c
+ - first_pending_trap: returns lowest signal number with a trap pending
+ - trapped_signal_received: set to the last trapped signal the shell
+ received in trap_handler(); reset to 0 in run_pending_traps
+
+builtins/read.def
+ - read_builtin: changes to posix-mode (posixly_correct != 0) to make
+ `read' interruptible by a trapped signal. After the trap runs,
+ read returns 128+sig and does not assign the partially-read line
+ to the named variable(s). From an austin-group discussion started
+ by David Korn
+
+ 1/11
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - slight changes to the descriptions of the compat32 and compat40 shell
+ options to clarify their meaning
+
+ 1/12
+ ----
+lib/readline/{colors.[ch],parse-colors.[ch]}
+ - new files, part of color infrastructure support
+
+Makefile.in,lib/readline/Makefile.in
+ - arrange to have colors.o and parse-colors.o added to readline
+ library
+
+{configure,config.h}.in
+ - check for stdbool.h, define HAVE_STDBOOL_H if found
+
+ 1/14
+ ----
+lib/readline/bind.c
+ - colored_stats: new bindable variable, enables using colors to
+ indicate file type when listing completions
+
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - _rl_colored_stats: new variable, controlled by colored-stats bindable
+ variable
+ - colored_stat_start, colored_stat_end: new functions to set and reset
+ the terminal color appropriately depending on the type of the
+ filename to be printed
+ - print_filename: changes to print colors if `colored-stats' variable
+ set. Changes contributed by Raphael Droz
+ <raphael.droz+floss@gmail.com>
+
+lib/readline/readline.c
+ - rl_initialize_everything: add call to _rl_parse_colors to parse
+ color values out of $LS_COLORS. May have to add to rl_initialize
+ to make more dynamic if LS_COLORS changes (which doesn't happen
+ very often, if at all)
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - _rl_colored_stats: new extern declaration
+
+lib/readline/doc/{readline.3,rluser.texi},doc/bash.1
+ - colored-stats: document new bindable readline variable
+
+lib/readline/colors.c
+ - _rl_print_color_indicator: call rl_filename_stat_hook before calling
+ lstat/stat so we can get color indicators for stuff like
+ $HOME/Applications
+
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - stat_char: call rl_filename_stat_hook before calling lstat/stat
+
+findcmd.[ch],execute_cmd.c
+ - search_for_command: now takes a second `flags' argument; changed
+ header function prototype and callers
+ - search_for_command: if (flags & 1), put the command found in $PATH
+ into the command hash table (previous default behavior)
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - is_dirname: call search_for_command with flags argument of 0 so it
+ doesn't try to put something in the command hash table
+
+bashline.c
+ - bash_command_name_stat_hook: a hook function for readline's
+ filename_stat_hook that does $PATH searching the same way that
+ execute_cmd.c:execute_disk_command() does it, and rewrites the
+ passed filename if found. Does not put names into command hash
+ table. This allows command name completion to take advantage
+ of `visible-stats' and `colored-stats' settings.
+ - executable_completion: new function, calls the directory completion
+ hook to expand the filename before calling executable_file or
+ executable_or_directory; change command_word_completion_function to
+ call executable_completion. This allows $HOME/bin/[TAB] to do
+ command completion and display alternatives
+
+ 1/17
+ ----
+pcomplete.c
+ - gen_command_matches: now takes a new second argument: the command
+ name as deciphered by the programmable completion code and used
+ to look up the compspec; changed callers (gen_compspec_completions)
+ - gen_shell_function_matches: now takes a new second argument: the
+ command that originally caused the completion function to be
+ invoked; changed callers (gen_compspec_completions))
+ - build_arg_list: now takes a new second argument: the command name
+ corresponding to the current compspec; changed callers
+ (gen_command_matches, gen_shell_function_matches)
+ - build_arg_list: now uses `cmd' argument to create $1 passed to
+ invoked command or shell function
+ - gen_compspec_completions: if we skipped a null command at the
+ beginning of the line (e.g., for completing `>'), add a new word for
+ it at the beginning of the word list and increment nw and cw
+ appropriately. This is all a partial fix for the shortcoming
+ pointed out by Sung Pae <sungpae@gmail.com>
+
+ 1/18
+ ----
+
+{configure,config.h}.in
+ - new check: check for AUDIT_USER_TTY defined in <linux/audit.h>,
+ define HAVE_DECL_AUDIT_USER_TTY if both are found
+
+lib/readline/rlconf.h
+ - ENABLE_TTY_AUDIT_SUPPORT: new define, allows use of the Linux kernel
+ tty auditing system if it's available and enabled
+
+lib/readline/util.c
+ - _rl_audit_tty: new function, send a string to the kernel tty audit
+ system
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - _rl_audit_tty: new extern declaration
+
+lib/readline/readline.c
+ - readline: call _rl_audit_tty with line to be returned before returning
+ it if the Linux tty audit system is available and it's been enabled
+ in rlconf.h Original patch from Miroslav Trmac; recent request
+ from Miroslav Lichvar <mlichvar@redhat.com>
+
+ 1/21
+ ----
+
+lib/readline/readline.c:
+ - _rl_dispatch_subseq: add an inter-character timeout for multi-char
+ key sequences. Suggested by <rogerx.oss@gmail.com>. Still needs
+ work to make a user-settable variable
+
+parse.y
+ - shell_getc: make code that uses the pop_alias dependent on ALIAS
+ define
+
+variables.h
+ - sv_tz: extern define should only depend on HAVE_TZSET
+
+expr.c
+ - expr_streval: if ARRAY_VARS is not defined, set lvalue->ind to -1;
+ move assignment to `ind' inside define
+ - expr_bind_array_element: declaration and uses need to be #ifdef
+ ARRAY_VARS
+
+arrayfunc.h
+ - AV_ALLOWALL, AV_QUOTED, AV_USEIND: define to 0 if ARRAY_VARS not
+ defined; used in subst.c unconditionally
+
+sig.h
+ - make the signal blocking functions not dependent on JOB_CONTROL
+
+sig.c
+ - sigprocmask: make the replacement definition not dependent on
+ JOB_CONTROL
+
+trap.c
+ - use BLOCK_SIGNAL/UNBLOCK_SIGNAL instead of code dependent on
+ HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS and BSD signals
+
+ 1/24
+ ----
+
+print_cmd.c
+ - print_redirection_list: change the conditions under which
+ r_duplicating_output_word is mapped to r_err_and_out to more or
+ less match those used in redir.c. Fixes bug pointed out by
+ Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+
+ 1/29
+ ----
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - _rl_block_sigwinch,_rl_release_sigwinch: don't compile in bodies
+ unless SIGWINCH is defined. Fixes bug reported by Pierre Muller
+ <pierre.muller@ics-cnrs.unistra.fr>
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - small modifications to the introduction to the REDIRECTION section
+ to describe how redirections can modify file handles
+ - small modification to the section describing base#n to make it
+ clearer that n can be denoted using non-numerics. From a posting
+ by Linda Walsh <bash@tlinx.org>
+
+ 2/2
+ ---
+builtins/printf.def
+ - printf_builtin: make sure vbuf is intialized and non-null when -v
+ is supplied, since other parts of the code assume that it's not
+ null (e.g., bind_printf_variable()). Fixes bug reported by Jim
+ Avera <james_avera@yahoo.com>
+
+ 2/4
+ ---
+lib/readline/undo.c
+ - _rl_free_undo_list: new function, old body of rl_free_undo_list,
+ frees undo entries in UNDO_LIST * passed as argument
+ - rl_free_undo_list: call _rl_free_undo_list
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - _rl_free_undo_list: new extern declaration
+ - _rl_keyseq_timeout: new extern declaration (see below)
+
+lib/readline/misc.c
+ - rl_clear_history: new function. Clears the history list and frees
+ all associated data similar to history.c:clear_history(), but
+ takes rl_undo_list into account and frees and UNDO_LISTs saved as
+ `data' members of a history list entry
+
+lib/readline/doc/rltech.texi
+ - rl_clear_history: documented
+
+lib/readline/readline.c
+ - _rl_keyseq_timeout: new variable to hold intra-key timeout value
+ from 1/21 fix; specified in milliseconds. Default value is 500
+ - _rl_dispatch_subseq: change to use _rl_keyseq_timeout as intra-key
+ timeout if it's greater than 0; no timeout if <= 0
+ - _rl_dispatch_subseq: don't check for queued keyboard input if we have
+ pushed or pending input, or if we're reading input from a macro
+
+lib/readline/bind.c
+ - keyseq-timeout: new bindable variable, shadows _rl_keyseq_timeout
+ - string_varlist: add keyseq-timeout
+ - sv_seqtimeout: new function to modify value of _rl_keyseq_timeout;
+ clamps negative values at 0 for now
+ - _rl_get_string_variable_value: return value for keyseq-timeout
+
+doc/bash.1,lib/readline/doc/{rluser.texi,readline.3}
+ - keyseq-timeout: documented
+
+lib/readline/isearch.c
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: modification to fix from 7/18 to not use
+ cxt->keymap and cxt->okeymap, since by the time this code is
+ executed, they are equal. Use `f' to check for rl_insert or
+ unbound func
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: if we're switching keymaps, not in
+ callback mode, and don't have pending or pushed input, use
+ _rl_input_queued to resolve a potentially ambiguous key sequence.
+ Suggested by Roger Zauner <rogerx.oss@gmail.com>
+ - _rl_isearch_dispatch: if we have changed keymaps and resolved to
+ an editing function (not self-insert), make sure we stuff the
+ right characters back onto the input after changing the keymap
+ back so the right editing function is executed after the search
+ is terminated. Rest of fix for bug reported by Roger Zauner
+ <rogerx.oss@gmail.com>
+
+ 2/5
+ ---
+builtins/gen-helpfiles.c
+ - new file: reads struct builtin and writes the long docs to files
+ in the `helpdirs' subdirectory. The filename is given in the
+ previously-unused `handle' member of the struct builtin. Links
+ with `tmpbuiltins.o', which is created by Makefile to have the
+ right long documentation. When not cross-compiling, gets the
+ right #defines based on configuration options from config.h instead
+ of trying to parse conditional parts of def files. Fixes
+ shortcoming pointed out by Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
+
+builtins/Makefile.in
+ - tmpbuiltins.c: new generated file, created to enable creation of
+ separate helpfiles based on correct #defines instead of trying to
+ parse conditional parts of def files
+ - gen-helpfiles: new program to generate helpfiles, links with
+ tmpbuiltins.o
+ - HELPFILES_TARGET: new target, substituted by configure to `helpdoc'
+ if separate helpfiles requested
+ - targets: new target, libbuiltins.a and $(HELPFILES_TARGET)
+ - CREATED_OBJECTS: new variable, holds created object files for
+ make clean; changed make clean to remove created objects
+ - helpdoc: changed to call gen-helpfiles instead of mkbuiltins
+
+Makefile.in
+ - when building libbuiltins.a, recursively call make with `targets'
+ argument to make sure separate helpfiles get built
+
+configure.in
+ - substitute `helpdoc' as value of HELPFILES_TARGET if
+ --enable-separate-helpfiles supplied as configure argument
+
+builtins/mkbuiltins.c
+ - `-nofunctions': new argument, causes mkbuiltins to not write value
+ for function implementing a particular builtin to struct builtin
+ and to write document file name to `handle' member of struct builtin
+ - no longer writes separate helpfiles; that is left to gen-helpfiles
+
+ 2/8
+ ---
+subst.c
+ - make sure last_command_exit_value is set to a non-zero value before
+ any calls to report_error, since `-e' set will short-circuit
+ report_error. Fixes bug reported by Ewan Mellor
+ <Ewan.Mellor@eu.citrix.com>
+
+variables.c
+ - make_local_array_variable: added second argument; if non-zero,
+ function will return an existing local associative array variable
+ instead of insisting on an indexed array
+
+variable.h,subst.c
+ - make_local_array_variable: changed prototype and caller
+
+builtins/declare.def
+ - declare_internal: add second arg to call to make_local_array_variable;
+ making_array_special, which indicates we're processing an
+ assignment like declare a[b]=c. Fixes seg fault resulting from
+ a being an already-declared local associative array variable in a
+ function. Ubuntu bash bug 928900.
+
+ 2/14
+ ----
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_command_internal: if redirections into or out of a loop fail,
+ don't try to free ofifo_list unless saved_fifo is non-zero. It's
+ only valid if saved_fifo is set
+
+ 2/15
+ ----
+{arrayfunc,braces,variables}.c
+ - last_command_exit_value: make sure it's set before any calls to
+ report_error, since -e will cause that to exit the shell
+
+builtins/common.c
+ - get_job_by_name: call internal_error instead of report_error so this
+ doesn't exit the shell
+
+ 2/18
+ ----
+builtins/evalstring.c
+ - parse_and_execute: make sure the file descriptor to be redirected to
+ is 1 before calling cat_file. One fix for bug reported by Dan Douglas
+ <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+parse.y
+ - read_token_word: don't return NUMBER if a string of all digits
+ resolves to a number that overflows the bounds of an intmax_t.
+ Other fix for bug reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+ 2/19
+ ----
+lib/sh/strtrans.c
+ - ansicstr: use 0x7f as the boundary for characters that translate
+ directly from ASCII to unicode (\u and \U escapes) instead of
+ UCHAR_MAX, since everything >= 0x80 requires more than one byte.
+ Bug and fix from John Kearney <dethrophes@web.de>
+
+builtins/printf.def
+ - tescape: ditto for printf \u and \U escape sequences
+
+ 2/20
+ ----
+lib/sh/unicode.c
+ - u32toutf8: fix to handle encodings up to six bytes long correctly
+ (though technically UTF-8 only has characters up to 4 bytes long).
+ Report and fix from John Kearney <dethrophes@web.de>
+ - u32toutf8: first argument is now an unsigned 32-bit quantity,
+ changed callers (u32cconv) to pass c instead of wc
+ - u32reset: new function, resets local static state to uninitialized
+ (locale information, currently)
+
+locale.c
+ - call u32reset whenever LC_CTYPE/LC_ALL/LANG is changed to reset the
+ cached locale information used by u32cconv. From a report from
+ John Kearney <dethrophes@web.de>
+
+ 2/21
+ ----
+doc/{bash,builtins}.1
+ - minor changes from Bjarni Ingi Gislason <bjarniig@rhi.hi.is>
+
+lib/sh/unicode.c
+ - u32cconv: only assume you can directly call wctomb on the passed
+ value if __STDC_ISO_10646__ is defined and the value is <=
+ 0x7fffffff
+ - stub_charset: return locale as default instead of "ASCII", let
+ rest of code decide what to do with it
+
+lib/readline/parens.c
+ - _rl_enable_paren_matching: make paren matching work in vi insert
+ mode. Bug report from <derflob@derflob.de>
+
+ 2/22
+ ----
+lib/sh/shquote.c
+ - sh_backslash_quote: quote tilde in places where it would be
+ expanded. From a report from John Kearney <dethrophes@web.de>
+
+ 2/23
+ ----
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_pipeline: wrap the discard_unwind_frame call in #ifdef
+ JOB_CONTROL, since the frame is only created if JOB_CONTROL is
+ defined. Bug and fix from Doug Kehn <rdkehn@yahoo.com>
+
+ 2/25
+ ----
+error.c
+ - report_error: make sure last_command_exit_value is non-zero before
+ we call exit_shell, since the exit trap may reference it. Call
+ exit_shell with last_command_exit_value to allow exit statuses
+ other than 1
+
+unicode.c
+ - stub_charset: use local static buffer to hold charset, don't change
+ value returned by get_locale_var. Based on idea and code from
+ John Kearney <dethrophes@web.de>
+ - u32toutf16: function to convert unsigned 32-bit value (unicode) to
+ UTF-16. From John Kearney <dethrophes@web.de>
+ - u32cconv: call u32toutf16 if __STDC_ISO_10646__ defined and wchar_t
+ is two bytes, send result to wcstombs, return if not encoding error.
+ From John Kearney <dethrophes@web.de>
+ - u32cconv: return UTF-8 conversion if iconv conversion to local
+ charset is unsupported
+
+ 3/2
+ ---
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - print_filename: if there is no directory hook, but there is a stat
+ hook, and we want to append a slash to directories, call the stat
+ hook before calling path_isdir on the expanded directory name.
+ Report and pointer to fix from Steve Rago <sar@nec-labs.com>
+
+ 3/3
+ ---
+builtins/evalstring.c
+ - parse_and_execute: fix to change of 2/18: make sure the file
+ descriptor being redirected to is 0 before calling cat_file when
+ we see something like $(< file). Real fix for bug reported by
+ Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+subst.c
+ - parameter_brace_patsub: run the replacement string through quote
+ removal even if the expansion is within double quotes, because
+ the parser and string extract functions treat the quotes and
+ backslashes as special. If they're treated as special, quote
+ removal should remove them (this is the Posix position and
+ compatible with ksh93). THIS IS NOT BACKWARDS COMPATIBLE.
+
+ 3/4
+ ---
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - rl_menu_complete: fix to make show-all-if-ambiguous and
+ menu-complete-display-prefix work together if both are set. Fix
+ from Sami Pietila <sami.pietila@gmail.com>
+
+ 3/5
+ ---
+bashline.c
+ - dircomplete_expand_relpath: new variable, if non-zero, means that
+ `shopt -s direxpand' should expand relative pathnames. Zero by
+ default, not user-settable yet
+ - bash_directory_completion_hook: if we have a relative pathname that
+ isn't changed by canonicalization or spell checking after being
+ appended to $PWD, then don't change what the user typed. Controlled
+ by dircomplete_expand_relpath
+
+ 3/7
+ ---
+m4/timespec.m4
+ - new macros, cribbed from gnulib and coreutils: find out whether we
+ have `struct timespec' and what file includes it
+
+m4/stat-time.m4
+ - new macros, cribbed from gnulib and coreutils: find out whether the
+ mtime/atime/ctime/etctime fields of struct stat are of type
+ struct timespec, and what the name is
+
+include/stat-time.h
+ - new file, cribbed from gnulib, with additions from coreutils: include
+ the right file to get the struct timespec define, or provide our own
+ replacement. Provides a bunch of inline functions to turn the
+ appropriate members of struct stat into `struct timespec' values,
+ zeroing out the tv_nsec field if necessary
+
+test.c
+ - include "stat-time.h" for the nanosecond timestamp resolution stuff
+ - stat_mtime: new function, returns struct stat and the mod time
+ normalized into a `struct timespec' for the filename passed as the
+ first argument
+ - filecomp: call stat_mtime instead of sh_stat for each filename
+ argument to get the mtime as a struct timespec
+ - filecomp: call timespec_cmp instead of using a straight arithmetic
+ comparison for the -nt and -ot operators, using timespec returned by
+ stat_mtime. Added functionality requested by by Werner Fink
+ <werner@suse.de> for systems that can support it
+
+ 3/10
+ ----
+include/posixdir.h
+ - REAL_DIR_ENTRY: remove dependency on _POSIX_SOURCE, only use feature
+ test macros to decide whether dirent.d_ino is present and usable;
+ define D_INO_AVAILABLE. Report and fix from Fabrizion Gennari
+ <fabrizio.ge@tiscali.it>
+ - D_FILENO_AVAILABLE: define if we can use dirent.d_fileno
+
+lib/sh/getcwd.c
+ - use D_FILENO_AVAILABLE to decide whether or not to compile in
+ _path_checkino and whether or not to call it. Report and initial
+ fix from Fabrizion Gennari <fabrizio.ge@tiscali.it>
+
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - make sure all occurrences of SIGWINCH are protected by #ifdef
+
+sig.c
+ - make sure all occurrences of SIGCHLD are protected by #ifdef
+
+nojobs.c
+ - make sure SA_RESTART is defined to 0 if the OS doesn't define it
+
+version.c
+ - show_shell_version: don't use string literals in printf, use %s.
+ Has added benefit of removing newline from string to be translated
+
+trap.c
+ - queue_sigchld_trap: new function, increments the number of pending
+ SIGCHLD signals by the argument, which is by convention the number
+ of children reaped in a call to waitchld()
+
+trap.h
+ - queue_sigchld_trap: new extern declaration
+
+jobs.c
+ - waitchld: if called from the SIGCHLD signal handler (sigchld > 0),
+ then call queue_sigchld_trap to avoid running the trap in a signal
+ handler context. Report and original fix from Siddhesh Poyarekar
+ <siddhesh@redhat.com>
+
+lib/sh/unicode.c
+ - u32tocesc: take an unsigned 32-bit quantity and encode it using
+ ISO C99 string notation (\u/\U)
+ - u32cconv: call u32tocesc as a fallback instead of u32cchar
+ - u32cconv: call u32tocesc if iconv cannot convert the character.
+ Maybe do the same thing if iconv_open fails
+ - u32reset: call iconv_close on localconv if u32init == 1
+
+ 3/11
+ ----
+config-top.h
+ - CHECKWINSIZE_DEFAULT: new define, set to initial value of
+ check_window_size (shopt checkwinsize): 0 for off, 1 for on.
+ Default is 0
+
+{jobs,nojobs}.c
+ - check_window_size: default initial value to CHECKWINSIZE_DEFAULT
+
+ 3/13
+ ----
+doc/bashref.texi
+ - change text referring to the copying restrictions to that
+ recommended by the FSF (no Front-Cover Texts and no Back-Cover
+ Texts)
+
+lib/readline/doc/{history,rlman,rluserman}.texi
+ - change text referring to the copying restrictions to that
+ recommended by the FSF (no Front-Cover Texts and no Back-Cover
+ Texts)
+
+ 3/15
+ ----
+array.c
+ - LASTREF_START: new macro to set the starting position for an array
+ traversal to `lastref' if that's valid, and to the start of the array
+ if not. Used in array_reference, array_insert, array_remove
+ - array_remove: try to be a little smarter with lastref instead of
+ unconditionally invalidating it
+
+ 3/16
+ ----
+array.c
+ - array_insert: fix memory leak by deleting element to be added in the
+ case of an error
+
+ 3/18
+ ----
+lib/sh/mbschr.c
+ - mbschr: don't call mbrlen unless is_basic is false; devolves to a
+ straight character-by-character run through the string
+
+ 3/19
+ ----
+stringlib.c
+ - substring: use memcpy instead of strncpy, since we know the length
+ and are going to add our own NUL terminator
+
+ 3/20
+ ----
+subst.c
+ - parameter_brace_expand_rhs: if expand_string_for_rhs returns a quoted
+ null string (a list with one element for which
+ QUOTED_NULL(list->word->word) returns true), return the quoted null
+ and set the flags in the returned word to indicate it. Fixes bug
+ reported by Mark Edgar <medgar123@gmail.com>
+
+lib/sh/tmpfile.c
+ - use random(3) instead of get_random_number to avoid perturbing the
+ random sequence you get using $RANDOM. Bug report and fix from
+ Jurij Mihelic <jurij.mihelic@fri.uni-lj.si>
+
+ 3/21
+ ----
+config-top.h
+ - OPTIMIZE_SEQUENTIAL_ARRAY_ASSIGNMENT: define to 1 to optimize
+ sequential indexed array assignment patterns. Defined to 1 by
+ default
+
+array.c
+ - array_insert: if OPTIMIZE_SEQUENTIAL_ARRAY_ASSIGNMENT is defined,
+ start the search at lastref (see change from 3/15)
+
+ 3/27
+ ----
+print_cmd.c
+ - debug_print_word_list: new debugging function, prints a word list
+ preceded by an optional string and using a caller-specified
+ separator
+
+ 4/1
+ ---
+command.h
+ - W_ASSNGLOBAL: new flag, set to indicate declare -g
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - fix_assignment_words: note that we have a -g argument to an assignment
+ builtin and set the W_ASSNGLOBAL flag in the variable word
+
+subst.c
+ - dump_word_flags: print out W_ASSNGLOBAL if present
+ - do_assignment_internal: only set ASS_MKLOCAL if W_ASSIGNARG is set
+ and W_ASSNGLOBAL is not. Don't want to create a local variable even
+ if variable_context is non-zero if ASSNGLOBAL is set. Fixes bug
+ reported by Bill Gradwohl <bill@ycc.com>
+
+ 4/7
+ ---
+lib/readline/readline.c
+ - _rl_dispatch_subseq: make the `keyseq-timeout' variable apply to
+ ESC processing when in vi mode. After hitting ESC, readline will
+ wait up to _rl_keyseq_timeout*1000 microseconds (if set) for
+ additional input before dispatching on the ESC and switching to
+ command/movement mode. Completes timeout work suggested by
+ <rogerx.oss@gmail.com>; this prompted by report from Barry Downes
+ <barry.downes@gmail.com>
+
+lib/sh/shmbchar.c
+ - sh_mbsnlen: new function, returns the number of (possibly multibyte)
+ characters in a passed string with a passed length, examining at most
+ maxlen (third argument) bytes
+
+externs.h
+ - sh_mbsnlen: extern declaration for new function
+
+shell.c
+ - exit_shell: call maybe_save_shell_history if remember_on_history is
+ set, not just in interactive shells. That means the history is
+ saved if history is enabled, regardless of whether or not the shell
+ is interactive
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - TMOUT: fix description to make it explicit that TMOUT is the timeout
+ period for a complete line of input, not just any input. Fixes
+ problem reported in Ubuntu bug 957303:
+ https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/bash/+bug/957303
+ - HISTFILE: document change to write history list to history file in
+ any shell with history enabled, not just interactive shells. This
+ seems to be more logical behavior. Suggested by Greg Wooledge
+ <wooledg@eeg.ccf.org>
+
+ 4/12
+ ----
+lib/readline/colors.h
+ - only include stdbool.h if HAVE_STDBOOL_H is defined
+ - if HAVE_STDBOOL_H is not defined, provide enough definition for the
+ library to use `bool', `true', and `false'
+
+lib/readline/parse-colors.[ch]
+ - don't try to include <stdbool.h> at all; rely on colors.h to do it
+
+lib/sh/snprintf.c
+ - vsnprintf_internal: only treat '0' as a flag to indicate zero padding
+ if `.' hasn't been encountered ((flags&PF_DOT) == 0); otherwise treat
+ it as the first digit of a precision specifier. Fixes bug reported
+ by Petr Sumbera <petr.sumbera@sun.com>
+
+ 4/15
+ ----
+lib/sh/snprintf.c
+ - vsnprintf_internal: if the '0' and '-' flags both occur, the '0'
+ flag is ignored -- Posix. Start of a series of fixes based on
+ tests and patches from Petr Sumbera <petr.sumbera@sun.com>
+ - PUT_PLUS: make sure PF_PLUS flag is specified before putting the `+'
+ - vsnprintf_internal: when '+' is read as a flag, don't set right-
+ justify flag if the LADJUST (`-') flag has already been supplied
+ - floating: make sure to output space padding before the `+', zero
+ padding after
+ - exponent: make sure to output space padding before the `+', zero
+ padding after
+ - exponent: only subtract one from the width for the decimal point
+ if we're really going to print one
+ - floating: use presence of PF_PLUS flag to decide whether to account
+ for the `+' in the padded field width. Ditto for exponent()
+
+ 4/16
+ ----
+lib/sh/snprintf.c
+ - vsnprint_internal: only reduce precision by 1 when processing the `g'
+ format if it's > 0. A precision of 0 should stay 0; otherwise it
+ gets set to -1 (NOT_FOUND) and converted to the default
+ - number, lnumber: if an explicit precision is supplied, turn off the
+ zero-padding flag and set the pad character back to space
+ - number, lnumber: only account for a `+' when performing the field
+ width calculation if the coversion is base 10; we don't add a `+'
+ for other bases
+
+ 4/18
+ ----
+tests/printf3.sub
+ - try using "perl -e 'print time'" to get the current time in seconds
+ since the epoch if "date +%s" is not available (solaris 8-10)
+
+ 4/19
+ ----
+tests/run-printf
+ - use cat -v instead of relying on diff -a being available to convert
+ control characters to ascii and avoid the dreaded "Binary files
+ /tmp/xx and printf.right differ"
+
+ 4/20
+ ----
+lib/sh/strftime.c
+ - incoporated new version from Aharon Robbins <arnold@skeeve.com>
+
+ 4/22
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - slight change to the description of /dev/tcp and /dev/udp
+
+subst.c
+ - match_wpattern: logic fix to the calculation of `simple' (was |=,
+ needs to be &=). Bug report from Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>,
+ fix from Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
+
+bashline.c
+ - bash_filename_stat_hook: add code from bash_directory_completion_hook
+ that performs pathname canonicalization in the same way that cd and
+ other builtins will do
+
+ 4/25
+ ----
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_pipeline: change the call to move_to_high_fd to make it use
+ getdtablesize() and to not stomp on existing open file descriptors,
+ like the fd the shell is using to read a script. Bug report from
+ Greg Wooledge <wooledg@eeg.ccf.org>
+
+ 5/6
+ ---
+subst.c
+ - expand_word_internal: case '$': after calling param_expand and
+ setting had_quoted_null, set TEMP to null. The code that builds the
+ returned string at the end of the function will take care of making
+ and returning a quoted null string if there's nothing else in
+ ISTRING. If there is, the quoted null should just go away. Part of
+ fix for bug reported by Ruediger Kuhlmann <RKuhlmann@orga-systems.com>
+ - expand_word_internal: when processing ISTRING to build return value,
+ only set W_HASQUOTEDNULL in the returned word flags if the word is
+ a quoted null string AND had_quoted_null is set. Rest of fix
+
+ 5/9
+ ---
+variables.c
+ - bind_variable_internal: if we get an array variable here (implicit
+ assignment to index 0), call make_array_variable_value, which
+ dummies up a fake SHELL_VAR * from array[0]. This matters when
+ we're appending and have to use the current value
+ - bind_variable_internal: after computing the new value, treat assoc
+ variables with higher precedence than simple array variables; it
+ might be that a variable has both attributes set
+
+arrayfunc.c
+ - bind_array_var_internal: break code out that handles creating the
+ new value to be assigned to an array variable index into a new
+ function, make_array_variable_value. This handles creating a
+ dummy SHELL_VAR * for implicit array[0] assignment. Fixes bug
+ reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+arrayfunc.h
+ - make_array_variable_value: new extern declaration
+
+ 5/19
+ ----
+variables.c
+ - bind_int_variable: if an assignment statement like x=y comes in
+ from the expression evaluator, and x is an array, handle it like
+ x[0]=y. Fixes bug reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+ 5/24
+ ----
+
+braces.c
+ - mkseq: handle possible overflow and break the sequence generating
+ loop if it occurs. Fixes OpenSUSE bug 763591:
+ https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=763591
+
+ 5/25
+ ----
+Makefile.in
+ - LDFLAGS_FOR_BUILD: add to compilation recipes for build tools
+ buildversion, mksignames, mksyntax
+ - LDFLAGS_FOR_BUILD: add to compilation recipes for test tools
+ recho, zecho, printenv, xcase
+
+builtins/Makefile.in
+ - LDFLAGS_FOR_BUILD: add to compilation recipes for build tools
+ gen-helpfiles, psize.aux
+
+variables.c
+ - bind_int_variable: if LHS is a simple variable name without an array
+ reference, but resolves to an array variable, call
+ bind_array_variable with index 0 to make x=1 equivalent to x[0]=1.
+ Fixes bug reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+ 5/27
+ ----
+subst.c
+ - expand_word_internal: make sure has_dollar_at doesn't get reset before
+ recursive calls to param_expand or expand_word_internal, since it has
+ to save state of what came before. Use temp variable and make sure
+ has_dollar_at is incremented if recursive call processes "$@".
+ Fixes bug reported by gregrwm <backuppc-users@whitleymott.net> and
+ supplemented by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - changes to the description of substring expansion inspired by
+ suggestions from Bill Gradwohl <bill@ycc.com>
+
+doc/bashref.texi
+ - added substring expansion examples inspired by suggestions from
+ Bill Gradwohl <bill@ycc.com>
+
+variables.c
+ - find_shell_variable: search for a variable in the list of shell
+ contexts, ignore the temporary environment
+ - find_variable_tempenv: search for a variable in the list of shell
+ contexts, force search of the temporary environment
+ - find_variable_notempenv: search for a variable in the list of shell
+ contexts, don't force search of the temporary environment
+
+variables.h
+ - find_shell_variable: extern declaration
+ - find_variable_tempenv: extern declaration
+ - find_variable_notempenv: extern declaration
+
+arrayfunc.c
+ - bind_array_variable: call find_shell_variable instead of calling
+ var_lookup directly
+
+findcmd.c
+ - search_for_command: call find_variable_tempenv instead of
+ find_variable_internal directly
+ - _find_user_command_internal: call find_variable_tempenv instead of
+ find_variable_internal directly
+
+builtins/setattr.def
+ - set_var_attribute: call find_variable_notempenv instead of
+ find_variable_internal directly
+ - show_name_attributes: call find_variable_tempenv instead of
+ find_variable_internal directly
+
+ 6/1
+ ---
+sig.c
+ - termsig_handler: don't try to save the shell history on a terminating
+ signal any more, since it just causes too many problems on Linux
+ systems using glibc and glibc malloc
+
+lib/readline/vi_mode.c
+ - rl_vi_change_to: change to correctly redo `cc', since `c' is not a vi
+ motion character. From Red Hat bug 813289
+ - rl_vi_delete_to: change to correctly redo `dd', since `d' is not a vi
+ motion character
+ - rl_vi_yank_to: change to correctly redo `yy', since `y' is not a vi
+ motion character
+
+ 6/4
+ ---
+lib/sh/mktime.c
+ - current versions of VMS do not need to include <stddef.h>. Fix from
+ John E. Malmberg <wb8tyw@qsl.net>
+
+ 6/5
+ ---
+lib/sh/eaccess.c
+ - sh_stat: instead of using a static buffer to do the DEV_FD_PREFIX
+ translation, use a dynamically-allocated buffer that we keep
+ resizing. Fixes potential security hole reported by David Leverton
+ <levertond@googlemail.com>
+
+ 6/5
+ ---
+braces.c
+ - expand_seqterm: check errno == ERANGE after calling strtoimax for
+ rhs and incr. Part of a set of fixes from Scott McMillan
+ <scotty.mcmillan@gmail.com>
+ - expand_seqterm: incr now of type `intmax_t', which changes
+ arguments to mkseq
+ - mkseq: a better fix for detecting overflow and underflow since it's
+ undefined in C and compilers `optimize' out overflow checks. Uses
+ ADDOVERFLOW and SUBOVERFLOW macros
+ - mkseq: use sh_imaxabs (new macro) instead of abs() for intmax_t
+ variables
+ - mkseq: don't allow incr to be converted to -INTMAX_MIN
+ - mkseq: make sure that strvec_create isn't called with a size argument
+ greater than INT_MAX, since it only takes an int
+
+ 6/6
+ ---
+braces.c
+ - mkseq: try and be smarter about not overallocating elements in
+ the return array if the increment is not 1 or -1
+
+ 6/7
+ ---
+parse.y
+ - history_delimiting_chars: if the parser says we're in the middle of
+ a compound assignment (PST_COMPASSIGN), just return a space to avoid
+ adding a stray semicolon to the history entry. Fixes bug reported
+ by "Davide Brini" <dave_br@gmx.com>
+
+ 6/8
+ ---
+bashline.c
+ - bash_directory_completion_hook: don't attempt spelling correction
+ on the directory name unless the direxpand option is set and we are
+ going to replace the directory name with the corrected one in the
+ readline line. Suggested by Linda Walsh <bash@tlinx.org>
+
+lib/sh/shquote.c
+ - sh_backslash_quote: now takes a third argument: flags. If non-zero,
+ tildes are not backslash-escaped. Have to handle both printf %q,
+ where they should be escaped, and filename completion, where they
+ should not when used as usernames
+
+externs.h
+ - sh_backslash_quote: declaration now takes a third argument
+
+builtins/printf.def
+ - printf_builtin: call sh_backslash_quote with 1 as third argument
+ so tildes get escaped
+
+{bashline,bracecomp}.c
+ - call sh_backslash_quote with 0 as third argument so tildes are not
+ escaped in completed words
+
+doc/bash.1
+ - add `coproc' to the list of reserved words. From a report by
+ Jens Schweikhardt <schweikh@schweikhardt.net>
+
+ 6/10
+ ----
+execute_cmd.c
+ - line_number_for_err_trap: now global, so parse_and_execute can save
+ and restore it with unwind-protect
+
+builtins/evalstring.c
+ - parse_prologue: save and restore line_number_for_err_trap along
+ with line_number
+ - restore_lastcom: new function, unwind-protect to restore
+ the_printed_command_except_trap
+ - parse_prologue: use restore_lastcom to save and restore the value
+ of the_printed_command_except_trap around calls to parse_and_execute
+ (eval/source/.)
+
+ 6/15
+ ----
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - complete_fncmp: change filename comparison code to understand
+ multibyte characters, even when doing case-sensitive or case-mapping
+ comparisons. Fixes problem reported by Nikolay Shirokovskiy
+ <nshyrokovskiy@gmail.com>
+
+ 6/20
+ ----
+builtins/mapfile.def
+ - mapfile: move the line count increment and check for having read
+ the specified number of lines to the end of the loop to avoid
+ reading an additional line with zgetline. Fixes bug reported by
+ Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+ 6/21
+ ----
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_pipeline: make sure `lastpipe_flag' is initialized to 0 on
+ all systems, since it's tested later in the function. Fixes bug
+ reported by John E. Malmberg <wb8tyw@qsl.net>
+
+ 6/22
+ ----
+mailcheck.c
+ - file_mod_date_changed: return 0 right away if mailstat() does not
+ return success. Fixes bug with using uninitialized values reported
+ by szymon.kalasz@uj.edu.pl
+
+builtins/set.def
+ - the `monitor' option is not available when the shell is compiled
+ without job control, since the underlying `m' flag is not available
+
+nojobs.c
+ - job_control: now declared as int variable, initialized to 0, never
+ modified
+
+jobs.h
+ - job_control: extern declaration no longer dependent on JOB_CONTROL
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_pipeline: made necessary changes so `lastpipe' shell option
+ is now available in all shells, even those compiled without
+ JOB_CONTROL defined
+
+ 6/23
+ ----
+lib/glob/glob.c
+ - glob_filename: check for interrupts before returning if glob_vector
+ returns NULL or an error. Bug reported by Serge van den Boom
+ <svdb@stack.nl>, fix from Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
+ - call run_pending_traps after each call to QUIT or test of
+ interrupt_state, like we do in mainline shell code
+ - glob_vector: don't call QUIT; in `if (lose)' code block; just free
+ memory, return NULL, and let callers deal with interrupt_state or
+ other signals and traps
+
+ 6/25
+ ----
+lib/readline/input.c
+ - rl_read_key: restructure the loop that calls the event hook a little,
+ so that the hook is called only after rl_gather_tyi returns no input,
+ and any pending input is returned first. This results in better
+ efficiency for processing pending input without calling the hook
+ on every input character as bash-4.1 did. From a report from
+ Max Horn <max@quendi.de>
+
+ 6/26
+ ----
+trap.c
+ - signal_is_pending: return TRUE if SIG argument has been received and
+ a trap is waiting to execute
+
+trap.h
+ - signal_is_pending: extern declaration
+
+lib/glob/glob.c
+ - glob_vector: check for pending SIGINT trap each time through the loop,
+ just like we check for interrupt_state or terminating_signal, and
+ set `lose = 1' so we clean up after ourselves and interrupt the
+ operation before running the trap. This may require a change later,
+ maybe call run_pending_traps and do that if run_pending_traps returns?
+
+variables.c
+ - sv_histtimefmt: set history_comment_character to default (`#') if
+ it's 0 when we're turning on history timestamps. The history code
+ uses the history comment character to prefix timestamps, and
+ leaving it at 0 effectively removes them from the history. From a
+ report to help-bash by Dennis Williamson <dennistwilliamson@gmail.com>
+
+ 6/27
+ ----
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - rl_maybe_restore_sighandler: new function, sets handler for SIG to
+ HANDLER->sa_handler only if it's not SIG_IGN. Needs to be called
+ on same signals set using rl_maybe_set_sighandler, which does not
+ override an existing SIG_IGN handler (SIGALRM is ok since it does
+ the check inline; doesn't mess with SIGWINCH)
+
+ 6/30
+ ----
+variables.h
+ - additional defines for the new `nameref' variable attribute
+ (att_nameref): nameref_p, nameref_cell, var_setref
+
+variables.c
+ - find_variable_nameref: resolve SHELL_VAR V through chain of namerefs
+ - find_variable_last_nameref: resolve variable NAME until last in a
+ chain of possibly more than one nameref starting at shell_variables
+ - find_global_variable_last_nameref: resolve variable NAME until last
+ in a chain of possibly more than one nameref starting at
+ global_variables
+ - find_nameref_at_context: resolve SHELL_VAR V through chain of namerefs
+ in a specific variable context (usually a local variable hash table)
+ - find_variable_nameref_context: resolve SHELL_VAR V through chain of
+ namerefs following a chain of varible contexts
+ - find_variable_last_nameref_context: resolve SHELL_VAR V as in
+ find_variable_last_context, but return the final nameref instead of
+ what the final nameref resolves to
+ - find_variable_tempenv, find_variable_notempenv, find_global_variable,
+ find_shell_variable, find_variable: modified to follow namerefs
+ - find_global_variable_noref: look up a global variable without following
+ any namerefs
+ - find_variable_noref: look up a shell variable without following any
+ namerefs
+ - bind_variable_internal: modify to follow a chain of namerefs in the
+ global variables table; change to handle assignments to a nameref by
+ following nameref chain
+ - bind_variable: modify to follow chain of namerefs when binding to a
+ local variable
+ - unbind_variable: changes to unset nameref variables (unsets both
+ nameref and variable it resolves to)
+
+subst.c
+ - parameter_brace_expand_word: change to handle expanding nameref whose
+ value is x[n]
+ - parameter_brace_expand_indir: change to expand in ksh93-compatible
+ way if variable to be indirected is nameref and a simple (non-array)
+ expansion
+ - param_expand: change to expand $foo where foo is a nameref whose value
+ is x[n]
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_for_command: changes to implement ksh93 semantics when index
+ variable is a nameref
+
+builtins/setattr.def
+ - show_var_attributes: change to add `n' to flags list if att_nameref
+ is set
+
+builtins/set.def
+ - unset_builtin: changes to error messages to follow nameref variables
+
+builtins/declare.def
+ - document new -n option
+ - declare_internal: new `-n' and `+n' options
+ - declare_internal: handle declare -n var[=value] and
+ declare +n var[=value] for existing and non-existant variables.
+ Enforce restriction that nameref variables cannot be arrays.
+ Implement semi-peculiar ksh93 semantics for typeset +n ref=value
+
+ 7/5
+ ---
+variables.c
+ - unbind_variable: unset whatever a nameref resolves to, leaving the
+ nameref variable itself alone
+ - unbind_nameref: new function, unsets a nameref variable, not the
+ variable it references
+
+variables.h
+ - unbind_nameref: extern declaration
+
+builtins/set.def
+ - unset_builtin: modify to add -n option, which calls unbind_nameref
+ leaving unbind_variable for the usual case. This required slight
+ changes and additions to the test suite
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - document namerefs and typeset/declare/local/unset -n
+
+ 7/13
+ ----
+lib/sh/casemod.c
+ - include shmbchar.h for is_basic and supporting pieces
+ - sh_casemod: use _to_wupper and _to_wlower to convert wide character
+ case instead of TOUPPER and TOLOWER. Fixes bug reported by
+ Dennis Williamson <dennistwilliamson@gmail.com>, fix from
+ Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
+ - cval: short-circuit and return ascii value if is_basic tests true
+ - sh_casemod: short-circuit and use non-multibyte case modification
+ and toggling code if is_basic tests true
+
+lib/readline/signals.c
+ - _rl_{block,release}_sigint: remove the code that actually blocks and
+ releases the signals, since we defer signal handling until calls to
+ RL_CHECK_SIGNALS()
+
+lib/readline/{callback,readline,util}.c
+ - if HAVE_POSIX_SIGSETJMP is defined, use sigsetjmp/siglongjmp without
+ saving and restoring the signal mask instead of setjmp/longjmp
+
+lib/readline/rltty.c
+ - prepare_terminal_settings: don't mess with IXOFF setting if
+ USE_XON_XOFF defined
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - add some text to the description of set -e clarifying its effect
+ on shell functions and shell function execution. Suggested by
+ Rainer Blome <rainer.blome@gmx.de>
+
+bashline.c
+ - edit_and_execute_command: increment current_command_line_count before
+ adding partial line to command history (for command-oriented-history
+ because of rl_newline at beginning of function), then reset it to 0
+ before adding the dummy history entry to make sure the dummy entry
+ doesn't get added to previous incomplete command. Partial fix for
+ problem reported by Peng Yu <pengyu.ut@gmail.com>
+
+ 7/24
+ ----
+configure.in
+ - interix: define RECYCLES_PIDS. Based on a report from Michael
+ Haubenwallner <michael.haubenwallner@salomon.at>
+
+ 7/26
+ ----
+jobs.c
+ - make_child: call bgp_delete on the newly-created pid unconditionally.
+ Some systems reuse pids before cycling through an entire set of
+ CHILD_MAX/_SC_CHILD_MAX unique pids. This is no longer dependent
+ on RECYCLES_PIDS. Based on a report from Michael Haubenwallner
+ <michael.haubenwallner@salomon.at>
+
+support/shobj-conf
+ - Mac OS X: drop MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.3 from the LDFLAGS. We
+ can finally kill Panther
+
+ 7/28
+ ----
+subst.c
+ - command_substitute: make sure last_made_pid gets reset if make_child
+ fails
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_command_internal: case cm_simple: decide whether or not to
+ wait_for a child if already_making_children is non-zero, indicates
+ that there is an unwaited-for child. More of fix for bug report
+ from Michael Haubenwallner <michael.haubenwallner@salomon.at>
+
+jobs.c
+ - make_child: call delete_old_job (new_pid) unconditionally, don't
+ bother to check whether or not pid wrap occurred. Rest of fix for
+ bug report from Michael Haubenwallner
+ <michael.haubenwallner@salomon.at>
+
+ 7/29
+ ----
+shell.c
+ - subshell_exit: new function, exits the shell (via call to sh_exit())
+ after calling any defined exit trap
+
+externs.h
+ - subshell_exit: new extern declaration
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_command_internal: make sure to call subshell_exit for
+ {} group commands executed asynchronously (&). Part of fix for
+ EXIT trap bug reported by Maarten Billemont <lhunath@lyndir.com>
+
+sig.c
+ - reset_terminating_signals: make sure to set termsigs_initialized back
+ to 0, so a subsequent call to initialize_terminating_signals works
+ right. Rest of fix for bug reported by Maarten Billemont
+ <lhunath@lyndir.com>
+
+{execute_cmd,general,jobs,mailcheck,mksyntax,test}.c
+builtins/{cd,fc,pushd,ulimit}.def
+lib/malloc/getpagesize.h
+lib/sh/{clktck,fpurge,inet_aton,mailstat,oslib,pathcanon,pathphys,spell,strerror}.c
+ - make inclusion of <sys/param.h> dependent on HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
+ consistently
+
+ 8/6
+ ---
+lib/readline/histexpand.c
+ - history_expand_internal: now takes an additional argument saying
+ whether the history expansion occurs within a quoted string, set to
+ the open quote character
+ - history_expand_internal: use new argument instead of checking prev
+ char and initializing quoted_search_delimiter, pass qc directly to
+ get_history_event, where it allows a matching quote to terminate a
+ string defining an event
+ - history_expand: change single-quote handling code so that if
+ history_quotes_inhibit_expansion is 0, single quotes are treated
+ like double quotes
+ - history_expand: change call to history_expand_internal to pass new
+ argument of `"' if double-quoted string, `'' if single-quoted string;
+ this lets history_expand decide what is a quoted string and what
+ is not
+
+ 8/7
+ ---
+configure.in
+ - AC_CANONICAL_BUILD: invoke for later use
+
+lib/readline/macro.c
+ - _rl_prev_macro_key: new function, inverse of _rl_next_macro_key:
+ backs up the index into the current macro by 1
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - _rl_prev_macro_key: extern declaration
+
+
+lib/readline/readline.c
+ - _rl_dispatch_subseq, _rl_subseq_result: don't call _rl_unget_char
+ if we're currently reading from a macro; call _rl_prev_macro_key
+ instead. Fixes bug reported by Clark Wang <clark.wang@oracle.com>
+
+ 8/13
+ ----
+builtins/evalstring.c
+ - evalstring(): new function, wrapper around parse_and_execute.
+ make sure we handle cases where parse_and_execute can call `return'
+ and short-circuit without cleaning up properly. We call
+ parse_and_execute_cleanup() then jump to the previous-saved return
+ location
+
+builtins/common.h
+ - extern declaration for evalstring()
+
+builtins/eval.def
+ - eval_builtin: make sure we handle `eval " ... return"' in contexts
+ where `return' is valid by calling evalstring(). Fixes bug with
+ `eval return' in sourced files reported by Clark Wang
+ <dearvoid@gmail.com>
+
+trap.c
+ - run_pending_traps: call evalstring instead of parse_and_execute.
+ XXX - still needs to handle saving and restoring token state in the
+ presence of `return'; could use unwind_protects for that
+
+builtins/mapfile.def
+ - run_callback: call evalstring instead of parse_and_execute
+
+ 8/15
+ ----
+bashline.c
+ - bash_filename_stat_hook: make sure we don't free local_dirname
+ before using it to canonicalize any expanded filename. Make sure
+ it always points to *dirname and only free it if we're replacing
+ it.
+
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - append_to_match: make sure we call rl_filename_stat_hook with
+ newly-allocated memory to avoid problems with freeing it twice
+
+ 8/17
+ ----
+variables.c,config-top.h
+ - if ARRAY_EXPORT is defined to 1 when variables.c is compiled, the
+ code that allows indexed arrays to be exported is enabled and
+ included
+
+ 8/19
+ ----
+shell.c
+ - call start_debugger from main() only if dollar_vars[1] != 0 (close
+ enough to a non-interactive shell, since we can be interactive with
+ -i while running a shell script). Fixes oddity reported by
+ Techlive Zheng <techlivezheng@gmail.com>
+
+ 8/20
+ ----
+arrayfunc.c
+ - quote_array_assignment_chars: don't bother quoting if the word has
+ not been marked as an assignment (W_ASSIGNMENT)
+ - quote_array_assignment_chars: turn on W_NOGLOB in the word flags
+ so assignment statements don't undergo globbing. Partial fix for
+ problems reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+ 8/21
+ ----
+command.h
+ - W_NOBRACE: new word flag that means to inhibit brace expansion
+
+subst.c
+ - brace_expand_word_list: suppress brace expansion for words with
+ W_NOBRACE flag
+
+ 8/22
+ ----
+builtins/read.def
+ - read_builtin: don't call dequote_string on what we've read, even if
+ we saw an escape character, unless (input_string && *input_string).
+ We may have escaped an IFS whitespace character. Fixes seg fault
+ reported by <armandsl@gmail.com>
+
+execute_cmd.c
+ - execute_command_internal: set the_printed_command_except trap when
+ about to execute a ( ... ) user subshell. For now, set it only if
+ ERR is trapped; can relax that later. Fixes bug reported by
+ Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
+
+ 8/23
+ ----
+jobs.c
+ - remove references to first_pid and pid_wrap, since we're not using
+ them for anything anymore
+
+ 8/24
+ ----
+subst.c
+ - changes for W_NOBRACE everywhere appropriate: so it can be displayed
+ for debugging, and passed out of expand_word_internal
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - small changes to make it clearer that the = and == operators are
+ equivalent, and will cause pattern matching when used with [[.
+ From a question from Michal Soltys <soltys@ziu.info>
+
+doc/bashref.texi
+ - some small formatting changes from Karl Berry <karl@freefriends.org>
+
+ 8/27
+ ----
+lib/readline/doc/{history,rlman,rluserman}.texi
+ - some small formatting changes from Karl Berry <karl@freefriends.org>
+
+arrayfunc.c
+ - assign_array_element_internal, assign_compound_array_list,
+ unbind_array_element, array_value_internal: changes to make
+ assignment statements to negative indices (a[-1]=2) and unsetting
+ array elements using negative indices (unset 'a[-1]') work.
+ From suggestions by Dennis Williamson <dennistwilliamson@gmail.com>
+ and Chris F. A. Johnson <chris@cfajohnson.com>
+
+subst.c
+ - array_length_reference: changes to make length references to array
+ elements using negative indices (${#a[-1]}) work
+
+ 8/28
+ ----
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - document new treatment of negative indices to indexed arrays when
+ assigning, referencing, calculating length, and unsetting
+
+ 8/29
+ ----
+shell.c
+ - show_shell_usage: add -l to list of shell invocation options (short
+ for --login). From Red Hat bug 852469
+
+configure.ac
+ - renamed from configure.in, as latest autoconf versions want. Patches
+ Stefano Lattarini <stefano.lattarini@gmail.com>
+
+MANIFEST,Makefile.in,doc/bashref.texi,support/mkconffiles
+ - configure.in -> configure.ac
+
+ 9/1
+ ---
+
+parse.y
+ - read_token_word: allow words like {array[ind]} to be valid redirection
+ words for constructs like {x}<file
+
+redir.c
+ - redir_varassign: bind_var_to_int already handles array assignments,
+ so don't need to do anything more for things like {a[i]}<file
+ - redir_varvalue: changes to allow references to {a[i]} when
+ performing redirections using valid_array_reference and
+ get_array_value. Adds functionality requested most recently by
+ <unknown@vmw-les.eng.vmware.com>
+
+lib/readline/display.c
+ - update_line: if the first difference between the old and new lines
+ is completely before any invisible characters in the prompt, we
+ should not adjust _rl_last_c_pos, since it's before any invisible
+ characters. Fixed in two places
+ - prompt_modechar: return a character indicating the editing mode:
+ emacs (@), vi command (:), or vi insert (+)
+ - _rl_reset_prompt: new function, just calls rl_expand_prompt. Will be
+ inlined, placeholder for more changes
+ - expand_prompt: if show-mode-in-prompt is enabled, add a character to
+ the front of the prompt indicating the editing mode, adjusting the
+ various variables as appropriate to keep track of the number of
+ visible characters and number of screen positions
+
+lib/readline/bind.c
+ - show-mode-in-prompt: new bindable boolean variable, shadowed by
+ _rl_show_mode_in_prompt variable
+ - hack_special_boolean_var: call _rl_reset_prompt when toggling or
+ setting show-mode-in-prompt
+
+lib/readline/readline.c
+ - readline_internal_setup: make sure the correct vi mode keymap is set
+ before expanding the prompt string for the first time
+
+lib/readline/misc.c
+ - rl_emacs_editing_mode: make sure to call _rl_reset_prompt if we're
+ showing the editing mode in the prompt
+
+lib/readline/rlprivate.h
+ - _rl_reset_prompt, _rl_show_mode_in_prompt: extern declarations
+
+lib/readline/vi_mode.c
+ - rl_vi_insertion_mode: call _rl_reset_prompt
+ - rl_vi_movement_mode: call _rl_reset_prompt. Finishes changes for
+ showing mode in prompt string, originally requested by Miroslav
+ Koskar <mkoskar@gmail.com> and most recently by Jordan Michael
+ Ziegler <jziegler@bnl.gov>
+
+doc/bash.1,lib/readline/doc/{readline.3,rluser.texi}
+ - document new show-mode-in-prompt variable, off by default
+
+ 9/3
+ ---
+
+jobs.c
+ - set_childmax: new function, external mechanism for other parts of
+ the shell to set js.c_childmax, the number of saved exited child
+ statuses to remember
+jobs.h
+ - set_childmax: extern declaration
+
+variables.c
+ - CHILD_MAX: new special variable, with sv_childmax function to
+ run when it changes. Setting CHILD_MAX to a value greater than
+ zero but less than some maximum (currently 8192) sets the number of
+ exited child statuses to remember. set_childmax (jobs.c) ensures
+ that the number does not drop below the posix-mandated minimum
+ (CHILD_MAX)
+
+doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi}
+ - CHILD_MAX: document new meaning and action when variable is set
+
+ 9/5
+ ---
+redir.c
+ - redir_varassign: call stupidly_hack_special_variables after
+ assigning fd number to specified variable, so we can use constructs
+ like {BASH_XTRACEFD}>foo. Suggested by Pierre Gaston
+ <pierre.gaston@gmail.com>
+
+ 9/8
+ ---
+expr.c
+ - expr_streval: save and restore the value of `noeval' around any call
+ to get_array_value, since that can end up recursively calling
+ evalexp to perform array subscript evaluation. Fixes bug reported
+ by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+ - readtok: invalidate previous contents of `curlval' before freeing
+ and reallocating tokstr (which, chances are, will get the same
+ pointer as before and render curlval inconsistent). Fixes other
+ bug reported by Dan Douglas <ormaaj@gmail.com>
+
+ 9/9
+ ---
+lib/readline/complete.c
+ - rl_username_completion_function: protect call to setpwent() with
+ #ifdef (HAVE_GETPWENT)/#endif. Fixes bug reported by
+ Gerd Hofmann <gerd.hofmann.nbg@googlemail.com>
+
+lib/readline/display.c
+ - rl_message: second and subsequent calls to rl_message can result in
+ local_prompt being overwritten with new values (e.g., from the
+ successive calls displaying the incremental search string). Need
+ to free before overwriting if it's not the same as the value saved
+ in saved_local_prompt. Fixes memory leak reported by
+ Wouter Vermaelen <vermaelen.wouter@gmail.com>
+
+lib/readline/{terminal.c,rlprivate.h}
+ - move CUSTOM_REDISPLAY_FUNC and CUSTOM_INPUT_FUNC defines from
+ terminal.c to rlprivate.h so other files can use them
--- /dev/null
+Starting bash with the `--posix' command-line option or executing
+`set -o posix' while bash is running will cause bash to conform more
+closely to the Posix.2 standard by changing the behavior to match that
+specified by Posix.2 in areas where the bash default differs.
+
+The following list is what's changed when `posix mode' is in effect:
+
+1. When a command in the hash table no longer exists, bash will re-search
+ $PATH to find the new location. This is also available with
+ `shopt -s checkhash'.
+
+2. The >& redirection does not redirect stdout and stderr.
+
+3. The message printed by the job control code and builtins when a job
+ exits with a non-zero status is `Done(status)'.
+
+4. Reserved words may not be aliased.
+
+5. The Posix.2 PS1 and PS2 expansions of `!' -> history number and
+ `!!' -> `!' are enabled, and parameter expansion is performed on
+ the value regardless of the setting of the `promptvars' option.
+
+6. Interactive comments are enabled by default. (Note that bash has
+ them on by default anyway.)
+
+7. The Posix.2 startup files are executed ($ENV) rather than the normal
+ bash files.
+
+8. Tilde expansion is only performed on assignments preceding a command
+ name, rather than on all assignment statements on the line.
+
+9. The default history file is ~/.sh_history (default value of $HISTFILE).
+
+10. The output of `kill -l' prints all the signal names on a single line,
+ separated by spaces.
+
+11. Non-interactive shells exit if `file' in `. file' is not found.
+
+12. Redirection operators do not perform pathname expansion on the word
+ in the redirection unless the shell is interactive
+
+13. Function names must be valid shell identifiers. That is, they may not
+ contain characters other than letters, digits, and underscores, and
+ may not start with a digit. Declaring a function with an illegal name
+ causes a fatal syntax error in non-interactive shells.
+
+14. Posix.2 `special' builtins are found before shell functions during command
+ lookup.
+
+15. If a Posix.2 special builtin returns an error status, a non-interactive
+ shell exits. The fatal errors are those listed in the POSIX.2 standard,
+ and include things like passing incorrect options, redirection errors,
+ variable assignment errors for assignments preceding the command name,
+ and so on.
+
+16. The environment passed to executed commands is not sorted. Neither is
+ the output of `set'. This is not strictly Posix.2 behavior, but sh
+ does it this way. Ksh does not. It's not necessary to sort the
+ environment; no program should rely on it being sorted.
+
+17. If the `cd' builtin finds a directory to change to using $CDPATH, the
+ value it assigns to $PWD does not contain any symbolic links, as if
+ `cd -P' had been executed.
+
+18. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if a variable
+ assignment error occurs when no command name follows the assignment
+ statements. A variable assignment error occurs, for example, when
+ trying to assign a value to a read-only variable.
+
+19. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if the iteration
+ variable in a for statement or the selection variable in a select
+ statement is a read-only variable.
+
+20. Process substitution is not available.
+
+21. Assignment statements preceding POSIX.2 `special' builtins persist in
+ the shell environment after the builtin completes.
+
+There is other Posix.2 behavior that bash does not implement. Specifically:
+
+1. Assignment statements affect the execution environment of all builtins,
+ not just special ones.
--- /dev/null
+This file is set.def, from which is created set.c.
+It implements the "set" and "unset" builtins in Bash.
+
+Copyright (C) 1987, 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+This file is part of GNU Bash, the Bourne Again SHell.
+
+Bash is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
+the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
+Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later
+version.
+
+Bash is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
+WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
+FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
+for more details.
+
+You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
+with Bash; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software
+Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
+
+$PRODUCES set.c
+
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include "../shell.h"
+#include "../flags.h"
+
+#include "bashgetopt.h"
+
+extern int interactive;
+extern int noclobber, posixly_correct;
+#if defined (READLINE)
+extern int rl_editing_mode, no_line_editing;
+#endif /* READLINE */
+
+$BUILTIN set
+$FUNCTION set_builtin
+$SHORT_DOC set [--abefhkmnptuvxldBCHP] [-o option] [arg ...]
+ -a Mark variables which are modified or created for export.
+ -b Notify of job termination immediately.
+ -e Exit immediately if a command exits with a non-zero status.
+ -f Disable file name generation (globbing).
+ -h Locate and remember function commands as functions are
+ defined. Function commands are normally looked up when
+ the function is executed.
+ -i Force the shell to be an "interactive" one. Interactive shells
+ always read `~/.bashrc' on startup.
+ -k All keyword arguments are placed in the environment for a
+ command, not just those that precede the command name.
+ -m Job control is enabled.
+ -n Read commands but do not execute them.
+ -o option-name
+ Set the variable corresponding to option-name:
+ allexport same as -a
+ braceexpand same as -B
+#if defined (READLINE)
+ emacs use an emacs-style line editing interface
+#endif /* READLINE */
+ errexit same as -e
+ histexpand same as -H
+ ignoreeof the shell will not exit upon reading EOF
+ interactive-comments
+ allow comments to appear in interactive commands
+ monitor same as -m
+ noclobber disallow redirection to existing files
+ noexec same as -n
+ noglob same as -f
+ nohash same as -d
+ notify save as -b
+ nounset same as -u
+ physical same as -P
+ posix change the behavior of bash where the default
+ operation differs from the 1003.2 standard to
+ match the standard
+ privileged same as -p
+ verbose same as -v
+#if defined (READLINE)
+ vi use a vi-style line editing interface
+#endif /* READLINE */
+ xtrace same as -x
+ -p Turned on whenever the real and effective user ids do not match.
+ Disables processing of the $ENV file and importing of shell
+ functions. Turning this option off causes the effective uid and
+ gid to be set to the real uid and gid.
+ -t Exit after reading and executing one command.
+ -u Treat unset variables as an error when substituting.
+ -v Print shell input lines as they are read.
+ -x Print commands and their arguments as they are executed.
+ -l Save and restore the binding of the NAME in a FOR command.
+ -d Disable the hashing of commands that are looked up for execution.
+ Normally, commands are remembered in a hash table, and once
+ found, do not have to be looked up again.
+#if defined (BRACE_EXPANSION)
+ -B the shell will perform brace expansion
+#endif /* BRACE_EXPANSION */
+#if defined (BANG_HISTORY)
+ -H Enable ! style history substitution. This flag is on
+ by default.
+#endif /* BANG_HISTORY */
+ -C If set, disallow existing regular files to be overwritten
+ by redirection of output.
+ -P If set, do not follow symbolic links when executing commands
+ such as cd which change the current directory.
+
+Using + rather than - causes these flags to be turned off. The
+flags can also be used upon invocation of the shell. The current
+set of flags may be found in $-. The remaining n ARGs are positional
+parameters and are assigned, in order, to $1, $2, .. $n. If no
+ARGs are given, all shell variables are printed.
+$END
+
+/* An a-list used to match long options for set -o to the corresponding
+ option letter. */
+struct {
+ char *name;
+ int letter;
+} o_options[] = {
+ { "allexport", 'a' },
+#if defined (BRACE_EXPANSION)
+ { "braceexpand",'B' },
+#endif
+ { "errexit", 'e' },
+ { "histexpand", 'H' },
+ { "monitor", 'm' },
+ { "noexec", 'n' },
+ { "noglob", 'f' },
+ { "nohash", 'd' },
+#if defined (JOB_CONTROL)
+ { "notify", 'b' },
+#endif /* JOB_CONTROL */
+ {"nounset", 'u' },
+ {"physical", 'P' },
+ {"privileged", 'p' },
+ {"verbose", 'v' },
+ {"xtrace", 'x' },
+ {(char *)NULL, 0},
+};
+
+#define MINUS_O_FORMAT "%-15s\t%s\n"
+
+void
+list_minus_o_opts ()
+{
+ register int i;
+ char *on = "on", *off = "off";
+
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "noclobber", (noclobber == 1) ? on : off);
+
+ if (find_variable ("ignoreeof") || find_variable ("IGNOREEOF"))
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "ignoreeof", on);
+ else
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "ignoreeof", off);
+
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "interactive-comments",
+ interactive_comments ? on : off);
+
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "posix", posixly_correct ? on : off);
+
+#if defined (READLINE)
+ if (no_line_editing)
+ {
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "emacs", off);
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "vi", off);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* Magic. This code `knows' how readline handles rl_editing_mode. */
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "emacs", (rl_editing_mode == 1) ? on : off);
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, "vi", (rl_editing_mode == 0) ? on : off);
+ }
+#endif /* READLINE */
+
+ for (i = 0; o_options[i].name; i++)
+ {
+ int *on_or_off, zero = 0;
+
+ on_or_off = find_flag (o_options[i].letter);
+ if (on_or_off == FLAG_UNKNOWN)
+ on_or_off = &zero;
+ printf (MINUS_O_FORMAT, o_options[i].name, (*on_or_off == 1) ? on : off);
+ }
+}
+
+set_minus_o_option (on_or_off, option_name)
+ int on_or_off;
+ char *option_name;
+{
+ int option_char = -1;
+
+ if (STREQ (option_name, "noclobber"))
+ {
+ if (on_or_off == FLAG_ON)
+ bind_variable ("noclobber", "");
+ else
+ unbind_variable ("noclobber");
+ stupidly_hack_special_variables ("noclobber");
+ }
+ else if (STREQ (option_name, "ignoreeof"))
+ {
+ unbind_variable ("ignoreeof");
+ unbind_variable ("IGNOREEOF");
+ if (on_or_off == FLAG_ON)
+ bind_variable ("IGNOREEOF", "10");
+ stupidly_hack_special_variables ("IGNOREEOF");
+ }
+
+#if defined (READLINE)
+ else if ((STREQ (option_name, "emacs")) || (STREQ (option_name, "vi")))
+ {
+ if (on_or_off == FLAG_ON)
+ {
+ rl_variable_bind ("editing-mode", option_name);
+
+ if (interactive)
+ with_input_from_stdin ();
+ no_line_editing = 0;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ int isemacs = (rl_editing_mode == 1);
+ if ((isemacs && STREQ (option_name, "emacs")) ||
+ (!isemacs && STREQ (option_name, "vi")))
+ {
+ if (interactive)
+ with_input_from_stream (stdin, "stdin");
+ no_line_editing = 1;
+ }
+ else
+ builtin_error ("not in %s editing mode", option_name);
+ }
+ }
+#endif /* READLINE */
+ else if (STREQ (option_name, "interactive-comments"))
+ interactive_comments = (on_or_off == FLAG_ON);
+ else if (STREQ (option_name, "posix"))
+ {
+ posixly_correct = (on_or_off == FLAG_ON);
+ unbind_variable ("POSIXLY_CORRECT");
+ unbind_variable ("POSIX_PEDANTIC");
+ if (on_or_off == FLAG_ON)
+ {
+ bind_variable ("POSIXLY_CORRECT", "");
+ stupidly_hack_special_variables ("POSIXLY_CORRECT");
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ register int i;
+ for (i = 0; o_options[i].name; i++)
+ {
+ if (STREQ (option_name, o_options[i].name))
+ {
+ option_char = o_options[i].letter;
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+ if (option_char == -1)
+ {
+ builtin_error ("%s: unknown option name", option_name);
+ return (EXECUTION_FAILURE);
+ }
+ if (change_flag (option_char, on_or_off) == FLAG_ERROR)
+ {
+ bad_option (option_name);
+ return (EXECUTION_FAILURE);
+ }
+ }
+ return (EXECUTION_SUCCESS);
+}
+
+/* Set some flags from the word values in the input list. If LIST is empty,
+ then print out the values of the variables instead. If LIST contains
+ non-flags, then set $1 - $9 to the successive words of LIST. */
+set_builtin (list)
+ WORD_LIST *list;
+{
+ int on_or_off, flag_name, force_assignment = 0;
+
+ if (!list)
+ {
+ SHELL_VAR **vars;
+
+ vars = all_shell_variables ();
+ if (vars)
+ {
+ print_var_list (vars);
+ free (vars);
+ }
+
+ vars = all_shell_functions ();
+ if (vars)
+ {
+ print_var_list (vars);
+ free (vars);
+ }
+
+ return (EXECUTION_SUCCESS);
+ }
+
+ /* Check validity of flag arguments. */
+ if (*list->word->word == '-' || *list->word->word == '+')
+ {
+ register char *arg;
+ WORD_LIST *save_list = list;
+
+ while (list && (arg = list->word->word))
+ {
+ char c;
+
+ if (arg[0] != '-' && arg[0] != '+')
+ break;
+
+ /* `-' or `--' signifies end of flag arguments. */
+ if (arg[0] == '-' &&
+ (!arg[1] || (arg[1] == '-' && !arg[2])))
+ break;
+
+ while (c = *++arg)
+ {
+ if (find_flag (c) == FLAG_UNKNOWN && c != 'o')
+ {
+ char s[2];
+ s[0] = c; s[1] = '\0';
+ bad_option (s);
+ if (c == '?')
+ builtin_usage ();
+ return (c == '?' ? EXECUTION_SUCCESS : EXECUTION_FAILURE);
+ }
+ }
+ list = list->next;
+ }
+ list = save_list;
+ }
+
+ /* Do the set command. While the list consists of words starting with
+ '-' or '+' treat them as flags, otherwise, start assigning them to
+ $1 ... $n. */
+ while (list)
+ {
+ char *string = list->word->word;
+
+ /* If the argument is `--' or `-' then signal the end of the list
+ and remember the remaining arguments. */
+ if (string[0] == '-' && (!string[1] || (string[1] == '-' && !string[2])))
+ {
+ list = list->next;
+
+ /* `set --' unsets the positional parameters. */
+ if (string[1] == '-')
+ force_assignment = 1;
+
+ /* Until told differently, the old shell behaviour of
+ `set - [arg ...]' being equivalent to `set +xv [arg ...]'
+ stands. Posix.2 says the behaviour is marked as obsolescent. */
+ else
+ {
+ change_flag ('x', '+');
+ change_flag ('v', '+');
+ }
+
+ break;
+ }
+
+ if ((on_or_off = *string) &&
+ (on_or_off == '-' || on_or_off == '+'))
+ {
+ int i = 1;
+ while (flag_name = string[i++])
+ {
+ if (flag_name == '?')
+ {
+ builtin_usage ();
+ return (EXECUTION_SUCCESS);
+ }
+ else if (flag_name == 'o') /* -+o option-name */
+ {
+ char *option_name;
+ WORD_LIST *opt;
+
+ opt = list->next;
+
+ if (!opt)
+ {
+ list_minus_o_opts ();
+ continue;
+ }
+
+ option_name = opt->word->word;
+
+ if (!option_name || !*option_name || (*option_name == '-'))
+ {
+ list_minus_o_opts ();
+ continue;
+ }
+ list = list->next; /* Skip over option name. */
+
+ if (set_minus_o_option (on_or_off, option_name) != EXECUTION_SUCCESS)
+ return (EXECUTION_FAILURE);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if (change_flag (flag_name, on_or_off) == FLAG_ERROR)
+ {
+ char opt[3];
+ opt[0] = on_or_off;
+ opt[1] = flag_name;
+ opt[2] = '\0';
+ bad_option (opt);
+ builtin_usage ();
+ return (EXECUTION_FAILURE);
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ break;
+ }
+ list = list->next;
+ }
+
+ /* Assigning $1 ... $n */
+ if (list || force_assignment)
+ remember_args (list, 1);
+ return (EXECUTION_SUCCESS);
+}
+
+$BUILTIN unset
+$FUNCTION unset_builtin
+$SHORT_DOC unset [-f] [-v] [name ...]
+For each NAME, remove the corresponding variable or function. Given
+the `-v', unset will only act on variables. Given the `-f' flag,
+unset will only act on functions. With neither flag, unset first
+tries to unset a variable, and if that fails, then tries to unset a
+function. Some variables (such as PATH and IFS) cannot be unset; also
+see readonly.
+$END
+
+#define NEXT_VARIABLE() any_failed++; list = list->next; continue;
+
+unset_builtin (list)
+ WORD_LIST *list;
+{
+ int unset_function, unset_variable, unset_array, opt, any_failed;
+ char *name;
+
+ unset_function = unset_variable = unset_array = any_failed = 0;
+
+ reset_internal_getopt ();
+ while ((opt = internal_getopt (list, "fv")) != -1)
+ {
+ switch (opt)
+ {
+ case 'f':
+ unset_function = 1;
+ break;
+ case 'v':
+ unset_variable = 1;
+ break;
+ default:
+ builtin_usage ();
+ return (EXECUTION_FAILURE);
+ }
+ }
+
+ list = loptend;
+
+ if (unset_function && unset_variable)
+ {
+ builtin_error ("cannot simultaneously unset a function and a variable");
+ return (EXECUTION_FAILURE);
+ }
+
+ while (list)
+ {
+ SHELL_VAR *var;
+ int tem;
+#if defined (ARRAY_VARS)
+ char *t;
+#endif
+
+ name = list->word->word;
+
+#if defined (ARRAY_VARS)
+ if (!unset_function && valid_array_reference (name))
+ {
+ t = strchr (name, '[');
+ *t++ = '\0';
+ unset_array++;
+ }
+#endif
+
+ var = unset_function ? find_function (name) : find_variable (name);
+
+ if (var && !unset_function && non_unsettable_p (var))
+ {
+ builtin_error ("%s: cannot unset", name);
+ NEXT_VARIABLE ();
+ }
+
+ /* Posix.2 says that unsetting readonly variables is an error. */
+ if (var && readonly_p (var))
+ {
+ builtin_error ("%s: cannot unset: readonly %s",
+ name, unset_function ? "function" : "variable");
+ NEXT_VARIABLE ();
+ }
+
+ /* Unless the -f option is supplied, the name refers to a variable. */
+#if defined (ARRAY_VARS)
+ if (var && unset_array)
+ {
+ if (array_p (var) == 0)
+ {
+ builtin_error ("%s: not an array variable", name);
+ NEXT_VARIABLE ();
+ }
+ else
+ tem = unbind_array_element (var, t);
+ }
+ else
+#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */
+ tem = makunbound (name, unset_function ? shell_functions : shell_variables);
+
+ /* This is what Posix.2 draft 11+ says. ``If neither -f nor -v
+ is specified, the name refers to a variable; if a variable by
+ that name does not exist, a function by that name, if any,
+ shall be unset.'' */
+ if ((tem == -1) && !unset_function && !unset_variable)
+ tem = makunbound (name, shell_functions);
+
+ if (tem == -1)
+ any_failed++;
+ else if (!unset_function)
+ stupidly_hack_special_variables (name);
+
+ list = list->next;
+ }
+
+ if (any_failed)
+ return (EXECUTION_FAILURE);
+ else
+ return (EXECUTION_SUCCESS);
+}
--- /dev/null
+/* unwind_prot.h - Macros and functions for hacking unwind protection. */
+
+/* Copyright (C) 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ This file is part of GNU Bash, the Bourne Again SHell.
+
+ Bash is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
+ the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
+ Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later
+ version.
+
+ Bash is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
+ WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
+ FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
+ for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
+ with Bash; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software
+ Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
+
+#if !defined (_UNWIND_PROT_H)
+#define _UNWIND_PROT_H
+
+/* Run a function without interrupts. */
+extern void begin_unwind_frame ();
+extern void discard_unwind_frame ();
+extern void run_unwind_frame ();
+extern void add_unwind_protect ();
+extern void remove_unwind_protect ();
+extern void run_unwind_protects ();
+extern void unwind_protect_var ();
+
+/* Define for people who like their code to look a certain way. */
+#define end_unwind_frame()
+
+/* How to protect an integer. */
+#define unwind_protect_int(X) unwind_protect_var (&(X), (char *)(X), sizeof (int))
+
+/* How to protect a pointer to a string. */
+#define unwind_protect_string(X) \
+ unwind_protect_var ((int *)&(X), (X), sizeof (char *))
+
+/* How to protect any old pointer. */
+#define unwind_protect_pointer(X) unwind_protect_string (X)
+
+/* How to protect the contents of a jmp_buf. */
+#define unwind_protect_jmp_buf(X) \
+ unwind_protect_var ((int *)(X), (char *)(X), sizeof (procenv_t))
+
+#endif /* _UNWIND_PROT_H */
--- /dev/null
+# This file is a shell script that caches the results of configure
+# tests for CYGWIN32 so they don't need to be done when cross-compiling.
+
+# AC_FUNC_GETPGRP should also define GETPGRP_VOID
+ac_cv_func_getpgrp_void=${ac_cv_func_getpgrp_void='yes'}
+# AC_FUNC_SETVBUF_REVERSED should not define anything else
+ac_cv_func_setvbuf_reversed=${ac_cv_func_setvbuf_reversed='no'}
+# on CYGWIN32, system calls do not restart
+ac_cv_sys_restartable_syscalls=${ac_cv_sys_restartable_syscalls='no'}
+bash_cv_sys_restartable_syscalls=${bash_cv_sys_restartable_syscalls='no'}
+
+# these may be necessary, but they are currently commented out
+#ac_cv_c_bigendian=${ac_cv_c_bigendian='no'}
+ac_cv_sizeof_char_p=${ac_cv_sizeof_char_p='4'}
+ac_cv_sizeof_int=${ac_cv_sizeof_int='4'}
+ac_cv_sizeof_long=${ac_cv_sizeof_long='4'}
+ac_cv_sizeof_double=${ac_cv_sizeof_double='8'}
+
+bash_cv_dup2_broken=${bash_cv_dup2_broken='no'}
+bash_cv_pgrp_pipe=${bash_cv_pgrp_pipe='no'}
+bash_cv_type_rlimit=${bash_cv_type_rlimit='long'}
+bash_cv_decl_under_sys_siglist=${bash_cv_decl_under_sys_siglist='no'}
+bash_cv_under_sys_siglist=${bash_cv_under_sys_siglist='no'}
+bash_cv_sys_siglist=${bash_cv_sys_siglist='no'}
+bash_cv_opendir_not_robust=${bash_cv_opendir_not_robust='no'}
+bash_cv_getenv_redef=${bash_cv_getenv_redef='yes'}
+bash_cv_printf_declared=${bash_cv_printf_declared='yes'}
+bash_cv_ulimit_maxfds=${bash_cv_ulimit_maxfds='no'}
+bash_cv_getcwd_calls_popen=${bash_cv_getcwd_calls_popen='no'}
+bash_cv_must_reinstall_sighandlers=${bash_cv_must_reinstall_sighandlers='no'}
+bash_cv_job_control_missing=${bash_cv_job_control_missing='present'}
+bash_cv_sys_named_pipes=${bash_cv_sys_named_pipes='missing'}
+bash_cv_func_sigsetjmp=${bash_cv_func_sigsetjmp='missing'}
+bash_cv_mail_dir=${bash_cv_mail_dir='unknown'}
+bash_cv_func_strcoll_broken=${bash_cv_func_strcoll_broken='no'}
+
+bash_cv_type_int32_t=${bash_cv_type_int32_t='int'}
+bash_cv_type_u_int32_t=${bash_cv_type_u_int32_t='int'}
+
+ac_cv_type_bits64_t=${ac_cv_type_bits64_t='no'}
+
+# end of cross-build/cygwin32.cache
--- /dev/null
+This is the Bash FAQ, version 3.24, for Bash version 2.05b.
+
+This document contains a set of frequently-asked questions concerning
+Bash, the GNU Bourne-Again Shell. Bash is a freely-available command
+interpreter with advanced features for both interactive use and shell
+programming.
+
+Another good source of basic information about shells is the collection
+of FAQ articles periodically posted to comp.unix.shell.
+
+Questions and comments concerning this document should be sent to
+chet@po.cwru.edu.
+
+This document is available for anonymous FTP with the URL
+
+ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/FAQ
+
+The Bash home page is http://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/~chet/bash/bashtop.html
+
+----------
+Contents:
+
+Section A: The Basics
+
+A1) What is it?
+A2) What's the latest version?
+A3) Where can I get it?
+A4) On what machines will bash run?
+A5) Will bash run on operating systems other than Unix?
+A6) How can I build bash with gcc?
+A7) How can I make bash my login shell?
+A8) I just changed my login shell to bash, and now I can't FTP into my
+ machine. Why not?
+A9) What's the `POSIX 1003.2 standard'?
+A10) What is the bash `posix mode'?
+
+Section B: The latest version
+
+B1) What's new in version 2.05b?
+B2) Are there any user-visible incompatibilities between bash-2.05b and
+ bash-1.14.7?
+
+Section C: Differences from other Unix shells
+
+C1) How does bash differ from sh, the Bourne shell?
+C2) How does bash differ from the Korn shell, version ksh88?
+C3) Which new features in ksh-93 are not in bash, and which are?
+
+Section D: Why does bash do some things differently than other Unix shells?
+
+D1) Why does bash run a different version of `command' than
+ `which command' says it will?
+D2) Why doesn't bash treat brace expansions exactly like csh?
+D3) Why doesn't bash have csh variable modifiers?
+D4) How can I make my csh aliases work when I convert to bash?
+D5) How can I pipe standard output and standard error from one command to
+ another, like csh does with `|&'?
+D6) Now that I've converted from ksh to bash, are there equivalents to
+ ksh features like autoloaded functions and the `whence' command?
+
+Section E: Why does bash do certain things the way it does?
+
+E1) Why is the bash builtin `test' slightly different from /bin/test?
+E2) Why does bash sometimes say `Broken pipe'?
+E3) When I have terminal escape sequences in my prompt, why does bash
+ wrap lines at the wrong column?
+E4) If I pipe the output of a command into `read variable', why doesn't
+ the output show up in $variable when the read command finishes?
+E5) I have a bunch of shell scripts that use backslash-escaped characters
+ in arguments to `echo'. Bash doesn't interpret these characters. Why
+ not, and how can I make it understand them?
+E6) Why doesn't a while or for loop get suspended when I type ^Z?
+E7) What about empty for loops in Makefiles?
+E8) Why does the arithmetic evaluation code complain about `08'?
+E9) Why does the pattern matching expression [A-Z]* match files beginning
+ with every letter except `z'?
+E10) Why does `cd //' leave $PWD as `//'?
+E11) If I resize my xterm while another program is running, why doesn't bash
+ notice the change?
+
+Section F: Things to watch out for on certain Unix versions
+
+F1) Why can't I use command line editing in my `cmdtool'?
+F2) I built bash on Solaris 2. Why do globbing expansions and filename
+ completion chop off the first few characters of each filename?
+F3) Why does bash dump core after I interrupt username completion or
+ `~user' tilde expansion on a machine running NIS?
+F4) I'm running SVR4.2. Why is the line erased every time I type `@'?
+F5) Why does bash report syntax errors when my C News scripts use a
+ redirection before a subshell command?
+F6) Why can't I use vi-mode editing on Red Hat Linux 6.1?
+F7) Why do bash-2.05a and bash-2.05b fail to compile `printf.def' on
+ HP/UX 11.x?
+
+Section G: How can I get bash to do certain common things?
+
+G1) How can I get bash to read and display eight-bit characters?
+G2) How do I write a function `x' to replace builtin command `x', but
+ still invoke the command from within the function?
+G3) How can I find the value of a shell variable whose name is the value
+ of another shell variable?
+G4) How can I make the bash `time' reserved word print timing output that
+ looks like the output from my system's /usr/bin/time?
+G5) How do I get the current directory into my prompt?
+G6) How can I rename "*.foo" to "*.bar"?
+G7) How can I translate a filename from uppercase to lowercase?
+G8) How can I write a filename expansion (globbing) pattern that will match
+ all files in the current directory except "." and ".."?
+
+Section H: Where do I go from here?
+
+H1) How do I report bugs in bash, and where should I look for fixes and
+ advice?
+H2) What kind of bash documentation is there?
+H3) What's coming in future versions?
+H4) What's on the bash `wish list'?
+H5) When will the next release appear?
+
+----------
+Section A: The Basics
+
+A1) What is it?
+
+Bash is a Unix command interpreter (shell). It is an implementation of
+the Posix 1003.2 shell standard, and resembles the Korn and System V
+shells.
+
+Bash contains a number of enhancements over those shells, both
+for interactive use and shell programming. Features geared
+toward interactive use include command line editing, command
+history, job control, aliases, and prompt expansion. Programming
+features include additional variable expansions, shell
+arithmetic, and a number of variables and options to control
+shell behavior.
+
+Bash was originally written by Brian Fox of the Free Software
+Foundation. The current developer and maintainer is Chet Ramey
+of Case Western Reserve University.
+
+A2) What's the latest version?
+
+The latest version is 2.05b, first made available on Wednesday, 17
+July, 2002.
+
+A3) Where can I get it?
+
+Bash is the GNU project's shell, and so is available from the
+master GNU archive site, ftp.gnu.org, and its mirrors. The
+latest version is also available for FTP from ftp.cwru.edu.
+The following URLs tell how to get version 2.05b:
+
+ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/bash-2.05b.tar.gz
+ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/bash-2.05b.tar.gz
+
+Formatted versions of the documentation are available with the URLs:
+
+ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/bash-doc-2.05b.tar.gz
+ftp://ftp.cwru.edu/pub/bash/bash-doc-2.05b.tar.gz
+
+A4) On what machines will bash run?
+
+Bash has been ported to nearly every version of UNIX. All you
+should have to do to build it on a machine for which a port
+exists is to type `configure' and then `make'. The build process
+will attempt to discover the version of UNIX you have and tailor
+itself accordingly, using a script created by GNU autoconf.
+
+More information appears in the file `INSTALL' in the distribution.
+
+The Bash web page (http://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/~chet/bash/bashtop.html)
+explains how to obtain binary versions of bash for most of the major
+commercial Unix systems.
+
+A5) Will bash run on operating systems other than Unix?
+
+Configuration specifics for Unix-like systems such as QNX and
+LynxOS are included in the distribution. Bash-2.05 and later
+versions should compile and run on Minix 2.0 (patches were
+contributed), but I don't believe anyone has built bash-2.x on
+earlier Minix versions yet.
+
+Bash has been ported to versions of Windows implementing the Win32
+programming interface. This includes Windows 95 and Windows NT.
+The port was done by Cygnus Solutions as part of their CYGWIN
+project. For more information about the project, look at the URLs
+
+http://www.cygwin.com/
+http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin
+
+Cygnus originally ported bash-1.14.7, and that port was part of their
+early GNU-Win32 (the original name) releases. Cygnus has also done a
+port of bash-2.05 to the CYGWIN environment, and it is available as
+part of their current release.
+
+Bash-2.05b should require no local Cygnus changes to build and run under
+CYGWIN.
+
+The Cygnus port works only on Intel machines. There is a port of bash
+(I don't know which version) to the alpha/NT environment available from
+
+ftp://ftp.gnustep.org//pub/win32/bash-alpha-nt-1.01.tar.gz
+
+DJ Delorie has a port of bash-2.x which runs under MS-DOS, as part
+of the DJGPP project. For more information on the project, see
+
+http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/
+
+I have been told that the original DJGPP port was done by Daisuke Aoyama.
+
+Mark Elbrecht <snowball3@bigfoot.com> has sent me notice that bash-2.04
+is available for DJGPP V2. The files are available as:
+
+ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204b.zip binary
+ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204d.zip documentation
+ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/bsh204s.zip source
+
+Mark has begun to work with bash-2.05, but I don't know the status.
+
+Ports of bash-1.12 and bash-2.0 are available for OS/2 from
+
+ftp://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/util/shell/bash_112.zip
+ftp://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/util/shell/bash-2.0(253).zip
+
+I haven't looked at either, but the second appears to be a binary-only
+distribution. Beware.
+
+I have received word that Bash (I'm not sure which version, but I
+believe that it's at least bash-2.02.1) is the standard shell on
+BeOS.
+
+A6) How can I build bash with gcc?
+
+Bash configures to use gcc by default if it is available. Read the
+file INSTALL in the distribution for more information.
+
+A7) How can I make bash my login shell?
+
+Some machines let you use `chsh' to change your login shell. Other
+systems use `passwd -s' or `passwd -e'. If one of these works for
+you, that's all you need. Note that many systems require the full
+pathname to a shell to appear in /etc/shells before you can make it
+your login shell. For this, you may need the assistance of your
+friendly local system administrator.
+
+If you cannot do this, you can still use bash as your login shell, but
+you need to perform some tricks. The basic idea is to add a command
+to your login shell's startup file to replace your login shell with
+bash.
+
+For example, if your login shell is csh or tcsh, and you have installed
+bash in /usr/gnu/bin/bash, add the following line to ~/.login:
+
+ if ( -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ) exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login
+
+(the `--login' tells bash that it is a login shell).
+
+It's not a good idea to put this command into ~/.cshrc, because every
+csh you run without the `-f' option, even ones started to run csh scripts,
+reads that file. If you must put the command in ~/.cshrc, use something
+like
+
+ if ( $?prompt ) exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login
+
+to ensure that bash is exec'd only when the csh is interactive.
+
+If your login shell is sh or ksh, you have to do two things.
+
+First, create an empty file in your home directory named `.bash_profile'.
+The existence of this file will prevent the exec'd bash from trying to
+read ~/.profile, and re-execing itself over and over again. ~/.bash_profile
+is the first file bash tries to read initialization commands from when
+it is invoked as a login shell.
+
+Next, add a line similar to the above to ~/.profile:
+
+ [ -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && [ -x /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && \
+ exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login
+
+This will cause login shells to replace themselves with bash running as
+a login shell. Once you have this working, you can copy your initialization
+code from ~/.profile to ~/.bash_profile.
+
+I have received word that the recipe supplied above is insufficient for
+machines running CDE. CDE has a maze of twisty little startup files, all
+slightly different.
+
+If you cannot change your login shell in the password file to bash, you
+will have to (apparently) live with CDE using the shell in the password
+file to run its startup scripts. If you have changed your shell to bash,
+there is code in the CDE startup files (on Solaris, at least) that attempts
+to do the right thing. It is, however, often broken, and may require that
+you use the $BASH_ENV trick described below.
+
+`dtterm' claims to use $SHELL as the default program to start, so if you
+can change $SHELL in the CDE startup files, you should be able to use bash
+in your terminal windows.
+
+Setting DTSOURCEPROFILE in ~/.dtprofile will cause the `Xsession' program
+to read your login shell's startup files. You may be able to use bash for
+the rest of the CDE programs by setting SHELL to bash in ~/.dtprofile as
+well, but I have not tried this.
+
+You can use the above `exec' recipe to start bash when not logging in with
+CDE by testing the value of the DT variable:
+
+ if [ -n "$DT" ]; then
+ [ -f /usr/gnu/bin/bash ] && exec /usr/gnu/bin/bash --login
+ fi
+
+If CDE starts its shells non-interactively during login, the login shell
+startup files (~/.profile, ~/.bash_profile) will not be sourced at login.
+To get around this problem, append a line similar to the following to your
+~/.dtprofile:
+
+ BASH_ENV=${HOME}/.bash_profile ; export BASH_ENV
+
+and add the following line to the beginning of ~/.bash_profile:
+
+ unset BASH_ENV
+
+A8) I just changed my login shell to bash, and now I can't FTP into my
+ machine. Why not?
+
+You must add the full pathname to bash to the file /etc/shells. As
+noted in the answer to the previous question, many systems require
+this before you can make bash your login shell.
+
+Most versions of ftpd use this file to prohibit `special' users
+such as `uucp' and `news' from using FTP.
+
+A9) What's the `POSIX 1003.2 standard'?
+
+POSIX is a name originally coined by Richard Stallman for a
+family of open system standards based on UNIX. There are a
+number of aspects of UNIX under consideration for
+standardization, from the basic system services at the system
+call and C library level to applications and tools to system
+administration and management. Each area of standardization is
+assigned to a working group in the 1003 series.
+
+The POSIX Shell and Utilities standard has been developed by IEEE
+Working Group 1003.2 (POSIX.2). It concentrates on the command
+interpreter interface and utility programs commonly executed from
+the command line or by other programs. An initial version of the
+standard has been approved and published by the IEEE, and work is
+currently underway to update it.
+
+Bash is concerned with the aspects of the shell's behavior
+defined by POSIX.2. The shell command language has of course
+been standardized, including the basic flow control and program
+execution constructs, I/O redirection and pipelining, argument
+handling, variable expansion, and quoting.
+
+The `special' builtins, which must be implemented as part of the
+shell to provide the desired functionality, are specified as
+being part of the shell; examples of these are `eval' and
+`export'. Other utilities appear in the sections of POSIX.2 not
+devoted to the shell which are commonly (and in some cases must
+be) implemented as builtin commands, such as `read' and `test'.
+POSIX.2 also specifies aspects of the shell's interactive
+behavior as part of the UPE, including job control and command
+line editing. Only vi-style line editing commands have been
+standardized; emacs editing commands were left out due to
+objections.
+
+The Open Group has made an older version of its Single Unix
+Specification (version 2), which is very similar to POSIX.2,
+available on the web at
+
+http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007908799/
+
+The Single Unix Specification, version 3, is available on the web at
+
+http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/
+
+A10) What is the bash `posix mode'?
+
+Although bash is an implementation of the POSIX.2 shell
+specification, there are areas where the bash default behavior
+differs from that spec. The bash `posix mode' changes the bash
+behavior in these areas so that it obeys the spec more closely.
+
+Posix mode is entered by starting bash with the --posix or
+'-o posix' option or executing `set -o posix' after bash is running.
+
+The specific aspects of bash which change when posix mode is
+active are listed in the file POSIX in the bash distribution.
+They are also listed in a section in the Bash Reference Manual
+(from which that file is generated).
+
+Section B: The latest version
+
+B1) What's new in version 2.05b?
+
+The raison d'etre for bash-2.05b is to make a second intermediate
+release containing the first of the new features to be available
+in bash-3.0 and get feedback on those features before proceeding.
+The major new feature is multibyte character support in both Bash
+and Readline.
+
+Bash-2.05b contains the following new features (see the manual page for
+complete descriptions and the CHANGES and NEWS files in the bash-2.05b
+distribution):
+
+o support for multibyte characters has been added to both bash and readline
+
+o the DEBUG trap is now run *before* simple commands, ((...)) commands,
+ [[...]] conditional commands, and for ((...)) loops
+
+o the shell now performs arithmetic in the largest integer size the machine
+ supports (intmax_t)
+
+o there is a new \D{...} prompt expansion; passes the `...' to strftime(3)
+ and inserts the result into the expanded prompt
+
+o there is a new `here-string' redirection operator: <<< word
+
+o when displaying variables, function attributes and definitions are shown
+ separately, allowing them to be re-used as input (attempting to re-use
+ the old output would result in syntax errors).
+
+o `read' has a new `-u fd' option to read from a specified file descriptor
+
+o the bash debugger in examples/bashdb has been modified to work with the
+ new DEBUG trap semantics, the command set has been made more gdb-like,
+ and the changes to $LINENO make debugging functions work better
+
+o the expansion of $LINENO inside a shell function is only relative to the
+ function start if the shell is interactive -- if the shell is running a
+ script, $LINENO expands to the line number in the script. This is as
+ POSIX-2001 requires
+
+
+A short feature history dating from Bash-2.0:
+
+Bash-2.05a introduced the following new features:
+
+o The `printf' builtin has undergone major work
+
+o There is a new read-only `shopt' option: login_shell, which is set by
+ login shells and unset otherwise
+
+o New `\A' prompt string escape sequence; expanding to time in 24-hour
+ HH:MM format
+
+o New `-A group/-g' option to complete and compgen; goes group name
+ completion
+
+o New [+-]O invocation option to set and unset `shopt' options at startup
+
+o ksh-like `ERR' trap
+
+o `for' loops now allow empty word lists after the `in' reserved word
+
+o new `hard' and `soft' arguments for the `ulimit' builtin
+
+o Readline can be configured to place the user at the same point on the line
+ when retrieving commands from the history list
+
+o Readline can be configured to skip `hidden' files (filenames with a leading
+ `.' on Unix) when performing completion
+
+Bash-2.05 introduced the following new features:
+
+o This version has once again reverted to using locales and strcoll(3) when
+ processing pattern matching bracket expressions, as POSIX requires.
+o Added a new `--init-file' invocation argument as a synonym for `--rcfile',
+ per the new GNU coding standards.
+o The /dev/tcp and /dev/udp redirections now accept service names as well as
+ port numbers.
+o `complete' and `compgen' now take a `-o value' option, which controls some
+ of the aspects of that compspec. Valid values are:
+
+ default - perform bash default completion if programmable
+ completion produces no matches
+ dirnames - perform directory name completion if programmable
+ completion produces no matches
+ filenames - tell readline that the compspec produces filenames,
+ so it can do things like append slashes to
+ directory names and suppress trailing spaces
+o A new loadable builtin, realpath, which canonicalizes and expands symlinks
+ in pathname arguments.
+o When `set' is called without options, it prints function defintions in a
+ way that allows them to be reused as input. This affects `declare' and
+ `declare -p' as well. This only happens when the shell is not in POSIX
+ mode, since POSIX.2 forbids this behavior.
+
+Bash-2.04 introduced the following new features:
+
+o Programmable word completion with the new `complete' and `compgen' builtins;
+ examples are provided in examples/complete/complete-examples
+o `history' has a new `-d' option to delete a history entry
+o `bind' has a new `-x' option to bind key sequences to shell commands
+o The prompt expansion code has new `\j' and `\l' escape sequences
+o The `no_empty_cmd_completion' shell option, if enabled, inhibits
+ command completion when TAB is typed on an empty line
+o `help' has a new `-s' option to print a usage synopsis
+o New arithmetic operators: var++, var--, ++var, --var, expr1,expr2 (comma)
+o New ksh93-style arithmetic for command:
+ for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done
+o `read' has new options: `-t', `-n', `-d', `-s'
+o The redirection code handles several filenames specially: /dev/fd/N,
+ /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr
+o The redirection code now recognizes /dev/tcp/HOST/PORT and
+ /dev/udp/HOST/PORT and tries to open a TCP or UDP socket, respectively,
+ to the specified port on the specified host
+o The ${!prefix*} expansion has been implemented
+o A new FUNCNAME variable, which expands to the name of a currently-executing
+ function
+o The GROUPS variable is no longer readonly
+o A new shopt `xpg_echo' variable, to control the behavior of echo with
+ respect to backslash-escape sequences at runtime
+o The NON_INTERACTIVE_LOGIN_SHELLS #define has returned
+
+The version of Readline released with Bash-2.04, Readline-4.1, had several
+new features as well:
+
+o Parentheses matching is always compiled into readline, and controllable
+ with the new `blink-matching-paren' variable
+o The history-search-forward and history-search-backward functions now leave
+ point at the end of the line when the search string is empty, like
+ reverse-search-history, and forward-search-history
+o A new function for applications: rl_on_new_line_with_prompt()
+o New variables for applications: rl_already_prompted, and rl_gnu_readline_p
+
+
+Bash-2.03 had very few new features, in keeping with the convention
+that odd-numbered releases provide mainly bug fixes. A number of new
+features were added to Readline, mostly at the request of the Cygnus
+folks.
+
+A new shopt option, `restricted_shell', so that startup files can test
+ whether or not the shell was started in restricted mode
+Filename generation is now performed on the words between ( and ) in
+ compound array assignments (this is really a bug fix)
+OLDPWD is now auto-exported, as POSIX.2 requires
+ENV and BASH_ENV are read-only variables in a restricted shell
+Bash may now be linked against an already-installed Readline library,
+ as long as the Readline library is version 4 or newer
+All shells begun with the `--login' option will source the login shell
+ startup files, even if the shell is not interactive
+
+There were lots of changes to the version of the Readline library released
+along with Bash-2.03. For a complete list of the changes, read the file
+CHANGES in the Bash-2.03 distribution.
+
+Bash-2.02 contained the following new features:
+
+a new version of malloc (based on the old GNU malloc code in previous
+ bash versions) that is more page-oriented, more conservative
+ with memory usage, does not `orphan' large blocks when they
+ are freed, is usable on 64-bit machines, and has allocation
+ checking turned on unconditionally
+POSIX.2-style globbing character classes ([:alpha:], [:alnum:], etc.)
+POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes
+POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols
+the ksh [[...]] extended conditional command
+the ksh egrep-style extended pattern matching operators
+a new `printf' builtin
+the ksh-like $(<filename) command substitution, which is equivalent to
+ $(cat filename)
+new tilde prefixes that expand to directories from the directory stack
+new `**' arithmetic operator to do exponentiation
+case-insensitive globbing (filename expansion)
+menu completion a la tcsh
+`magic-space' history expansion function like tcsh
+the readline inputrc `language' has a new file inclusion directive ($include)
+
+Bash-2.01 contained only a few new features:
+
+new `GROUPS' builtin array variable containing the user's group list
+new bindable readline commands: history-and-alias-expand-line and
+ alias-expand-line
+
+Bash-2.0 contained extensive changes and new features from bash-1.14.7.
+Here's a short list:
+
+new `time' reserved word to time pipelines, shell builtins, and
+ shell functions
+one-dimensional arrays with a new compound assignment statement,
+ appropriate expansion constructs and modifications to some
+ of the builtins (read, declare, etc.) to use them
+new quoting syntaxes for ANSI-C string expansion and locale-specific
+ string translation
+new expansions to do substring extraction, pattern replacement, and
+ indirect variable expansion
+new builtins: `disown' and `shopt'
+new variables: HISTIGNORE, SHELLOPTS, PIPESTATUS, DIRSTACK, GLOBIGNORE,
+ MACHTYPE, BASH_VERSINFO
+special handling of many unused or redundant variables removed
+ (e.g., $notify, $glob_dot_filenames, $no_exit_on_failed_exec)
+dynamic loading of new builtin commands; many loadable examples provided
+new prompt expansions: \a, \e, \n, \H, \T, \@, \v, \V
+history and aliases available in shell scripts
+new readline variables: enable-keypad, mark-directories, input-meta,
+ visible-stats, disable-completion, comment-begin
+new readline commands to manipulate the mark and operate on the region
+new readline emacs mode commands and bindings for ksh-88 compatibility
+updated and extended builtins
+new DEBUG trap
+expanded (and now documented) restricted shell mode
+
+implementation stuff:
+autoconf-based configuration
+nearly all of the bugs reported since version 1.14 have been fixed
+most builtins converted to use builtin `getopt' for consistency
+most builtins use -p option to display output in a reusable form
+ (for consistency)
+grammar tighter and smaller (66 reduce-reduce conflicts gone)
+lots of code now smaller and faster
+test suite greatly expanded
+
+B2) Are there any user-visible incompatibilities between bash-2.05b and
+ bash-1.14.7?
+
+There are a few incompatibilities between version 1.14.7 and version 2.05b.
+They are detailed in the file COMPAT in the bash distribution. That file
+is not meant to be all-encompassing; send mail to bash-maintainers@gnu.org
+if if you find something that's not mentioned there.
+
+Section C: Differences from other Unix shells
+
+C1) How does bash differ from sh, the Bourne shell?
+
+This is a non-comprehensive list of features that differentiate bash
+from the SVR4.2 shell. The bash manual page explains these more
+completely.
+
+Things bash has that sh does not:
+ long invocation options
+ [+-]O invocation option
+ -l invocation option
+ `!' reserved word to invert pipeline return value
+ `time' reserved word to time pipelines and shell builtins
+ the `function' reserved word
+ the `select' compound command and reserved word
+ arithmetic for command: for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done
+ new $'...' and $"..." quoting
+ the $(...) form of command substitution
+ the $(<filename) form of command substitution, equivalent to
+ $(cat filename)
+ the ${#param} parameter value length operator
+ the ${!param} indirect parameter expansion operator
+ the ${!param*} prefix expansion operator
+ the ${param:offset[:length]} parameter substring operator
+ the ${param/pat[/string]} parameter pattern substitution operator
+ expansions to perform substring removal (${p%[%]w}, ${p#[#]w})
+ expansion of positional parameters beyond $9 with ${num}
+ variables: BASH, BASH_VERSION, BASH_VERSINFO, UID, EUID, REPLY,
+ TIMEFORMAT, PPID, PWD, OLDPWD, SHLVL, RANDOM, SECONDS,
+ LINENO, HISTCMD, HOSTTYPE, OSTYPE, MACHTYPE, HOSTNAME,
+ ENV, PS3, PS4, DIRSTACK, PIPESTATUS, HISTSIZE, HISTFILE,
+ HISTFILESIZE, HISTCONTROL, HISTIGNORE, GLOBIGNORE, GROUPS,
+ PROMPT_COMMAND, FCEDIT, FIGNORE, IGNOREEOF, INPUTRC,
+ SHELLOPTS, OPTERR, HOSTFILE, TMOUT, FUNCNAME, histchars,
+ auto_resume
+ DEBUG trap
+ ERR trap
+ variable arrays with new compound assignment syntax
+ redirections: <>, &>, >|, <<<, [n]<&word-, [n]>&word-
+ prompt string special char translation and variable expansion
+ auto-export of variables in initial environment
+ command search finds functions before builtins
+ bash return builtin will exit a file sourced with `.'
+ builtins: cd -/-L/-P, exec -l/-c/-a, echo -e/-E, hash -d/-l/-p/-t.
+ export -n/-f/-p/name=value, pwd -L/-P,
+ read -e/-p/-a/-t/-n/-d/-s/-u,
+ readonly -a/-f/name=value, trap -l, set +o,
+ set -b/-m/-o option/-h/-p/-B/-C/-H/-P,
+ unset -f/-v, ulimit -m/-p/-u,
+ type -a/-p/-t/-f/-P, suspend -f, kill -n,
+ test -o optname/s1 == s2/s1 < s2/s1 > s2/-nt/-ot/-ef/-O/-G/-S
+ bash reads ~/.bashrc for interactive shells, $ENV for non-interactive
+ bash restricted shell mode is more extensive
+ bash allows functions and variables with the same name
+ brace expansion
+ tilde expansion
+ arithmetic expansion with $((...)) and `let' builtin
+ the `[[...]]' extended conditional command
+ process substitution
+ aliases and alias/unalias builtins
+ local variables in functions and `local' builtin
+ readline and command-line editing with programmable completion
+ command history and history/fc builtins
+ csh-like history expansion
+ other new bash builtins: bind, command, compgen, complete, builtin,
+ declare/typeset, dirs, enable, fc, help,
+ history, logout, popd, pushd, disown, shopt,
+ printf
+ exported functions
+ filename generation when using output redirection (command >a*)
+ POSIX.2-style globbing character classes
+ POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes
+ POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols
+ egrep-like extended pattern matching operators
+ case-insensitive pattern matching and globbing
+ variable assignments preceding commands affect only that command,
+ even for builtins and functions
+ posix mode
+ redirection to /dev/fd/N, /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr,
+ /dev/tcp/host/port, /dev/udp/host/port
+
+Things sh has that bash does not:
+ uses variable SHACCT to do shell accounting
+ includes `stop' builtin (bash can use alias stop='kill -s STOP')
+ `newgrp' builtin
+ turns on job control if called as `jsh'
+ $TIMEOUT (like bash $TMOUT)
+ `^' is a synonym for `|'
+ new SVR4.2 sh builtins: mldmode, priv
+
+Implementation differences:
+ redirection to/from compound commands causes sh to create a subshell
+ bash does not allow unbalanced quotes; sh silently inserts them at EOF
+ bash does not mess with signal 11
+ sh sets (euid, egid) to (uid, gid) if -p not supplied and uid < 100
+ bash splits only the results of expansions on IFS, using POSIX.2
+ field splitting rules; sh splits all words on IFS
+ sh does not allow MAILCHECK to be unset (?)
+ sh does not allow traps on SIGALRM or SIGCHLD
+ bash allows multiple option arguments when invoked (e.g. -x -v);
+ sh allows only a single option argument (`sh -x -v' attempts
+ to open a file named `-v', and, on SunOS 4.1.4, dumps core.
+ On Solaris 2.4 and earlier versions, sh goes into an infinite
+ loop.)
+ sh exits a script if any builtin fails; bash exits only if one of
+ the POSIX.2 `special' builtins fails
+
+C2) How does bash differ from the Korn shell, version ksh88?
+
+Things bash has or uses that ksh88 does not:
+ long invocation options
+ [-+]O invocation option
+ -l invocation option
+ `!' reserved word
+ arithmetic for command: for ((expr1 ; expr2; expr3 )); do list; done
+ arithmetic in largest machine-supported size (intmax_t)
+ posix mode and posix conformance
+ command hashing
+ tilde expansion for assignment statements that look like $PATH
+ process substitution with named pipes if /dev/fd is not available
+ the ${!param} indirect parameter expansion operator
+ the ${!param*} prefix expansion operator
+ the ${param:offset[:length]} parameter substring operator
+ the ${param/pat[/string]} parameter pattern substitution operator
+ variables: BASH, BASH_VERSION, BASH_VERSINFO, UID, EUID, SHLVL,
+ TIMEFORMAT, HISTCMD, HOSTTYPE, OSTYPE, MACHTYPE,
+ HISTFILESIZE, HISTIGNORE, HISTCONTROL, PROMPT_COMMAND,
+ IGNOREEOF, FIGNORE, INPUTRC, HOSTFILE, DIRSTACK,
+ PIPESTATUS, HOSTNAME, OPTERR, SHELLOPTS, GLOBIGNORE,
+ GROUPS, FUNCNAME, histchars, auto_resume
+ prompt expansion with backslash escapes and command substitution
+ redirection: &> (stdout and stderr), <<<, [n]<&word-, [n]>&word-
+ more extensive and extensible editing and programmable completion
+ builtins: bind, builtin, command, declare, dirs, echo -e/-E, enable,
+ exec -l/-c/-a, fc -s, export -n/-f/-p, hash, help, history,
+ jobs -x/-r/-s, kill -s/-n/-l, local, logout, popd, pushd,
+ read -e/-p/-a/-t/-n/-d/-s, readonly -a/-n/-f/-p,
+ set -o braceexpand/-o histexpand/-o interactive-comments/
+ -o notify/-o physical/-o posix/-o hashall/-o onecmd/
+ -h/-B/-C/-b/-H/-P, set +o, suspend, trap -l, type,
+ typeset -a/-F/-p, ulimit -u, umask -S, alias -p, shopt,
+ disown, printf, complete, compgen
+ `!' csh-style history expansion
+ POSIX.2-style globbing character classes
+ POSIX.2-style globbing equivalence classes
+ POSIX.2-style globbing collating symbols
+ egrep-like extended pattern matching operators
+ case-insensitive pattern matching and globbing
+ `**' arithmetic operator to do exponentiation
+ redirection to /dev/fd/N, /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout, /dev/stderr
+ arrays of unlimited size
+ TMOUT is default timeout for `read' and `select'
+
+Things ksh88 has or uses that bash does not:
+ tracked aliases (alias -t)
+ variables: ERRNO, FPATH, EDITOR, VISUAL
+ co-processes (|&, >&p, <&p)
+ weirdly-scoped functions
+ typeset +f to list all function names without definitions
+ text of command history kept in a file, not memory
+ builtins: alias -x, cd old new, fc -e -, newgrp, print,
+ read -p/-s/var?prompt, set -A/-o gmacs/
+ -o bgnice/-o markdirs/-o nolog/-o trackall/-o viraw/-s,
+ typeset -H/-L/-R/-Z/-A/-ft/-fu/-fx/-l/-u/-t, whence
+ using environment to pass attributes of exported variables
+ arithmetic evaluation done on arguments to some builtins
+ reads .profile from $PWD when invoked as login shell
+
+Implementation differences:
+ ksh runs last command of a pipeline in parent shell context
+ bash has brace expansion by default (ksh88 compile-time option)
+ bash has fixed startup file for all interactive shells; ksh reads $ENV
+ bash has exported functions
+ bash command search finds functions before builtins
+ bash waits for all commands in pipeline to exit before returning status
+ emacs-mode editing has some slightly different key bindings
+
+C3) Which new features in ksh-93 are not in bash, and which are?
+
+New things in ksh-93 not in bash-2.05b:
+ associative arrays
+ floating point arithmetic and variables
+ math library functions
+ ${!name[sub]} name of subscript for associative array
+ `.' is allowed in variable names to create a hierarchical namespace
+ more extensive compound assignment syntax
+ discipline functions
+ `sleep' and `getconf' builtins (bash has loadable versions)
+ typeset -n and `nameref' variables
+ KEYBD trap
+ variables: .sh.edchar, .sh.edmode, .sh.edcol, .sh.edtext, .sh.version,
+ .sh.name, .sh.subscript, .sh.value, .sh.match, HISTEDIT
+ backreferences in pattern matching (\N)
+ `&' operator in pattern lists for matching
+ print -f (bash uses printf)
+ `fc' has been renamed to `hist'
+ `.' can execute shell functions
+ exit statuses between 0 and 255
+ set -o pipefail
+ `+=' variable assignment operator
+ FPATH and PATH mixing
+ getopts -a
+ -I invocation option
+ DEBUG trap now executed before each simple command, instead of after
+ printf %H, %P, %T, %Z modifiers, output base for %d
+ lexical scoping for local variables in `ksh' functions
+ no scoping for local variables in `POSIX' functions
+
+New things in ksh-93 present in bash-2.05b:
+ [n]<&word- and [n]>&word- redirections (combination dup and close)
+ for (( expr1; expr2; expr3 )) ; do list; done - arithmetic for command
+ ?:, ++, --, `expr1 , expr2' arithmetic operators
+ expansions: ${!param}, ${param:offset[:len]}, ${param/pat[/str]},
+ ${!param*}
+ compound array assignment
+ the `!' reserved word
+ loadable builtins -- but ksh uses `builtin' while bash uses `enable'
+ `command', `builtin', `disown' builtins
+ new $'...' and $"..." quoting
+ FIGNORE (but bash uses GLOBIGNORE), HISTCMD
+ set -o notify/-C
+ changes to kill builtin
+ read -A (bash uses read -a)
+ read -t/-d
+ trap -p
+ exec -c/-a
+ `.' restores the positional parameters when it completes
+ POSIX.2 `test'
+ umask -S
+ unalias -a
+ command and arithmetic substitution performed on PS1, PS4, and ENV
+ command name completion
+ ENV processed only for interactive shells
+
+Section D: Why does bash do some things differently than other Unix shells?
+
+D1) Why does bash run a different version of `command' than
+ `which command' says it will?
+
+On many systems, `which' is actually a csh script that assumes
+you're running csh. In tcsh, `which' and its cousin `where'
+are builtins. On other Unix systems, `which' is a perl script
+that uses the PATH environment variable.
+
+The csh script version reads the csh startup files from your
+home directory and uses those to determine which `command' will
+be invoked. Since bash doesn't use any of those startup files,
+there's a good chance that your bash environment differs from
+your csh environment. The bash `type' builtin does everything
+`which' does, and will report correct results for the running
+shell. If you're really wedded to the name `which', try adding
+the following function definition to your .bashrc:
+
+ which()
+ {
+ builtin type "$@"
+ }
+
+If you're moving from tcsh and would like to bring `where' along
+as well, use this function:
+
+ where()
+ {
+ builtin type -a "$@"
+ }
+
+D2) Why doesn't bash treat brace expansions exactly like csh?
+
+The only difference between bash and csh brace expansion is that
+bash requires a brace expression to contain at least one unquoted
+comma if it is to be expanded. Any brace-surrounded word not
+containing an unquoted comma is left unchanged by the brace
+expansion code. This affords the greatest degree of sh
+compatibility.
+
+Bash, ksh, zsh, and pd-ksh all implement brace expansion this way.
+
+D3) Why doesn't bash have csh variable modifiers?
+
+Posix has specified a more powerful, albeit somewhat more cryptic,
+mechanism cribbed from ksh, and bash implements it.
+
+${parameter%word}
+ Remove smallest suffix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce
+ a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the
+ smallest portion of the suffix matched by the pattern deleted.
+
+ x=file.c
+ echo ${x%.c}.o
+ -->file.o
+
+${parameter%%word}
+
+ Remove largest suffix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce
+ a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the
+ largest portion of the suffix matched by the pattern deleted.
+
+ x=posix/src/std
+ echo ${x%%/*}
+ -->posix
+
+${parameter#word}
+ Remove smallest prefix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce
+ a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the
+ smallest portion of the prefix matched by the pattern deleted.
+
+ x=$HOME/src/cmd
+ echo ${x#$HOME}
+ -->/src/cmd
+
+${parameter##word}
+ Remove largest prefix pattern. The WORD is expanded to produce
+ a pattern. It then expands to the value of PARAMETER, with the
+ largest portion of the prefix matched by the pattern deleted.
+
+ x=/one/two/three
+ echo ${x##*/}
+ -->three
+
+
+Given
+ a=/a/b/c/d
+ b=b.xxx
+
+ csh bash result
+ --- ---- ------
+ $a:h ${a%/*} /a/b/c
+ $a:t ${a##*/} d
+ $b:r ${b%.*} b
+ $b:e ${b##*.} xxx
+
+
+D4) How can I make my csh aliases work when I convert to bash?
+
+Bash uses a different syntax to support aliases than csh does.
+The details can be found in the documentation. We have provided
+a shell script which does most of the work of conversion for you;
+this script can be found in ./examples/misc/aliasconv.sh. Here is
+how you use it:
+
+Start csh in the normal way for you. (e.g., `csh')
+
+Pipe the output of `alias' through `aliasconv.sh', saving the
+results into `bash_aliases':
+
+ alias | bash aliasconv.sh >bash_aliases
+
+Edit `bash_aliases', carefully reading through any created
+functions. You will need to change the names of some csh specific
+variables to the bash equivalents. The script converts $cwd to
+$PWD, $term to $TERM, $home to $HOME, $user to $USER, and $prompt
+to $PS1. You may also have to add quotes to avoid unwanted
+expansion.
+
+For example, the csh alias:
+
+ alias cd 'cd \!*; echo $cwd'
+
+is converted to the bash function:
+
+ cd () { command cd "$@"; echo $PWD ; }
+
+The only thing that needs to be done is to quote $PWD:
+
+ cd () { command cd "$@"; echo "$PWD" ; }
+
+Merge the edited file into your ~/.bashrc.
+
+There is an additional, more ambitious, script in
+examples/misc/cshtobash that attempts to convert your entire csh
+environment to its bash equivalent. This script can be run as
+simply `cshtobash' to convert your normal interactive
+environment, or as `cshtobash ~/.login' to convert your login
+environment.
+
+D5) How can I pipe standard output and standard error from one command to
+ another, like csh does with `|&'?
+
+Use
+ command 2>&1 | command2
+
+The key is to remember that piping is performed before redirection, so
+file descriptor 1 points to the pipe when it is duplicated onto file
+descriptor 2.
+
+D6) Now that I've converted from ksh to bash, are there equivalents to
+ ksh features like autoloaded functions and the `whence' command?
+
+There are features in ksh-88 and ksh-93 that do not have direct bash
+equivalents. Most, however, can be emulated with very little trouble.
+
+ksh-88 feature Bash equivalent
+-------------- ---------------
+compiled-in aliases set up aliases in .bashrc; some ksh aliases are
+ bash builtins (hash, history, type)
+coprocesses named pipe pairs (one for read, one for write)
+typeset +f declare -F
+cd, print, whence function substitutes in examples/functions/kshenv
+autoloaded functions examples/functions/autoload is the same as typeset -fu
+read var?prompt read -p prompt var
+
+ksh-93 feature Bash equivalent
+-------------- ---------------
+sleep, getconf Bash has loadable versions in examples/loadables
+${.sh.version} $BASH_VERSION
+print -f printf
+hist alias hist=fc
+$HISTEDIT $FCEDIT
+
+Section E: How can I get bash to do certain things, and why does bash do
+ things the way it does?
+
+E1) Why is the bash builtin `test' slightly different from /bin/test?
+
+The specific example used here is [ ! x -o x ], which is false.
+
+Bash's builtin `test' implements the Posix.2 spec, which can be
+summarized as follows (the wording is due to David Korn):
+
+Here is the set of rules for processing test arguments.
+
+ 0 Args: False
+ 1 Arg: True iff argument is not null.
+ 2 Args: If first arg is !, True iff second argument is null.
+ If first argument is unary, then true if unary test is true
+ Otherwise error.
+ 3 Args: If second argument is a binary operator, do binary test of $1 $3
+ If first argument is !, negate two argument test of $2 $3
+ If first argument is `(' and third argument is `)', do the
+ one-argument test of the second argument.
+ Otherwise error.
+ 4 Args: If first argument is !, negate three argument test of $2 $3 $4.
+ Otherwise unspecified
+ 5 or more Args: unspecified. (Historical shells would use their
+ current algorithm).
+
+The operators -a and -o are considered binary operators for the purpose
+of the 3 Arg case.
+
+As you can see, the test becomes (not (x or x)), which is false.
+
+E2) Why does bash sometimes say `Broken pipe'?
+
+If a sequence of commands appears in a pipeline, and one of the
+reading commands finishes before the writer has finished, the
+writer receives a SIGPIPE signal. Many other shells special-case
+SIGPIPE as an exit status in the pipeline and do not report it.
+For example, in:
+
+ ps -aux | head
+
+`head' can finish before `ps' writes all of its output, and ps
+will try to write on a pipe without a reader. In that case, bash
+will print `Broken pipe' to stderr when ps is killed by a
+SIGPIPE.
+
+You can build a version of bash that will not report SIGPIPE errors
+by uncommenting the definition of DONT_REPORT_SIGPIPE in the file
+config-top.h.
+
+E3) When I have terminal escape sequences in my prompt, why does bash
+ wrap lines at the wrong column?
+
+Readline, the line editing library that bash uses, does not know
+that the terminal escape sequences do not take up space on the
+screen. The redisplay code assumes, unless told otherwise, that
+each character in the prompt is a `printable' character that
+takes up one character position on the screen.
+
+You can use the bash prompt expansion facility (see the PROMPTING
+section in the manual page) to tell readline that sequences of
+characters in the prompt strings take up no screen space.
+
+Use the \[ escape to begin a sequence of non-printing characters,
+and the \] escape to signal the end of such a sequence.
+
+E4) If I pipe the output of a command into `read variable', why doesn't
+ the output show up in $variable when the read command finishes?
+
+This has to do with the parent-child relationship between Unix
+processes. It affects all commands run in pipelines, not just
+simple calls to `read'. For example, piping a command's output
+into a `while' loop that repeatedly calls `read' will result in
+the same behavior.
+
+Each element of a pipeline runs in a separate process, a child of
+the shell running the pipeline. A subprocess cannot affect its
+parent's environment. When the `read' command sets the variable
+to the input, that variable is set only in the subshell, not the
+parent shell. When the subshell exits, the value of the variable
+is lost.
+
+Many pipelines that end with `read variable' can be converted
+into command substitutions, which will capture the output of
+a specified command. The output can then be assigned to a
+variable:
+
+ grep ^gnu /usr/lib/news/active | wc -l | read ngroup
+
+can be converted into
+
+ ngroup=$(grep ^gnu /usr/lib/news/active | wc -l)
+
+This does not, unfortunately, work to split the text among
+multiple variables, as read does when given multiple variable
+arguments. If you need to do this, you can either use the
+command substitution above to read the output into a variable
+and chop up the variable using the bash pattern removal
+expansion operators or use some variant of the following
+approach.
+
+Say /usr/local/bin/ipaddr is the following shell script:
+
+#! /bin/sh
+host `hostname` | awk '/address/ {print $NF}'
+
+Instead of using
+
+ /usr/local/bin/ipaddr | read A B C D
+
+to break the local machine's IP address into separate octets, use
+
+ OIFS="$IFS"
+ IFS=.
+ set -- $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr)
+ IFS="$OIFS"
+ A="$1" B="$2" C="$3" D="$4"
+
+Beware, however, that this will change the shell's positional
+parameters. If you need them, you should save them before doing
+this.
+
+This is the general approach -- in most cases you will not need to
+set $IFS to a different value.
+
+Some other user-supplied alternatives include:
+
+read A B C D << HERE
+ $(IFS=.; echo $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr))
+HERE
+
+and, where process substitution is available,
+
+read A B C D < <(IFS=.; echo $(/usr/local/bin/ipaddr))
+
+E5) I have a bunch of shell scripts that use backslash-escaped characters
+ in arguments to `echo'. Bash doesn't interpret these characters. Why
+ not, and how can I make it understand them?
+
+This is the behavior of echo on most Unix System V machines.
+
+The bash builtin `echo' is modeled after the 9th Edition
+Research Unix version of `echo'. It does not interpret
+backslash-escaped characters in its argument strings by default;
+it requires the use of the -e option to enable the
+interpretation. The System V echo provides no way to disable the
+special characters; the bash echo has a -E option to disable
+them.
+
+There is a configuration option that will make bash behave like
+the System V echo and interpret things like `\t' by default. Run
+configure with the --enable-xpg-echo-default option to turn this
+on. Be aware that this will cause some of the tests run when you
+type `make tests' to fail.
+
+There is a shell option, `xpg_echo', settable with `shopt', that will
+change the behavior of echo at runtime. Enabling this option turns
+on expansion of backslash-escape sequences.
+
+E6) Why doesn't a while or for loop get suspended when I type ^Z?
+
+This is a consequence of how job control works on Unix. The only
+thing that can be suspended is the process group. This is a single
+command or pipeline of commands that the shell forks and executes.
+
+When you run a while or for loop, the only thing that the shell forks
+and executes are any commands in the while loop test and commands in
+the loop bodies. These, therefore, are the only things that can be
+suspended when you type ^Z.
+
+If you want to be able to stop the entire loop, you need to put it
+within parentheses, which will force the loop into a subshell that
+may be stopped (and subsequently restarted) as a single unit.
+
+E7) What about empty for loops in Makefiles?
+
+It's fairly common to see constructs like this in automatically-generated
+Makefiles:
+
+SUBDIRS = @SUBDIRS@
+
+ ...
+
+subdirs-clean:
+ for d in ${SUBDIRS}; do \
+ ( cd $$d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean ) \
+ done
+
+When SUBDIRS is empty, this results in a command like this being passed to
+bash:
+
+ for d in ; do
+ ( cd $d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean )
+ done
+
+In versions of bash before bash-2.05a, this was a syntax error. If the
+reserved word `in' was present, a word must follow it before the semicolon
+or newline. The language in the manual page referring to the list of words
+being empty referred to the list after it is expanded. These versions of
+bash required that there be at least one word following the `in' when the
+construct was parsed.
+
+The idiomatic Makefile solution is something like:
+
+SUBDIRS = @SUBDIRS@
+
+subdirs-clean:
+ subdirs=$SUBDIRS ; for d in $$subdirs; do \
+ ( cd $$d && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} clean ) \
+ done
+
+The latest drafts of the updated POSIX standard have changed this: the
+word list is no longer required. Bash versions 2.05a and later accept
+the new syntax.
+
+E8) Why does the arithmetic evaluation code complain about `08'?
+
+The bash arithmetic evaluation code (used for `let', $(()), (()), and in
+other places), interprets a leading `0' in numeric constants as denoting
+an octal number, and a leading `0x' as denoting hexadecimal. This is
+in accordance with the POSIX.2 spec, section 2.9.2.1, which states that
+arithmetic constants should be handled as signed long integers as defined
+by the ANSI/ISO C standard.
+
+The POSIX.2 interpretation committee has confirmed this:
+
+http://www.pasc.org/interps/unofficial/db/p1003.2/pasc-1003.2-173.html
+
+E9) Why does the pattern matching expression [A-Z]* match files beginning
+ with every letter except `z'?
+
+Bash-2.03, Bash-2.05 and later versions honor the current locale setting
+when processing ranges within pattern matching bracket expressions ([A-Z]).
+This is what POSIX.2 and SUSv3/XPG6 specify.
+
+The behavior of the matcher in bash-2.05 and later versions depends on the
+current LC_COLLATE setting. Setting this variable to `C' or `POSIX' will
+result in the traditional behavior ([A-Z] matches all uppercase ASCII
+characters). Many other locales, including the en_US locale (the default
+on many US versions of Linux) collate the upper and lower case letters like
+this:
+
+ AaBb...Zz
+
+which means that [A-Z] matches every letter except `z'. Others collate like
+
+ aAbBcC...zZ
+
+which means that [A-Z] matches every letter except `a'.
+
+The portable way to specify upper case letters is [:upper:] instead of
+A-Z; lower case may be specified as [:lower:] instead of a-z.
+
+Look at the manual pages for setlocale(3), strcoll(3), and, if it is
+present, locale(1). If you have locale(1), you can use it to find
+your current locale information even if you do not have any of the
+LC_ variables set.
+
+My advice is to put
+
+ export LC_COLLATE=C
+
+into /etc/profile and inspect any shell scripts run from cron for
+constructs like [A-Z]. This will prevent things like
+
+ rm [A-Z]*
+
+from removing every file in the current directory except those beginning
+with `z' and still allow individual users to change the collation order.
+Users may put the above command into their own profiles as well, of course.
+
+E10) Why does `cd //' leave $PWD as `//'?
+
+POSIX.2, in its description of `cd', says that *three* or more leading
+slashes may be replaced with a single slash when canonicalizing the
+current working directory.
+
+This is, I presume, for historical compatibility. Certain versions of
+Unix, and early network file systems, used paths of the form
+//hostname/path to access `path' on server `hostname'.
+
+E11) If I resize my xterm while another program is running, why doesn't bash
+ notice the change?
+
+This is another issue that deals with job control.
+
+The kernel maintains a notion of a current terminal process group. Members
+of this process group (processes whose process group ID is equal to the
+current terminal process group ID) receive terminal-generated signals like
+SIGWINCH. (For more details, see the JOB CONTROL section of the bash
+man page.)
+
+If a terminal is resized, the kernel sends SIGWINCH to each member of
+the terminal's current process group (the `foreground' process group).
+
+When bash is running with job control enabled, each pipeline (which may be
+a single command) is run in its own process group, different from bash's
+process group. This foreground process group receives the SIGWINCH; bash
+does not. Bash has no way of knowing that the terminal has been resized.
+
+There is a `checkwinsize' option, settable with the `shopt' builtin, that
+will cause bash to check the window size and adjust its idea of the
+terminal's dimensions each time a process stops or exits and returns control
+of the terminal to bash. Enable it with `shopt -s checkwinsize'.
+
+Section F: Things to watch out for on certain Unix versions
+
+F1) Why can't I use command line editing in my `cmdtool'?
+
+The problem is `cmdtool' and bash fighting over the input. When
+scrolling is enabled in a cmdtool window, cmdtool puts the tty in
+`raw mode' to permit command-line editing using the mouse for
+applications that cannot do it themselves. As a result, bash and
+cmdtool each try to read keyboard input immediately, with neither
+getting enough of it to be useful.
+
+This mode also causes cmdtool to not implement many of the
+terminal functions and control sequences appearing in the
+`sun-cmd' termcap entry. For a more complete explanation, see
+that file examples/suncmd.termcap in the bash distribution.
+
+`xterm' is a better choice, and gets along with bash much more
+smoothly.
+
+If you must use cmdtool, you can use the termcap description in
+examples/suncmd.termcap. Set the TERMCAP variable to the terminal
+description contained in that file, i.e.
+
+TERMCAP='Mu|sun-cmd:am:bs:km:pt:li#34:co#80:cl=^L:ce=\E[K:cd=\E[J:rs=\E[s:'
+
+Then export TERMCAP and start a new cmdtool window from that shell.
+The bash command-line editing should behave better in the new
+cmdtool. If this works, you can put the assignment to TERMCAP
+in your bashrc file.
+
+F2) I built bash on Solaris 2. Why do globbing expansions and filename
+ completion chop off the first few characters of each filename?
+
+This is the consequence of building bash on SunOS 5 and linking
+with the libraries in /usr/ucblib, but using the definitions
+and structures from files in /usr/include.
+
+The actual conflict is between the dirent structure in
+/usr/include/dirent.h and the struct returned by the version of
+`readdir' in libucb.a (a 4.3-BSD style `struct direct').
+
+Make sure you've got /usr/ccs/bin ahead of /usr/ucb in your $PATH
+when configuring and building bash. This will ensure that you
+use /usr/ccs/bin/cc or acc instead of /usr/ucb/cc and that you
+link with libc before libucb.
+
+If you have installed the Sun C compiler, you may also need to
+put /usr/ccs/bin and /opt/SUNWspro/bin into your $PATH before
+/usr/ucb.
+
+F3) Why does bash dump core after I interrupt username completion or
+ `~user' tilde expansion on a machine running NIS?
+
+This is a famous and long-standing bug in the SunOS YP (sorry, NIS)
+client library, which is part of libc.
+
+The YP library code keeps static state -- a pointer into the data
+returned from the server. When YP initializes itself (setpwent),
+it looks at this pointer and calls free on it if it's non-null.
+So far, so good.
+
+If one of the YP functions is interrupted during getpwent (the
+exact function is interpretwithsave()), and returns NULL, the
+pointer is freed without being reset to NULL, and the function
+returns. The next time getpwent is called, it sees that this
+pointer is non-null, calls free, and the bash free() blows up
+because it's being asked to free freed memory.
+
+The traditional Unix mallocs allow memory to be freed multiple
+times; that's probably why this has never been fixed. You can
+run configure with the `--without-gnu-malloc' option to use
+the C library malloc and avoid the problem.
+
+F4) I'm running SVR4.2. Why is the line erased every time I type `@'?
+
+The `@' character is the default `line kill' character in most
+versions of System V, including SVR4.2. You can change this
+character to whatever you want using `stty'. For example, to
+change the line kill character to control-u, type
+
+ stty kill ^U
+
+where the `^' and `U' can be two separate characters.
+
+F5) Why does bash report syntax errors when my C News scripts use a
+ redirection before a subshell command?
+
+The actual command in question is something like
+
+ < file ( command )
+
+According to the grammar given in the POSIX.2 standard, this construct
+is, in fact, a syntax error. Redirections may only precede `simple
+commands'. A subshell construct such as the above is one of the shell's
+`compound commands'. A redirection may only follow a compound command.
+
+This affects the mechanical transformation of commands that use `cat'
+to pipe a file into a command (a favorite Useless-Use-Of-Cat topic on
+comp.unix.shell). While most commands of the form
+
+ cat file | command
+
+can be converted to `< file command', shell control structures such as
+loops and subshells require `command < file'.
+
+The file CWRU/sh-redir-hack in the bash-2.05a distribution is an
+(unofficial) patch to parse.y that will modify the grammar to
+support this construct. It will not apply with `patch'; you must
+modify parse.y by hand. Note that if you apply this, you must
+recompile with -DREDIRECTION_HACK. This introduces a large
+number of reduce/reduce conflicts into the shell grammar.
+
+F6) Why can't I use vi-mode editing on Red Hat Linux 6.1?
+
+The short answer is that Red Hat screwed up.
+
+The long answer is that they shipped an /etc/inputrc that only works
+for emacs mode editing, and then screwed all the vi users by setting
+INPUTRC to /etc/inputrc in /etc/profile.
+
+The short fix is to do one of the following: remove or rename
+/etc/inputrc, set INPUTRC=~/.inputrc in ~/.bashrc (or .bash_profile,
+but make sure you export it if you do), remove the assignment to
+INPUTRC from /etc/profile, add
+
+ set keymap emacs
+
+to the beginning of /etc/inputrc, or bracket the key bindings in
+/etc/inputrc with these lines
+
+ $if mode=emacs
+ [...]
+ $endif
+
+F7) Why do bash-2.05a and bash-2.05b fail to compile `printf.def' on
+ HP/UX 11.x?
+
+HP/UX's support for long double is imperfect at best.
+
+GCC will support it without problems, but the HP C library functions
+like strtold(3) and printf(3) don't actually work with long doubles.
+HP implemented a `long_double' type as a 4-element array of 32-bit
+ints, and that is what the library functions use. The ANSI C
+`long double' type is a 128-bit floating point scalar.
+
+The easiest fix, until HP fixes things up, is to edit the generated
+config.h and #undef the HAVE_LONG_DOUBLE line. After doing that,
+the compilation should complete successfully.
+
+Section G: How can I get bash to do certain common things?
+
+G1) How can I get bash to read and display eight-bit characters?
+
+This is a process requiring several steps.
+
+First, you must ensure that the `physical' data path is a full eight
+bits. For xterms, for example, the `vt100' resources `eightBitInput'
+and `eightBitOutput' should be set to `true'.
+
+Once you have set up an eight-bit path, you must tell the kernel and
+tty driver to leave the eighth bit of characters alone when processing
+keyboard input. Use `stty' to do this:
+
+ stty cs8 -istrip -parenb
+
+For old BSD-style systems, you can use
+
+ stty pass8
+
+You may also need
+
+ stty even odd
+
+Finally, you need to tell readline that you will be inputting and
+displaying eight-bit characters. You use readline variables to do
+this. These variables can be set in your .inputrc or using the bash
+`bind' builtin. Here's an example using `bind':
+
+ bash$ bind 'set convert-meta off'
+ bash$ bind 'set meta-flag on'
+ bash$ bind 'set output-meta on'
+
+The `set' commands between the single quotes may also be placed
+in ~/.inputrc.
+
+G2) How do I write a function `x' to replace builtin command `x', but
+ still invoke the command from within the function?
+
+This is why the `command' and `builtin' builtins exist. The
+`command' builtin executes the command supplied as its first
+argument, skipping over any function defined with that name. The
+`builtin' builtin executes the builtin command given as its first
+argument directly.
+
+For example, to write a function to replace `cd' that writes the
+hostname and current directory to an xterm title bar, use
+something like the following:
+
+ cd()
+ {
+ builtin cd "$@" && xtitle "$HOST: $PWD"
+ }
+
+This could also be written using `command' instead of `builtin';
+the version above is marginally more efficient.
+
+G3) How can I find the value of a shell variable whose name is the value
+ of another shell variable?
+
+Versions of Bash newer than Bash-2.0 support this directly. You can use
+
+ ${!var}
+
+For example, the following sequence of commands will echo `z':
+
+ var1=var2
+ var2=z
+ echo ${!var1}
+
+For sh compatibility, use the `eval' builtin. The important
+thing to remember is that `eval' expands the arguments you give
+it again, so you need to quote the parts of the arguments that
+you want `eval' to act on.
+
+For example, this expression prints the value of the last positional
+parameter:
+
+ eval echo \"\$\{$#\}\"
+
+The expansion of the quoted portions of this expression will be
+deferred until `eval' runs, while the `$#' will be expanded
+before `eval' is executed. In versions of bash later than bash-2.0,
+
+ echo ${!#}
+
+does the same thing.
+
+This is not the same thing as ksh93 `nameref' variables, though the syntax
+is similar. I may add namerefs in a future bash version.
+
+G4) How can I make the bash `time' reserved word print timing output that
+ looks like the output from my system's /usr/bin/time?
+
+The bash command timing code looks for a variable `TIMEFORMAT' and
+uses its value as a format string to decide how to display the
+timing statistics.
+
+The value of TIMEFORMAT is a string with `%' escapes expanded in a
+fashion similar in spirit to printf(3). The manual page explains
+the meanings of the escape sequences in the format string.
+
+If TIMEFORMAT is not set, bash acts as if the following assignment had
+been performed:
+
+ TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%3lR\nuser\t%3lU\nsys\t%3lS'
+
+The POSIX.2 default time format (used by `time -p command') is
+
+ TIMEFORMAT=$'real %2R\nuser %2U\nsys %2S'
+
+The BSD /usr/bin/time format can be emulated with:
+
+ TIMEFORMAT=$'\t%1R real\t%1U user\t%1S sys'
+
+The System V /usr/bin/time format can be emulated with:
+
+ TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%1R\nuser\t%1U\nsys\t%1S'
+
+The ksh format can be emulated with:
+
+ TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal\t%2lR\nuser\t%2lU\nsys\t%2lS'
+
+G5) How do I get the current directory into my prompt?
+
+Bash provides a number of backslash-escape sequences which are expanded
+when the prompt string (PS1 or PS2) is displayed. The full list is in
+the manual page.
+
+The \w expansion gives the full pathname of the current directory, with
+a tilde (`~') substituted for the current value of $HOME. The \W
+expansion gives the basename of the current directory. To put the full
+pathname of the current directory into the path without any tilde
+subsitution, use $PWD. Here are some examples:
+
+ PS1='\w$ ' # current directory with tilde
+ PS1='\W$ ' # basename of current directory
+ PS1='$PWD$ ' # full pathname of current directory
+
+The single quotes are important in the final example to prevent $PWD from
+being expanded when the assignment to PS1 is performed.
+
+G6) How can I rename "*.foo" to "*.bar"?
+
+Use the pattern removal functionality described in D3. The following `for'
+loop will do the trick:
+
+ for f in *.foo; do
+ mv $f ${f%foo}bar
+ done
+
+G7) How can I translate a filename from uppercase to lowercase?
+
+The script examples/functions/lowercase, originally written by John DuBois,
+will do the trick. The converse is left as an exercise.
+
+G8) How can I write a filename expansion (globbing) pattern that will match
+ all files in the current directory except "." and ".."?
+
+You must have set the `extglob' shell option using `shopt -s extglob' to use
+this:
+
+ echo .!(.|) *
+
+A solution that works without extended globbing is given in the Unix Shell
+FAQ, posted periodically to comp.unix.shell.
+
+Section H: Where do I go from here?
+
+H1) How do I report bugs in bash, and where should I look for fixes and
+ advice?
+
+Use the `bashbug' script to report bugs. It is built and
+installed at the same time as bash. It provides a standard
+template for reporting a problem and automatically includes
+information about your configuration and build environment.
+
+`bashbug' sends its reports to bug-bash@gnu.org, which
+is a large mailing list gatewayed to the usenet newsgroup gnu.bash.bug.
+
+Bug fixes, answers to questions, and announcements of new releases
+are all posted to gnu.bash.bug. Discussions concerning bash features
+and problems also take place there.
+
+To reach the bash maintainers directly, send mail to
+bash-maintainers@gnu.org.
+
+H2) What kind of bash documentation is there?
+
+First, look in the doc directory in the bash distribution. It should
+contain at least the following files:
+
+bash.1 an extensive, thorough Unix-style manual page
+builtins.1 a manual page covering just bash builtin commands
+bashref.texi a reference manual in GNU tex`info format
+bashref.info an info version of the reference manual
+FAQ this file
+article.ms text of an article written for The Linux Journal
+readline.3 a man page describing readline
+
+Postscript, HTML, and ASCII files created from the above source are
+available in the documentation distribution.
+
+There is additional documentation available for anonymous FTP from host
+ftp.cwru.edu in the `pub/bash' directory.
+
+Cameron Newham and Bill Rosenblatt have written a book on bash, published
+by O'Reilly and Associates. The book is based on Bill Rosenblatt's Korn
+Shell book. The title is ``Learning the Bash Shell'', and the ISBN number
+is 1-56592-147-X. Look for it in fine bookstores near you. This book
+covers bash-1.14, but has an appendix describing some of the new features
+in bash-2.0.
+
+A second edition of this book is available, published in January, 1998.
+The ISBN number is 1-56592-347-2. Look for it in the same fine bookstores
+or on the web.
+
+The GNU Bash Reference Manual has been published as a printed book by
+Network Theory Ltd (Paperback, ISBN: 0-9541617-7-7, Feb 2003). It covers
+bash-2.0 and is available from most online bookstores (see
+http://www.network-theory.co.uk/bash/manual/ for details). The publisher
+will donate $1 to the Free Software Foundation for each copy sold.
+
+H3) What's coming in future versions?
+
+These are features I hope to include in a future version of bash.
+
+a better bash debugger (a minimally-tested version is included with bash-2.05b)
+associative arrays
+co-processes, but with a new-style syntax that looks like function declaration
+
+H4) What's on the bash `wish list' for future versions?
+
+These are features that may or may not appear in a future version of bash.
+
+breaking some of the shell functionality into embeddable libraries
+a module system like zsh's, using dynamic loading like builtins
+better internationalization using GNU `gettext'
+date-stamped command history
+a bash programmer's guide with a chapter on creating loadable builtins
+a better loadable interface to perl with access to the shell builtins and
+ variables (contributions gratefully accepted)
+ksh93-like `nameref' variables
+ksh93-like `+=' variable assignment operator
+ksh93-like `xx.yy' variables (including some of the .sh.* variables) and
+ associated disipline functions
+Some of the new ksh93 pattern matching operators, like backreferencing
+
+H5) When will the next release appear?
+
+The next version will appear sometime in 2002. Never make predictions.
+
+
+This document is Copyright 1995-2003 by Chester Ramey.
+
+Permission is hereby granted, without written agreement and
+without license or royalty fees, to use, copy, and distribute
+this document for any purpose, provided that the above copyright
+notice appears in all copies of this document and that the
+contents of this document remain unaltered.
--- /dev/null
+#
+# Simple makefile for the sample loadable builtins
+#
+# Copyright (C) 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+# any later version.
+
+# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+# GNU General Public License for more details.
+
+# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111 USA.
+
+# Include some boilerplate Gnu makefile definitions.
+prefix = @prefix@
+
+exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@
+bindir = @bindir@
+libdir = @libdir@
+infodir = @infodir@
+includedir = @includedir@
+
+topdir = @top_srcdir@
+BUILD_DIR = @BUILD_DIR@
+srcdir = @srcdir@
+VPATH = .:@srcdir@
+
+@SET_MAKE@
+CC = @CC@
+RM = rm -f
+
+SHELL = @MAKE_SHELL@
+
+host_os = @host_os@
+host_cpu = @host_cpu@
+host_vendor = @host_vendor@
+
+CFLAGS = @CFLAGS@
+LOCAL_CFLAGS = @LOCAL_CFLAGS@
+DEFS = @DEFS@
+LOCAL_DEFS = @LOCAL_DEFS@
+
+CPPFLAGS = @CPPFLAGS@
+
+BASHINCDIR = ${topdir}/include
+
+LIBBUILD = ${BUILD_DIR}/lib
+
+INTL_LIBSRC = ${topdir}/lib/intl
+INTL_BUILDDIR = ${LIBBUILD}/intl
+INTL_INC = @INTL_INC@
+LIBINTL_H = @LIBINTL_H@
+
+CCFLAGS = $(DEFS) $(LOCAL_DEFS) $(LOCAL_CFLAGS) $(CFLAGS)
+
+#
+# These values are generated for configure by ${topdir}/support/shobj-conf.
+# If your system is not supported by that script, but includes facilities for
+# dynamic loading of shared objects, please update the script and send the
+# changes to bash-maintainers@gnu.org.
+#
+SHOBJ_CC = @SHOBJ_CC@
+SHOBJ_CFLAGS = @SHOBJ_CFLAGS@
+SHOBJ_LD = @SHOBJ_LD@
+SHOBJ_LDFLAGS = @SHOBJ_LDFLAGS@
+SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS = @SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS@
+SHOBJ_LIBS = @SHOBJ_LIBS@
+SHOBJ_STATUS = @SHOBJ_STATUS@
+
+INC = -I. -I.. -I$(topdir) -I$(topdir)/lib -I$(topdir)/builtins \
+ -I$(BASHINCDIR) -I$(BUILD_DIR) -I$(LIBBUILD) \
+ -I$(BUILD_DIR)/builtins $(INTL_INC)
+
+.c.o:
+ $(SHOBJ_CC) $(SHOBJ_CFLAGS) $(CCFLAGS) $(INC) -c -o $@ $<
+
+
+ALLPROG = print truefalse sleep pushd finfo logname basename dirname \
+ tty pathchk tee head mkdir rmdir printenv id whoami \
+ uname sync push ln unlink cut realpath getconf strftime
+OTHERPROG = necho hello cat
+
+all: $(SHOBJ_STATUS)
+
+supported: $(ALLPROG)
+others: $(OTHERPROG)
+
+unsupported:
+ @echo "Your system (${host_os}) is not supported by the"
+ @echo "${topdir}/support/shobj-conf script."
+ @echo "If your operating system provides facilities for dynamic"
+ @echo "loading of shared objects using the dlopen(3) interface,"
+ @echo "please update the script and re-run configure.
+ @echo "Please send the changes you made to bash-maintainers@gnu.org"
+ @echo "for inclusion in future bash releases."
+
+everything: supported others
+
+print: print.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ print.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+necho: necho.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ necho.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+getconf: getconf.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ getconf.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+hello: hello.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ hello.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+truefalse: truefalse.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ truefalse.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+sleep: sleep.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ sleep.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+finfo: finfo.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ finfo.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+cat: cat.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ cat.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+logname: logname.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ logname.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+basename: basename.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ basename.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+dirname: dirname.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ dirname.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+tty: tty.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ tty.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+pathchk: pathchk.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ pathchk.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+tee: tee.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ tee.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+mkdir: mkdir.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ mkdir.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+rmdir: rmdir.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ rmdir.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+head: head.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ head.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+printenv: printenv.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ printenv.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+id: id.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ id.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+whoami: whoami.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ whoami.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+uname: uname.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ uname.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+sync: sync.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ sync.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+push: push.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ push.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+ln: ln.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ ln.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+unlink: unlink.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ unlink.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+cut: cut.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ cut.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+realpath: realpath.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ realpath.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+strftime: strftime.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ strftime.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+# pushd is a special case. We use the same source that the builtin version
+# uses, with special compilation options.
+#
+pushd.c: ${topdir}/builtins/pushd.def
+ $(RM) $@
+ ${BUILD_DIR}/builtins/mkbuiltins -D ${topdir}/builtins ${topdir}/builtins/pushd.def
+
+pushd.o: pushd.c
+ $(RM) $@
+ $(SHOBJ_CC) -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -DPUSHD_AND_POPD -DLOADABLE_BUILTIN $(SHOBJ_CFLAGS) $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(INC) -c -o $@ $<
+
+pushd: pushd.o
+ $(SHOBJ_LD) $(SHOBJ_LDFLAGS) $(SHOBJ_XLDFLAGS) -o $@ pushd.o $(SHOBJ_LIBS)
+
+clean:
+ $(RM) $(ALLPROG) $(OTHERPROG) *.o
+ -( cd perl && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} $@ )
+
+mostlyclean: clean
+ -( cd perl && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} $@ )
+
+distclean maintainer-clean: clean
+ $(RM) Makefile pushd.c
+ -( cd perl && ${MAKE} ${MFLAGS} $@ )
+
+print.o: print.c
+truefalse.o: truefalse.c
+sleep.o: sleep.c
+finfo.o: finfo.c
+logname.o: logname.c
+basename.o: basename.c
+dirname.o: dirname.c
+tty.o: tty.c
+pathchk.o: pathchk.c
+tee.o: tee.c
+head.o: head.c
+rmdir.o: rmdir.c
+necho.o: necho.c
+getconf.o: getconf.c
+hello.o: hello.c
+cat.o: cat.c
+printenv.o: printenv.c
+id.o: id.c
+whoami.o: whoami.c
+uname.o: uname.c
+sync.o: sync.c
+push.o: push.c
+mkdir.o: mkdir.c
+realpath.o: realpath.c
+strftime.o: strftime.c
--- /dev/null
+#!/bin/bash
+# ash -- "Adventure shell"
+# last edit: 86/04/21 D A Gwyn
+# SCCS ID: @(#)ash.sh 1.4
+
+OPATH=$PATH
+
+ask()
+{
+ echo -n "$@" '[y/n] '
+ read ans
+
+ case "$ans" in
+ y*|Y*)
+ return 0
+ ;;
+ *)
+ return 1
+ ;;
+ esac
+}
+
+CAT=${PAGER:-more}
+
+ash_inst()
+{
+ cat <<- EOF
+
+ Instructions for the Adventure shell
+
+ Welcome to the Adventure shell! In this exploration of the UNIX file
+ system, I will act as your eyes and hands. As you move around, I will
+ describe whatever is visible and will carry out your commands. The
+ general form of a command is
+ Verb Object Extra_stuff.
+ Most commands pay no attention to the "Extra_stuff", and many do not
+ need an "Object". A typical command is
+ get all
+ which picks up all files in the current "room" (directory). You can
+ find out what you are carrying by typing the command
+ inventory
+ The command "help" results in a full description of all commands that I
+ understand. To quit the Adventure shell, type
+ quit
+
+ There are UNIX monsters lurking in the background. These are also
+ known as "commands with arguments".
+
+ Good luck!
+ EOF
+}
+
+ash_help()
+{
+echo "I understand the following commands (synonyms in parentheses):"
+echo ""
+
+echo "change OBJECT to NEW_NAME changes the name of the object"
+echo "clone OBJECT as NEW_NAME duplicates the object"
+echo "drop OBJECTS leaves the objects in the room"
+echo "enter (go) PASSAGE takes the labeled passage"
+echo "examine OBJECTS describes the objects in detail"
+echo "feed OBJECT to MONSTER stuffs the object into a UNIX monster"
+echo "get (take) OBJECTS picks up the specified objects"
+echo "gripe (bug) report a problem with the Adventure shell"
+echo "help prints this summary"
+echo "inventory (i) tells what you are carrying"
+echo "kill (destroy) OBJECTS destroys the objects"
+echo "look (l) describes the room, including hidden objects"
+echo "open (read) OBJECT shows the contents of an object"
+echo "quit (exit) leaves the Adventure shell"
+echo "resurrect OBJECTS attempts to restore dead objects"
+echo "steal OBJECT from MONSTER obtains the object from a UNIX monster"
+echo "throw OBJECT at daemon feeds the object to the printer daemon"
+echo "up takes the overhead passage"
+echo "wake MONSTER awakens a UNIX monster"
+echo "where (w) tells you where you are"
+echo "xyzzy moves you to your home"
+}
+
+MAINT=chet@ins.cwru.edu
+
+PATH=/usr/ucb:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin:.
+export PATH
+
+trap 'echo Ouch!' 2 3
+#trap '' 18 # disable Berkeley job control
+
+ash_lk(){ echo " $1 " | fgrep " $2 " >&- 2>&-; }
+ash_pr(){ echo $* | tr ' ' '\012' | pr -5 -t -w75 -l$[ ( $# + 4 ) / 5 ]; }
+ash_rm(){ echo " $1 " | sed -e "s/ $2 / /" -e 's/^ //' -e 's/ $//'; }
+
+# enable history, bang history expansion, and emacs editing
+set -o history
+set -o histexpand
+set -o emacs
+
+cd
+LIM=.limbo # $HOME/$LIM contains "destroyed" objects
+mkdir $LIM >&- 2>&-
+KNAP=.knapsack # $HOME/$KNAP contains objects being "carried"
+if [ ! -d $KNAP ]
+then mkdir $KNAP >&- 2>&-
+ if [ $? = 0 ]
+ then echo 'You found a discarded empty knapsack.'
+ else echo 'You have no knapsack to carry things in.'
+ exit 1
+ fi
+else echo 'One moment while I peek in your old knapsack...'
+fi
+
+kn=`echo \`ls -a $KNAP | sed -e '/^\.$/d' -e '/^\.\.$/d'\``
+
+if ask 'Welcome to the Adventure shell! Do you need instructions?'
+then
+ ash_inst
+ echo -n 'Type a newline to continue: '
+ read
+fi
+
+wiz=false
+cha=false
+prev=$LIM
+while :
+do room=`pwd`
+ if [ $room != $prev ]
+ then if [ $room = $HOME ]
+ then echo 'You are in your own home.'
+ else echo "You have entered $room."
+ fi
+ exs=
+ obs=
+ hexs=
+ hobs=
+ f=false
+ for i in `ls -a`
+ do case $i in
+ .|..) ;;
+ .*) if [ -f $i ]
+ then hobs="$hobs $i"
+ elif [ -d $i ]
+ then hexs="$hexs $i"
+ else f=true
+ fi
+ ;;
+ *) if [ -f $i ]
+ then obs="$obs $i"
+ elif [ -d $i ]
+ then exs="$exs $i"
+ else f=true
+ fi
+ ;;
+ esac
+ done
+ if [ "$obs" ]
+ then echo 'This room contains:'
+ ash_pr $obs
+ else echo 'The room looks empty.'
+ fi
+ if [ "$exs" ]
+ then echo 'There are exits labeled:'
+ ash_pr $exs
+ echo 'as well as a passage overhead.'
+ else echo 'There is a passage overhead.'
+ fi
+ if sh -c $f
+ then echo 'There are shadowy figures in the corner.'
+ fi
+ prev=$room
+ fi
+
+ read -e -p '-advsh> ' verb obj x # prompt is '-advsh> '
+ if [ $? != 0 ]
+ then verb=quit # EOF
+ fi
+
+ case $verb in
+ change) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$obj"
+ then set -- $x
+ case "$1" in
+ to) if [ "$2" ]
+ then if [ -f $2 ]
+ then echo "You must destroy $2 first."
+ set --
+ fi
+ if [ "$2" ]
+ then if mv $obj $2 >&- 2>&-
+ then echo "The $obj shimmers and turns into $2."
+ obs=`ash_rm "$2 $obs" "$obj"`
+ else echo "There is a cloud of smoke but the $obj is unchanged."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'To what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ *) echo "Change $obj to what?"
+ ;;
+ esac
+ else if ash_lk "$kn" "$obj"
+ then echo 'You must drop it first.'
+ else echo "I see no $obj here."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'Change what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ clone) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$obj"
+ then if [ ! -r $obj ]
+ then echo "The $obj does not wish to be cloned."
+ else set -- $x
+ case "$1" in
+ as) if [ "$2" ]
+ then if [ -f $2 ]
+ then echo "You must destroy $2 first."
+ else if cp $obj $2 >&- 2>&-
+ then echo "Poof! When the smoke clears, you see the new $2."
+ obs="$obs $2"
+ else echo 'You hear a dull thud but no clone appears.'
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'As what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ *) echo "Clone $obj as what?"
+ ;;
+ esac
+ fi
+ else if ash_lk "$kn" "$obj"
+ then echo 'You must drop it first.'
+ else echo "I see no $obj here."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'Clone what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ drop) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then for it in $obj $x
+ do if ash_lk "$kn" "$it"
+ then if [ -w $it ]
+ then echo "You must destroy $it first."
+ else if mv $HOME/$KNAP/$it $it >&- 2>&-
+ then echo "$it: dropped."
+ kn=`ash_rm "$kn" "$it"`
+ obs=`echo $it $obs`
+ else echo "The $it is caught in your knapsack."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo "You're not carrying the $it!"
+ fi
+ done
+ else echo 'Drop what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ enter|go) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if [ $obj != up ]
+ then if ash_lk "$exs $hexs" "$obj"
+ then if [ -x $obj ]
+ then if cd $obj
+ then echo 'You squeeze through the passage.'
+ else echo "You can't go that direction."
+ fi
+ else echo 'An invisible force blocks your way.'
+ fi
+ else echo 'I see no such passage.'
+ fi
+ else if cd ..
+ then echo 'You struggle upwards.'
+ else echo "You can't reach that high."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'Which passage?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ examine) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if [ $obj = all ]
+ then $obj=`echo $obs $exs`
+ x=
+ fi
+ for it in $obj $x
+ do if ash_lk "$obs $hobs $exs $hexs" "$it"
+ then echo "Upon close inspection of the $it, you see:"
+ ls -ld $it 2>&-
+ if [ $? != 0 ]
+ then echo "-- when you look directly at the $it, it vanishes."
+ fi
+ else if ash_lk "$kn" "$it"
+ then echo 'You must drop it first.'
+ else echo "I see no $it here."
+ fi
+ fi
+ done
+ else echo 'Examine what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ feed) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$obj"
+ then set -- $x
+ case "$1" in
+ to) if [ "$2" ]
+ then shift
+ if PATH=$OPATH $* <$obj 2>&-
+ then echo "The $1 monster devours your $obj."
+ if rm -f $obj >&- 2>&-
+ then obs=`ash_rm "$obs" "$obj"`
+ else echo 'But he spits it back up.'
+ fi
+ else echo "The $1 monster holds his nose in disdain."
+ fi
+ else echo 'To what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ *) echo "Feed $obj to what?"
+ ;;
+ esac
+ else if ash_lk "$kn" "$obj"
+ then echo 'You must drop it first.'
+ else echo "I see no $obj here."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'Feed what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ get|take) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if [ $obj = all ]
+ then obj="$obs"
+ x=
+ fi
+ for it in $obj $x
+ do if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$it"
+ then if ash_lk "$kn" "$it"
+ then echo 'You already have one.'
+ else if mv $it $HOME/$KNAP/$it >&- 2>&-
+ then echo "$it: taken."
+ kn="$it $kn"
+ obs=`ash_rm "$obs" "$it"`
+ else echo "The $it is too heavy."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo "I see no $it here."
+ fi
+ done
+ else echo 'Get what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ gripe|bug) echo 'Please describe the problem and your situation at the time it failed.\nEnd the bug report with a line containing just a Ctrl-D.'
+ cat | mail $MAINT -s 'ash bug'
+ echo 'Thank you!'
+ ;;
+ help) ash_help
+ ;;
+ inventory|i) if [ "$kn" ]
+ then echo 'Your knapsack contains:'
+ ash_pr $kn
+ else echo 'You are poverty-stricken.'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ kill|destroy) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if [ $obj = all ]
+ then x=
+ if ask "Do you really want to attempt to $verb them all?"
+ then obj=`echo $obs`
+ else echo 'Chicken!'
+ obj=
+ fi
+ fi
+ for it in $obj $x
+ do if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$it"
+ then if mv $it $HOME/$LIM <&- >&- 2>&-
+ then if [ $verb = kill ]
+ then echo "The $it cannot defend himself; he dies."
+ else echo "You have destroyed the $it; it vanishes."
+ fi
+ obs=`ash_rm "$obs" "$it"`
+ else if [ $verb = kill ]
+ then echo "Your feeble blows are no match for the $it."
+ else echo "The $it is indestructible."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else if ash_lk "$kn" "$it"
+ then echo "You must drop the $it first."
+ found=false
+ else echo "I see no $it here."
+ fi
+ fi
+ done
+ else echo 'Kill what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ look|l) obs=`echo $obs $hobs`
+ hobs=
+ if [ "$obs" ]
+ then echo 'The room contains:'
+ ash_pr $obs
+ else echo 'The room is empty.'
+ fi
+ exs=`echo $exs $hexs`
+ hexs=
+ if [ "$exs" ]
+ then echo 'There are exits plainly labeled:'
+ ash_pr $exs
+ echo 'and a passage directly overhead.'
+ else echo 'The only exit is directly overhead.'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ magic) if [ "$obj" = mode ]
+ then if sh -c $cha
+ then echo 'You had your chance and you blew it.'
+ else if ask 'Are you a wizard?'
+ then echo -n 'Prove it! Say the magic word: '
+ read obj
+ if [ "$obj" = armadillo ]
+ then echo 'Yes, master!!'
+ wiz=true
+ else echo "Homie says: I don't think so"
+ cha=true
+ fi
+ else echo "I didn't think so."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'Nice try.'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ open|read) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$obj"
+ then if [ -r $obj ]
+ then if [ -s $obj ]
+ then echo "Opening the $obj reveals:"
+ $CAT < $obj
+ if [ $? != 0 ]
+ then echo '-- oops, you lost the contents!'
+ fi
+ else echo "There is nothing inside the $obj."
+ fi
+ else echo "You do not have the proper tools to open the $obj."
+ fi
+ else if ash_lk "$kn" "$obj"
+ then echo 'You must drop it first.'
+ found=false
+ else echo "I see no $obj here."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'Open what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ quit|exit) if ask 'Do you really want to quit now?'
+ then if [ "$kn" ]
+ then echo 'The contents of your knapsack will still be there next time.'
+ fi
+ rm -rf $HOME/$LIM
+ echo 'See you later!'
+ exit 0
+ fi
+ ;;
+ resurrect) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then for it in $obj $x
+ do if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$it"
+ then echo "The $it is already alive and well."
+ else if mv $HOME/$LIM/$it $it <&- >&- 2>&-
+ then echo "The $it staggers to his feet."
+ obs=`echo $it $obs`
+ else echo "There are sparks but no $it appears."
+ fi
+ fi
+ done
+ else echo 'Resurrect what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ steal) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$obj"
+ then echo 'There is already one here.'
+ else set -- $x
+ case "$1" in
+ from) if [ "$2" ]
+ then shift
+ if PATH=$OPATH $* >$obj 2>&-
+ then echo "The $1 monster drops the $obj."
+ obs=`echo $obj $obs`
+ else echo "The $1 monster runs away as you approach."
+ rm -f $obj >&- 2>&-
+ fi
+ else echo 'From what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ *) echo "Steal $obj from what?"
+ ;;
+ esac
+ fi
+ else echo 'Steal what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ throw) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then if ash_lk "$obs $hobs" "$obj"
+ then set -- $x
+ case "$1" in
+ at) case "$2" in
+ daemon) if sh -c "lpr -r $obj"
+ then echo "The daemon catches the $obj, turns it into paper,\nand leaves it in the basket."
+ obs=`ash_rm "$obs" "$obj"`
+ else echo "The daemon is nowhere to be found."
+ fi
+ ;;
+ *) echo 'At what?'
+ ;;
+ esac
+ ;;
+ *) echo "Throw $obj at what?"
+ ;;
+ esac
+ else if ash_lk "$kn" "$obj"
+ then echo 'It is in your knapsack.'
+ found=false
+ else echo "I see no $obj here."
+ fi
+ fi
+ else echo 'Throw what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ u|up) if cd ..
+ then echo 'You pull yourself up a level.'
+ else echo "You can't reach that high."
+ fi
+ ;;
+ wake) if [ "$obj" ]
+ then echo "You awaken the $obj monster:"
+ PATH=$OPATH $obj $x
+ echo 'The monster slithers back into the darkness.'
+ else echo 'Wake what?'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ w|where) echo "You are in $room."
+ ;;
+ xyzzy) if cd
+ then echo 'A strange feeling comes over you.'
+ else echo 'Your spell fizzles out.'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ *) if [ "$verb" ]
+ then if sh -c $wiz
+ then PATH=$OPATH $verb $obj $x
+ else echo "I don't know how to \"$verb\"."
+ echo 'Type "help" for assistance.'
+ fi
+ else echo 'Say something!'
+ fi
+ ;;
+ esac
+done
/* expr.c -- arithmetic expression evaluation. */
-/* Copyright (C) 1990-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+/* Copyright (C) 1990-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GNU Bash, the Bourne Again SHell.
Implementation is a recursive-descent parser.
Chet Ramey
- chet@ins.CWRU.Edu
+ chet@po.cwru.edu
*/
#include "config.h"
/* Maximum amount of recursion allowed. This prevents a non-integer
variable such as "num=num+2" from infinitely adding to itself when
"let num=num+2" is given. */
+#if 0
#define MAX_EXPR_RECURSION_LEVEL 1024
+#else
+#define MAX_EXPR_RECURSION_LEVEL 16
+#endif
/* The Tokens. Singing "The Lion Sleeps Tonight". */
sprintf (lhs, "%s[%s]", vname, istr); /* XXX */
- expr_bind_variable (lhs, rhs);
/*itrace("expr_bind_array_element: %s=%s", lhs, rhs);*/
+ expr_bind_variable (lhs, rhs);
free (vname);
free (lhs);
}
lvalue = value;
}
+ /* XXX - watch out for pointer aliasing issues here */
lhs = savestring (tokstr);
/* save ind in case rhs is string var and evaluation overwrites it */
lind = curlval.ind;
FREE (tokstr);
tokstr = (char *)NULL; /* For freeing on errors. */
}
+
return (value);
}
}
else if (curtok == LPAR)
{
+ /* XXX - save curlval here? Or entire expression context? */
readtok ();
val = EXP_HIGHEST ();
}
else
{
+ /* XXX - watch out for pointer aliasing issues here */
if (stok == STR) /* free new tokstr before old one is restored */
FREE (tokstr);
RESTORETOK (&ec);
}
-
}
readtok ();
arrayind_t ind;
#endif
+/*itrace("expr_streval: %s: noeval = %d", tok, noeval);*/
+ /* If we are suppressing evaluation, just short-circuit here instead of
+ going through the rest of the evaluator. */
+ if (noeval)
+ return (0);
+
/* [[[[[ */
#if defined (ARRAY_VARS)
v = (e == ']') ? array_variable_part (tok, (char **)0, (int *)0) : find_variable (tok);
#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */
*cp = '\0';
+ /* XXX - watch out for pointer aliasing issues here */
+ if (curlval.tokstr && curlval.tokstr == tokstr)
+ init_lvalue (&curlval);
+
FREE (tokstr);
tokstr = savestring (tp);
*cp = c;
username = savestring (&text[first_char_loc]);
namelen = strlen (username);
+#if defined (HAVE_GETPWENT)
setpwent ();
+#endif
}
#if defined (HAVE_GETPWENT)
--- /dev/null
+/* complete.c -- filename completion for readline. */
+
+/* Copyright (C) 1987-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ This file is part of the GNU Readline Library (Readline), a library
+ for reading lines of text with interactive input and history editing.
+
+ Readline is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
+
+ Readline is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ along with Readline. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+*/
+
+#define READLINE_LIBRARY
+
+#if defined (HAVE_CONFIG_H)
+# include <config.h>
+#endif
+
+#include <sys/types.h>
+#include <fcntl.h>
+#if defined (HAVE_SYS_FILE_H)
+# include <sys/file.h>
+#endif
+
+#include <signal.h>
+
+#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H)
+# include <unistd.h>
+#endif /* HAVE_UNISTD_H */
+
+#if defined (HAVE_STDLIB_H)
+# include <stdlib.h>
+#else
+# include "ansi_stdlib.h"
+#endif /* HAVE_STDLIB_H */
+
+#include <stdio.h>
+
+#include <errno.h>
+#if !defined (errno)
+extern int errno;
+#endif /* !errno */
+
+#if defined (HAVE_PWD_H)
+#include <pwd.h>
+#endif
+
+#include "posixdir.h"
+#include "posixstat.h"
+
+/* System-specific feature definitions and include files. */
+#include "rldefs.h"
+#include "rlmbutil.h"
+
+/* Some standard library routines. */
+#include "readline.h"
+#include "xmalloc.h"
+#include "rlprivate.h"
+
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+# include "colors.h"
+#endif
+
+#ifdef __STDC__
+typedef int QSFUNC (const void *, const void *);
+#else
+typedef int QSFUNC ();
+#endif
+
+#ifdef HAVE_LSTAT
+# define LSTAT lstat
+#else
+# define LSTAT stat
+#endif
+
+/* Unix version of a hidden file. Could be different on other systems. */
+#define HIDDEN_FILE(fname) ((fname)[0] == '.')
+
+/* Most systems don't declare getpwent in <pwd.h> if _POSIX_SOURCE is
+ defined. */
+#if defined (HAVE_GETPWENT) && (!defined (HAVE_GETPW_DECLS) || defined (_POSIX_SOURCE))
+extern struct passwd *getpwent PARAMS((void));
+#endif /* HAVE_GETPWENT && (!HAVE_GETPW_DECLS || _POSIX_SOURCE) */
+
+/* If non-zero, then this is the address of a function to call when
+ completing a word would normally display the list of possible matches.
+ This function is called instead of actually doing the display.
+ It takes three arguments: (char **matches, int num_matches, int max_length)
+ where MATCHES is the array of strings that matched, NUM_MATCHES is the
+ number of strings in that array, and MAX_LENGTH is the length of the
+ longest string in that array. */
+rl_compdisp_func_t *rl_completion_display_matches_hook = (rl_compdisp_func_t *)NULL;
+
+#if defined (VISIBLE_STATS) || defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+# if !defined (X_OK)
+# define X_OK 1
+# endif
+#endif
+
+#if defined (VISIBLE_STATS)
+static int stat_char PARAMS((char *));
+#endif
+
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+static int colored_stat_start PARAMS((char *));
+static void colored_stat_end PARAMS((void));
+#endif
+
+static int path_isdir PARAMS((const char *));
+
+static char *rl_quote_filename PARAMS((char *, int, char *));
+
+static void _rl_complete_sigcleanup PARAMS((int, void *));
+
+static void set_completion_defaults PARAMS((int));
+static int get_y_or_n PARAMS((int));
+static int _rl_internal_pager PARAMS((int));
+static char *printable_part PARAMS((char *));
+static int fnwidth PARAMS((const char *));
+static int fnprint PARAMS((const char *, int));
+static int print_filename PARAMS((char *, char *, int));
+
+static char **gen_completion_matches PARAMS((char *, int, int, rl_compentry_func_t *, int, int));
+
+static char **remove_duplicate_matches PARAMS((char **));
+static void insert_match PARAMS((char *, int, int, char *));
+static int append_to_match PARAMS((char *, int, int, int));
+static void insert_all_matches PARAMS((char **, int, char *));
+static int complete_fncmp PARAMS((const char *, int, const char *, int));
+static void display_matches PARAMS((char **));
+static int compute_lcd_of_matches PARAMS((char **, int, const char *));
+static int postprocess_matches PARAMS((char ***, int));
+static int complete_get_screenwidth PARAMS((void));
+
+static char *make_quoted_replacement PARAMS((char *, int, char *));
+
+/* **************************************************************** */
+/* */
+/* Completion matching, from readline's point of view. */
+/* */
+/* **************************************************************** */
+
+/* Variables known only to the readline library. */
+
+/* If non-zero, non-unique completions always show the list of matches. */
+int _rl_complete_show_all = 0;
+
+/* If non-zero, non-unique completions show the list of matches, unless it
+ is not possible to do partial completion and modify the line. */
+int _rl_complete_show_unmodified = 0;
+
+/* If non-zero, completed directory names have a slash appended. */
+int _rl_complete_mark_directories = 1;
+
+/* If non-zero, the symlinked directory completion behavior introduced in
+ readline-4.2a is disabled, and symlinks that point to directories have
+ a slash appended (subject to the value of _rl_complete_mark_directories).
+ This is user-settable via the mark-symlinked-directories variable. */
+int _rl_complete_mark_symlink_dirs = 0;
+
+/* If non-zero, completions are printed horizontally in alphabetical order,
+ like `ls -x'. */
+int _rl_print_completions_horizontally;
+
+/* Non-zero means that case is not significant in filename completion. */
+#if defined (__MSDOS__) && !defined (__DJGPP__)
+int _rl_completion_case_fold = 1;
+#else
+int _rl_completion_case_fold = 0;
+#endif
+
+/* Non-zero means that `-' and `_' are equivalent when comparing filenames
+ for completion. */
+int _rl_completion_case_map = 0;
+
+/* If zero, don't match hidden files (filenames beginning with a `.' on
+ Unix) when doing filename completion. */
+int _rl_match_hidden_files = 1;
+
+/* Length in characters of a common prefix replaced with an ellipsis (`...')
+ when displaying completion matches. Matches whose printable portion has
+ more than this number of displaying characters in common will have the common
+ display prefix replaced with an ellipsis. */
+int _rl_completion_prefix_display_length = 0;
+
+/* The readline-private number of screen columns to use when displaying
+ matches. If < 0 or > _rl_screenwidth, it is ignored. */
+int _rl_completion_columns = -1;
+
+/* Global variables available to applications using readline. */
+
+#if defined (VISIBLE_STATS)
+/* Non-zero means add an additional character to each filename displayed
+ during listing completion iff rl_filename_completion_desired which helps
+ to indicate the type of file being listed. */
+int rl_visible_stats = 0;
+#endif /* VISIBLE_STATS */
+
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+/* Non-zero means to use colors to indicate file type when listing possible
+ completions. The colors used are taken from $LS_COLORS, if set. */
+int _rl_colored_stats = 1;
+#endif
+
+/* If non-zero, when completing in the middle of a word, don't insert
+ characters from the match that match characters following point in
+ the word. This means, for instance, completing when the cursor is
+ after the `e' in `Makefile' won't result in `Makefilefile'. */
+int _rl_skip_completed_text = 0;
+
+/* If non-zero, menu completion displays the common prefix first in the
+ cycle of possible completions instead of the last. */
+int _rl_menu_complete_prefix_first = 0;
+
+/* If non-zero, then this is the address of a function to call when
+ completing on a directory name. The function is called with
+ the address of a string (the current directory name) as an arg. */
+rl_icppfunc_t *rl_directory_completion_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)NULL;
+
+rl_icppfunc_t *rl_directory_rewrite_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)NULL;
+
+rl_icppfunc_t *rl_filename_stat_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)NULL;
+
+/* If non-zero, this is the address of a function to call when reading
+ directory entries from the filesystem for completion and comparing
+ them to the partial word to be completed. The function should
+ either return its first argument (if no conversion takes place) or
+ newly-allocated memory. This can, for instance, convert filenames
+ between character sets for comparison against what's typed at the
+ keyboard. The returned value is what is added to the list of
+ matches. The second argument is the length of the filename to be
+ converted. */
+rl_dequote_func_t *rl_filename_rewrite_hook = (rl_dequote_func_t *)NULL;
+
+/* Non-zero means readline completion functions perform tilde expansion. */
+int rl_complete_with_tilde_expansion = 0;
+
+/* Pointer to the generator function for completion_matches ().
+ NULL means to use rl_filename_completion_function (), the default filename
+ completer. */
+rl_compentry_func_t *rl_completion_entry_function = (rl_compentry_func_t *)NULL;
+
+/* Pointer to generator function for rl_menu_complete (). NULL means to use
+ *rl_completion_entry_function (see above). */
+rl_compentry_func_t *rl_menu_completion_entry_function = (rl_compentry_func_t *)NULL;
+
+/* Pointer to alternative function to create matches.
+ Function is called with TEXT, START, and END.
+ START and END are indices in RL_LINE_BUFFER saying what the boundaries
+ of TEXT are.
+ If this function exists and returns NULL then call the value of
+ rl_completion_entry_function to try to match, otherwise use the
+ array of strings returned. */
+rl_completion_func_t *rl_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL;
+
+/* Non-zero means to suppress normal filename completion after the
+ user-specified completion function has been called. */
+int rl_attempted_completion_over = 0;
+
+/* Set to a character indicating the type of completion being performed
+ by rl_complete_internal, available for use by application completion
+ functions. */
+int rl_completion_type = 0;
+
+/* Up to this many items will be displayed in response to a
+ possible-completions call. After that, we ask the user if
+ she is sure she wants to see them all. A negative value means
+ don't ask. */
+int rl_completion_query_items = 100;
+
+int _rl_page_completions = 1;
+
+/* The basic list of characters that signal a break between words for the
+ completer routine. The contents of this variable is what breaks words
+ in the shell, i.e. " \t\n\"\\'`@$><=" */
+const char *rl_basic_word_break_characters = " \t\n\"\\'`@$><=;|&{("; /* }) */
+
+/* List of basic quoting characters. */
+const char *rl_basic_quote_characters = "\"'";
+
+/* The list of characters that signal a break between words for
+ rl_complete_internal. The default list is the contents of
+ rl_basic_word_break_characters. */
+/*const*/ char *rl_completer_word_break_characters = (/*const*/ char *)NULL;
+
+/* Hook function to allow an application to set the completion word
+ break characters before readline breaks up the line. Allows
+ position-dependent word break characters. */
+rl_cpvfunc_t *rl_completion_word_break_hook = (rl_cpvfunc_t *)NULL;
+
+/* List of characters which can be used to quote a substring of the line.
+ Completion occurs on the entire substring, and within the substring
+ rl_completer_word_break_characters are treated as any other character,
+ unless they also appear within this list. */
+const char *rl_completer_quote_characters = (const char *)NULL;
+
+/* List of characters that should be quoted in filenames by the completer. */
+const char *rl_filename_quote_characters = (const char *)NULL;
+
+/* List of characters that are word break characters, but should be left
+ in TEXT when it is passed to the completion function. The shell uses
+ this to help determine what kind of completing to do. */
+const char *rl_special_prefixes = (const char *)NULL;
+
+/* If non-zero, then disallow duplicates in the matches. */
+int rl_ignore_completion_duplicates = 1;
+
+/* Non-zero means that the results of the matches are to be treated
+ as filenames. This is ALWAYS zero on entry, and can only be changed
+ within a completion entry finder function. */
+int rl_filename_completion_desired = 0;
+
+/* Non-zero means that the results of the matches are to be quoted using
+ double quotes (or an application-specific quoting mechanism) if the
+ filename contains any characters in rl_filename_quote_chars. This is
+ ALWAYS non-zero on entry, and can only be changed within a completion
+ entry finder function. */
+int rl_filename_quoting_desired = 1;
+
+/* This function, if defined, is called by the completer when real
+ filename completion is done, after all the matching names have been
+ generated. It is passed a (char**) known as matches in the code below.
+ It consists of a NULL-terminated array of pointers to potential
+ matching strings. The 1st element (matches[0]) is the maximal
+ substring that is common to all matches. This function can re-arrange
+ the list of matches as required, but all elements of the array must be
+ free()'d if they are deleted. The main intent of this function is
+ to implement FIGNORE a la SunOS csh. */
+rl_compignore_func_t *rl_ignore_some_completions_function = (rl_compignore_func_t *)NULL;
+
+/* Set to a function to quote a filename in an application-specific fashion.
+ Called with the text to quote, the type of match found (single or multiple)
+ and a pointer to the quoting character to be used, which the function can
+ reset if desired. */
+rl_quote_func_t *rl_filename_quoting_function = rl_quote_filename;
+
+/* Function to call to remove quoting characters from a filename. Called
+ before completion is attempted, so the embedded quotes do not interfere
+ with matching names in the file system. Readline doesn't do anything
+ with this; it's set only by applications. */
+rl_dequote_func_t *rl_filename_dequoting_function = (rl_dequote_func_t *)NULL;
+
+/* Function to call to decide whether or not a word break character is
+ quoted. If a character is quoted, it does not break words for the
+ completer. */
+rl_linebuf_func_t *rl_char_is_quoted_p = (rl_linebuf_func_t *)NULL;
+
+/* If non-zero, the completion functions don't append anything except a
+ possible closing quote. This is set to 0 by rl_complete_internal and
+ may be changed by an application-specific completion function. */
+int rl_completion_suppress_append = 0;
+
+/* Character appended to completed words when at the end of the line. The
+ default is a space. */
+int rl_completion_append_character = ' ';
+
+/* If non-zero, the completion functions don't append any closing quote.
+ This is set to 0 by rl_complete_internal and may be changed by an
+ application-specific completion function. */
+int rl_completion_suppress_quote = 0;
+
+/* Set to any quote character readline thinks it finds before any application
+ completion function is called. */
+int rl_completion_quote_character;
+
+/* Set to a non-zero value if readline found quoting anywhere in the word to
+ be completed; set before any application completion function is called. */
+int rl_completion_found_quote;
+
+/* If non-zero, a slash will be appended to completed filenames that are
+ symbolic links to directory names, subject to the value of the
+ mark-directories variable (which is user-settable). This exists so
+ that application completion functions can override the user's preference
+ (set via the mark-symlinked-directories variable) if appropriate.
+ It's set to the value of _rl_complete_mark_symlink_dirs in
+ rl_complete_internal before any application-specific completion
+ function is called, so without that function doing anything, the user's
+ preferences are honored. */
+int rl_completion_mark_symlink_dirs;
+
+/* If non-zero, inhibit completion (temporarily). */
+int rl_inhibit_completion;
+
+/* Set to the last key used to invoke one of the completion functions */
+int rl_completion_invoking_key;
+
+/* If non-zero, sort the completion matches. On by default. */
+int rl_sort_completion_matches = 1;
+
+/* Variables local to this file. */
+
+/* Local variable states what happened during the last completion attempt. */
+static int completion_changed_buffer;
+
+/* The result of the query to the user about displaying completion matches */
+static int completion_y_or_n;
+
+/*************************************/
+/* */
+/* Bindable completion functions */
+/* */
+/*************************************/
+
+/* Complete the word at or before point. You have supplied the function
+ that does the initial simple matching selection algorithm (see
+ rl_completion_matches ()). The default is to do filename completion. */
+int
+rl_complete (ignore, invoking_key)
+ int ignore, invoking_key;
+{
+ rl_completion_invoking_key = invoking_key;
+
+ if (rl_inhibit_completion)
+ return (_rl_insert_char (ignore, invoking_key));
+ else if (rl_last_func == rl_complete && !completion_changed_buffer)
+ return (rl_complete_internal ('?'));
+ else if (_rl_complete_show_all)
+ return (rl_complete_internal ('!'));
+ else if (_rl_complete_show_unmodified)
+ return (rl_complete_internal ('@'));
+ else
+ return (rl_complete_internal (TAB));
+}
+
+/* List the possible completions. See description of rl_complete (). */
+int
+rl_possible_completions (ignore, invoking_key)
+ int ignore, invoking_key;
+{
+ rl_completion_invoking_key = invoking_key;
+ return (rl_complete_internal ('?'));
+}
+
+int
+rl_insert_completions (ignore, invoking_key)
+ int ignore, invoking_key;
+{
+ rl_completion_invoking_key = invoking_key;
+ return (rl_complete_internal ('*'));
+}
+
+/* Return the correct value to pass to rl_complete_internal performing
+ the same tests as rl_complete. This allows consecutive calls to an
+ application's completion function to list possible completions and for
+ an application-specific completion function to honor the
+ show-all-if-ambiguous readline variable. */
+int
+rl_completion_mode (cfunc)
+ rl_command_func_t *cfunc;
+{
+ if (rl_last_func == cfunc && !completion_changed_buffer)
+ return '?';
+ else if (_rl_complete_show_all)
+ return '!';
+ else if (_rl_complete_show_unmodified)
+ return '@';
+ else
+ return TAB;
+}
+
+/************************************/
+/* */
+/* Completion utility functions */
+/* */
+/************************************/
+
+/* Reset readline state on a signal or other event. */
+void
+_rl_reset_completion_state ()
+{
+ rl_completion_found_quote = 0;
+ rl_completion_quote_character = 0;
+}
+
+static void
+_rl_complete_sigcleanup (sig, ptr)
+ int sig;
+ void *ptr;
+{
+ if (sig == SIGINT) /* XXX - for now */
+ _rl_free_match_list ((char **)ptr);
+}
+
+/* Set default values for readline word completion. These are the variables
+ that application completion functions can change or inspect. */
+static void
+set_completion_defaults (what_to_do)
+ int what_to_do;
+{
+ /* Only the completion entry function can change these. */
+ rl_filename_completion_desired = 0;
+ rl_filename_quoting_desired = 1;
+ rl_completion_type = what_to_do;
+ rl_completion_suppress_append = rl_completion_suppress_quote = 0;
+ rl_completion_append_character = ' ';
+
+ /* The completion entry function may optionally change this. */
+ rl_completion_mark_symlink_dirs = _rl_complete_mark_symlink_dirs;
+}
+
+/* The user must press "y" or "n". Non-zero return means "y" pressed. */
+static int
+get_y_or_n (for_pager)
+ int for_pager;
+{
+ int c;
+
+ /* For now, disable pager in callback mode, until we later convert to state
+ driven functions. Have to wait until next major version to add new
+ state definition, since it will change value of RL_STATE_DONE. */
+#if defined (READLINE_CALLBACKS)
+ if (RL_ISSTATE (RL_STATE_CALLBACK))
+ return 1;
+#endif
+
+ for (;;)
+ {
+ RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_MOREINPUT);
+ c = rl_read_key ();
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_MOREINPUT);
+
+ if (c == 'y' || c == 'Y' || c == ' ')
+ return (1);
+ if (c == 'n' || c == 'N' || c == RUBOUT)
+ return (0);
+ if (c == ABORT_CHAR || c < 0)
+ _rl_abort_internal ();
+ if (for_pager && (c == NEWLINE || c == RETURN))
+ return (2);
+ if (for_pager && (c == 'q' || c == 'Q'))
+ return (0);
+ rl_ding ();
+ }
+}
+
+static int
+_rl_internal_pager (lines)
+ int lines;
+{
+ int i;
+
+ fprintf (rl_outstream, "--More--");
+ fflush (rl_outstream);
+ i = get_y_or_n (1);
+ _rl_erase_entire_line ();
+ if (i == 0)
+ return -1;
+ else if (i == 2)
+ return (lines - 1);
+ else
+ return 0;
+}
+
+static int
+path_isdir (filename)
+ const char *filename;
+{
+ struct stat finfo;
+
+ return (stat (filename, &finfo) == 0 && S_ISDIR (finfo.st_mode));
+}
+
+#if defined (VISIBLE_STATS)
+/* Return the character which best describes FILENAME.
+ `@' for symbolic links
+ `/' for directories
+ `*' for executables
+ `=' for sockets
+ `|' for FIFOs
+ `%' for character special devices
+ `#' for block special devices */
+static int
+stat_char (filename)
+ char *filename;
+{
+ struct stat finfo;
+ int character, r;
+ char *f;
+ const char *fn;
+
+ /* Short-circuit a //server on cygwin, since that will always behave as
+ a directory. */
+#if __CYGWIN__
+ if (filename[0] == '/' && filename[1] == '/' && strchr (filename+2, '/') == 0)
+ return '/';
+#endif
+
+ f = 0;
+ if (rl_filename_stat_hook)
+ {
+ f = savestring (filename);
+ (*rl_filename_stat_hook) (&f);
+ fn = f;
+ }
+ else
+ fn = filename;
+
+#if defined (HAVE_LSTAT) && defined (S_ISLNK)
+ r = lstat (fn, &finfo);
+#else
+ r = stat (fn, &finfo);
+#endif
+
+ if (r == -1)
+ return (0);
+
+ character = 0;
+ if (S_ISDIR (finfo.st_mode))
+ character = '/';
+#if defined (S_ISCHR)
+ else if (S_ISCHR (finfo.st_mode))
+ character = '%';
+#endif /* S_ISCHR */
+#if defined (S_ISBLK)
+ else if (S_ISBLK (finfo.st_mode))
+ character = '#';
+#endif /* S_ISBLK */
+#if defined (S_ISLNK)
+ else if (S_ISLNK (finfo.st_mode))
+ character = '@';
+#endif /* S_ISLNK */
+#if defined (S_ISSOCK)
+ else if (S_ISSOCK (finfo.st_mode))
+ character = '=';
+#endif /* S_ISSOCK */
+#if defined (S_ISFIFO)
+ else if (S_ISFIFO (finfo.st_mode))
+ character = '|';
+#endif
+ else if (S_ISREG (finfo.st_mode))
+ {
+ if (access (filename, X_OK) == 0)
+ character = '*';
+ }
+
+ free (f);
+ return (character);
+}
+#endif /* VISIBLE_STATS */
+
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+static int
+colored_stat_start (filename)
+ char *filename;
+{
+ _rl_set_normal_color ();
+ return (_rl_print_color_indicator (filename));
+}
+
+static void
+colored_stat_end ()
+{
+ _rl_prep_non_filename_text ();
+ _rl_put_indicator (&_rl_color_indicator[C_CLR_TO_EOL]);
+}
+#endif
+
+/* Return the portion of PATHNAME that should be output when listing
+ possible completions. If we are hacking filename completion, we
+ are only interested in the basename, the portion following the
+ final slash. Otherwise, we return what we were passed. Since
+ printing empty strings is not very informative, if we're doing
+ filename completion, and the basename is the empty string, we look
+ for the previous slash and return the portion following that. If
+ there's no previous slash, we just return what we were passed. */
+static char *
+printable_part (pathname)
+ char *pathname;
+{
+ char *temp, *x;
+
+ if (rl_filename_completion_desired == 0) /* don't need to do anything */
+ return (pathname);
+
+ temp = strrchr (pathname, '/');
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ if (temp == 0 && ISALPHA ((unsigned char)pathname[0]) && pathname[1] == ':')
+ temp = pathname + 1;
+#endif
+
+ if (temp == 0 || *temp == '\0')
+ return (pathname);
+ /* If the basename is NULL, we might have a pathname like '/usr/src/'.
+ Look for a previous slash and, if one is found, return the portion
+ following that slash. If there's no previous slash, just return the
+ pathname we were passed. */
+ else if (temp[1] == '\0')
+ {
+ for (x = temp - 1; x > pathname; x--)
+ if (*x == '/')
+ break;
+ return ((*x == '/') ? x + 1 : pathname);
+ }
+ else
+ return ++temp;
+}
+
+/* Compute width of STRING when displayed on screen by print_filename */
+static int
+fnwidth (string)
+ const char *string;
+{
+ int width, pos;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ mbstate_t ps;
+ int left, w;
+ size_t clen;
+ wchar_t wc;
+
+ left = strlen (string) + 1;
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+#endif
+
+ width = pos = 0;
+ while (string[pos])
+ {
+ if (CTRL_CHAR (string[pos]) || string[pos] == RUBOUT)
+ {
+ width += 2;
+ pos++;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ clen = mbrtowc (&wc, string + pos, left - pos, &ps);
+ if (MB_INVALIDCH (clen))
+ {
+ width++;
+ pos++;
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ }
+ else if (MB_NULLWCH (clen))
+ break;
+ else
+ {
+ pos += clen;
+ w = WCWIDTH (wc);
+ width += (w >= 0) ? w : 1;
+ }
+#else
+ width++;
+ pos++;
+#endif
+ }
+ }
+
+ return width;
+}
+
+#define ELLIPSIS_LEN 3
+
+static int
+fnprint (to_print, prefix_bytes)
+ const char *to_print;
+ int prefix_bytes;
+{
+ int printed_len, w;
+ const char *s;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ mbstate_t ps;
+ const char *end;
+ size_t tlen;
+ int width;
+ wchar_t wc;
+
+ end = to_print + strlen (to_print) + 1;
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+#endif
+
+ printed_len = 0;
+
+ /* Don't print only the ellipsis if the common prefix is one of the
+ possible completions */
+ if (to_print[prefix_bytes] == '\0')
+ prefix_bytes = 0;
+
+ if (prefix_bytes)
+ {
+ char ellipsis;
+
+ ellipsis = (to_print[prefix_bytes] == '.') ? '_' : '.';
+ for (w = 0; w < ELLIPSIS_LEN; w++)
+ putc (ellipsis, rl_outstream);
+ printed_len = ELLIPSIS_LEN;
+ }
+
+ s = to_print + prefix_bytes;
+ while (*s)
+ {
+ if (CTRL_CHAR (*s))
+ {
+ putc ('^', rl_outstream);
+ putc (UNCTRL (*s), rl_outstream);
+ printed_len += 2;
+ s++;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+#endif
+ }
+ else if (*s == RUBOUT)
+ {
+ putc ('^', rl_outstream);
+ putc ('?', rl_outstream);
+ printed_len += 2;
+ s++;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+#endif
+ }
+ else
+ {
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ tlen = mbrtowc (&wc, s, end - s, &ps);
+ if (MB_INVALIDCH (tlen))
+ {
+ tlen = 1;
+ width = 1;
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ }
+ else if (MB_NULLWCH (tlen))
+ break;
+ else
+ {
+ w = WCWIDTH (wc);
+ width = (w >= 0) ? w : 1;
+ }
+ fwrite (s, 1, tlen, rl_outstream);
+ s += tlen;
+ printed_len += width;
+#else
+ putc (*s, rl_outstream);
+ s++;
+ printed_len++;
+#endif
+ }
+ }
+
+ return printed_len;
+}
+
+/* Output TO_PRINT to rl_outstream. If VISIBLE_STATS is defined and we
+ are using it, check for and output a single character for `special'
+ filenames. Return the number of characters we output. */
+
+static int
+print_filename (to_print, full_pathname, prefix_bytes)
+ char *to_print, *full_pathname;
+ int prefix_bytes;
+{
+ int printed_len, extension_char, slen, tlen;
+ char *s, c, *new_full_pathname, *dn;
+
+ extension_char = 0;
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+ /* Defer printing if we want to prefix with a color indicator */
+ if (_rl_colored_stats == 0 || rl_filename_completion_desired == 0)
+#endif
+ printed_len = fnprint (to_print, prefix_bytes);
+
+ if (rl_filename_completion_desired && (
+#if defined (VISIBLE_STATS)
+ rl_visible_stats ||
+#endif
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+ _rl_colored_stats ||
+#endif
+ _rl_complete_mark_directories))
+ {
+ /* If to_print != full_pathname, to_print is the basename of the
+ path passed. In this case, we try to expand the directory
+ name before checking for the stat character. */
+ if (to_print != full_pathname)
+ {
+ /* Terminate the directory name. */
+ c = to_print[-1];
+ to_print[-1] = '\0';
+
+ /* If setting the last slash in full_pathname to a NUL results in
+ full_pathname being the empty string, we are trying to complete
+ files in the root directory. If we pass a null string to the
+ bash directory completion hook, for example, it will expand it
+ to the current directory. We just want the `/'. */
+ if (full_pathname == 0 || *full_pathname == 0)
+ dn = "/";
+ else if (full_pathname[0] != '/')
+ dn = full_pathname;
+ else if (full_pathname[1] == 0)
+ dn = "//"; /* restore trailing slash to `//' */
+ else if (full_pathname[1] == '/' && full_pathname[2] == 0)
+ dn = "/"; /* don't turn /// into // */
+ else
+ dn = full_pathname;
+ s = tilde_expand (dn);
+ if (rl_directory_completion_hook)
+ (*rl_directory_completion_hook) (&s);
+
+ slen = strlen (s);
+ tlen = strlen (to_print);
+ new_full_pathname = (char *)xmalloc (slen + tlen + 2);
+ strcpy (new_full_pathname, s);
+ if (s[slen - 1] == '/')
+ slen--;
+ else
+ new_full_pathname[slen] = '/';
+ new_full_pathname[slen] = '/';
+ strcpy (new_full_pathname + slen + 1, to_print);
+
+#if defined (VISIBLE_STATS)
+ if (rl_visible_stats)
+ extension_char = stat_char (new_full_pathname);
+ else
+#endif
+ if (_rl_complete_mark_directories)
+ {
+ dn = 0;
+ if (rl_directory_completion_hook == 0 && rl_filename_stat_hook)
+ {
+ dn = savestring (new_full_pathname);
+ (*rl_filename_stat_hook) (&dn);
+ free (new_full_pathname);
+ new_full_pathname = dn;
+ }
+ if (path_isdir (new_full_pathname))
+ extension_char = '/';
+ }
+
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+ if (_rl_colored_stats)
+ {
+ colored_stat_start (new_full_pathname);
+ printed_len = fnprint (to_print, prefix_bytes);
+ colored_stat_end ();
+ }
+#endif
+
+ xfree (new_full_pathname);
+ to_print[-1] = c;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ s = tilde_expand (full_pathname);
+#if defined (VISIBLE_STATS)
+ if (rl_visible_stats)
+ extension_char = stat_char (s);
+ else
+#endif
+ if (_rl_complete_mark_directories && path_isdir (s))
+ extension_char = '/';
+
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+ if (_rl_colored_stats)
+ {
+ colored_stat_start (s);
+ printed_len = fnprint (to_print, prefix_bytes);
+ colored_stat_end ();
+ }
+#endif
+
+ }
+
+ xfree (s);
+ if (extension_char)
+ {
+ putc (extension_char, rl_outstream);
+ printed_len++;
+ }
+ }
+
+ return printed_len;
+}
+
+static char *
+rl_quote_filename (s, rtype, qcp)
+ char *s;
+ int rtype;
+ char *qcp;
+{
+ char *r;
+
+ r = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (s) + 2);
+ *r = *rl_completer_quote_characters;
+ strcpy (r + 1, s);
+ if (qcp)
+ *qcp = *rl_completer_quote_characters;
+ return r;
+}
+
+/* Find the bounds of the current word for completion purposes, and leave
+ rl_point set to the end of the word. This function skips quoted
+ substrings (characters between matched pairs of characters in
+ rl_completer_quote_characters). First we try to find an unclosed
+ quoted substring on which to do matching. If one is not found, we use
+ the word break characters to find the boundaries of the current word.
+ We call an application-specific function to decide whether or not a
+ particular word break character is quoted; if that function returns a
+ non-zero result, the character does not break a word. This function
+ returns the opening quote character if we found an unclosed quoted
+ substring, '\0' otherwise. FP, if non-null, is set to a value saying
+ which (shell-like) quote characters we found (single quote, double
+ quote, or backslash) anywhere in the string. DP, if non-null, is set to
+ the value of the delimiter character that caused a word break. */
+
+char
+_rl_find_completion_word (fp, dp)
+ int *fp, *dp;
+{
+ int scan, end, found_quote, delimiter, pass_next, isbrk;
+ char quote_char, *brkchars;
+
+ end = rl_point;
+ found_quote = delimiter = 0;
+ quote_char = '\0';
+
+ brkchars = 0;
+ if (rl_completion_word_break_hook)
+ brkchars = (*rl_completion_word_break_hook) ();
+ if (brkchars == 0)
+ brkchars = rl_completer_word_break_characters;
+
+ if (rl_completer_quote_characters)
+ {
+ /* We have a list of characters which can be used in pairs to
+ quote substrings for the completer. Try to find the start
+ of an unclosed quoted substring. */
+ /* FOUND_QUOTE is set so we know what kind of quotes we found. */
+ for (scan = pass_next = 0; scan < end; scan = MB_NEXTCHAR (rl_line_buffer, scan, 1, MB_FIND_ANY))
+ {
+ if (pass_next)
+ {
+ pass_next = 0;
+ continue;
+ }
+
+ /* Shell-like semantics for single quotes -- don't allow backslash
+ to quote anything in single quotes, especially not the closing
+ quote. If you don't like this, take out the check on the value
+ of quote_char. */
+ if (quote_char != '\'' && rl_line_buffer[scan] == '\\')
+ {
+ pass_next = 1;
+ found_quote |= RL_QF_BACKSLASH;
+ continue;
+ }
+
+ if (quote_char != '\0')
+ {
+ /* Ignore everything until the matching close quote char. */
+ if (rl_line_buffer[scan] == quote_char)
+ {
+ /* Found matching close. Abandon this substring. */
+ quote_char = '\0';
+ rl_point = end;
+ }
+ }
+ else if (strchr (rl_completer_quote_characters, rl_line_buffer[scan]))
+ {
+ /* Found start of a quoted substring. */
+ quote_char = rl_line_buffer[scan];
+ rl_point = scan + 1;
+ /* Shell-like quoting conventions. */
+ if (quote_char == '\'')
+ found_quote |= RL_QF_SINGLE_QUOTE;
+ else if (quote_char == '"')
+ found_quote |= RL_QF_DOUBLE_QUOTE;
+ else
+ found_quote |= RL_QF_OTHER_QUOTE;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ if (rl_point == end && quote_char == '\0')
+ {
+ /* We didn't find an unclosed quoted substring upon which to do
+ completion, so use the word break characters to find the
+ substring on which to complete. */
+ while (rl_point = MB_PREVCHAR (rl_line_buffer, rl_point, MB_FIND_ANY))
+ {
+ scan = rl_line_buffer[rl_point];
+
+ if (strchr (brkchars, scan) == 0)
+ continue;
+
+ /* Call the application-specific function to tell us whether
+ this word break character is quoted and should be skipped. */
+ if (rl_char_is_quoted_p && found_quote &&
+ (*rl_char_is_quoted_p) (rl_line_buffer, rl_point))
+ continue;
+
+ /* Convoluted code, but it avoids an n^2 algorithm with calls
+ to char_is_quoted. */
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+
+ /* If we are at an unquoted word break, then advance past it. */
+ scan = rl_line_buffer[rl_point];
+
+ /* If there is an application-specific function to say whether or not
+ a character is quoted and we found a quote character, let that
+ function decide whether or not a character is a word break, even
+ if it is found in rl_completer_word_break_characters. Don't bother
+ if we're at the end of the line, though. */
+ if (scan)
+ {
+ if (rl_char_is_quoted_p)
+ isbrk = (found_quote == 0 ||
+ (*rl_char_is_quoted_p) (rl_line_buffer, rl_point) == 0) &&
+ strchr (brkchars, scan) != 0;
+ else
+ isbrk = strchr (brkchars, scan) != 0;
+
+ if (isbrk)
+ {
+ /* If the character that caused the word break was a quoting
+ character, then remember it as the delimiter. */
+ if (rl_basic_quote_characters &&
+ strchr (rl_basic_quote_characters, scan) &&
+ (end - rl_point) > 1)
+ delimiter = scan;
+
+ /* If the character isn't needed to determine something special
+ about what kind of completion to perform, then advance past it. */
+ if (rl_special_prefixes == 0 || strchr (rl_special_prefixes, scan) == 0)
+ rl_point++;
+ }
+ }
+
+ if (fp)
+ *fp = found_quote;
+ if (dp)
+ *dp = delimiter;
+
+ return (quote_char);
+}
+
+static char **
+gen_completion_matches (text, start, end, our_func, found_quote, quote_char)
+ char *text;
+ int start, end;
+ rl_compentry_func_t *our_func;
+ int found_quote, quote_char;
+{
+ char **matches;
+
+ rl_completion_found_quote = found_quote;
+ rl_completion_quote_character = quote_char;
+
+ /* If the user wants to TRY to complete, but then wants to give
+ up and use the default completion function, they set the
+ variable rl_attempted_completion_function. */
+ if (rl_attempted_completion_function)
+ {
+ matches = (*rl_attempted_completion_function) (text, start, end);
+ if (RL_SIG_RECEIVED())
+ {
+ _rl_free_match_list (matches);
+ matches = 0;
+ RL_CHECK_SIGNALS ();
+ }
+
+ if (matches || rl_attempted_completion_over)
+ {
+ rl_attempted_completion_over = 0;
+ return (matches);
+ }
+ }
+
+ /* XXX -- filename dequoting moved into rl_filename_completion_function */
+
+ /* rl_completion_matches will check for signals as well to avoid a long
+ delay while reading a directory. */
+ matches = rl_completion_matches (text, our_func);
+ if (RL_SIG_RECEIVED())
+ {
+ _rl_free_match_list (matches);
+ matches = 0;
+ RL_CHECK_SIGNALS ();
+ }
+ return matches;
+}
+
+/* Filter out duplicates in MATCHES. This frees up the strings in
+ MATCHES. */
+static char **
+remove_duplicate_matches (matches)
+ char **matches;
+{
+ char *lowest_common;
+ int i, j, newlen;
+ char dead_slot;
+ char **temp_array;
+
+ /* Sort the items. */
+ for (i = 0; matches[i]; i++)
+ ;
+
+ /* Sort the array without matches[0], since we need it to
+ stay in place no matter what. */
+ if (i && rl_sort_completion_matches)
+ qsort (matches+1, i-1, sizeof (char *), (QSFUNC *)_rl_qsort_string_compare);
+
+ /* Remember the lowest common denominator for it may be unique. */
+ lowest_common = savestring (matches[0]);
+
+ for (i = newlen = 0; matches[i + 1]; i++)
+ {
+ if (strcmp (matches[i], matches[i + 1]) == 0)
+ {
+ xfree (matches[i]);
+ matches[i] = (char *)&dead_slot;
+ }
+ else
+ newlen++;
+ }
+
+ /* We have marked all the dead slots with (char *)&dead_slot.
+ Copy all the non-dead entries into a new array. */
+ temp_array = (char **)xmalloc ((3 + newlen) * sizeof (char *));
+ for (i = j = 1; matches[i]; i++)
+ {
+ if (matches[i] != (char *)&dead_slot)
+ temp_array[j++] = matches[i];
+ }
+ temp_array[j] = (char *)NULL;
+
+ if (matches[0] != (char *)&dead_slot)
+ xfree (matches[0]);
+
+ /* Place the lowest common denominator back in [0]. */
+ temp_array[0] = lowest_common;
+
+ /* If there is one string left, and it is identical to the
+ lowest common denominator, then the LCD is the string to
+ insert. */
+ if (j == 2 && strcmp (temp_array[0], temp_array[1]) == 0)
+ {
+ xfree (temp_array[1]);
+ temp_array[1] = (char *)NULL;
+ }
+ return (temp_array);
+}
+
+/* Find the common prefix of the list of matches, and put it into
+ matches[0]. */
+static int
+compute_lcd_of_matches (match_list, matches, text)
+ char **match_list;
+ int matches;
+ const char *text;
+{
+ register int i, c1, c2, si;
+ int low; /* Count of max-matched characters. */
+ int lx;
+ char *dtext; /* dequoted TEXT, if needed */
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ int v;
+ size_t v1, v2;
+ mbstate_t ps1, ps2;
+ wchar_t wc1, wc2;
+#endif
+
+ /* If only one match, just use that. Otherwise, compare each
+ member of the list with the next, finding out where they
+ stop matching. */
+ if (matches == 1)
+ {
+ match_list[0] = match_list[1];
+ match_list[1] = (char *)NULL;
+ return 1;
+ }
+
+ for (i = 1, low = 100000; i < matches; i++)
+ {
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ memset (&ps1, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ memset (&ps2, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ }
+#endif
+ if (_rl_completion_case_fold)
+ {
+ for (si = 0;
+ (c1 = _rl_to_lower(match_list[i][si])) &&
+ (c2 = _rl_to_lower(match_list[i + 1][si]));
+ si++)
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ v1 = mbrtowc(&wc1, match_list[i]+si, strlen (match_list[i]+si), &ps1);
+ v2 = mbrtowc (&wc2, match_list[i+1]+si, strlen (match_list[i+1]+si), &ps2);
+ if (MB_INVALIDCH (v1) || MB_INVALIDCH (v2))
+ {
+ if (c1 != c2) /* do byte comparison */
+ break;
+ continue;
+ }
+ wc1 = towlower (wc1);
+ wc2 = towlower (wc2);
+ if (wc1 != wc2)
+ break;
+ else if (v1 > 1)
+ si += v1 - 1;
+ }
+ else
+#endif
+ if (c1 != c2)
+ break;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ for (si = 0;
+ (c1 = match_list[i][si]) &&
+ (c2 = match_list[i + 1][si]);
+ si++)
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ mbstate_t ps_back;
+ ps_back = ps1;
+ if (!_rl_compare_chars (match_list[i], si, &ps1, match_list[i+1], si, &ps2))
+ break;
+ else if ((v = _rl_get_char_len (&match_list[i][si], &ps_back)) > 1)
+ si += v - 1;
+ }
+ else
+#endif
+ if (c1 != c2)
+ break;
+ }
+
+ if (low > si)
+ low = si;
+ }
+
+ /* If there were multiple matches, but none matched up to even the
+ first character, and the user typed something, use that as the
+ value of matches[0]. */
+ if (low == 0 && text && *text)
+ {
+ match_list[0] = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (text) + 1);
+ strcpy (match_list[0], text);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ match_list[0] = (char *)xmalloc (low + 1);
+
+ /* XXX - this might need changes in the presence of multibyte chars */
+
+ /* If we are ignoring case, try to preserve the case of the string
+ the user typed in the face of multiple matches differing in case. */
+ if (_rl_completion_case_fold)
+ {
+ /* We're making an assumption here:
+ IF we're completing filenames AND
+ the application has defined a filename dequoting function AND
+ we found a quote character AND
+ the application has requested filename quoting
+ THEN
+ we assume that TEXT was dequoted before checking against
+ the file system and needs to be dequoted here before we
+ check against the list of matches
+ FI */
+ dtext = (char *)NULL;
+ if (rl_filename_completion_desired &&
+ rl_filename_dequoting_function &&
+ rl_completion_found_quote &&
+ rl_filename_quoting_desired)
+ {
+ dtext = (*rl_filename_dequoting_function) ((char *)text, rl_completion_quote_character);
+ text = dtext;
+ }
+
+ /* sort the list to get consistent answers. */
+ qsort (match_list+1, matches, sizeof(char *), (QSFUNC *)_rl_qsort_string_compare);
+
+ si = strlen (text);
+ lx = (si <= low) ? si : low; /* check shorter of text and matches */
+ /* Try to preserve the case of what the user typed in the presence of
+ multiple matches: check each match for something that matches
+ what the user typed taking case into account; use it up to common
+ length of matches if one is found. If not, just use first match. */
+ for (i = 1; i <= matches; i++)
+ if (strncmp (match_list[i], text, lx) == 0)
+ {
+ strncpy (match_list[0], match_list[i], low);
+ break;
+ }
+ /* no casematch, use first entry */
+ if (i > matches)
+ strncpy (match_list[0], match_list[1], low);
+
+ FREE (dtext);
+ }
+ else
+ strncpy (match_list[0], match_list[1], low);
+
+ match_list[0][low] = '\0';
+ }
+
+ return matches;
+}
+
+static int
+postprocess_matches (matchesp, matching_filenames)
+ char ***matchesp;
+ int matching_filenames;
+{
+ char *t, **matches, **temp_matches;
+ int nmatch, i;
+
+ matches = *matchesp;
+
+ if (matches == 0)
+ return 0;
+
+ /* It seems to me that in all the cases we handle we would like
+ to ignore duplicate possiblilities. Scan for the text to
+ insert being identical to the other completions. */
+ if (rl_ignore_completion_duplicates)
+ {
+ temp_matches = remove_duplicate_matches (matches);
+ xfree (matches);
+ matches = temp_matches;
+ }
+
+ /* If we are matching filenames, then here is our chance to
+ do clever processing by re-examining the list. Call the
+ ignore function with the array as a parameter. It can
+ munge the array, deleting matches as it desires. */
+ if (rl_ignore_some_completions_function && matching_filenames)
+ {
+ for (nmatch = 1; matches[nmatch]; nmatch++)
+ ;
+ (void)(*rl_ignore_some_completions_function) (matches);
+ if (matches == 0 || matches[0] == 0)
+ {
+ FREE (matches);
+ *matchesp = (char **)0;
+ return 0;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* If we removed some matches, recompute the common prefix. */
+ for (i = 1; matches[i]; i++)
+ ;
+ if (i > 1 && i < nmatch)
+ {
+ t = matches[0];
+ compute_lcd_of_matches (matches, i - 1, t);
+ FREE (t);
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ *matchesp = matches;
+ return (1);
+}
+
+static int
+complete_get_screenwidth ()
+{
+ int cols;
+ char *envcols;
+
+ cols = _rl_completion_columns;
+ if (cols >= 0 && cols <= _rl_screenwidth)
+ return cols;
+ envcols = getenv ("COLUMNS");
+ if (envcols && *envcols)
+ cols = atoi (envcols);
+ if (cols >= 0 && cols <= _rl_screenwidth)
+ return cols;
+ return _rl_screenwidth;
+}
+
+/* A convenience function for displaying a list of strings in
+ columnar format on readline's output stream. MATCHES is the list
+ of strings, in argv format, LEN is the number of strings in MATCHES,
+ and MAX is the length of the longest string in MATCHES. */
+void
+rl_display_match_list (matches, len, max)
+ char **matches;
+ int len, max;
+{
+ int count, limit, printed_len, lines, cols;
+ int i, j, k, l, common_length, sind;
+ char *temp, *t;
+
+ /* Find the length of the prefix common to all items: length as displayed
+ characters (common_length) and as a byte index into the matches (sind) */
+ common_length = sind = 0;
+ if (_rl_completion_prefix_display_length > 0)
+ {
+ t = printable_part (matches[0]);
+ temp = strrchr (t, '/');
+ common_length = temp ? fnwidth (temp) : fnwidth (t);
+ sind = temp ? strlen (temp) : strlen (t);
+
+ if (common_length > _rl_completion_prefix_display_length && common_length > ELLIPSIS_LEN)
+ max -= common_length - ELLIPSIS_LEN;
+ else
+ common_length = sind = 0;
+ }
+
+ /* How many items of MAX length can we fit in the screen window? */
+ cols = complete_get_screenwidth ();
+ max += 2;
+ limit = cols / max;
+ if (limit != 1 && (limit * max == cols))
+ limit--;
+
+ /* If cols == 0, limit will end up -1 */
+ if (cols < _rl_screenwidth && limit < 0)
+ limit = 1;
+
+ /* Avoid a possible floating exception. If max > cols,
+ limit will be 0 and a divide-by-zero fault will result. */
+ if (limit == 0)
+ limit = 1;
+
+ /* How many iterations of the printing loop? */
+ count = (len + (limit - 1)) / limit;
+
+ /* Watch out for special case. If LEN is less than LIMIT, then
+ just do the inner printing loop.
+ 0 < len <= limit implies count = 1. */
+
+ /* Sort the items if they are not already sorted. */
+ if (rl_ignore_completion_duplicates == 0 && rl_sort_completion_matches)
+ qsort (matches + 1, len, sizeof (char *), (QSFUNC *)_rl_qsort_string_compare);
+
+ rl_crlf ();
+
+ lines = 0;
+ if (_rl_print_completions_horizontally == 0)
+ {
+ /* Print the sorted items, up-and-down alphabetically, like ls. */
+ for (i = 1; i <= count; i++)
+ {
+ for (j = 0, l = i; j < limit; j++)
+ {
+ if (l > len || matches[l] == 0)
+ break;
+ else
+ {
+ temp = printable_part (matches[l]);
+ printed_len = print_filename (temp, matches[l], sind);
+
+ if (j + 1 < limit)
+ for (k = 0; k < max - printed_len; k++)
+ putc (' ', rl_outstream);
+ }
+ l += count;
+ }
+ rl_crlf ();
+ lines++;
+ if (_rl_page_completions && lines >= (_rl_screenheight - 1) && i < count)
+ {
+ lines = _rl_internal_pager (lines);
+ if (lines < 0)
+ return;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* Print the sorted items, across alphabetically, like ls -x. */
+ for (i = 1; matches[i]; i++)
+ {
+ temp = printable_part (matches[i]);
+ printed_len = print_filename (temp, matches[i], sind);
+ /* Have we reached the end of this line? */
+ if (matches[i+1])
+ {
+ if (i && (limit > 1) && (i % limit) == 0)
+ {
+ rl_crlf ();
+ lines++;
+ if (_rl_page_completions && lines >= _rl_screenheight - 1)
+ {
+ lines = _rl_internal_pager (lines);
+ if (lines < 0)
+ return;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ for (k = 0; k < max - printed_len; k++)
+ putc (' ', rl_outstream);
+ }
+ }
+ rl_crlf ();
+ }
+}
+
+/* Display MATCHES, a list of matching filenames in argv format. This
+ handles the simple case -- a single match -- first. If there is more
+ than one match, we compute the number of strings in the list and the
+ length of the longest string, which will be needed by the display
+ function. If the application wants to handle displaying the list of
+ matches itself, it sets RL_COMPLETION_DISPLAY_MATCHES_HOOK to the
+ address of a function, and we just call it. If we're handling the
+ display ourselves, we just call rl_display_match_list. We also check
+ that the list of matches doesn't exceed the user-settable threshold,
+ and ask the user if he wants to see the list if there are more matches
+ than RL_COMPLETION_QUERY_ITEMS. */
+static void
+display_matches (matches)
+ char **matches;
+{
+ int len, max, i;
+ char *temp;
+
+ /* Move to the last visible line of a possibly-multiple-line command. */
+ _rl_move_vert (_rl_vis_botlin);
+
+ /* Handle simple case first. What if there is only one answer? */
+ if (matches[1] == 0)
+ {
+ temp = printable_part (matches[0]);
+ rl_crlf ();
+ print_filename (temp, matches[0], 0);
+ rl_crlf ();
+
+ rl_forced_update_display ();
+ rl_display_fixed = 1;
+
+ return;
+ }
+
+ /* There is more than one answer. Find out how many there are,
+ and find the maximum printed length of a single entry. */
+ for (max = 0, i = 1; matches[i]; i++)
+ {
+ temp = printable_part (matches[i]);
+ len = fnwidth (temp);
+
+ if (len > max)
+ max = len;
+ }
+
+ len = i - 1;
+
+ /* If the caller has defined a display hook, then call that now. */
+ if (rl_completion_display_matches_hook)
+ {
+ (*rl_completion_display_matches_hook) (matches, len, max);
+ return;
+ }
+
+ /* If there are many items, then ask the user if she really wants to
+ see them all. */
+ if (rl_completion_query_items > 0 && len >= rl_completion_query_items)
+ {
+ rl_crlf ();
+ fprintf (rl_outstream, "Display all %d possibilities? (y or n)", len);
+ fflush (rl_outstream);
+ if ((completion_y_or_n = get_y_or_n (0)) == 0)
+ {
+ rl_crlf ();
+
+ rl_forced_update_display ();
+ rl_display_fixed = 1;
+
+ return;
+ }
+ }
+
+ rl_display_match_list (matches, len, max);
+
+ rl_forced_update_display ();
+ rl_display_fixed = 1;
+}
+
+static char *
+make_quoted_replacement (match, mtype, qc)
+ char *match;
+ int mtype;
+ char *qc; /* Pointer to quoting character, if any */
+{
+ int should_quote, do_replace;
+ char *replacement;
+
+ /* If we are doing completion on quoted substrings, and any matches
+ contain any of the completer_word_break_characters, then auto-
+ matically prepend the substring with a quote character (just pick
+ the first one from the list of such) if it does not already begin
+ with a quote string. FIXME: Need to remove any such automatically
+ inserted quote character when it no longer is necessary, such as
+ if we change the string we are completing on and the new set of
+ matches don't require a quoted substring. */
+ replacement = match;
+
+ should_quote = match && rl_completer_quote_characters &&
+ rl_filename_completion_desired &&
+ rl_filename_quoting_desired;
+
+ if (should_quote)
+ should_quote = should_quote && (!qc || !*qc ||
+ (rl_completer_quote_characters && strchr (rl_completer_quote_characters, *qc)));
+
+ if (should_quote)
+ {
+ /* If there is a single match, see if we need to quote it.
+ This also checks whether the common prefix of several
+ matches needs to be quoted. */
+ should_quote = rl_filename_quote_characters
+ ? (_rl_strpbrk (match, rl_filename_quote_characters) != 0)
+ : 0;
+
+ do_replace = should_quote ? mtype : NO_MATCH;
+ /* Quote the replacement, since we found an embedded
+ word break character in a potential match. */
+ if (do_replace != NO_MATCH && rl_filename_quoting_function)
+ replacement = (*rl_filename_quoting_function) (match, do_replace, qc);
+ }
+ return (replacement);
+}
+
+static void
+insert_match (match, start, mtype, qc)
+ char *match;
+ int start, mtype;
+ char *qc;
+{
+ char *replacement, *r;
+ char oqc;
+ int end, rlen;
+
+ oqc = qc ? *qc : '\0';
+ replacement = make_quoted_replacement (match, mtype, qc);
+
+ /* Now insert the match. */
+ if (replacement)
+ {
+ rlen = strlen (replacement);
+ /* Don't double an opening quote character. */
+ if (qc && *qc && start && rl_line_buffer[start - 1] == *qc &&
+ replacement[0] == *qc)
+ start--;
+ /* If make_quoted_replacement changed the quoting character, remove
+ the opening quote and insert the (fully-quoted) replacement. */
+ else if (qc && (*qc != oqc) && start && rl_line_buffer[start - 1] == oqc &&
+ replacement[0] != oqc)
+ start--;
+ end = rl_point - 1;
+ /* Don't double a closing quote character */
+ if (qc && *qc && end && rl_line_buffer[rl_point] == *qc && replacement[rlen - 1] == *qc)
+ end++;
+ if (_rl_skip_completed_text)
+ {
+ r = replacement;
+ while (start < rl_end && *r && rl_line_buffer[start] == *r)
+ {
+ start++;
+ r++;
+ }
+ if (start <= end || *r)
+ _rl_replace_text (r, start, end);
+ rl_point = start + strlen (r);
+ }
+ else
+ _rl_replace_text (replacement, start, end);
+ if (replacement != match)
+ xfree (replacement);
+ }
+}
+
+/* Append any necessary closing quote and a separator character to the
+ just-inserted match. If the user has specified that directories
+ should be marked by a trailing `/', append one of those instead. The
+ default trailing character is a space. Returns the number of characters
+ appended. If NONTRIVIAL_MATCH is set, we test for a symlink (if the OS
+ has them) and don't add a suffix for a symlink to a directory. A
+ nontrivial match is one that actually adds to the word being completed.
+ The variable rl_completion_mark_symlink_dirs controls this behavior
+ (it's initially set to the what the user has chosen, indicated by the
+ value of _rl_complete_mark_symlink_dirs, but may be modified by an
+ application's completion function). */
+static int
+append_to_match (text, delimiter, quote_char, nontrivial_match)
+ char *text;
+ int delimiter, quote_char, nontrivial_match;
+{
+ char temp_string[4], *filename, *fn;
+ int temp_string_index, s;
+ struct stat finfo;
+
+ temp_string_index = 0;
+ if (quote_char && rl_point && rl_completion_suppress_quote == 0 &&
+ rl_line_buffer[rl_point - 1] != quote_char)
+ temp_string[temp_string_index++] = quote_char;
+
+ if (delimiter)
+ temp_string[temp_string_index++] = delimiter;
+ else if (rl_completion_suppress_append == 0 && rl_completion_append_character)
+ temp_string[temp_string_index++] = rl_completion_append_character;
+
+ temp_string[temp_string_index++] = '\0';
+
+ if (rl_filename_completion_desired)
+ {
+ filename = tilde_expand (text);
+ if (rl_filename_stat_hook)
+ {
+ fn = savestring (filename);
+ (*rl_filename_stat_hook) (&fn);
+ xfree (filename);
+ filename = fn;
+ }
+ s = (nontrivial_match && rl_completion_mark_symlink_dirs == 0)
+ ? LSTAT (filename, &finfo)
+ : stat (filename, &finfo);
+ if (s == 0 && S_ISDIR (finfo.st_mode))
+ {
+ if (_rl_complete_mark_directories /* && rl_completion_suppress_append == 0 */)
+ {
+ /* This is clumsy. Avoid putting in a double slash if point
+ is at the end of the line and the previous character is a
+ slash. */
+ if (rl_point && rl_line_buffer[rl_point] == '\0' && rl_line_buffer[rl_point - 1] == '/')
+ ;
+ else if (rl_line_buffer[rl_point] != '/')
+ rl_insert_text ("/");
+ }
+ }
+#ifdef S_ISLNK
+ /* Don't add anything if the filename is a symlink and resolves to a
+ directory. */
+ else if (s == 0 && S_ISLNK (finfo.st_mode) && path_isdir (filename))
+ ;
+#endif
+ else
+ {
+ if (rl_point == rl_end && temp_string_index)
+ rl_insert_text (temp_string);
+ }
+ xfree (filename);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if (rl_point == rl_end && temp_string_index)
+ rl_insert_text (temp_string);
+ }
+
+ return (temp_string_index);
+}
+
+static void
+insert_all_matches (matches, point, qc)
+ char **matches;
+ int point;
+ char *qc;
+{
+ int i;
+ char *rp;
+
+ rl_begin_undo_group ();
+ /* remove any opening quote character; make_quoted_replacement will add
+ it back. */
+ if (qc && *qc && point && rl_line_buffer[point - 1] == *qc)
+ point--;
+ rl_delete_text (point, rl_point);
+ rl_point = point;
+
+ if (matches[1])
+ {
+ for (i = 1; matches[i]; i++)
+ {
+ rp = make_quoted_replacement (matches[i], SINGLE_MATCH, qc);
+ rl_insert_text (rp);
+ rl_insert_text (" ");
+ if (rp != matches[i])
+ xfree (rp);
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ rp = make_quoted_replacement (matches[0], SINGLE_MATCH, qc);
+ rl_insert_text (rp);
+ rl_insert_text (" ");
+ if (rp != matches[0])
+ xfree (rp);
+ }
+ rl_end_undo_group ();
+}
+
+void
+_rl_free_match_list (matches)
+ char **matches;
+{
+ register int i;
+
+ if (matches == 0)
+ return;
+
+ for (i = 0; matches[i]; i++)
+ xfree (matches[i]);
+ xfree (matches);
+}
+
+/* Complete the word at or before point.
+ WHAT_TO_DO says what to do with the completion.
+ `?' means list the possible completions.
+ TAB means do standard completion.
+ `*' means insert all of the possible completions.
+ `!' means to do standard completion, and list all possible completions if
+ there is more than one.
+ `@' means to do standard completion, and list all possible completions if
+ there is more than one and partial completion is not possible. */
+int
+rl_complete_internal (what_to_do)
+ int what_to_do;
+{
+ char **matches;
+ rl_compentry_func_t *our_func;
+ int start, end, delimiter, found_quote, i, nontrivial_lcd;
+ char *text, *saved_line_buffer;
+ char quote_char;
+#if 1
+ int tlen, mlen;
+#endif
+
+ RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+
+ set_completion_defaults (what_to_do);
+
+ saved_line_buffer = rl_line_buffer ? savestring (rl_line_buffer) : (char *)NULL;
+ our_func = rl_completion_entry_function
+ ? rl_completion_entry_function
+ : rl_filename_completion_function;
+ /* We now look backwards for the start of a filename/variable word. */
+ end = rl_point;
+ found_quote = delimiter = 0;
+ quote_char = '\0';
+
+ if (rl_point)
+ /* This (possibly) changes rl_point. If it returns a non-zero char,
+ we know we have an open quote. */
+ quote_char = _rl_find_completion_word (&found_quote, &delimiter);
+
+ start = rl_point;
+ rl_point = end;
+
+ text = rl_copy_text (start, end);
+ matches = gen_completion_matches (text, start, end, our_func, found_quote, quote_char);
+ /* nontrivial_lcd is set if the common prefix adds something to the word
+ being completed. */
+ nontrivial_lcd = matches && strcmp (text, matches[0]) != 0;
+ if (what_to_do == '!' || what_to_do == '@')
+ tlen = strlen (text);
+ xfree (text);
+
+ if (matches == 0)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (saved_line_buffer);
+ completion_changed_buffer = 0;
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+ _rl_reset_completion_state ();
+ return (0);
+ }
+
+ /* If we are matching filenames, the attempted completion function will
+ have set rl_filename_completion_desired to a non-zero value. The basic
+ rl_filename_completion_function does this. */
+ i = rl_filename_completion_desired;
+
+ if (postprocess_matches (&matches, i) == 0)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (saved_line_buffer);
+ completion_changed_buffer = 0;
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+ _rl_reset_completion_state ();
+ return (0);
+ }
+
+ switch (what_to_do)
+ {
+ case TAB:
+ case '!':
+ case '@':
+ /* Insert the first match with proper quoting. */
+ if (what_to_do == TAB)
+ {
+ if (*matches[0])
+ insert_match (matches[0], start, matches[1] ? MULT_MATCH : SINGLE_MATCH, "e_char);
+ }
+ else if (*matches[0] && matches[1] == 0)
+ /* should we perform the check only if there are multiple matches? */
+ insert_match (matches[0], start, matches[1] ? MULT_MATCH : SINGLE_MATCH, "e_char);
+ else if (*matches[0]) /* what_to_do != TAB && multiple matches */
+ {
+ mlen = *matches[0] ? strlen (matches[0]) : 0;
+ if (mlen >= tlen)
+ insert_match (matches[0], start, matches[1] ? MULT_MATCH : SINGLE_MATCH, "e_char);
+ }
+
+ /* If there are more matches, ring the bell to indicate.
+ If we are in vi mode, Posix.2 says to not ring the bell.
+ If the `show-all-if-ambiguous' variable is set, display
+ all the matches immediately. Otherwise, if this was the
+ only match, and we are hacking files, check the file to
+ see if it was a directory. If so, and the `mark-directories'
+ variable is set, add a '/' to the name. If not, and we
+ are at the end of the line, then add a space. */
+ if (matches[1])
+ {
+ if (what_to_do == '!')
+ {
+ display_matches (matches);
+ break;
+ }
+ else if (what_to_do == '@')
+ {
+ if (nontrivial_lcd == 0)
+ display_matches (matches);
+ break;
+ }
+ else if (rl_editing_mode != vi_mode)
+ rl_ding (); /* There are other matches remaining. */
+ }
+ else
+ append_to_match (matches[0], delimiter, quote_char, nontrivial_lcd);
+
+ break;
+
+ case '*':
+ insert_all_matches (matches, start, "e_char);
+ break;
+
+ case '?':
+ if (rl_completion_display_matches_hook == 0)
+ {
+ _rl_sigcleanup = _rl_complete_sigcleanup;
+ _rl_sigcleanarg = matches;
+ }
+ display_matches (matches);
+ _rl_sigcleanup = 0;
+ _rl_sigcleanarg = 0;
+ break;
+
+ default:
+ _rl_ttymsg ("bad value %d for what_to_do in rl_complete", what_to_do);
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (saved_line_buffer);
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+ _rl_free_match_list (matches);
+ _rl_reset_completion_state ();
+ return 1;
+ }
+
+ _rl_free_match_list (matches);
+
+ /* Check to see if the line has changed through all of this manipulation. */
+ if (saved_line_buffer)
+ {
+ completion_changed_buffer = strcmp (rl_line_buffer, saved_line_buffer) != 0;
+ xfree (saved_line_buffer);
+ }
+
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+ _rl_reset_completion_state ();
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/***************************************************************/
+/* */
+/* Application-callable completion match generator functions */
+/* */
+/***************************************************************/
+
+/* Return an array of (char *) which is a list of completions for TEXT.
+ If there are no completions, return a NULL pointer.
+ The first entry in the returned array is the substitution for TEXT.
+ The remaining entries are the possible completions.
+ The array is terminated with a NULL pointer.
+
+ ENTRY_FUNCTION is a function of two args, and returns a (char *).
+ The first argument is TEXT.
+ The second is a state argument; it should be zero on the first call, and
+ non-zero on subsequent calls. It returns a NULL pointer to the caller
+ when there are no more matches.
+ */
+char **
+rl_completion_matches (text, entry_function)
+ const char *text;
+ rl_compentry_func_t *entry_function;
+{
+ register int i;
+
+ /* Number of slots in match_list. */
+ int match_list_size;
+
+ /* The list of matches. */
+ char **match_list;
+
+ /* Number of matches actually found. */
+ int matches;
+
+ /* Temporary string binder. */
+ char *string;
+
+ matches = 0;
+ match_list_size = 10;
+ match_list = (char **)xmalloc ((match_list_size + 1) * sizeof (char *));
+ match_list[1] = (char *)NULL;
+
+ while (string = (*entry_function) (text, matches))
+ {
+ if (RL_SIG_RECEIVED ())
+ {
+ /* Start at 1 because we don't set matches[0] in this function.
+ Only free the list members if we're building match list from
+ rl_filename_completion_function, since we know that doesn't
+ free the strings it returns. */
+ if (entry_function == rl_filename_completion_function)
+ {
+ for (i = 1; match_list[i]; i++)
+ xfree (match_list[i]);
+ }
+ xfree (match_list);
+ match_list = 0;
+ match_list_size = 0;
+ RL_CHECK_SIGNALS ();
+ }
+
+ if (matches + 1 == match_list_size)
+ match_list = (char **)xrealloc
+ (match_list, ((match_list_size += 10) + 1) * sizeof (char *));
+
+ match_list[++matches] = string;
+ match_list[matches + 1] = (char *)NULL;
+ }
+
+ /* If there were any matches, then look through them finding out the
+ lowest common denominator. That then becomes match_list[0]. */
+ if (matches)
+ compute_lcd_of_matches (match_list, matches, text);
+ else /* There were no matches. */
+ {
+ xfree (match_list);
+ match_list = (char **)NULL;
+ }
+ return (match_list);
+}
+
+/* A completion function for usernames.
+ TEXT contains a partial username preceded by a random
+ character (usually `~'). */
+char *
+rl_username_completion_function (text, state)
+ const char *text;
+ int state;
+{
+#if defined (__WIN32__) || defined (__OPENNT)
+ return (char *)NULL;
+#else /* !__WIN32__ && !__OPENNT) */
+ static char *username = (char *)NULL;
+ static struct passwd *entry;
+ static int namelen, first_char, first_char_loc;
+ char *value;
+
+ if (state == 0)
+ {
+ FREE (username);
+
+ first_char = *text;
+ first_char_loc = first_char == '~';
+
+ username = savestring (&text[first_char_loc]);
+ namelen = strlen (username);
+ setpwent ();
+ }
+
+#if defined (HAVE_GETPWENT)
+ while (entry = getpwent ())
+ {
+ /* Null usernames should result in all users as possible completions. */
+ if (namelen == 0 || (STREQN (username, entry->pw_name, namelen)))
+ break;
+ }
+#endif
+
+ if (entry == 0)
+ {
+#if defined (HAVE_GETPWENT)
+ endpwent ();
+#endif
+ return ((char *)NULL);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ value = (char *)xmalloc (2 + strlen (entry->pw_name));
+
+ *value = *text;
+
+ strcpy (value + first_char_loc, entry->pw_name);
+
+ if (first_char == '~')
+ rl_filename_completion_desired = 1;
+
+ return (value);
+ }
+#endif /* !__WIN32__ && !__OPENNT */
+}
+
+/* Return non-zero if CONVFN matches FILENAME up to the length of FILENAME
+ (FILENAME_LEN). If _rl_completion_case_fold is set, compare without
+ regard to the alphabetic case of characters. If
+ _rl_completion_case_map is set, make `-' and `_' equivalent. CONVFN is
+ the possibly-converted directory entry; FILENAME is what the user typed. */
+static int
+complete_fncmp (convfn, convlen, filename, filename_len)
+ const char *convfn;
+ int convlen;
+ const char *filename;
+ int filename_len;
+{
+ register char *s1, *s2;
+ int d, len;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ size_t v1, v2;
+ mbstate_t ps1, ps2;
+ wchar_t wc1, wc2;
+#endif
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ memset (&ps1, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ memset (&ps2, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+#endif
+
+ if (filename_len == 0)
+ return 1;
+ if (convlen < filename_len)
+ return 0;
+
+ len = filename_len;
+ s1 = (char *)convfn;
+ s2 = (char *)filename;
+
+ /* Otherwise, if these match up to the length of filename, then
+ it is a match. */
+ if (_rl_completion_case_fold && _rl_completion_case_map)
+ {
+ /* Case-insensitive comparison treating _ and - as equivalent */
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ do
+ {
+ v1 = mbrtowc (&wc1, s1, convlen, &ps1);
+ v2 = mbrtowc (&wc2, s2, filename_len, &ps2);
+ if (v1 == 0 && v2 == 0)
+ return 1;
+ else if (MB_INVALIDCH (v1) || MB_INVALIDCH (v2))
+ {
+ if (*s1 != *s2) /* do byte comparison */
+ return 0;
+ else if ((*s1 == '-' || *s1 == '_') && (*s2 == '-' || *s2 == '_'))
+ return 0;
+ s1++; s2++; len--;
+ continue;
+ }
+ wc1 = towlower (wc1);
+ wc2 = towlower (wc2);
+ s1 += v1;
+ s2 += v1;
+ len -= v1;
+ if ((wc1 == L'-' || wc1 == L'_') && (wc2 == L'-' || wc2 == L'_'))
+ continue;
+ if (wc1 != wc2)
+ return 0;
+ }
+ while (len != 0);
+ }
+ else
+#endif
+ {
+ do
+ {
+ d = _rl_to_lower (*s1) - _rl_to_lower (*s2);
+ /* *s1 == [-_] && *s2 == [-_] */
+ if ((*s1 == '-' || *s1 == '_') && (*s2 == '-' || *s2 == '_'))
+ d = 0;
+ if (d != 0)
+ return 0;
+ s1++; s2++; /* already checked convlen >= filename_len */
+ }
+ while (--len != 0);
+ }
+
+ return 1;
+ }
+ else if (_rl_completion_case_fold)
+ {
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ do
+ {
+ v1 = mbrtowc (&wc1, s1, convlen, &ps1);
+ v2 = mbrtowc (&wc2, s2, filename_len, &ps2);
+ if (v1 == 0 && v2 == 0)
+ return 1;
+ else if (MB_INVALIDCH (v1) || MB_INVALIDCH (v2))
+ {
+ if (*s1 != *s2) /* do byte comparison */
+ return 0;
+ s1++; s2++; len--;
+ continue;
+ }
+ wc1 = towlower (wc1);
+ wc2 = towlower (wc2);
+ if (wc1 != wc2)
+ return 0;
+ s1 += v1;
+ s2 += v1;
+ len -= v1;
+ }
+ while (len != 0);
+ return 1;
+ }
+ else
+#endif
+ if ((_rl_to_lower (convfn[0]) == _rl_to_lower (filename[0])) &&
+ (convlen >= filename_len) &&
+ (_rl_strnicmp (filename, convfn, filename_len) == 0))
+ return 1;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if ((convfn[0] == filename[0]) &&
+ (convlen >= filename_len) &&
+ (strncmp (filename, convfn, filename_len) == 0))
+ return 1;
+ }
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/* Okay, now we write the entry_function for filename completion. In the
+ general case. Note that completion in the shell is a little different
+ because of all the pathnames that must be followed when looking up the
+ completion for a command. */
+char *
+rl_filename_completion_function (text, state)
+ const char *text;
+ int state;
+{
+ static DIR *directory = (DIR *)NULL;
+ static char *filename = (char *)NULL;
+ static char *dirname = (char *)NULL;
+ static char *users_dirname = (char *)NULL;
+ static int filename_len;
+ char *temp, *dentry, *convfn;
+ int dirlen, dentlen, convlen;
+ struct dirent *entry;
+
+ /* If we don't have any state, then do some initialization. */
+ if (state == 0)
+ {
+ /* If we were interrupted before closing the directory or reading
+ all of its contents, close it. */
+ if (directory)
+ {
+ closedir (directory);
+ directory = (DIR *)NULL;
+ }
+ FREE (dirname);
+ FREE (filename);
+ FREE (users_dirname);
+
+ filename = savestring (text);
+ if (*text == 0)
+ text = ".";
+ dirname = savestring (text);
+
+ temp = strrchr (dirname, '/');
+
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ /* special hack for //X/... */
+ if (dirname[0] == '/' && dirname[1] == '/' && ISALPHA ((unsigned char)dirname[2]) && dirname[3] == '/')
+ temp = strrchr (dirname + 3, '/');
+#endif
+
+ if (temp)
+ {
+ strcpy (filename, ++temp);
+ *temp = '\0';
+ }
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ /* searches from current directory on the drive */
+ else if (ISALPHA ((unsigned char)dirname[0]) && dirname[1] == ':')
+ {
+ strcpy (filename, dirname + 2);
+ dirname[2] = '\0';
+ }
+#endif
+ else
+ {
+ dirname[0] = '.';
+ dirname[1] = '\0';
+ }
+
+ /* We aren't done yet. We also support the "~user" syntax. */
+
+ /* Save the version of the directory that the user typed, dequoting
+ it if necessary. */
+ if (rl_completion_found_quote && rl_filename_dequoting_function)
+ users_dirname = (*rl_filename_dequoting_function) (dirname, rl_completion_quote_character);
+ else
+ users_dirname = savestring (dirname);
+
+ if (*dirname == '~')
+ {
+ temp = tilde_expand (dirname);
+ xfree (dirname);
+ dirname = temp;
+ }
+
+ /* We have saved the possibly-dequoted version of the directory name
+ the user typed. Now transform the directory name we're going to
+ pass to opendir(2). The directory rewrite hook modifies only the
+ directory name; the directory completion hook modifies both the
+ directory name passed to opendir(2) and the version the user
+ typed. Both the directory completion and rewrite hooks should perform
+ any necessary dequoting. The hook functions return 1 if they modify
+ the directory name argument. If either hook returns 0, it should
+ not modify the directory name pointer passed as an argument. */
+ if (rl_directory_rewrite_hook)
+ (*rl_directory_rewrite_hook) (&dirname);
+ else if (rl_directory_completion_hook && (*rl_directory_completion_hook) (&dirname))
+ {
+ xfree (users_dirname);
+ users_dirname = savestring (dirname);
+ }
+ else if (rl_completion_found_quote && rl_filename_dequoting_function)
+ {
+ /* delete single and double quotes */
+ xfree (dirname);
+ dirname = savestring (users_dirname);
+ }
+ directory = opendir (dirname);
+
+ /* Now dequote a non-null filename. FILENAME will not be NULL, but may
+ be empty. */
+ if (*filename && rl_completion_found_quote && rl_filename_dequoting_function)
+ {
+ /* delete single and double quotes */
+ temp = (*rl_filename_dequoting_function) (filename, rl_completion_quote_character);
+ xfree (filename);
+ filename = temp;
+ }
+ filename_len = strlen (filename);
+
+ rl_filename_completion_desired = 1;
+ }
+
+ /* At this point we should entertain the possibility of hacking wildcarded
+ filenames, like /usr/man/man<WILD>/te<TAB>. If the directory name
+ contains globbing characters, then build an array of directories, and
+ then map over that list while completing. */
+ /* *** UNIMPLEMENTED *** */
+
+ /* Now that we have some state, we can read the directory. */
+
+ entry = (struct dirent *)NULL;
+ while (directory && (entry = readdir (directory)))
+ {
+ convfn = dentry = entry->d_name;
+ convlen = dentlen = D_NAMLEN (entry);
+
+ if (rl_filename_rewrite_hook)
+ {
+ convfn = (*rl_filename_rewrite_hook) (dentry, dentlen);
+ convlen = (convfn == dentry) ? dentlen : strlen (convfn);
+ }
+
+ /* Special case for no filename. If the user has disabled the
+ `match-hidden-files' variable, skip filenames beginning with `.'.
+ All other entries except "." and ".." match. */
+ if (filename_len == 0)
+ {
+ if (_rl_match_hidden_files == 0 && HIDDEN_FILE (convfn))
+ continue;
+
+ if (convfn[0] != '.' ||
+ (convfn[1] && (convfn[1] != '.' || convfn[2])))
+ break;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if (complete_fncmp (convfn, convlen, filename, filename_len))
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+
+ if (entry == 0)
+ {
+ if (directory)
+ {
+ closedir (directory);
+ directory = (DIR *)NULL;
+ }
+ if (dirname)
+ {
+ xfree (dirname);
+ dirname = (char *)NULL;
+ }
+ if (filename)
+ {
+ xfree (filename);
+ filename = (char *)NULL;
+ }
+ if (users_dirname)
+ {
+ xfree (users_dirname);
+ users_dirname = (char *)NULL;
+ }
+
+ return (char *)NULL;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* dirname && (strcmp (dirname, ".") != 0) */
+ if (dirname && (dirname[0] != '.' || dirname[1]))
+ {
+ if (rl_complete_with_tilde_expansion && *users_dirname == '~')
+ {
+ dirlen = strlen (dirname);
+ temp = (char *)xmalloc (2 + dirlen + D_NAMLEN (entry));
+ strcpy (temp, dirname);
+ /* Canonicalization cuts off any final slash present. We
+ may need to add it back. */
+ if (dirname[dirlen - 1] != '/')
+ {
+ temp[dirlen++] = '/';
+ temp[dirlen] = '\0';
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ dirlen = strlen (users_dirname);
+ temp = (char *)xmalloc (2 + dirlen + D_NAMLEN (entry));
+ strcpy (temp, users_dirname);
+ /* Make sure that temp has a trailing slash here. */
+ if (users_dirname[dirlen - 1] != '/')
+ temp[dirlen++] = '/';
+ }
+
+ strcpy (temp + dirlen, convfn);
+ }
+ else
+ temp = savestring (convfn);
+
+ if (convfn != dentry)
+ xfree (convfn);
+
+ return (temp);
+ }
+}
+
+/* An initial implementation of a menu completion function a la tcsh. The
+ first time (if the last readline command was not rl_old_menu_complete), we
+ generate the list of matches. This code is very similar to the code in
+ rl_complete_internal -- there should be a way to combine the two. Then,
+ for each item in the list of matches, we insert the match in an undoable
+ fashion, with the appropriate character appended (this happens on the
+ second and subsequent consecutive calls to rl_old_menu_complete). When we
+ hit the end of the match list, we restore the original unmatched text,
+ ring the bell, and reset the counter to zero. */
+int
+rl_old_menu_complete (count, invoking_key)
+ int count, invoking_key;
+{
+ rl_compentry_func_t *our_func;
+ int matching_filenames, found_quote;
+
+ static char *orig_text;
+ static char **matches = (char **)0;
+ static int match_list_index = 0;
+ static int match_list_size = 0;
+ static int orig_start, orig_end;
+ static char quote_char;
+ static int delimiter;
+
+ /* The first time through, we generate the list of matches and set things
+ up to insert them. */
+ if (rl_last_func != rl_old_menu_complete)
+ {
+ /* Clean up from previous call, if any. */
+ FREE (orig_text);
+ if (matches)
+ _rl_free_match_list (matches);
+
+ match_list_index = match_list_size = 0;
+ matches = (char **)NULL;
+
+ rl_completion_invoking_key = invoking_key;
+
+ RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+
+ /* Only the completion entry function can change these. */
+ set_completion_defaults ('%');
+
+ our_func = rl_menu_completion_entry_function;
+ if (our_func == 0)
+ our_func = rl_completion_entry_function
+ ? rl_completion_entry_function
+ : rl_filename_completion_function;
+
+ /* We now look backwards for the start of a filename/variable word. */
+ orig_end = rl_point;
+ found_quote = delimiter = 0;
+ quote_char = '\0';
+
+ if (rl_point)
+ /* This (possibly) changes rl_point. If it returns a non-zero char,
+ we know we have an open quote. */
+ quote_char = _rl_find_completion_word (&found_quote, &delimiter);
+
+ orig_start = rl_point;
+ rl_point = orig_end;
+
+ orig_text = rl_copy_text (orig_start, orig_end);
+ matches = gen_completion_matches (orig_text, orig_start, orig_end,
+ our_func, found_quote, quote_char);
+
+ /* If we are matching filenames, the attempted completion function will
+ have set rl_filename_completion_desired to a non-zero value. The basic
+ rl_filename_completion_function does this. */
+ matching_filenames = rl_filename_completion_desired;
+
+ if (matches == 0 || postprocess_matches (&matches, matching_filenames) == 0)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (matches);
+ matches = (char **)0;
+ FREE (orig_text);
+ orig_text = (char *)0;
+ completion_changed_buffer = 0;
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+ return (0);
+ }
+
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+
+ for (match_list_size = 0; matches[match_list_size]; match_list_size++)
+ ;
+ /* matches[0] is lcd if match_list_size > 1, but the circular buffer
+ code below should take care of it. */
+
+ if (match_list_size > 1 && _rl_complete_show_all)
+ display_matches (matches);
+ }
+
+ /* Now we have the list of matches. Replace the text between
+ rl_line_buffer[orig_start] and rl_line_buffer[rl_point] with
+ matches[match_list_index], and add any necessary closing char. */
+
+ if (matches == 0 || match_list_size == 0)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (matches);
+ matches = (char **)0;
+ completion_changed_buffer = 0;
+ return (0);
+ }
+
+ match_list_index += count;
+ if (match_list_index < 0)
+ {
+ while (match_list_index < 0)
+ match_list_index += match_list_size;
+ }
+ else
+ match_list_index %= match_list_size;
+
+ if (match_list_index == 0 && match_list_size > 1)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ insert_match (orig_text, orig_start, MULT_MATCH, "e_char);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ insert_match (matches[match_list_index], orig_start, SINGLE_MATCH, "e_char);
+ append_to_match (matches[match_list_index], delimiter, quote_char,
+ strcmp (orig_text, matches[match_list_index]));
+ }
+
+ completion_changed_buffer = 1;
+ return (0);
+}
+
+int
+rl_menu_complete (count, ignore)
+ int count, ignore;
+{
+ rl_compentry_func_t *our_func;
+ int matching_filenames, found_quote;
+
+ static char *orig_text;
+ static char **matches = (char **)0;
+ static int match_list_index = 0;
+ static int match_list_size = 0;
+ static int nontrivial_lcd = 0;
+ static int full_completion = 0; /* set to 1 if menu completion should reinitialize on next call */
+ static int orig_start, orig_end;
+ static char quote_char;
+ static int delimiter, cstate;
+
+ /* The first time through, we generate the list of matches and set things
+ up to insert them. */
+ if ((rl_last_func != rl_menu_complete && rl_last_func != rl_backward_menu_complete) || full_completion)
+ {
+ /* Clean up from previous call, if any. */
+ FREE (orig_text);
+ if (matches)
+ _rl_free_match_list (matches);
+
+ match_list_index = match_list_size = 0;
+ matches = (char **)NULL;
+
+ full_completion = 0;
+
+ RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+
+ /* Only the completion entry function can change these. */
+ set_completion_defaults ('%');
+
+ our_func = rl_menu_completion_entry_function;
+ if (our_func == 0)
+ our_func = rl_completion_entry_function
+ ? rl_completion_entry_function
+ : rl_filename_completion_function;
+
+ /* We now look backwards for the start of a filename/variable word. */
+ orig_end = rl_point;
+ found_quote = delimiter = 0;
+ quote_char = '\0';
+
+ if (rl_point)
+ /* This (possibly) changes rl_point. If it returns a non-zero char,
+ we know we have an open quote. */
+ quote_char = _rl_find_completion_word (&found_quote, &delimiter);
+
+ orig_start = rl_point;
+ rl_point = orig_end;
+
+ orig_text = rl_copy_text (orig_start, orig_end);
+ matches = gen_completion_matches (orig_text, orig_start, orig_end,
+ our_func, found_quote, quote_char);
+
+ nontrivial_lcd = matches && strcmp (orig_text, matches[0]) != 0;
+
+ /* If we are matching filenames, the attempted completion function will
+ have set rl_filename_completion_desired to a non-zero value. The basic
+ rl_filename_completion_function does this. */
+ matching_filenames = rl_filename_completion_desired;
+
+ if (matches == 0 || postprocess_matches (&matches, matching_filenames) == 0)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (matches);
+ matches = (char **)0;
+ FREE (orig_text);
+ orig_text = (char *)0;
+ completion_changed_buffer = 0;
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+ return (0);
+ }
+
+ RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_COMPLETING);
+
+ for (match_list_size = 0; matches[match_list_size]; match_list_size++)
+ ;
+
+ if (match_list_size == 0)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (matches);
+ matches = (char **)0;
+ match_list_index = 0;
+ completion_changed_buffer = 0;
+ return (0);
+ }
+
+ /* matches[0] is lcd if match_list_size > 1, but the circular buffer
+ code below should take care of it. */
+ if (*matches[0])
+ {
+ insert_match (matches[0], orig_start, matches[1] ? MULT_MATCH : SINGLE_MATCH, "e_char);
+ orig_end = orig_start + strlen (matches[0]);
+ completion_changed_buffer = STREQ (orig_text, matches[0]) == 0;
+ }
+
+ if (match_list_size > 1 && _rl_complete_show_all)
+ {
+ display_matches (matches);
+ /* If there are so many matches that the user has to be asked
+ whether or not he wants to see the matches, menu completion
+ is unwieldy. */
+ if (rl_completion_query_items > 0 && match_list_size >= rl_completion_query_items)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (matches);
+ matches = (char **)0;
+ full_completion = 1;
+ return (0);
+ }
+ else if (_rl_menu_complete_prefix_first)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ return (0);
+ }
+ }
+ else if (match_list_size <= 1)
+ {
+ append_to_match (matches[0], delimiter, quote_char, nontrivial_lcd);
+ full_completion = 1;
+ return (0);
+ }
+ else if (_rl_menu_complete_prefix_first && match_list_size > 1)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ return (0);
+ }
+ }
+
+ /* Now we have the list of matches. Replace the text between
+ rl_line_buffer[orig_start] and rl_line_buffer[rl_point] with
+ matches[match_list_index], and add any necessary closing char. */
+
+ if (matches == 0 || match_list_size == 0)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ FREE (matches);
+ matches = (char **)0;
+ completion_changed_buffer = 0;
+ return (0);
+ }
+
+ match_list_index += count;
+ if (match_list_index < 0)
+ {
+ while (match_list_index < 0)
+ match_list_index += match_list_size;
+ }
+ else
+ match_list_index %= match_list_size;
+
+ if (match_list_index == 0 && match_list_size > 1)
+ {
+ rl_ding ();
+ insert_match (matches[0], orig_start, MULT_MATCH, "e_char);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ insert_match (matches[match_list_index], orig_start, SINGLE_MATCH, "e_char);
+ append_to_match (matches[match_list_index], delimiter, quote_char,
+ strcmp (orig_text, matches[match_list_index]));
+ }
+
+ completion_changed_buffer = 1;
+ return (0);
+}
+
+int
+rl_backward_menu_complete (count, key)
+ int count, key;
+{
+ /* Positive arguments to backward-menu-complete translate into negative
+ arguments for menu-complete, and vice versa. */
+ return (rl_menu_complete (-count, key));
+}
rl_save_prompt ();
msg_saved_prompt = 1;
}
+ else if (local_prompt != saved_local_prompt)
+ {
+ FREE (local_prompt);
+ FREE (local_prompt_prefix);
+ local_prompt = (char *)NULL;
+ }
rl_display_prompt = msg_buf;
local_prompt = expand_prompt (msg_buf, &prompt_visible_length,
&prompt_last_invisible,
rl_save_prompt ();
msg_saved_prompt = 1;
}
+ else if (local_prompt != saved_local_prompt)
+ {
+ FREE (local_prompt);
+ FREE (local_prompt_prefix);
+ local_prompt = (char *)NULL;
+ }
local_prompt = expand_prompt (msg_buf, &prompt_visible_length,
&prompt_last_invisible,
&prompt_invis_chars_first_line,
--- /dev/null
+/* display.c -- readline redisplay facility. */
+
+/* Copyright (C) 1987-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ This file is part of the GNU Readline Library (Readline), a library
+ for reading lines of text with interactive input and history editing.
+
+ Readline is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
+
+ Readline is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ along with Readline. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+*/
+
+#define READLINE_LIBRARY
+
+#if defined (HAVE_CONFIG_H)
+# include <config.h>
+#endif
+
+#include <sys/types.h>
+
+#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H)
+# include <unistd.h>
+#endif /* HAVE_UNISTD_H */
+
+#include "posixstat.h"
+
+#if defined (HAVE_STDLIB_H)
+# include <stdlib.h>
+#else
+# include "ansi_stdlib.h"
+#endif /* HAVE_STDLIB_H */
+
+#include <stdio.h>
+
+#ifdef __MSDOS__
+# include <pc.h>
+#endif
+
+/* System-specific feature definitions and include files. */
+#include "rldefs.h"
+#include "rlmbutil.h"
+
+/* Termcap library stuff. */
+#include "tcap.h"
+
+/* Some standard library routines. */
+#include "readline.h"
+#include "history.h"
+
+#include "rlprivate.h"
+#include "xmalloc.h"
+
+#if !defined (strchr) && !defined (__STDC__)
+extern char *strchr (), *strrchr ();
+#endif /* !strchr && !__STDC__ */
+
+static void update_line PARAMS((char *, char *, int, int, int, int));
+static void space_to_eol PARAMS((int));
+static void delete_chars PARAMS((int));
+static void insert_some_chars PARAMS((char *, int, int));
+static void cr PARAMS((void));
+
+/* State of visible and invisible lines. */
+struct line_state
+ {
+ char *line;
+ int *lbreaks;
+ int lbsize;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ int *wrapped_line;
+ int wbsize;
+#endif
+ };
+
+/* The line display buffers. One is the line currently displayed on
+ the screen. The other is the line about to be displayed. */
+static struct line_state line_state_array[2];
+static struct line_state *line_state_visible = &line_state_array[0];
+static struct line_state *line_state_invisible = &line_state_array[1];
+static int line_structures_initialized = 0;
+
+/* Backwards-compatible names. */
+#define inv_lbreaks (line_state_invisible->lbreaks)
+#define inv_lbsize (line_state_invisible->lbsize)
+#define vis_lbreaks (line_state_visible->lbreaks)
+#define vis_lbsize (line_state_visible->lbsize)
+
+#define visible_line (line_state_visible->line)
+#define invisible_line (line_state_invisible->line)
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+static int _rl_col_width PARAMS((const char *, int, int, int));
+#else
+# define _rl_col_width(l, s, e, f) (((e) <= (s)) ? 0 : (e) - (s))
+#endif
+
+/* Heuristic used to decide whether it is faster to move from CUR to NEW
+ by backing up or outputting a carriage return and moving forward. CUR
+ and NEW are either both buffer positions or absolute screen positions. */
+#define CR_FASTER(new, cur) (((new) + 1) < ((cur) - (new)))
+
+/* _rl_last_c_pos is an absolute cursor position in multibyte locales and a
+ buffer index in others. This macro is used when deciding whether the
+ current cursor position is in the middle of a prompt string containing
+ invisible characters. XXX - might need to take `modmark' into account. */
+#define PROMPT_ENDING_INDEX \
+ ((MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) ? prompt_physical_chars : prompt_last_invisible+1)
+
+
+/* **************************************************************** */
+/* */
+/* Display stuff */
+/* */
+/* **************************************************************** */
+
+/* This is the stuff that is hard for me. I never seem to write good
+ display routines in C. Let's see how I do this time. */
+
+/* (PWP) Well... Good for a simple line updater, but totally ignores
+ the problems of input lines longer than the screen width.
+
+ update_line and the code that calls it makes a multiple line,
+ automatically wrapping line update. Careful attention needs
+ to be paid to the vertical position variables. */
+
+/* Keep two buffers; one which reflects the current contents of the
+ screen, and the other to draw what we think the new contents should
+ be. Then compare the buffers, and make whatever changes to the
+ screen itself that we should. Finally, make the buffer that we
+ just drew into be the one which reflects the current contents of the
+ screen, and place the cursor where it belongs.
+
+ Commands that want to can fix the display themselves, and then let
+ this function know that the display has been fixed by setting the
+ RL_DISPLAY_FIXED variable. This is good for efficiency. */
+
+/* Application-specific redisplay function. */
+rl_voidfunc_t *rl_redisplay_function = rl_redisplay;
+
+/* Global variables declared here. */
+/* What YOU turn on when you have handled all redisplay yourself. */
+int rl_display_fixed = 0;
+
+int _rl_suppress_redisplay = 0;
+int _rl_want_redisplay = 0;
+
+/* The stuff that gets printed out before the actual text of the line.
+ This is usually pointing to rl_prompt. */
+char *rl_display_prompt = (char *)NULL;
+
+/* Pseudo-global variables declared here. */
+
+/* The visible cursor position. If you print some text, adjust this. */
+/* NOTE: _rl_last_c_pos is used as a buffer index when not in a locale
+ supporting multibyte characters, and an absolute cursor position when
+ in such a locale. This is an artifact of the donated multibyte support.
+ Care must be taken when modifying its value. */
+int _rl_last_c_pos = 0;
+int _rl_last_v_pos = 0;
+
+static int cpos_adjusted;
+static int cpos_buffer_position;
+static int prompt_multibyte_chars;
+
+/* Number of lines currently on screen minus 1. */
+int _rl_vis_botlin = 0;
+
+/* Variables used only in this file. */
+/* The last left edge of text that was displayed. This is used when
+ doing horizontal scrolling. It shifts in thirds of a screenwidth. */
+static int last_lmargin;
+
+/* A buffer for `modeline' messages. */
+static char *msg_buf = 0;
+static int msg_bufsiz = 0;
+
+/* Non-zero forces the redisplay even if we thought it was unnecessary. */
+static int forced_display;
+
+/* Default and initial buffer size. Can grow. */
+static int line_size = 1024;
+
+/* Variables to keep track of the expanded prompt string, which may
+ include invisible characters. */
+
+static char *local_prompt, *local_prompt_prefix;
+static int local_prompt_len;
+static int prompt_visible_length, prompt_prefix_length;
+
+/* The number of invisible characters in the line currently being
+ displayed on the screen. */
+static int visible_wrap_offset;
+
+/* The number of invisible characters in the prompt string. Static so it
+ can be shared between rl_redisplay and update_line */
+static int wrap_offset;
+
+/* The index of the last invisible character in the prompt string. */
+static int prompt_last_invisible;
+
+/* The length (buffer offset) of the first line of the last (possibly
+ multi-line) buffer displayed on the screen. */
+static int visible_first_line_len;
+
+/* Number of invisible characters on the first physical line of the prompt.
+ Only valid when the number of physical characters in the prompt exceeds
+ (or is equal to) _rl_screenwidth. */
+static int prompt_invis_chars_first_line;
+
+static int prompt_last_screen_line;
+
+static int prompt_physical_chars;
+
+/* set to a non-zero value by rl_redisplay if we are marking modified history
+ lines and the current line is so marked. */
+static int modmark;
+
+/* Variables to save and restore prompt and display information. */
+
+/* These are getting numerous enough that it's time to create a struct. */
+
+static char *saved_local_prompt;
+static char *saved_local_prefix;
+static int saved_last_invisible;
+static int saved_visible_length;
+static int saved_prefix_length;
+static int saved_local_length;
+static int saved_invis_chars_first_line;
+static int saved_physical_chars;
+
+/* Return a character indicating the editing mode, for use in the prompt. */
+static int
+prompt_modechar ()
+{
+ if (rl_editing_mode == emacs_mode)
+ return '@';
+ else if (_rl_keymap == vi_insertion_keymap)
+ return '+'; /* vi insert mode */
+ else
+ return ':'; /* vi command mode */
+}
+
+/* Expand the prompt string S and return the number of visible
+ characters in *LP, if LP is not null. This is currently more-or-less
+ a placeholder for expansion. LIP, if non-null is a place to store the
+ index of the last invisible character in the returned string. NIFLP,
+ if non-zero, is a place to store the number of invisible characters in
+ the first prompt line. The previous are used as byte counts -- indexes
+ into a character buffer. */
+
+/* Current implementation:
+ \001 (^A) start non-visible characters
+ \002 (^B) end non-visible characters
+ all characters except \001 and \002 (following a \001) are copied to
+ the returned string; all characters except those between \001 and
+ \002 are assumed to be `visible'. */
+
+static char *
+expand_prompt (pmt, lp, lip, niflp, vlp)
+ char *pmt;
+ int *lp, *lip, *niflp, *vlp;
+{
+ char *r, *ret, *p, *igstart;
+ int l, rl, last, ignoring, ninvis, invfl, invflset, ind, pind, physchars;
+
+ /* Short-circuit if we can. */
+ if ((MB_CUR_MAX <= 1 || rl_byte_oriented) && strchr (pmt, RL_PROMPT_START_IGNORE) == 0)
+ {
+ if (pmt == rl_prompt && _rl_show_mode_in_prompt)
+ {
+ l = strlen (pmt);
+ r = (char *)xmalloc (l + 2);
+ r[0] = prompt_modechar ();
+ strcpy (r + 1, pmt);
+ }
+ else
+ r = savestring (pmt);
+
+ if (lp)
+ *lp = strlen (r);
+ if (lip)
+ *lip = 0;
+ if (niflp)
+ *niflp = 0;
+ if (vlp)
+ *vlp = lp ? *lp : strlen (r);
+ return r;
+ }
+
+ l = strlen (pmt);
+ r = ret = (char *)xmalloc (l + 2);
+
+ rl = physchars = 0; /* move up here so mode show can set them */
+ if (pmt == rl_prompt && _rl_show_mode_in_prompt)
+ {
+ *r++ = prompt_modechar ();
+ rl = physchars = 1;
+ }
+
+ invfl = 0; /* invisible chars in first line of prompt */
+ invflset = 0; /* we only want to set invfl once */
+
+ igstart = 0;
+ for (ignoring = last = ninvis = 0, p = pmt; p && *p; p++)
+ {
+ /* This code strips the invisible character string markers
+ RL_PROMPT_START_IGNORE and RL_PROMPT_END_IGNORE */
+ if (ignoring == 0 && *p == RL_PROMPT_START_IGNORE) /* XXX - check ignoring? */
+ {
+ ignoring = 1;
+ igstart = p;
+ continue;
+ }
+ else if (ignoring && *p == RL_PROMPT_END_IGNORE)
+ {
+ ignoring = 0;
+ if (p != (igstart + 1))
+ last = r - ret - 1;
+ continue;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ pind = p - pmt;
+ ind = _rl_find_next_mbchar (pmt, pind, 1, MB_FIND_NONZERO);
+ l = ind - pind;
+ while (l--)
+ *r++ = *p++;
+ if (!ignoring)
+ {
+ /* rl ends up being assigned to prompt_visible_length,
+ which is the number of characters in the buffer that
+ contribute to characters on the screen, which might
+ not be the same as the number of physical characters
+ on the screen in the presence of multibyte characters */
+ rl += ind - pind;
+ physchars += _rl_col_width (pmt, pind, ind, 0);
+ }
+ else
+ ninvis += ind - pind;
+ p--; /* compensate for later increment */
+ }
+ else
+#endif
+ {
+ *r++ = *p;
+ if (!ignoring)
+ {
+ rl++; /* visible length byte counter */
+ physchars++;
+ }
+ else
+ ninvis++; /* invisible chars byte counter */
+ }
+
+ if (invflset == 0 && rl >= _rl_screenwidth)
+ {
+ invfl = ninvis;
+ invflset = 1;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ if (rl < _rl_screenwidth)
+ invfl = ninvis;
+
+ *r = '\0';
+ if (lp)
+ *lp = rl;
+ if (lip)
+ *lip = last;
+ if (niflp)
+ *niflp = invfl;
+ if (vlp)
+ *vlp = physchars;
+ return ret;
+}
+
+/* Just strip out RL_PROMPT_START_IGNORE and RL_PROMPT_END_IGNORE from
+ PMT and return the rest of PMT. */
+char *
+_rl_strip_prompt (pmt)
+ char *pmt;
+{
+ char *ret;
+
+ ret = expand_prompt (pmt, (int *)NULL, (int *)NULL, (int *)NULL, (int *)NULL);
+ return ret;
+}
+
+void
+_rl_reset_prompt ()
+{
+ rl_visible_prompt_length = rl_expand_prompt (rl_prompt);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Expand the prompt string into the various display components, if
+ * necessary.
+ *
+ * local_prompt = expanded last line of string in rl_display_prompt
+ * (portion after the final newline)
+ * local_prompt_prefix = portion before last newline of rl_display_prompt,
+ * expanded via expand_prompt
+ * prompt_visible_length = number of visible characters in local_prompt
+ * prompt_prefix_length = number of visible characters in local_prompt_prefix
+ *
+ * This function is called once per call to readline(). It may also be
+ * called arbitrarily to expand the primary prompt.
+ *
+ * The return value is the number of visible characters on the last line
+ * of the (possibly multi-line) prompt.
+ */
+int
+rl_expand_prompt (prompt)
+ char *prompt;
+{
+ char *p, *t;
+ int c;
+
+ /* Clear out any saved values. */
+ FREE (local_prompt);
+ FREE (local_prompt_prefix);
+
+ local_prompt = local_prompt_prefix = (char *)0;
+ local_prompt_len = 0;
+ prompt_last_invisible = prompt_invis_chars_first_line = 0;
+ prompt_visible_length = prompt_physical_chars = 0;
+
+ if (prompt == 0 || *prompt == 0)
+ return (0);
+
+ p = strrchr (prompt, '\n');
+ if (!p)
+ {
+ /* The prompt is only one logical line, though it might wrap. */
+ local_prompt = expand_prompt (prompt, &prompt_visible_length,
+ &prompt_last_invisible,
+ &prompt_invis_chars_first_line,
+ &prompt_physical_chars);
+ local_prompt_prefix = (char *)0;
+ local_prompt_len = local_prompt ? strlen (local_prompt) : 0;
+ return (prompt_visible_length);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* The prompt spans multiple lines. */
+ t = ++p;
+ local_prompt = expand_prompt (p, &prompt_visible_length,
+ &prompt_last_invisible,
+ &prompt_invis_chars_first_line,
+ &prompt_physical_chars);
+ c = *t; *t = '\0';
+ /* The portion of the prompt string up to and including the
+ final newline is now null-terminated. */
+ local_prompt_prefix = expand_prompt (prompt, &prompt_prefix_length,
+ (int *)NULL,
+ (int *)NULL,
+ (int *)NULL);
+ *t = c;
+ local_prompt_len = local_prompt ? strlen (local_prompt) : 0;
+ return (prompt_prefix_length);
+ }
+}
+
+/* Initialize the VISIBLE_LINE and INVISIBLE_LINE arrays, and their associated
+ arrays of line break markers. MINSIZE is the minimum size of VISIBLE_LINE
+ and INVISIBLE_LINE; if it is greater than LINE_SIZE, LINE_SIZE is
+ increased. If the lines have already been allocated, this ensures that
+ they can hold at least MINSIZE characters. */
+static void
+init_line_structures (minsize)
+ int minsize;
+{
+ register int n;
+
+ if (invisible_line == 0) /* initialize it */
+ {
+ if (line_size < minsize)
+ line_size = minsize;
+ visible_line = (char *)xmalloc (line_size);
+ invisible_line = (char *)xmalloc (line_size);
+ }
+ else if (line_size < minsize) /* ensure it can hold MINSIZE chars */
+ {
+ line_size *= 2;
+ if (line_size < minsize)
+ line_size = minsize;
+ visible_line = (char *)xrealloc (visible_line, line_size);
+ invisible_line = (char *)xrealloc (invisible_line, line_size);
+ }
+
+ for (n = minsize; n < line_size; n++)
+ {
+ visible_line[n] = 0;
+ invisible_line[n] = 1;
+ }
+
+ if (vis_lbreaks == 0)
+ {
+ /* should be enough. */
+ inv_lbsize = vis_lbsize = 256;
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ line_state_visible->wbsize = vis_lbsize;
+ line_state_visible->wrapped_line = (int *)xmalloc (line_state_visible->wbsize * sizeof (int));
+
+ line_state_invisible->wbsize = inv_lbsize;
+ line_state_invisible->wrapped_line = (int *)xmalloc (line_state_invisible->wbsize * sizeof (int));
+#endif
+
+ inv_lbreaks = (int *)xmalloc (inv_lbsize * sizeof (int));
+ vis_lbreaks = (int *)xmalloc (vis_lbsize * sizeof (int));
+ inv_lbreaks[0] = vis_lbreaks[0] = 0;
+ }
+
+ line_structures_initialized = 1;
+}
+
+/* Basic redisplay algorithm. */
+void
+rl_redisplay ()
+{
+ register int in, out, c, linenum, cursor_linenum;
+ register char *line;
+ int inv_botlin, lb_botlin, lb_linenum, o_cpos;
+ int newlines, lpos, temp, n0, num, prompt_lines_estimate;
+ char *prompt_this_line;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ wchar_t wc;
+ size_t wc_bytes;
+ int wc_width;
+ mbstate_t ps;
+ int _rl_wrapped_multicolumn = 0;
+#endif
+
+ if (_rl_echoing_p == 0)
+ return;
+
+ /* Block keyboard interrupts because this function manipulates global
+ data structures. */
+ _rl_block_sigint ();
+ RL_SETSTATE (RL_STATE_REDISPLAYING);
+
+ if (!rl_display_prompt)
+ rl_display_prompt = "";
+
+ if (line_structures_initialized == 0)
+ {
+ init_line_structures (0);
+ rl_on_new_line ();
+ }
+
+ /* Draw the line into the buffer. */
+ cpos_buffer_position = -1;
+
+ prompt_multibyte_chars = prompt_visible_length - prompt_physical_chars;
+
+ line = invisible_line;
+ out = inv_botlin = 0;
+
+ /* Mark the line as modified or not. We only do this for history
+ lines. */
+ modmark = 0;
+ if (_rl_mark_modified_lines && current_history () && rl_undo_list)
+ {
+ line[out++] = '*';
+ line[out] = '\0';
+ modmark = 1;
+ }
+
+ /* If someone thought that the redisplay was handled, but the currently
+ visible line has a different modification state than the one about
+ to become visible, then correct the caller's misconception. */
+ if (visible_line[0] != invisible_line[0])
+ rl_display_fixed = 0;
+
+ /* If the prompt to be displayed is the `primary' readline prompt (the
+ one passed to readline()), use the values we have already expanded.
+ If not, use what's already in rl_display_prompt. WRAP_OFFSET is the
+ number of non-visible characters in the prompt string. */
+ if (rl_display_prompt == rl_prompt || local_prompt)
+ {
+ if (local_prompt_prefix && forced_display)
+ _rl_output_some_chars (local_prompt_prefix, strlen (local_prompt_prefix));
+
+ if (local_prompt_len > 0)
+ {
+ temp = local_prompt_len + out + 2;
+ if (temp >= line_size)
+ {
+ line_size = (temp + 1024) - (temp % 1024);
+ visible_line = (char *)xrealloc (visible_line, line_size);
+ line = invisible_line = (char *)xrealloc (invisible_line, line_size);
+ }
+ strncpy (line + out, local_prompt, local_prompt_len);
+ out += local_prompt_len;
+ }
+ line[out] = '\0';
+ wrap_offset = local_prompt_len - prompt_visible_length;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ int pmtlen;
+ prompt_this_line = strrchr (rl_display_prompt, '\n');
+ if (!prompt_this_line)
+ prompt_this_line = rl_display_prompt;
+ else
+ {
+ prompt_this_line++;
+ pmtlen = prompt_this_line - rl_display_prompt; /* temp var */
+ if (forced_display)
+ {
+ _rl_output_some_chars (rl_display_prompt, pmtlen);
+ /* Make sure we are at column zero even after a newline,
+ regardless of the state of terminal output processing. */
+ if (pmtlen < 2 || prompt_this_line[-2] != '\r')
+ cr ();
+ }
+ }
+
+ prompt_physical_chars = pmtlen = strlen (prompt_this_line);
+ temp = pmtlen + out + 2;
+ if (temp >= line_size)
+ {
+ line_size = (temp + 1024) - (temp % 1024);
+ visible_line = (char *)xrealloc (visible_line, line_size);
+ line = invisible_line = (char *)xrealloc (invisible_line, line_size);
+ }
+ strncpy (line + out, prompt_this_line, pmtlen);
+ out += pmtlen;
+ line[out] = '\0';
+ wrap_offset = prompt_invis_chars_first_line = 0;
+ }
+
+#define CHECK_INV_LBREAKS() \
+ do { \
+ if (newlines >= (inv_lbsize - 2)) \
+ { \
+ inv_lbsize *= 2; \
+ inv_lbreaks = (int *)xrealloc (inv_lbreaks, inv_lbsize * sizeof (int)); \
+ } \
+ } while (0)
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+#define CHECK_LPOS() \
+ do { \
+ lpos++; \
+ if (lpos >= _rl_screenwidth) \
+ { \
+ if (newlines >= (inv_lbsize - 2)) \
+ { \
+ inv_lbsize *= 2; \
+ inv_lbreaks = (int *)xrealloc (inv_lbreaks, inv_lbsize * sizeof (int)); \
+ } \
+ inv_lbreaks[++newlines] = out; \
+ if (newlines >= (line_state_invisible->wbsize - 1)) \
+ { \
+ line_state_invisible->wbsize *= 2; \
+ line_state_invisible->wrapped_line = (int *)xrealloc (line_state_invisible->wrapped_line, line_state_invisible->wbsize * sizeof(int)); \
+ } \
+ line_state_invisible->wrapped_line[newlines] = _rl_wrapped_multicolumn; \
+ lpos = 0; \
+ } \
+ } while (0)
+#else
+#define CHECK_LPOS() \
+ do { \
+ lpos++; \
+ if (lpos >= _rl_screenwidth) \
+ { \
+ if (newlines >= (inv_lbsize - 2)) \
+ { \
+ inv_lbsize *= 2; \
+ inv_lbreaks = (int *)xrealloc (inv_lbreaks, inv_lbsize * sizeof (int)); \
+ } \
+ inv_lbreaks[++newlines] = out; \
+ lpos = 0; \
+ } \
+ } while (0)
+#endif
+
+ /* inv_lbreaks[i] is where line i starts in the buffer. */
+ inv_lbreaks[newlines = 0] = 0;
+ lpos = prompt_physical_chars + modmark;
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ memset (line_state_invisible->wrapped_line, 0, line_state_invisible->wbsize * sizeof (int));
+ num = 0;
+#endif
+
+ /* prompt_invis_chars_first_line is the number of invisible characters in
+ the first physical line of the prompt.
+ wrap_offset - prompt_invis_chars_first_line is the number of invis
+ chars on the second (or, more generally, last) line. */
+
+ /* This is zero-based, used to set the newlines */
+ prompt_lines_estimate = lpos / _rl_screenwidth;
+
+ /* what if lpos is already >= _rl_screenwidth before we start drawing the
+ contents of the command line? */
+ while (lpos >= _rl_screenwidth)
+ {
+ int z;
+ /* fix from Darin Johnson <darin@acuson.com> for prompt string with
+ invisible characters that is longer than the screen width. The
+ prompt_invis_chars_first_line variable could be made into an array
+ saying how many invisible characters there are per line, but that's
+ probably too much work for the benefit gained. How many people have
+ prompts that exceed two physical lines?
+ Additional logic fix from Edward Catmur <ed@catmur.co.uk> */
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0 && prompt_multibyte_chars > 0)
+ {
+ n0 = num;
+ temp = local_prompt_len;
+ while (num < temp)
+ {
+ z = _rl_col_width (local_prompt, n0, num, 1);
+ if (z > _rl_screenwidth)
+ {
+ num = _rl_find_prev_mbchar (local_prompt, num, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ break;
+ }
+ else if (z == _rl_screenwidth)
+ break;
+ num++;
+ }
+ temp = num;
+ }
+ else
+#endif /* !HANDLE_MULTIBYTE */
+ temp = ((newlines + 1) * _rl_screenwidth);
+
+ /* Now account for invisible characters in the current line. */
+ /* XXX - this assumes that the invisible characters may be split, but only
+ between the first and the last lines. */
+ temp += ((local_prompt_prefix == 0) ? ((newlines == 0) ? prompt_invis_chars_first_line
+ : ((newlines == prompt_lines_estimate) ? wrap_offset : prompt_invis_chars_first_line))
+ : ((newlines == 0) ? wrap_offset : 0));
+
+ inv_lbreaks[++newlines] = temp;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0 && prompt_multibyte_chars > 0)
+ lpos -= _rl_col_width (local_prompt, n0, num, 1);
+ else
+#endif
+ lpos -= _rl_screenwidth;
+ }
+
+ prompt_last_screen_line = newlines;
+
+ /* Draw the rest of the line (after the prompt) into invisible_line, keeping
+ track of where the cursor is (cpos_buffer_position), the number of the line containing
+ the cursor (lb_linenum), the last line number (lb_botlin and inv_botlin).
+ It maintains an array of line breaks for display (inv_lbreaks).
+ This handles expanding tabs for display and displaying meta characters. */
+ lb_linenum = 0;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ in = 0;
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ /* XXX - what if wc_bytes ends up <= 0? check for MB_INVALIDCH */
+ wc_bytes = mbrtowc (&wc, rl_line_buffer, rl_end, &ps);
+ }
+ else
+ wc_bytes = 1;
+ while (in < rl_end)
+#else
+ for (in = 0; in < rl_end; in++)
+#endif
+ {
+ c = (unsigned char)rl_line_buffer[in];
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ if (MB_INVALIDCH (wc_bytes))
+ {
+ /* Byte sequence is invalid or shortened. Assume that the
+ first byte represents a character. */
+ wc_bytes = 1;
+ /* Assume that a character occupies a single column. */
+ wc_width = 1;
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ }
+ else if (MB_NULLWCH (wc_bytes))
+ break; /* Found '\0' */
+ else
+ {
+ temp = WCWIDTH (wc);
+ wc_width = (temp >= 0) ? temp : 1;
+ }
+ }
+#endif
+
+ if (out + 8 >= line_size) /* XXX - 8 for \t */
+ {
+ line_size *= 2;
+ visible_line = (char *)xrealloc (visible_line, line_size);
+ invisible_line = (char *)xrealloc (invisible_line, line_size);
+ line = invisible_line;
+ }
+
+ if (in == rl_point)
+ {
+ cpos_buffer_position = out;
+ lb_linenum = newlines;
+ }
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (META_CHAR (c) && _rl_output_meta_chars == 0) /* XXX - clean up */
+#else
+ if (META_CHAR (c))
+#endif
+ {
+ if (_rl_output_meta_chars == 0)
+ {
+ sprintf (line + out, "\\%o", c);
+
+ if (lpos + 4 >= _rl_screenwidth)
+ {
+ temp = _rl_screenwidth - lpos;
+ CHECK_INV_LBREAKS ();
+ inv_lbreaks[++newlines] = out + temp;
+ lpos = 4 - temp;
+ }
+ else
+ lpos += 4;
+
+ out += 4;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ line[out++] = c;
+ CHECK_LPOS();
+ }
+ }
+#if defined (DISPLAY_TABS)
+ else if (c == '\t')
+ {
+ register int newout;
+
+#if 0
+ newout = (out | (int)7) + 1;
+#else
+ newout = out + 8 - lpos % 8;
+#endif
+ temp = newout - out;
+ if (lpos + temp >= _rl_screenwidth)
+ {
+ register int temp2;
+ temp2 = _rl_screenwidth - lpos;
+ CHECK_INV_LBREAKS ();
+ inv_lbreaks[++newlines] = out + temp2;
+ lpos = temp - temp2;
+ while (out < newout)
+ line[out++] = ' ';
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ while (out < newout)
+ line[out++] = ' ';
+ lpos += temp;
+ }
+ }
+#endif
+ else if (c == '\n' && _rl_horizontal_scroll_mode == 0 && _rl_term_up && *_rl_term_up)
+ {
+ line[out++] = '\0'; /* XXX - sentinel */
+ CHECK_INV_LBREAKS ();
+ inv_lbreaks[++newlines] = out;
+ lpos = 0;
+ }
+ else if (CTRL_CHAR (c) || c == RUBOUT)
+ {
+ line[out++] = '^';
+ CHECK_LPOS();
+ line[out++] = CTRL_CHAR (c) ? UNCTRL (c) : '?';
+ CHECK_LPOS();
+ }
+ else
+ {
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ register int i;
+
+ _rl_wrapped_multicolumn = 0;
+
+ if (_rl_screenwidth < lpos + wc_width)
+ for (i = lpos; i < _rl_screenwidth; i++)
+ {
+ /* The space will be removed in update_line() */
+ line[out++] = ' ';
+ _rl_wrapped_multicolumn++;
+ CHECK_LPOS();
+ }
+ if (in == rl_point)
+ {
+ cpos_buffer_position = out;
+ lb_linenum = newlines;
+ }
+ for (i = in; i < in+wc_bytes; i++)
+ line[out++] = rl_line_buffer[i];
+ for (i = 0; i < wc_width; i++)
+ CHECK_LPOS();
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ line[out++] = c;
+ CHECK_LPOS();
+ }
+#else
+ line[out++] = c;
+ CHECK_LPOS();
+#endif
+ }
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ in += wc_bytes;
+ /* XXX - what if wc_bytes ends up <= 0? check for MB_INVALIDCH */
+ wc_bytes = mbrtowc (&wc, rl_line_buffer + in, rl_end - in, &ps);
+ }
+ else
+ in++;
+#endif
+
+ }
+ line[out] = '\0';
+ if (cpos_buffer_position < 0)
+ {
+ cpos_buffer_position = out;
+ lb_linenum = newlines;
+ }
+
+ inv_botlin = lb_botlin = newlines;
+ CHECK_INV_LBREAKS ();
+ inv_lbreaks[newlines+1] = out;
+ cursor_linenum = lb_linenum;
+
+ /* CPOS_BUFFER_POSITION == position in buffer where cursor should be placed.
+ CURSOR_LINENUM == line number where the cursor should be placed. */
+
+ /* PWP: now is when things get a bit hairy. The visible and invisible
+ line buffers are really multiple lines, which would wrap every
+ (screenwidth - 1) characters. Go through each in turn, finding
+ the changed region and updating it. The line order is top to bottom. */
+
+ /* If we can move the cursor up and down, then use multiple lines,
+ otherwise, let long lines display in a single terminal line, and
+ horizontally scroll it. */
+
+ if (_rl_horizontal_scroll_mode == 0 && _rl_term_up && *_rl_term_up)
+ {
+ int nleft, pos, changed_screen_line, tx;
+
+ if (!rl_display_fixed || forced_display)
+ {
+ forced_display = 0;
+
+ /* If we have more than a screenful of material to display, then
+ only display a screenful. We should display the last screen,
+ not the first. */
+ if (out >= _rl_screenchars)
+ {
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ out = _rl_find_prev_mbchar (line, _rl_screenchars, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ else
+ out = _rl_screenchars - 1;
+ }
+
+ /* The first line is at character position 0 in the buffer. The
+ second and subsequent lines start at inv_lbreaks[N], offset by
+ OFFSET (which has already been calculated above). */
+
+#define INVIS_FIRST() (prompt_physical_chars > _rl_screenwidth ? prompt_invis_chars_first_line : wrap_offset)
+#define WRAP_OFFSET(line, offset) ((line == 0) \
+ ? (offset ? INVIS_FIRST() : 0) \
+ : ((line == prompt_last_screen_line) ? wrap_offset-prompt_invis_chars_first_line : 0))
+#define W_OFFSET(line, offset) ((line) == 0 ? offset : 0)
+#define VIS_LLEN(l) ((l) > _rl_vis_botlin ? 0 : (vis_lbreaks[l+1] - vis_lbreaks[l]))
+#define INV_LLEN(l) (inv_lbreaks[l+1] - inv_lbreaks[l])
+#define VIS_CHARS(line) (visible_line + vis_lbreaks[line])
+#define VIS_LINE(line) ((line) > _rl_vis_botlin) ? "" : VIS_CHARS(line)
+#define INV_LINE(line) (invisible_line + inv_lbreaks[line])
+
+#define OLD_CPOS_IN_PROMPT() (cpos_adjusted == 0 && \
+ _rl_last_c_pos != o_cpos && \
+ _rl_last_c_pos > wrap_offset && \
+ o_cpos < prompt_last_invisible)
+
+ /* For each line in the buffer, do the updating display. */
+ for (linenum = 0; linenum <= inv_botlin; linenum++)
+ {
+ /* This can lead us astray if we execute a program that changes
+ the locale from a non-multibyte to a multibyte one. */
+ o_cpos = _rl_last_c_pos;
+ cpos_adjusted = 0;
+ update_line (VIS_LINE(linenum), INV_LINE(linenum), linenum,
+ VIS_LLEN(linenum), INV_LLEN(linenum), inv_botlin);
+
+ /* update_line potentially changes _rl_last_c_pos, but doesn't
+ take invisible characters into account, since _rl_last_c_pos
+ is an absolute cursor position in a multibyte locale. See
+ if compensating here is the right thing, or if we have to
+ change update_line itself. There are several cases in which
+ update_line adjusts _rl_last_c_pos itself (so it can pass
+ _rl_move_cursor_relative accurate values); it communicates
+ this back by setting cpos_adjusted. If we assume that
+ _rl_last_c_pos is correct (an absolute cursor position) each
+ time update_line is called, then we can assume in our
+ calculations that o_cpos does not need to be adjusted by
+ wrap_offset. */
+ if (linenum == 0 && (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) && OLD_CPOS_IN_PROMPT())
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= prompt_invis_chars_first_line; /* XXX - was wrap_offset */
+ else if (linenum == prompt_last_screen_line && prompt_physical_chars > _rl_screenwidth &&
+ (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) &&
+ cpos_adjusted == 0 &&
+ _rl_last_c_pos != o_cpos &&
+ _rl_last_c_pos > (prompt_last_invisible - _rl_screenwidth - prompt_invis_chars_first_line))
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= (wrap_offset-prompt_invis_chars_first_line);
+
+ /* If this is the line with the prompt, we might need to
+ compensate for invisible characters in the new line. Do
+ this only if there is not more than one new line (which
+ implies that we completely overwrite the old visible line)
+ and the new line is shorter than the old. Make sure we are
+ at the end of the new line before clearing. */
+ if (linenum == 0 &&
+ inv_botlin == 0 && _rl_last_c_pos == out &&
+ (wrap_offset > visible_wrap_offset) &&
+ (_rl_last_c_pos < visible_first_line_len))
+ {
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ nleft = _rl_screenwidth - _rl_last_c_pos;
+ else
+ nleft = _rl_screenwidth + wrap_offset - _rl_last_c_pos;
+ if (nleft)
+ _rl_clear_to_eol (nleft);
+ }
+#if 0
+ /* This segment is intended to handle the case where the prompt
+ has invisible characters on the second line and the new line
+ to be displayed needs to clear the rest of the old characters
+ out (e.g., when printing the i-search prompt). In general,
+ the case of the new line being shorter than the old.
+ Incomplete */
+ else if (linenum == prompt_last_screen_line &&
+ prompt_physical_chars > _rl_screenwidth &&
+ wrap_offset != prompt_invis_chars_first_line &&
+ _rl_last_c_pos == out &&
+#endif
+
+
+ /* Since the new first line is now visible, save its length. */
+ if (linenum == 0)
+ visible_first_line_len = (inv_botlin > 0) ? inv_lbreaks[1] : out - wrap_offset;
+ }
+
+ /* We may have deleted some lines. If so, clear the left over
+ blank ones at the bottom out. */
+ if (_rl_vis_botlin > inv_botlin)
+ {
+ char *tt;
+ for (; linenum <= _rl_vis_botlin; linenum++)
+ {
+ tt = VIS_CHARS (linenum);
+ _rl_move_vert (linenum);
+ _rl_move_cursor_relative (0, tt);
+ _rl_clear_to_eol
+ ((linenum == _rl_vis_botlin) ? strlen (tt) : _rl_screenwidth);
+ }
+ }
+ _rl_vis_botlin = inv_botlin;
+
+ /* CHANGED_SCREEN_LINE is set to 1 if we have moved to a
+ different screen line during this redisplay. */
+ changed_screen_line = _rl_last_v_pos != cursor_linenum;
+ if (changed_screen_line)
+ {
+ _rl_move_vert (cursor_linenum);
+ /* If we moved up to the line with the prompt using _rl_term_up,
+ the physical cursor position on the screen stays the same,
+ but the buffer position needs to be adjusted to account
+ for invisible characters. */
+ if ((MB_CUR_MAX == 1 || rl_byte_oriented) && cursor_linenum == 0 && wrap_offset)
+ _rl_last_c_pos += wrap_offset;
+ }
+
+ /* We have to reprint the prompt if it contains invisible
+ characters, since it's not generally OK to just reprint
+ the characters from the current cursor position. But we
+ only need to reprint it if the cursor is before the last
+ invisible character in the prompt string. */
+ nleft = prompt_visible_length + wrap_offset;
+ if (cursor_linenum == 0 && wrap_offset > 0 && _rl_last_c_pos > 0 &&
+#if 0
+ _rl_last_c_pos <= PROMPT_ENDING_INDEX && local_prompt)
+#else
+ _rl_last_c_pos < PROMPT_ENDING_INDEX && local_prompt)
+#endif
+ {
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ putc ('\r', rl_outstream);
+#else
+ if (_rl_term_cr)
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif
+ if (modmark)
+ _rl_output_some_chars ("*", 1);
+
+ _rl_output_some_chars (local_prompt, nleft);
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ _rl_last_c_pos = _rl_col_width (local_prompt, 0, nleft, 1) - wrap_offset + modmark;
+ else
+ _rl_last_c_pos = nleft + modmark;
+ }
+
+ /* Where on that line? And where does that line start
+ in the buffer? */
+ pos = inv_lbreaks[cursor_linenum];
+ /* nleft == number of characters in the line buffer between the
+ start of the line and the desired cursor position. */
+ nleft = cpos_buffer_position - pos;
+
+ /* NLEFT is now a number of characters in a buffer. When in a
+ multibyte locale, however, _rl_last_c_pos is an absolute cursor
+ position that doesn't take invisible characters in the prompt
+ into account. We use a fudge factor to compensate. */
+
+ /* Since _rl_backspace() doesn't know about invisible characters in the
+ prompt, and there's no good way to tell it, we compensate for
+ those characters here and call _rl_backspace() directly. */
+ if (wrap_offset && cursor_linenum == 0 && nleft < _rl_last_c_pos)
+ {
+ /* TX == new physical cursor position in multibyte locale. */
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ tx = _rl_col_width (&visible_line[pos], 0, nleft, 1) - visible_wrap_offset;
+ else
+ tx = nleft;
+ if (tx >= 0 && _rl_last_c_pos > tx)
+ {
+ _rl_backspace (_rl_last_c_pos - tx); /* XXX */
+ _rl_last_c_pos = tx;
+ }
+ }
+
+ /* We need to note that in a multibyte locale we are dealing with
+ _rl_last_c_pos as an absolute cursor position, but moving to a
+ point specified by a buffer position (NLEFT) that doesn't take
+ invisible characters into account. */
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ _rl_move_cursor_relative (nleft, &invisible_line[pos]);
+ else if (nleft != _rl_last_c_pos)
+ _rl_move_cursor_relative (nleft, &invisible_line[pos]);
+ }
+ }
+ else /* Do horizontal scrolling. */
+ {
+#define M_OFFSET(margin, offset) ((margin) == 0 ? offset : 0)
+ int lmargin, ndisp, nleft, phys_c_pos, t;
+
+ /* Always at top line. */
+ _rl_last_v_pos = 0;
+
+ /* Compute where in the buffer the displayed line should start. This
+ will be LMARGIN. */
+
+ /* The number of characters that will be displayed before the cursor. */
+ ndisp = cpos_buffer_position - wrap_offset;
+ nleft = prompt_visible_length + wrap_offset;
+ /* Where the new cursor position will be on the screen. This can be
+ longer than SCREENWIDTH; if it is, lmargin will be adjusted. */
+ phys_c_pos = cpos_buffer_position - (last_lmargin ? last_lmargin : wrap_offset);
+ t = _rl_screenwidth / 3;
+
+ /* If the number of characters had already exceeded the screenwidth,
+ last_lmargin will be > 0. */
+
+ /* If the number of characters to be displayed is more than the screen
+ width, compute the starting offset so that the cursor is about
+ two-thirds of the way across the screen. */
+ if (phys_c_pos > _rl_screenwidth - 2)
+ {
+ lmargin = cpos_buffer_position - (2 * t);
+ if (lmargin < 0)
+ lmargin = 0;
+ /* If the left margin would be in the middle of a prompt with
+ invisible characters, don't display the prompt at all. */
+ if (wrap_offset && lmargin > 0 && lmargin < nleft)
+ lmargin = nleft;
+ }
+ else if (ndisp < _rl_screenwidth - 2) /* XXX - was -1 */
+ lmargin = 0;
+ else if (phys_c_pos < 1)
+ {
+ /* If we are moving back towards the beginning of the line and
+ the last margin is no longer correct, compute a new one. */
+ lmargin = ((cpos_buffer_position - 1) / t) * t; /* XXX */
+ if (wrap_offset && lmargin > 0 && lmargin < nleft)
+ lmargin = nleft;
+ }
+ else
+ lmargin = last_lmargin;
+
+ /* If the first character on the screen isn't the first character
+ in the display line, indicate this with a special character. */
+ if (lmargin > 0)
+ line[lmargin] = '<';
+
+ /* If SCREENWIDTH characters starting at LMARGIN do not encompass
+ the whole line, indicate that with a special character at the
+ right edge of the screen. If LMARGIN is 0, we need to take the
+ wrap offset into account. */
+ t = lmargin + M_OFFSET (lmargin, wrap_offset) + _rl_screenwidth;
+ if (t < out)
+ line[t - 1] = '>';
+
+ if (rl_display_fixed == 0 || forced_display || lmargin != last_lmargin)
+ {
+ forced_display = 0;
+ o_cpos = _rl_last_c_pos;
+ cpos_adjusted = 0;
+ update_line (&visible_line[last_lmargin],
+ &invisible_line[lmargin],
+ 0,
+ _rl_screenwidth + visible_wrap_offset,
+ _rl_screenwidth + (lmargin ? 0 : wrap_offset),
+ 0);
+
+ if ((MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) && OLD_CPOS_IN_PROMPT())
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= prompt_invis_chars_first_line; /* XXX - was wrap_offset */
+
+ /* If the visible new line is shorter than the old, but the number
+ of invisible characters is greater, and we are at the end of
+ the new line, we need to clear to eol. */
+ t = _rl_last_c_pos - M_OFFSET (lmargin, wrap_offset);
+ if ((M_OFFSET (lmargin, wrap_offset) > visible_wrap_offset) &&
+ (_rl_last_c_pos == out) &&
+ t < visible_first_line_len)
+ {
+ nleft = _rl_screenwidth - t;
+ _rl_clear_to_eol (nleft);
+ }
+ visible_first_line_len = out - lmargin - M_OFFSET (lmargin, wrap_offset);
+ if (visible_first_line_len > _rl_screenwidth)
+ visible_first_line_len = _rl_screenwidth;
+
+ _rl_move_cursor_relative (cpos_buffer_position - lmargin, &invisible_line[lmargin]);
+ last_lmargin = lmargin;
+ }
+ }
+ fflush (rl_outstream);
+
+ /* Swap visible and non-visible lines. */
+ {
+ struct line_state *vtemp = line_state_visible;
+
+ line_state_visible = line_state_invisible;
+ line_state_invisible = vtemp;
+
+ rl_display_fixed = 0;
+ /* If we are displaying on a single line, and last_lmargin is > 0, we
+ are not displaying any invisible characters, so set visible_wrap_offset
+ to 0. */
+ if (_rl_horizontal_scroll_mode && last_lmargin)
+ visible_wrap_offset = 0;
+ else
+ visible_wrap_offset = wrap_offset;
+ }
+
+ RL_UNSETSTATE (RL_STATE_REDISPLAYING);
+ _rl_release_sigint ();
+}
+
+/* PWP: update_line() is based on finding the middle difference of each
+ line on the screen; vis:
+
+ /old first difference
+ /beginning of line | /old last same /old EOL
+ v v v v
+old: eddie> Oh, my little gruntle-buggy is to me, as lurgid as
+new: eddie> Oh, my little buggy says to me, as lurgid as
+ ^ ^ ^ ^
+ \beginning of line | \new last same \new end of line
+ \new first difference
+
+ All are character pointers for the sake of speed. Special cases for
+ no differences, as well as for end of line additions must be handled.
+
+ Could be made even smarter, but this works well enough */
+static void
+update_line (old, new, current_line, omax, nmax, inv_botlin)
+ register char *old, *new;
+ int current_line, omax, nmax, inv_botlin;
+{
+ register char *ofd, *ols, *oe, *nfd, *nls, *ne;
+ int temp, lendiff, wsatend, od, nd, twidth, o_cpos;
+ int current_invis_chars;
+ int col_lendiff, col_temp;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ mbstate_t ps_new, ps_old;
+ int new_offset, old_offset;
+#endif
+
+ /* If we're at the right edge of a terminal that supports xn, we're
+ ready to wrap around, so do so. This fixes problems with knowing
+ the exact cursor position and cut-and-paste with certain terminal
+ emulators. In this calculation, TEMP is the physical screen
+ position of the cursor. */
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ temp = _rl_last_c_pos;
+ else
+ temp = _rl_last_c_pos - WRAP_OFFSET (_rl_last_v_pos, visible_wrap_offset);
+ if (temp == _rl_screenwidth && _rl_term_autowrap && !_rl_horizontal_scroll_mode
+ && _rl_last_v_pos == current_line - 1)
+ {
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ wchar_t wc;
+ mbstate_t ps;
+ int tempwidth, bytes;
+ size_t ret;
+
+ /* This fixes only double-column characters, but if the wrapped
+ character comsumes more than three columns, spaces will be
+ inserted in the string buffer. */
+ if (current_line < line_state_visible->wbsize && line_state_visible->wrapped_line[current_line] > 0)
+ _rl_clear_to_eol (line_state_visible->wrapped_line[current_line]);
+
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ ret = mbrtowc (&wc, new, MB_CUR_MAX, &ps);
+ if (MB_INVALIDCH (ret))
+ {
+ tempwidth = 1;
+ ret = 1;
+ }
+ else if (MB_NULLWCH (ret))
+ tempwidth = 0;
+ else
+ tempwidth = WCWIDTH (wc);
+
+ if (tempwidth > 0)
+ {
+ int count, i;
+ bytes = ret;
+ for (count = 0; count < bytes; count++)
+ putc (new[count], rl_outstream);
+ _rl_last_c_pos = tempwidth;
+ _rl_last_v_pos++;
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ ret = mbrtowc (&wc, old, MB_CUR_MAX, &ps);
+ if (ret != 0 && bytes != 0)
+ {
+ if (MB_INVALIDCH (ret))
+ ret = 1;
+ memmove (old+bytes, old+ret, strlen (old+ret));
+ memcpy (old, new, bytes);
+ /* Fix up indices if we copy data from one line to another */
+ omax += bytes - ret;
+ for (i = current_line+1; i < inv_botlin+1; i++)
+ vis_lbreaks[i] += bytes - ret;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ putc (' ', rl_outstream);
+ _rl_last_c_pos = 1;
+ _rl_last_v_pos++;
+ if (old[0] && new[0])
+ old[0] = new[0];
+ }
+ }
+ else
+#endif
+ {
+ if (new[0])
+ putc (new[0], rl_outstream);
+ else
+ putc (' ', rl_outstream);
+ _rl_last_c_pos = 1;
+ _rl_last_v_pos++;
+ if (old[0] && new[0])
+ old[0] = new[0];
+ }
+ }
+
+
+ /* Find first difference. */
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ /* See if the old line is a subset of the new line, so that the
+ only change is adding characters. */
+ temp = (omax < nmax) ? omax : nmax;
+ if (memcmp (old, new, temp) == 0) /* adding at the end */
+ {
+ new_offset = old_offset = temp;
+ ofd = old + temp;
+ nfd = new + temp;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ memset (&ps_new, 0, sizeof(mbstate_t));
+ memset (&ps_old, 0, sizeof(mbstate_t));
+
+ if (omax == nmax && STREQN (new, old, omax))
+ {
+ old_offset = omax;
+ new_offset = nmax;
+ ofd = old + omax;
+ nfd = new + nmax;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ new_offset = old_offset = 0;
+ for (ofd = old, nfd = new;
+ (ofd - old < omax) && *ofd &&
+ _rl_compare_chars(old, old_offset, &ps_old, new, new_offset, &ps_new); )
+ {
+ old_offset = _rl_find_next_mbchar (old, old_offset, 1, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ new_offset = _rl_find_next_mbchar (new, new_offset, 1, MB_FIND_ANY);
+
+ ofd = old + old_offset;
+ nfd = new + new_offset;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ else
+#endif
+ for (ofd = old, nfd = new;
+ (ofd - old < omax) && *ofd && (*ofd == *nfd);
+ ofd++, nfd++)
+ ;
+
+ /* Move to the end of the screen line. ND and OD are used to keep track
+ of the distance between ne and new and oe and old, respectively, to
+ move a subtraction out of each loop. */
+ for (od = ofd - old, oe = ofd; od < omax && *oe; oe++, od++);
+ for (nd = nfd - new, ne = nfd; nd < nmax && *ne; ne++, nd++);
+
+ /* If no difference, continue to next line. */
+ if (ofd == oe && nfd == ne)
+ return;
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0 && _rl_utf8locale)
+ {
+ wchar_t wc;
+ mbstate_t ps = { 0 };
+ int t;
+
+ /* If the first character in the difference is a zero-width character,
+ assume it's a combining character and back one up so the two base
+ characters no longer compare equivalently. */
+ t = mbrtowc (&wc, ofd, MB_CUR_MAX, &ps);
+ if (t > 0 && UNICODE_COMBINING_CHAR (wc) && WCWIDTH (wc) == 0)
+ {
+ old_offset = _rl_find_prev_mbchar (old, ofd - old, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ new_offset = _rl_find_prev_mbchar (new, nfd - new, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ ofd = old + old_offset; /* equal by definition */
+ nfd = new + new_offset;
+ }
+ }
+#endif
+
+ wsatend = 1; /* flag for trailing whitespace */
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ ols = old + _rl_find_prev_mbchar (old, oe - old, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ nls = new + _rl_find_prev_mbchar (new, ne - new, MB_FIND_ANY);
+
+ while ((ols > ofd) && (nls > nfd))
+ {
+ memset (&ps_old, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ memset (&ps_new, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+
+#if 0
+ /* On advice from jir@yamato.ibm.com */
+ _rl_adjust_point (old, ols - old, &ps_old);
+ _rl_adjust_point (new, nls - new, &ps_new);
+#endif
+
+ if (_rl_compare_chars (old, ols - old, &ps_old, new, nls - new, &ps_new) == 0)
+ break;
+
+ if (*ols == ' ')
+ wsatend = 0;
+
+ ols = old + _rl_find_prev_mbchar (old, ols - old, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ nls = new + _rl_find_prev_mbchar (new, nls - new, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+#endif /* HANDLE_MULTIBYTE */
+ ols = oe - 1; /* find last same */
+ nls = ne - 1;
+ while ((ols > ofd) && (nls > nfd) && (*ols == *nls))
+ {
+ if (*ols != ' ')
+ wsatend = 0;
+ ols--;
+ nls--;
+ }
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ }
+#endif
+
+ if (wsatend)
+ {
+ ols = oe;
+ nls = ne;
+ }
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ /* This may not work for stateful encoding, but who cares? To handle
+ stateful encoding properly, we have to scan each string from the
+ beginning and compare. */
+ else if (_rl_compare_chars (ols, 0, NULL, nls, 0, NULL) == 0)
+#else
+ else if (*ols != *nls)
+#endif
+ {
+ if (*ols) /* don't step past the NUL */
+ {
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ ols = old + _rl_find_next_mbchar (old, ols - old, 1, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ else
+ ols++;
+ }
+ if (*nls)
+ {
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ nls = new + _rl_find_next_mbchar (new, nls - new, 1, MB_FIND_ANY);
+ else
+ nls++;
+ }
+ }
+
+ /* count of invisible characters in the current invisible line. */
+ current_invis_chars = W_OFFSET (current_line, wrap_offset);
+ if (_rl_last_v_pos != current_line)
+ {
+ _rl_move_vert (current_line);
+ if ((MB_CUR_MAX == 1 || rl_byte_oriented) && current_line == 0 && visible_wrap_offset)
+ _rl_last_c_pos += visible_wrap_offset;
+ }
+
+ /* If this is the first line and there are invisible characters in the
+ prompt string, and the prompt string has not changed, and the current
+ cursor position is before the last invisible character in the prompt,
+ and the index of the character to move to is past the end of the prompt
+ string, then redraw the entire prompt string. We can only do this
+ reliably if the terminal supports a `cr' capability.
+
+ This is not an efficiency hack -- there is a problem with redrawing
+ portions of the prompt string if they contain terminal escape
+ sequences (like drawing the `unbold' sequence without a corresponding
+ `bold') that manifests itself on certain terminals. */
+
+ lendiff = local_prompt_len;
+ od = ofd - old; /* index of first difference in visible line */
+ if (current_line == 0 && !_rl_horizontal_scroll_mode &&
+ _rl_term_cr && lendiff > prompt_visible_length && _rl_last_c_pos > 0 &&
+ od >= lendiff && _rl_last_c_pos < PROMPT_ENDING_INDEX)
+ {
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ putc ('\r', rl_outstream);
+#else
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif
+ if (modmark)
+ _rl_output_some_chars ("*", 1);
+ _rl_output_some_chars (local_prompt, lendiff);
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ /* We take wrap_offset into account here so we can pass correct
+ information to _rl_move_cursor_relative. */
+ _rl_last_c_pos = _rl_col_width (local_prompt, 0, lendiff, 1) - wrap_offset + modmark;
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ }
+ else
+ _rl_last_c_pos = lendiff + modmark;
+ }
+
+ o_cpos = _rl_last_c_pos;
+
+ /* When this function returns, _rl_last_c_pos is correct, and an absolute
+ cursor postion in multibyte mode, but a buffer index when not in a
+ multibyte locale. */
+ _rl_move_cursor_relative (od, old);
+#if 1
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ /* We need to indicate that the cursor position is correct in the presence of
+ invisible characters in the prompt string. Let's see if setting this when
+ we make sure we're at the end of the drawn prompt string works. */
+ if (current_line == 0 && MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0 &&
+ (_rl_last_c_pos > 0 || o_cpos > 0) &&
+ _rl_last_c_pos == prompt_physical_chars)
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+#endif
+#endif
+
+ /* if (len (new) > len (old))
+ lendiff == difference in buffer
+ col_lendiff == difference on screen
+ When not using multibyte characters, these are equal */
+ lendiff = (nls - nfd) - (ols - ofd);
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ col_lendiff = _rl_col_width (new, nfd - new, nls - new, 1) - _rl_col_width (old, ofd - old, ols - old, 1);
+ else
+ col_lendiff = lendiff;
+
+ /* If we are changing the number of invisible characters in a line, and
+ the spot of first difference is before the end of the invisible chars,
+ lendiff needs to be adjusted. */
+ if (current_line == 0 && !_rl_horizontal_scroll_mode &&
+ current_invis_chars != visible_wrap_offset)
+ {
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ lendiff += visible_wrap_offset - current_invis_chars;
+ col_lendiff += visible_wrap_offset - current_invis_chars;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ lendiff += visible_wrap_offset - current_invis_chars;
+ col_lendiff = lendiff;
+ }
+ }
+
+ /* Insert (diff (len (old), len (new)) ch. */
+ temp = ne - nfd;
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ col_temp = _rl_col_width (new, nfd - new, ne - new, 1);
+ else
+ col_temp = temp;
+
+ if (col_lendiff > 0) /* XXX - was lendiff */
+ {
+ /* Non-zero if we're increasing the number of lines. */
+ int gl = current_line >= _rl_vis_botlin && inv_botlin > _rl_vis_botlin;
+ /* If col_lendiff is > 0, implying that the new string takes up more
+ screen real estate than the old, but lendiff is < 0, meaning that it
+ takes fewer bytes, we need to just output the characters starting
+ from the first difference. These will overwrite what is on the
+ display, so there's no reason to do a smart update. This can really
+ only happen in a multibyte environment. */
+ if (lendiff < 0)
+ {
+ _rl_output_some_chars (nfd, temp);
+ _rl_last_c_pos += _rl_col_width (nfd, 0, temp, 1);
+ /* If nfd begins before any invisible characters in the prompt,
+ adjust _rl_last_c_pos to account for wrap_offset and set
+ cpos_adjusted to let the caller know. */
+ if (current_line == 0 && wrap_offset && ((nfd - new) <= prompt_last_invisible))
+ {
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= wrap_offset;
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ }
+ return;
+ }
+ /* Sometimes it is cheaper to print the characters rather than
+ use the terminal's capabilities. If we're growing the number
+ of lines, make sure we actually cause the new line to wrap
+ around on auto-wrapping terminals. */
+ else if (_rl_terminal_can_insert && ((2 * col_temp) >= col_lendiff || _rl_term_IC) && (!_rl_term_autowrap || !gl))
+ {
+ /* If lendiff > prompt_visible_length and _rl_last_c_pos == 0 and
+ _rl_horizontal_scroll_mode == 1, inserting the characters with
+ _rl_term_IC or _rl_term_ic will screw up the screen because of the
+ invisible characters. We need to just draw them. */
+ /* The same thing happens if we're trying to draw before the last
+ invisible character in the prompt string or we're increasing the
+ number of invisible characters in the line and we're not drawing
+ the entire prompt string. */
+ if (*ols && ((_rl_horizontal_scroll_mode &&
+ _rl_last_c_pos == 0 &&
+ lendiff > prompt_visible_length &&
+ current_invis_chars > 0) == 0) &&
+ (((MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) &&
+ current_line == 0 && wrap_offset &&
+ ((nfd - new) <= prompt_last_invisible) &&
+ (col_lendiff < prompt_visible_length)) == 0) &&
+ (visible_wrap_offset >= current_invis_chars))
+ {
+ insert_some_chars (nfd, lendiff, col_lendiff);
+ _rl_last_c_pos += col_lendiff;
+ }
+#if 0 /* XXX - for now */
+ else if ((MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) && _rl_last_c_pos == 0 && wrap_offset && (nfd-new) <= prompt_last_invisible && col_lendiff < prompt_visible_length && visible_wrap_offset >= current_invis_chars)
+ {
+ _rl_output_some_chars (nfd, lendiff);
+ _rl_last_c_pos += col_lendiff;
+ }
+#endif
+ else if ((MB_CUR_MAX == 1 || rl_byte_oriented != 0) && *ols == 0 && lendiff > 0)
+ {
+ /* At the end of a line the characters do not have to
+ be "inserted". They can just be placed on the screen. */
+ /* However, this screws up the rest of this block, which
+ assumes you've done the insert because you can. */
+ _rl_output_some_chars (nfd, lendiff);
+ _rl_last_c_pos += col_lendiff;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ _rl_output_some_chars (nfd, temp);
+ _rl_last_c_pos += col_temp;
+ /* If nfd begins before the last invisible character in the
+ prompt, adjust _rl_last_c_pos to account for wrap_offset
+ and set cpos_adjusted to let the caller know. */
+ if ((MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) && current_line == 0 && wrap_offset && ((nfd - new) <= prompt_last_invisible))
+ {
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= wrap_offset;
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ }
+ return;
+ }
+ /* Copy (new) chars to screen from first diff to last match. */
+ temp = nls - nfd;
+ if ((temp - lendiff) > 0)
+ {
+ _rl_output_some_chars (nfd + lendiff, temp - lendiff);
+ /* XXX -- this bears closer inspection. Fixes a redisplay bug
+ reported against bash-3.0-alpha by Andreas Schwab involving
+ multibyte characters and prompt strings with invisible
+ characters, but was previously disabled. */
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ twidth = _rl_col_width (nfd+lendiff, 0, temp-col_lendiff, 1);
+ else
+ twidth = temp - lendiff;
+ _rl_last_c_pos += twidth;
+ /* If nfd begins before the last invisible character in the
+ prompt, adjust _rl_last_c_pos to account for wrap_offset
+ and set cpos_adjusted to let the caller know. */
+ if ((MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) && current_line == 0 && wrap_offset && ((nfd - new) <= prompt_last_invisible))
+ {
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= wrap_offset;
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* cannot insert chars, write to EOL */
+ _rl_output_some_chars (nfd, temp);
+ _rl_last_c_pos += col_temp;
+ /* If we're in a multibyte locale and were before the last invisible
+ char in the current line (which implies we just output some invisible
+ characters) we need to adjust _rl_last_c_pos, since it represents
+ a physical character position. */
+ if ((MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) &&
+ current_line == prompt_last_screen_line && wrap_offset &&
+ wrap_offset != prompt_invis_chars_first_line &&
+ ((nfd-new) < (prompt_last_invisible-(current_line*_rl_screenwidth))))
+ {
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= wrap_offset - prompt_invis_chars_first_line;
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ else /* Delete characters from line. */
+ {
+ /* If possible and inexpensive to use terminal deletion, then do so. */
+ if (_rl_term_dc && (2 * col_temp) >= -col_lendiff)
+ {
+ /* If all we're doing is erasing the invisible characters in the
+ prompt string, don't bother. It screws up the assumptions
+ about what's on the screen. */
+ if (_rl_horizontal_scroll_mode && _rl_last_c_pos == 0 &&
+ -lendiff == visible_wrap_offset)
+ col_lendiff = 0;
+
+ if (col_lendiff)
+ delete_chars (-col_lendiff); /* delete (diff) characters */
+
+ /* Copy (new) chars to screen from first diff to last match */
+ temp = nls - nfd;
+ if (temp > 0)
+ {
+ /* If nfd begins at the prompt, or before the invisible
+ characters in the prompt, we need to adjust _rl_last_c_pos
+ in a multibyte locale to account for the wrap offset and
+ set cpos_adjusted accordingly. */
+ _rl_output_some_chars (nfd, temp);
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ _rl_last_c_pos += _rl_col_width (nfd, 0, temp, 1);
+ if (current_line == 0 && wrap_offset && _rl_last_c_pos > wrap_offset && ((nfd - new) <= prompt_last_invisible))
+ {
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= wrap_offset;
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ _rl_last_c_pos += temp;
+ }
+ }
+ /* Otherwise, print over the existing material. */
+ else
+ {
+ if (temp > 0)
+ {
+ /* If nfd begins at the prompt, or before the invisible
+ characters in the prompt, we need to adjust _rl_last_c_pos
+ in a multibyte locale to account for the wrap offset and
+ set cpos_adjusted accordingly. */
+ _rl_output_some_chars (nfd, temp);
+ _rl_last_c_pos += col_temp; /* XXX */
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ if (current_line == 0 && wrap_offset && _rl_last_c_pos > wrap_offset && ((nfd - new) <= prompt_last_invisible))
+ {
+ _rl_last_c_pos -= wrap_offset;
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ lendiff = (oe - old) - (ne - new);
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ col_lendiff = _rl_col_width (old, 0, oe - old, 1) - _rl_col_width (new, 0, ne - new, 1);
+ else
+ col_lendiff = lendiff;
+
+#if 0
+ if (col_lendiff)
+#else
+ /* If we've already printed over the entire width of the screen,
+ including the old material, then col_lendiff doesn't matter and
+ space_to_eol will insert too many spaces. XXX - maybe we should
+ adjust col_lendiff based on the difference between _rl_last_c_pos
+ and _rl_screenwidth */
+ if (col_lendiff && ((MB_CUR_MAX == 1 || rl_byte_oriented) || (_rl_last_c_pos < _rl_screenwidth)))
+#endif
+ {
+ if (_rl_term_autowrap && current_line < inv_botlin)
+ space_to_eol (col_lendiff);
+ else
+ _rl_clear_to_eol (col_lendiff);
+ }
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+/* Tell the update routines that we have moved onto a new (empty) line. */
+int
+rl_on_new_line ()
+{
+ if (visible_line)
+ visible_line[0] = '\0';
+
+ _rl_last_c_pos = _rl_last_v_pos = 0;
+ _rl_vis_botlin = last_lmargin = 0;
+ if (vis_lbreaks)
+ vis_lbreaks[0] = vis_lbreaks[1] = 0;
+ visible_wrap_offset = 0;
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/* Tell the update routines that we have moved onto a new line with the
+ prompt already displayed. Code originally from the version of readline
+ distributed with CLISP. rl_expand_prompt must have already been called
+ (explicitly or implicitly). This still doesn't work exactly right. */
+int
+rl_on_new_line_with_prompt ()
+{
+ int prompt_size, i, l, real_screenwidth, newlines;
+ char *prompt_last_line, *lprompt;
+
+ /* Initialize visible_line and invisible_line to ensure that they can hold
+ the already-displayed prompt. */
+ prompt_size = strlen (rl_prompt) + 1;
+ init_line_structures (prompt_size);
+
+ /* Make sure the line structures hold the already-displayed prompt for
+ redisplay. */
+ lprompt = local_prompt ? local_prompt : rl_prompt;
+ strcpy (visible_line, lprompt);
+ strcpy (invisible_line, lprompt);
+
+ /* If the prompt contains newlines, take the last tail. */
+ prompt_last_line = strrchr (rl_prompt, '\n');
+ if (!prompt_last_line)
+ prompt_last_line = rl_prompt;
+
+ l = strlen (prompt_last_line);
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ _rl_last_c_pos = _rl_col_width (prompt_last_line, 0, l, 1); /* XXX */
+ else
+ _rl_last_c_pos = l;
+
+ /* Dissect prompt_last_line into screen lines. Note that here we have
+ to use the real screenwidth. Readline's notion of screenwidth might be
+ one less, see terminal.c. */
+ real_screenwidth = _rl_screenwidth + (_rl_term_autowrap ? 0 : 1);
+ _rl_last_v_pos = l / real_screenwidth;
+ /* If the prompt length is a multiple of real_screenwidth, we don't know
+ whether the cursor is at the end of the last line, or already at the
+ beginning of the next line. Output a newline just to be safe. */
+ if (l > 0 && (l % real_screenwidth) == 0)
+ _rl_output_some_chars ("\n", 1);
+ last_lmargin = 0;
+
+ newlines = 0; i = 0;
+ while (i <= l)
+ {
+ _rl_vis_botlin = newlines;
+ vis_lbreaks[newlines++] = i;
+ i += real_screenwidth;
+ }
+ vis_lbreaks[newlines] = l;
+ visible_wrap_offset = 0;
+
+ rl_display_prompt = rl_prompt; /* XXX - make sure it's set */
+
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/* Actually update the display, period. */
+int
+rl_forced_update_display ()
+{
+ register char *temp;
+
+ if (visible_line)
+ {
+ temp = visible_line;
+ while (*temp)
+ *temp++ = '\0';
+ }
+ rl_on_new_line ();
+ forced_display++;
+ (*rl_redisplay_function) ();
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/* Move the cursor from _rl_last_c_pos to NEW, which are buffer indices.
+ (Well, when we don't have multibyte characters, _rl_last_c_pos is a
+ buffer index.)
+ DATA is the contents of the screen line of interest; i.e., where
+ the movement is being done. */
+void
+_rl_move_cursor_relative (new, data)
+ int new;
+ const char *data;
+{
+ register int i;
+ int woff; /* number of invisible chars on current line */
+ int cpos, dpos; /* current and desired cursor positions */
+ int adjust;
+
+ woff = WRAP_OFFSET (_rl_last_v_pos, wrap_offset);
+ cpos = _rl_last_c_pos;
+
+ if (cpos == 0 && cpos == new)
+ return;
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ /* If we have multibyte characters, NEW is indexed by the buffer point in
+ a multibyte string, but _rl_last_c_pos is the display position. In
+ this case, NEW's display position is not obvious and must be
+ calculated. We need to account for invisible characters in this line,
+ as long as we are past them and they are counted by _rl_col_width. */
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ adjust = 1;
+ /* Try to short-circuit common cases and eliminate a bunch of multibyte
+ character function calls. */
+ /* 1. prompt string */
+ if (new == local_prompt_len && memcmp (data, local_prompt, new) == 0)
+ {
+ dpos = prompt_physical_chars;
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ adjust = 0;
+ }
+ /* 2. prompt_string + line contents */
+ else if (new > local_prompt_len && local_prompt && memcmp (data, local_prompt, local_prompt_len) == 0)
+ {
+ dpos = prompt_physical_chars + _rl_col_width (data, local_prompt_len, new, 1);
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ adjust = 0;
+ }
+ else
+ dpos = _rl_col_width (data, 0, new, 1);
+
+ /* Use NEW when comparing against the last invisible character in the
+ prompt string, since they're both buffer indices and DPOS is a
+ desired display position. */
+ if (adjust && ((new > prompt_last_invisible) || /* XXX - don't use woff here */
+ (prompt_physical_chars >= _rl_screenwidth &&
+ _rl_last_v_pos == prompt_last_screen_line &&
+ wrap_offset >= woff && dpos >= woff &&
+ new > (prompt_last_invisible-(_rl_screenwidth*_rl_last_v_pos)-wrap_offset))))
+ /* XXX last comparison might need to be >= */
+ {
+ dpos -= woff;
+ /* Since this will be assigned to _rl_last_c_pos at the end (more
+ precisely, _rl_last_c_pos == dpos when this function returns),
+ let the caller know. */
+ cpos_adjusted = 1;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+#endif
+ dpos = new;
+
+ /* If we don't have to do anything, then return. */
+ if (cpos == dpos)
+ return;
+
+ /* It may be faster to output a CR, and then move forwards instead
+ of moving backwards. */
+ /* i == current physical cursor position. */
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ i = _rl_last_c_pos;
+ else
+#endif
+ i = _rl_last_c_pos - woff;
+ if (dpos == 0 || CR_FASTER (dpos, _rl_last_c_pos) ||
+ (_rl_term_autowrap && i == _rl_screenwidth))
+ {
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ putc ('\r', rl_outstream);
+#else
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif /* !__MSDOS__ */
+ cpos = _rl_last_c_pos = 0;
+ }
+
+ if (cpos < dpos)
+ {
+ /* Move the cursor forward. We do it by printing the command
+ to move the cursor forward if there is one, else print that
+ portion of the output buffer again. Which is cheaper? */
+
+ /* The above comment is left here for posterity. It is faster
+ to print one character (non-control) than to print a control
+ sequence telling the terminal to move forward one character.
+ That kind of control is for people who don't know what the
+ data is underneath the cursor. */
+
+ /* However, we need a handle on where the current display position is
+ in the buffer for the immediately preceding comment to be true.
+ In multibyte locales, we don't currently have that info available.
+ Without it, we don't know where the data we have to display begins
+ in the buffer and we have to go back to the beginning of the screen
+ line. In this case, we can use the terminal sequence to move forward
+ if it's available. */
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0)
+ {
+ if (_rl_term_forward_char)
+ {
+ for (i = cpos; i < dpos; i++)
+ tputs (_rl_term_forward_char, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ for (i = 0; i < new; i++)
+ putc (data[i], rl_outstream);
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ for (i = cpos; i < new; i++)
+ putc (data[i], rl_outstream);
+ }
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ /* NEW points to the buffer point, but _rl_last_c_pos is the display point.
+ The byte length of the string is probably bigger than the column width
+ of the string, which means that if NEW == _rl_last_c_pos, then NEW's
+ display point is less than _rl_last_c_pos. */
+#endif
+ else if (cpos > dpos)
+ _rl_backspace (cpos - dpos);
+
+ _rl_last_c_pos = dpos;
+}
+
+/* PWP: move the cursor up or down. */
+void
+_rl_move_vert (to)
+ int to;
+{
+ register int delta, i;
+
+ if (_rl_last_v_pos == to || to > _rl_screenheight)
+ return;
+
+ if ((delta = to - _rl_last_v_pos) > 0)
+ {
+ for (i = 0; i < delta; i++)
+ putc ('\n', rl_outstream);
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ putc ('\r', rl_outstream);
+#else
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif
+ _rl_last_c_pos = 0;
+ }
+ else
+ { /* delta < 0 */
+#ifdef __DJGPP__
+ int row, col;
+
+ fflush (rl_outstream);
+ ScreenGetCursor (&row, &col);
+ ScreenSetCursor (row + delta, col);
+ i = -delta;
+#else
+ if (_rl_term_up && *_rl_term_up)
+ for (i = 0; i < -delta; i++)
+ tputs (_rl_term_up, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif /* !__DJGPP__ */
+ }
+
+ _rl_last_v_pos = to; /* Now TO is here */
+}
+
+/* Physically print C on rl_outstream. This is for functions which know
+ how to optimize the display. Return the number of characters output. */
+int
+rl_show_char (c)
+ int c;
+{
+ int n = 1;
+ if (META_CHAR (c) && (_rl_output_meta_chars == 0))
+ {
+ fprintf (rl_outstream, "M-");
+ n += 2;
+ c = UNMETA (c);
+ }
+
+#if defined (DISPLAY_TABS)
+ if ((CTRL_CHAR (c) && c != '\t') || c == RUBOUT)
+#else
+ if (CTRL_CHAR (c) || c == RUBOUT)
+#endif /* !DISPLAY_TABS */
+ {
+ fprintf (rl_outstream, "C-");
+ n += 2;
+ c = CTRL_CHAR (c) ? UNCTRL (c) : '?';
+ }
+
+ putc (c, rl_outstream);
+ fflush (rl_outstream);
+ return n;
+}
+
+int
+rl_character_len (c, pos)
+ register int c, pos;
+{
+ unsigned char uc;
+
+ uc = (unsigned char)c;
+
+ if (META_CHAR (uc))
+ return ((_rl_output_meta_chars == 0) ? 4 : 1);
+
+ if (uc == '\t')
+ {
+#if defined (DISPLAY_TABS)
+ return (((pos | 7) + 1) - pos);
+#else
+ return (2);
+#endif /* !DISPLAY_TABS */
+ }
+
+ if (CTRL_CHAR (c) || c == RUBOUT)
+ return (2);
+
+ return ((ISPRINT (uc)) ? 1 : 2);
+}
+/* How to print things in the "echo-area". The prompt is treated as a
+ mini-modeline. */
+static int msg_saved_prompt = 0;
+
+#if defined (USE_VARARGS)
+int
+#if defined (PREFER_STDARG)
+rl_message (const char *format, ...)
+#else
+rl_message (va_alist)
+ va_dcl
+#endif
+{
+ va_list args;
+#if defined (PREFER_VARARGS)
+ char *format;
+#endif
+#if defined (HAVE_VSNPRINTF)
+ int bneed;
+#endif
+
+#if defined (PREFER_STDARG)
+ va_start (args, format);
+#else
+ va_start (args);
+ format = va_arg (args, char *);
+#endif
+
+ if (msg_buf == 0)
+ msg_buf = xmalloc (msg_bufsiz = 128);
+
+#if defined (HAVE_VSNPRINTF)
+ bneed = vsnprintf (msg_buf, msg_bufsiz - 1, format, args);
+ if (bneed >= msg_bufsiz - 1)
+ {
+ msg_bufsiz = bneed + 1;
+ msg_buf = xrealloc (msg_buf, msg_bufsiz);
+ va_end (args);
+
+#if defined (PREFER_STDARG)
+ va_start (args, format);
+#else
+ va_start (args);
+ format = va_arg (args, char *);
+#endif
+ vsnprintf (msg_buf, msg_bufsiz - 1, format, args);
+ }
+#else
+ vsprintf (msg_buf, format, args);
+ msg_buf[msg_bufsiz - 1] = '\0'; /* overflow? */
+#endif
+ va_end (args);
+
+ if (saved_local_prompt == 0)
+ {
+ rl_save_prompt ();
+ msg_saved_prompt = 1;
+ }
+ rl_display_prompt = msg_buf;
+ local_prompt = expand_prompt (msg_buf, &prompt_visible_length,
+ &prompt_last_invisible,
+ &prompt_invis_chars_first_line,
+ &prompt_physical_chars);
+ local_prompt_prefix = (char *)NULL;
+ local_prompt_len = local_prompt ? strlen (local_prompt) : 0;
+ (*rl_redisplay_function) ();
+
+ return 0;
+}
+#else /* !USE_VARARGS */
+int
+rl_message (format, arg1, arg2)
+ char *format;
+{
+ if (msg_buf == 0)
+ msg_buf = xmalloc (msg_bufsiz = 128);
+
+ sprintf (msg_buf, format, arg1, arg2);
+ msg_buf[msg_bufsiz - 1] = '\0'; /* overflow? */
+
+ rl_display_prompt = msg_buf;
+ if (saved_local_prompt == 0)
+ {
+ rl_save_prompt ();
+ msg_saved_prompt = 1;
+ }
+ local_prompt = expand_prompt (msg_buf, &prompt_visible_length,
+ &prompt_last_invisible,
+ &prompt_invis_chars_first_line,
+ &prompt_physical_chars);
+ local_prompt_prefix = (char *)NULL;
+ local_prompt_len = local_prompt ? strlen (local_prompt) : 0;
+ (*rl_redisplay_function) ();
+
+ return 0;
+}
+#endif /* !USE_VARARGS */
+
+/* How to clear things from the "echo-area". */
+int
+rl_clear_message ()
+{
+ rl_display_prompt = rl_prompt;
+ if (msg_saved_prompt)
+ {
+ rl_restore_prompt ();
+ msg_saved_prompt = 0;
+ }
+ (*rl_redisplay_function) ();
+ return 0;
+}
+
+int
+rl_reset_line_state ()
+{
+ rl_on_new_line ();
+
+ rl_display_prompt = rl_prompt ? rl_prompt : "";
+ forced_display = 1;
+ return 0;
+}
+
+void
+rl_save_prompt ()
+{
+ saved_local_prompt = local_prompt;
+ saved_local_prefix = local_prompt_prefix;
+ saved_prefix_length = prompt_prefix_length;
+ saved_local_length = local_prompt_len;
+ saved_last_invisible = prompt_last_invisible;
+ saved_visible_length = prompt_visible_length;
+ saved_invis_chars_first_line = prompt_invis_chars_first_line;
+ saved_physical_chars = prompt_physical_chars;
+
+ local_prompt = local_prompt_prefix = (char *)0;
+ local_prompt_len = 0;
+ prompt_last_invisible = prompt_visible_length = prompt_prefix_length = 0;
+ prompt_invis_chars_first_line = prompt_physical_chars = 0;
+}
+
+void
+rl_restore_prompt ()
+{
+ FREE (local_prompt);
+ FREE (local_prompt_prefix);
+
+ local_prompt = saved_local_prompt;
+ local_prompt_prefix = saved_local_prefix;
+ local_prompt_len = saved_local_length;
+ prompt_prefix_length = saved_prefix_length;
+ prompt_last_invisible = saved_last_invisible;
+ prompt_visible_length = saved_visible_length;
+ prompt_invis_chars_first_line = saved_invis_chars_first_line;
+ prompt_physical_chars = saved_physical_chars;
+
+ /* can test saved_local_prompt to see if prompt info has been saved. */
+ saved_local_prompt = saved_local_prefix = (char *)0;
+ saved_local_length = 0;
+ saved_last_invisible = saved_visible_length = saved_prefix_length = 0;
+ saved_invis_chars_first_line = saved_physical_chars = 0;
+}
+
+char *
+_rl_make_prompt_for_search (pchar)
+ int pchar;
+{
+ int len;
+ char *pmt, *p;
+
+ rl_save_prompt ();
+
+ /* We've saved the prompt, and can do anything with the various prompt
+ strings we need before they're restored. We want the unexpanded
+ portion of the prompt string after any final newline. */
+ p = rl_prompt ? strrchr (rl_prompt, '\n') : 0;
+ if (p == 0)
+ {
+ len = (rl_prompt && *rl_prompt) ? strlen (rl_prompt) : 0;
+ pmt = (char *)xmalloc (len + 2);
+ if (len)
+ strcpy (pmt, rl_prompt);
+ pmt[len] = pchar;
+ pmt[len+1] = '\0';
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ p++;
+ len = strlen (p);
+ pmt = (char *)xmalloc (len + 2);
+ if (len)
+ strcpy (pmt, p);
+ pmt[len] = pchar;
+ pmt[len+1] = '\0';
+ }
+
+ /* will be overwritten by expand_prompt, called from rl_message */
+ prompt_physical_chars = saved_physical_chars + 1;
+ return pmt;
+}
+
+/* Quick redisplay hack when erasing characters at the end of the line. */
+void
+_rl_erase_at_end_of_line (l)
+ int l;
+{
+ register int i;
+
+ _rl_backspace (l);
+ for (i = 0; i < l; i++)
+ putc (' ', rl_outstream);
+ _rl_backspace (l);
+ for (i = 0; i < l; i++)
+ visible_line[--_rl_last_c_pos] = '\0';
+ rl_display_fixed++;
+}
+
+/* Clear to the end of the line. COUNT is the minimum
+ number of character spaces to clear, */
+void
+_rl_clear_to_eol (count)
+ int count;
+{
+#ifndef __MSDOS__
+ if (_rl_term_clreol)
+ tputs (_rl_term_clreol, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ else
+#endif
+ if (count)
+ space_to_eol (count);
+}
+
+/* Clear to the end of the line using spaces. COUNT is the minimum
+ number of character spaces to clear, */
+static void
+space_to_eol (count)
+ int count;
+{
+ register int i;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
+ putc (' ', rl_outstream);
+
+ _rl_last_c_pos += count;
+}
+
+void
+_rl_clear_screen ()
+{
+#ifndef __DJGPP__
+ if (_rl_term_clrpag)
+ tputs (_rl_term_clrpag, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ else
+ rl_crlf ();
+#else
+ ScreenClear ();
+ ScreenSetCursor (0, 0);
+#endif /* __DJGPP__ */
+}
+
+/* Insert COUNT characters from STRING to the output stream at column COL. */
+static void
+insert_some_chars (string, count, col)
+ char *string;
+ int count, col;
+{
+#if defined (__MSDOS__) || defined (__MINGW32__)
+ _rl_output_some_chars (string, count);
+#else
+ /* DEBUGGING */
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX == 1 || rl_byte_oriented)
+ if (count != col)
+ _rl_ttymsg ("debug: insert_some_chars: count (%d) != col (%d)", count, col);
+
+ /* If IC is defined, then we do not have to "enter" insert mode. */
+ if (_rl_term_IC)
+ {
+ char *buffer;
+
+ buffer = tgoto (_rl_term_IC, 0, col);
+ tputs (buffer, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ _rl_output_some_chars (string, count);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ register int i;
+
+ /* If we have to turn on insert-mode, then do so. */
+ if (_rl_term_im && *_rl_term_im)
+ tputs (_rl_term_im, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+
+ /* If there is a special command for inserting characters, then
+ use that first to open up the space. */
+ if (_rl_term_ic && *_rl_term_ic)
+ {
+ for (i = col; i--; )
+ tputs (_rl_term_ic, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ }
+
+ /* Print the text. */
+ _rl_output_some_chars (string, count);
+
+ /* If there is a string to turn off insert mode, we had best use
+ it now. */
+ if (_rl_term_ei && *_rl_term_ei)
+ tputs (_rl_term_ei, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ }
+#endif /* __MSDOS__ || __MINGW32__ */
+}
+
+/* Delete COUNT characters from the display line. */
+static void
+delete_chars (count)
+ int count;
+{
+ if (count > _rl_screenwidth) /* XXX */
+ return;
+
+#if !defined (__MSDOS__) && !defined (__MINGW32__)
+ if (_rl_term_DC && *_rl_term_DC)
+ {
+ char *buffer;
+ buffer = tgoto (_rl_term_DC, count, count);
+ tputs (buffer, count, _rl_output_character_function);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if (_rl_term_dc && *_rl_term_dc)
+ while (count--)
+ tputs (_rl_term_dc, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ }
+#endif /* !__MSDOS__ && !__MINGW32__ */
+}
+
+void
+_rl_update_final ()
+{
+ int full_lines;
+
+ full_lines = 0;
+ /* If the cursor is the only thing on an otherwise-blank last line,
+ compensate so we don't print an extra CRLF. */
+ if (_rl_vis_botlin && _rl_last_c_pos == 0 &&
+ visible_line[vis_lbreaks[_rl_vis_botlin]] == 0)
+ {
+ _rl_vis_botlin--;
+ full_lines = 1;
+ }
+ _rl_move_vert (_rl_vis_botlin);
+ /* If we've wrapped lines, remove the final xterm line-wrap flag. */
+ if (full_lines && _rl_term_autowrap && (VIS_LLEN(_rl_vis_botlin) == _rl_screenwidth))
+ {
+ char *last_line;
+
+ last_line = &visible_line[vis_lbreaks[_rl_vis_botlin]];
+ cpos_buffer_position = -1; /* don't know where we are in buffer */
+ _rl_move_cursor_relative (_rl_screenwidth - 1, last_line); /* XXX */
+ _rl_clear_to_eol (0);
+ putc (last_line[_rl_screenwidth - 1], rl_outstream);
+ }
+ _rl_vis_botlin = 0;
+ rl_crlf ();
+ fflush (rl_outstream);
+ rl_display_fixed++;
+}
+
+/* Move to the start of the current line. */
+static void
+cr ()
+{
+ if (_rl_term_cr)
+ {
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ putc ('\r', rl_outstream);
+#else
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif
+ _rl_last_c_pos = 0;
+ }
+}
+
+/* Redraw the last line of a multi-line prompt that may possibly contain
+ terminal escape sequences. Called with the cursor at column 0 of the
+ line to draw the prompt on. */
+static void
+redraw_prompt (t)
+ char *t;
+{
+ char *oldp;
+
+ oldp = rl_display_prompt;
+ rl_save_prompt ();
+
+ rl_display_prompt = t;
+ local_prompt = expand_prompt (t, &prompt_visible_length,
+ &prompt_last_invisible,
+ &prompt_invis_chars_first_line,
+ &prompt_physical_chars);
+ local_prompt_prefix = (char *)NULL;
+ local_prompt_len = local_prompt ? strlen (local_prompt) : 0;
+
+ rl_forced_update_display ();
+
+ rl_display_prompt = oldp;
+ rl_restore_prompt();
+}
+
+/* Redisplay the current line after a SIGWINCH is received. */
+void
+_rl_redisplay_after_sigwinch ()
+{
+ char *t;
+
+ /* Clear the last line (assuming that the screen size change will result in
+ either more or fewer characters on that line only) and put the cursor at
+ column 0. Make sure the right thing happens if we have wrapped to a new
+ screen line. */
+ if (_rl_term_cr)
+ {
+ _rl_move_vert (_rl_vis_botlin);
+
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ putc ('\r', rl_outstream);
+#else
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif
+ _rl_last_c_pos = 0;
+#if defined (__MSDOS__)
+ space_to_eol (_rl_screenwidth);
+ putc ('\r', rl_outstream);
+#else
+ if (_rl_term_clreol)
+ tputs (_rl_term_clreol, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ else
+ {
+ space_to_eol (_rl_screenwidth);
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ }
+#endif
+ if (_rl_last_v_pos > 0)
+ _rl_move_vert (0);
+ }
+ else
+ rl_crlf ();
+
+ /* Redraw only the last line of a multi-line prompt. */
+ t = strrchr (rl_display_prompt, '\n');
+ if (t)
+ redraw_prompt (++t);
+ else
+ rl_forced_update_display ();
+}
+
+void
+_rl_clean_up_for_exit ()
+{
+ if (_rl_echoing_p)
+ {
+ _rl_move_vert (_rl_vis_botlin);
+ _rl_vis_botlin = 0;
+ fflush (rl_outstream);
+ rl_restart_output (1, 0);
+ }
+}
+
+void
+_rl_erase_entire_line ()
+{
+ cr ();
+ _rl_clear_to_eol (0);
+ cr ();
+ fflush (rl_outstream);
+}
+
+/* return the `current display line' of the cursor -- the number of lines to
+ move up to get to the first screen line of the current readline line. */
+int
+_rl_current_display_line ()
+{
+ int ret, nleft;
+
+ /* Find out whether or not there might be invisible characters in the
+ editing buffer. */
+ if (rl_display_prompt == rl_prompt)
+ nleft = _rl_last_c_pos - _rl_screenwidth - rl_visible_prompt_length;
+ else
+ nleft = _rl_last_c_pos - _rl_screenwidth;
+
+ if (nleft > 0)
+ ret = 1 + nleft / _rl_screenwidth;
+ else
+ ret = 0;
+
+ return ret;
+}
+
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+/* Calculate the number of screen columns occupied by STR from START to END.
+ In the case of multibyte characters with stateful encoding, we have to
+ scan from the beginning of the string to take the state into account. */
+static int
+_rl_col_width (str, start, end, flags)
+ const char *str;
+ int start, end, flags;
+{
+ wchar_t wc;
+ mbstate_t ps;
+ int tmp, point, width, max;
+
+ if (end <= start)
+ return 0;
+ if (MB_CUR_MAX == 1 || rl_byte_oriented)
+{
+_rl_ttymsg ("_rl_col_width: called with MB_CUR_MAX == 1");
+ return (end - start);
+}
+
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+
+ point = 0;
+ max = end;
+
+ /* Try to short-circuit common cases. The adjustment to remove wrap_offset
+ is done by the caller. */
+ /* 1. prompt string */
+ if (flags && start == 0 && end == local_prompt_len && memcmp (str, local_prompt, local_prompt_len) == 0)
+ return (prompt_physical_chars + wrap_offset);
+ /* 2. prompt string + line contents */
+ else if (flags && start == 0 && local_prompt_len > 0 && end > local_prompt_len && local_prompt && memcmp (str, local_prompt, local_prompt_len) == 0)
+ {
+ tmp = prompt_physical_chars + wrap_offset;
+ /* XXX - try to call ourselves recursively with non-prompt portion */
+ tmp += _rl_col_width (str, local_prompt_len, end, flags);
+ return (tmp);
+ }
+
+ while (point < start)
+ {
+ tmp = mbrlen (str + point, max, &ps);
+ if (MB_INVALIDCH ((size_t)tmp))
+ {
+ /* In this case, the bytes are invalid or too short to compose a
+ multibyte character, so we assume that the first byte represents
+ a single character. */
+ point++;
+ max--;
+
+ /* Clear the state of the byte sequence, because in this case the
+ effect of mbstate is undefined. */
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ }
+ else if (MB_NULLWCH (tmp))
+ break; /* Found '\0' */
+ else
+ {
+ point += tmp;
+ max -= tmp;
+ }
+ }
+
+ /* If START is not a byte that starts a character, then POINT will be
+ greater than START. In this case, assume that (POINT - START) gives
+ a byte count that is the number of columns of difference. */
+ width = point - start;
+
+ while (point < end)
+ {
+ tmp = mbrtowc (&wc, str + point, max, &ps);
+ if (MB_INVALIDCH ((size_t)tmp))
+ {
+ /* In this case, the bytes are invalid or too short to compose a
+ multibyte character, so we assume that the first byte represents
+ a single character. */
+ point++;
+ max--;
+
+ /* and assume that the byte occupies a single column. */
+ width++;
+
+ /* Clear the state of the byte sequence, because in this case the
+ effect of mbstate is undefined. */
+ memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t));
+ }
+ else if (MB_NULLWCH (tmp))
+ break; /* Found '\0' */
+ else
+ {
+ point += tmp;
+ max -= tmp;
+ tmp = WCWIDTH(wc);
+ width += (tmp >= 0) ? tmp : 1;
+ }
+ }
+
+ width += point - end;
+
+ return width;
+}
+#endif /* HANDLE_MULTIBYTE */
--- /dev/null
+# This makefile for Readline library documentation is in -*- text -*- mode.
+# Emacs likes it that way.
+RM = rm -f
+
+MAKEINFO = makeinfo
+TEXI2DVI = texi2dvi
+TEXI2HTML = texi2html
+QUIETPS = #set this to -q to shut up dvips
+DVIPS = dvips -D 300 $(QUIETPS) -o $@ # tricky
+
+INSTALL_DATA = cp
+infodir = /usr/local/info
+
+RLSRC = rlman.texinfo rluser.texinfo rltech.texinfo
+HISTSRC = hist.texinfo hsuser.texinfo hstech.texinfo
+
+DVIOBJ = readline.dvi history.dvi
+INFOOBJ = readline.info history.info
+PSOBJ = readline.ps history.ps
+HTMLOBJ = readline.html history.html
+
+all: info dvi html ps
+nodvi: info html
+
+readline.dvi: $(RLSRC)
+ $(TEXI2DVI) rlman.texinfo
+ mv rlman.dvi readline.dvi
+
+readline.info: $(RLSRC)
+ $(MAKEINFO) --no-split -o $@ rlman.texinfo
+
+history.dvi: ${HISTSRC}
+ $(TEXI2DVI) hist.texinfo
+ mv hist.dvi history.dvi
+
+history.info: ${HISTSRC}
+ $(MAKEINFO) --no-split -o $@ hist.texinfo
+
+readline.ps: readline.dvi
+ $(RM) $@
+ $(DVIPS) readline.dvi
+
+history.ps: history.dvi
+ $(RM) $@
+ $(DVIPS) history.dvi
+
+readline.html: ${RLSRC}
+ $(TEXI2HTML) rlman.texinfo
+ sed -e 's:rlman.html:readline.html:' -e 's:rlman_toc.html:readline_toc.html:' rlman.html > readline.html
+ sed -e 's:rlman.html:readline.html:' -e 's:rlman_toc.html:readline_toc.html:' rlman_toc.html > readline_toc.html
+ $(RM) rlman.html rlman_toc.html
+
+history.html: ${HISTSRC}
+ $(TEXI2HTML) hist.texinfo
+ sed -e 's:hist.html:history.html:' -e 's:hist_toc.html:history_toc.html:' hist.html > history.html
+ sed -e 's:hist.html:history.html:' -e 's:hist_toc.html:history_toc.html:' hist_toc.html > history_toc.html
+ $(RM) hist.html hist_toc.html
+
+info: $(INFOOBJ)
+dvi: $(DVIOBJ)
+ps: $(PSOBJ)
+html: $(HTMLOBJ)
+
+clean:
+ $(RM) *.aux *.cp *.fn *.ky *.log *.pg *.toc *.tp *.vr *.cps *.pgs \
+ *.fns *.kys *.tps *.vrs *.o core
+
+distclean: clean
+mostlyclean: clean
+
+maintainer-clean: clean
+ $(RM) *.dvi *.info *.info-* *.ps *.html
+
+install: info
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} readline.info $(infodir)/readline.info
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} history.info $(infodir)/history.info
#define RL_SIG_RECEIVED() (_rl_caught_signal != 0)
#define RL_SIGINT_RECEIVED() (_rl_caught_signal == SIGINT)
+#define CUSTOM_REDISPLAY_FUNC() (rl_redisplay_function != rl_redisplay)
+#define CUSTOM_INPUT_FUNC() (rl_getc_function != rl_getc)
+
/*************************************************************************
* *
* Global structs undocumented in texinfo manual and not in readline.h *
--- /dev/null
+/* rlprivate.h -- functions and variables global to the readline library,
+ but not intended for use by applications. */
+
+/* Copyright (C) 1999-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ This file is part of the GNU Readline Library (Readline), a library
+ for reading lines of text with interactive input and history editing.
+
+ Readline is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
+
+ Readline is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ along with Readline. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+*/
+
+#if !defined (_RL_PRIVATE_H_)
+#define _RL_PRIVATE_H_
+
+#include "rlconf.h" /* for VISIBLE_STATS */
+#include "rlstdc.h"
+#include "posixjmp.h" /* defines procenv_t */
+
+/*************************************************************************
+ * *
+ * Convenience definitions *
+ * *
+ *************************************************************************/
+
+#define EMACS_MODE() (rl_editing_mode == emacs_mode)
+#define VI_COMMAND_MODE() (rl_editing_mode == vi_mode && _rl_keymap == vi_movement_keymap)
+#define VI_INSERT_MODE() (rl_editing_mode == vi_mode && _rl_keymap == vi_insertion_keymap)
+
+#define RL_CHECK_SIGNALS() \
+ do { \
+ if (_rl_caught_signal) _rl_signal_handler (_rl_caught_signal); \
+ } while (0)
+
+#define RL_SIG_RECEIVED() (_rl_caught_signal != 0)
+#define RL_SIGINT_RECEIVED() (_rl_caught_signal == SIGINT)
+
+/*************************************************************************
+ * *
+ * Global structs undocumented in texinfo manual and not in readline.h *
+ * *
+ *************************************************************************/
+/* search types */
+#define RL_SEARCH_ISEARCH 0x01 /* incremental search */
+#define RL_SEARCH_NSEARCH 0x02 /* non-incremental search */
+#define RL_SEARCH_CSEARCH 0x04 /* intra-line char search */
+
+/* search flags */
+#define SF_REVERSE 0x01
+#define SF_FOUND 0x02
+#define SF_FAILED 0x04
+#define SF_CHGKMAP 0x08
+
+typedef struct __rl_search_context
+{
+ int type;
+ int sflags;
+
+ char *search_string;
+ int search_string_index;
+ int search_string_size;
+
+ char **lines;
+ char *allocated_line;
+ int hlen;
+ int hindex;
+
+ int save_point;
+ int save_mark;
+ int save_line;
+ int last_found_line;
+ char *prev_line_found;
+
+ UNDO_LIST *save_undo_list;
+
+ Keymap keymap; /* used when dispatching commands in search string */
+ Keymap okeymap; /* original keymap */
+
+ int history_pos;
+ int direction;
+
+ int prevc;
+ int lastc;
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+ char mb[MB_LEN_MAX];
+ char pmb[MB_LEN_MAX];
+#endif
+
+ char *sline;
+ int sline_len;
+ int sline_index;
+
+ char *search_terminators;
+} _rl_search_cxt;
+
+/* Callback data for reading numeric arguments */
+#define NUM_SAWMINUS 0x01
+#define NUM_SAWDIGITS 0x02
+#define NUM_READONE 0x04
+
+typedef int _rl_arg_cxt;
+
+/* A context for reading key sequences longer than a single character when
+ using the callback interface. */
+#define KSEQ_DISPATCHED 0x01
+#define KSEQ_SUBSEQ 0x02
+#define KSEQ_RECURSIVE 0x04
+
+typedef struct __rl_keyseq_context
+{
+ int flags;
+ int subseq_arg;
+ int subseq_retval; /* XXX */
+ Keymap dmap;
+
+ Keymap oldmap;
+ int okey;
+ struct __rl_keyseq_context *ocxt;
+ int childval;
+} _rl_keyseq_cxt;
+
+/* vi-mode commands that use result of motion command to define boundaries */
+#define VIM_DELETE 0x01
+#define VIM_CHANGE 0x02
+#define VIM_YANK 0x04
+
+/* various states for vi-mode commands that use motion commands. reflects
+ RL_READLINE_STATE */
+#define VMSTATE_READ 0x01
+#define VMSTATE_NUMARG 0x02
+
+typedef struct __rl_vimotion_context
+{
+ int op;
+ int state;
+ int flags; /* reserved */
+ _rl_arg_cxt ncxt;
+ int numeric_arg;
+ int start, end; /* rl_point, rl_end */
+ int key, motion; /* initial key, motion command */
+} _rl_vimotion_cxt;
+
+/* fill in more as needed */
+/* `Generic' callback data and functions */
+typedef struct __rl_callback_generic_arg
+{
+ int count;
+ int i1, i2;
+ /* add here as needed */
+} _rl_callback_generic_arg;
+
+typedef int _rl_callback_func_t PARAMS((_rl_callback_generic_arg *));
+
+typedef void _rl_sigcleanup_func_t PARAMS((int, void *));
+
+/*************************************************************************
+ * *
+ * Global functions undocumented in texinfo manual and not in readline.h *
+ * *
+ *************************************************************************/
+
+/*************************************************************************
+ * *
+ * Global variables undocumented in texinfo manual and not in readline.h *
+ * *
+ *************************************************************************/
+
+/* complete.c */
+extern int rl_complete_with_tilde_expansion;
+#if defined (VISIBLE_STATS)
+extern int rl_visible_stats;
+#endif /* VISIBLE_STATS */
+#if defined (COLOR_SUPPORT)
+extern int _rl_colored_stats;
+#endif
+
+/* readline.c */
+extern int rl_line_buffer_len;
+extern int rl_arg_sign;
+extern int rl_visible_prompt_length;
+extern int rl_byte_oriented;
+
+/* display.c */
+extern int rl_display_fixed;
+
+/* parens.c */
+extern int rl_blink_matching_paren;
+
+/*************************************************************************
+ * *
+ * Global functions and variables unused and undocumented *
+ * *
+ *************************************************************************/
+
+/* kill.c */
+extern int rl_set_retained_kills PARAMS((int));
+
+/* terminal.c */
+extern void _rl_set_screen_size PARAMS((int, int));
+
+/* undo.c */
+extern int _rl_fix_last_undo_of_type PARAMS((int, int, int));
+
+/* util.c */
+extern char *_rl_savestring PARAMS((const char *));
+
+/*************************************************************************
+ * *
+ * Functions and variables private to the readline library *
+ * *
+ *************************************************************************/
+
+/* NOTE: Functions and variables prefixed with `_rl_' are
+ pseudo-global: they are global so they can be shared
+ between files in the readline library, but are not intended
+ to be visible to readline callers. */
+
+/*************************************************************************
+ * Undocumented private functions *
+ *************************************************************************/
+
+#if defined(READLINE_CALLBACKS)
+
+/* readline.c */
+extern void readline_internal_setup PARAMS((void));
+extern char *readline_internal_teardown PARAMS((int));
+extern int readline_internal_char PARAMS((void));
+
+extern _rl_keyseq_cxt *_rl_keyseq_cxt_alloc PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_keyseq_cxt_dispose PARAMS((_rl_keyseq_cxt *));
+extern void _rl_keyseq_chain_dispose PARAMS((void));
+
+extern int _rl_dispatch_callback PARAMS((_rl_keyseq_cxt *));
+
+/* callback.c */
+extern _rl_callback_generic_arg *_rl_callback_data_alloc PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_callback_data_dispose PARAMS((_rl_callback_generic_arg *));
+
+#endif /* READLINE_CALLBACKS */
+
+/* bind.c */
+extern char *_rl_untranslate_macro_value PARAMS((char *, int));
+
+/* complete.c */
+extern void _rl_reset_completion_state PARAMS((void));
+extern char _rl_find_completion_word PARAMS((int *, int *));
+extern void _rl_free_match_list PARAMS((char **));
+
+/* display.c */
+extern char *_rl_strip_prompt PARAMS((char *));
+extern void _rl_reset_prompt PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_move_cursor_relative PARAMS((int, const char *));
+extern void _rl_move_vert PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_save_prompt PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_restore_prompt PARAMS((void));
+extern char *_rl_make_prompt_for_search PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_erase_at_end_of_line PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_clear_to_eol PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_clear_screen PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_update_final PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_redisplay_after_sigwinch PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_clean_up_for_exit PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_erase_entire_line PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_current_display_line PARAMS((void));
+
+/* input.c */
+extern int _rl_any_typein PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_input_available PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_input_queued PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_insert_typein PARAMS((int));
+extern int _rl_unget_char PARAMS((int));
+extern int _rl_pushed_input_available PARAMS((void));
+
+/* isearch.c */
+extern _rl_search_cxt *_rl_scxt_alloc PARAMS((int, int));
+extern void _rl_scxt_dispose PARAMS((_rl_search_cxt *, int));
+
+extern int _rl_isearch_dispatch PARAMS((_rl_search_cxt *, int));
+extern int _rl_isearch_callback PARAMS((_rl_search_cxt *));
+
+extern int _rl_search_getchar PARAMS((_rl_search_cxt *));
+
+/* macro.c */
+extern void _rl_with_macro_input PARAMS((char *));
+extern int _rl_next_macro_key PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_prev_macro_key PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_push_executing_macro PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_pop_executing_macro PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_add_macro_char PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_kill_kbd_macro PARAMS((void));
+
+/* misc.c */
+extern int _rl_arg_overflow PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_arg_init PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_arg_getchar PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_arg_callback PARAMS((_rl_arg_cxt));
+extern void _rl_reset_argument PARAMS((void));
+
+extern void _rl_start_using_history PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_free_saved_history_line PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_set_insert_mode PARAMS((int, int));
+
+extern void _rl_revert_all_lines PARAMS((void));
+
+/* nls.c */
+extern int _rl_init_eightbit PARAMS((void));
+
+/* parens.c */
+extern void _rl_enable_paren_matching PARAMS((int));
+
+/* readline.c */
+extern void _rl_init_line_state PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_set_the_line PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_dispatch PARAMS((int, Keymap));
+extern int _rl_dispatch_subseq PARAMS((int, Keymap, int));
+extern void _rl_internal_char_cleanup PARAMS((void));
+
+/* rltty.c */
+extern int _rl_disable_tty_signals PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_restore_tty_signals PARAMS((void));
+
+/* search.c */
+extern int _rl_nsearch_callback PARAMS((_rl_search_cxt *));
+
+/* signals.c */
+extern void _rl_signal_handler PARAMS((int));
+
+extern void _rl_block_sigint PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_release_sigint PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_block_sigwinch PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_release_sigwinch PARAMS((void));
+
+/* terminal.c */
+extern void _rl_get_screen_size PARAMS((int, int));
+extern void _rl_sigwinch_resize_terminal PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_init_terminal_io PARAMS((const char *));
+#ifdef _MINIX
+extern void _rl_output_character_function PARAMS((int));
+#else
+extern int _rl_output_character_function PARAMS((int));
+#endif
+extern void _rl_output_some_chars PARAMS((const char *, int));
+extern int _rl_backspace PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_enable_meta_key PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_disable_meta_key PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_control_keypad PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_set_cursor PARAMS((int, int));
+
+/* text.c */
+extern void _rl_fix_point PARAMS((int));
+extern int _rl_replace_text PARAMS((const char *, int, int));
+extern int _rl_forward_char_internal PARAMS((int));
+extern int _rl_insert_char PARAMS((int, int));
+extern int _rl_overwrite_char PARAMS((int, int));
+extern int _rl_overwrite_rubout PARAMS((int, int));
+extern int _rl_rubout_char PARAMS((int, int));
+#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE)
+extern int _rl_char_search_internal PARAMS((int, int, char *, int));
+#else
+extern int _rl_char_search_internal PARAMS((int, int, int));
+#endif
+extern int _rl_set_mark_at_pos PARAMS((int));
+
+/* undo.c */
+extern UNDO_LIST *_rl_copy_undo_entry PARAMS((UNDO_LIST *));
+extern UNDO_LIST *_rl_copy_undo_list PARAMS((UNDO_LIST *));
+extern void _rl_free_undo_list PARAMS((UNDO_LIST *));
+
+/* util.c */
+#if defined (USE_VARARGS) && defined (PREFER_STDARG)
+extern void _rl_ttymsg (const char *, ...) __attribute__((__format__ (printf, 1, 2)));
+extern void _rl_errmsg (const char *, ...) __attribute__((__format__ (printf, 1, 2)));
+extern void _rl_trace (const char *, ...) __attribute__((__format__ (printf, 1, 2)));
+#else
+extern void _rl_ttymsg ();
+extern void _rl_errmsg ();
+extern void _rl_trace ();
+#endif
+extern void _rl_audit_tty PARAMS((char *));
+
+extern int _rl_tropen PARAMS((void));
+
+extern int _rl_abort_internal PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_null_function PARAMS((int, int));
+extern char *_rl_strindex PARAMS((const char *, const char *));
+extern int _rl_qsort_string_compare PARAMS((char **, char **));
+extern int (_rl_uppercase_p) PARAMS((int));
+extern int (_rl_lowercase_p) PARAMS((int));
+extern int (_rl_pure_alphabetic) PARAMS((int));
+extern int (_rl_digit_p) PARAMS((int));
+extern int (_rl_to_lower) PARAMS((int));
+extern int (_rl_to_upper) PARAMS((int));
+extern int (_rl_digit_value) PARAMS((int));
+
+/* vi_mode.c */
+extern void _rl_vi_initialize_line PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_vi_reset_last PARAMS((void));
+extern void _rl_vi_set_last PARAMS((int, int, int));
+extern int _rl_vi_textmod_command PARAMS((int));
+extern void _rl_vi_done_inserting PARAMS((void));
+extern int _rl_vi_domove_callback PARAMS((_rl_vimotion_cxt *));
+
+/*************************************************************************
+ * Undocumented private variables *
+ *************************************************************************/
+
+/* bind.c */
+extern const char * const _rl_possible_control_prefixes[];
+extern const char * const _rl_possible_meta_prefixes[];
+
+/* callback.c */
+extern _rl_callback_func_t *_rl_callback_func;
+extern _rl_callback_generic_arg *_rl_callback_data;
+
+/* complete.c */
+extern int _rl_complete_show_all;
+extern int _rl_complete_show_unmodified;
+extern int _rl_complete_mark_directories;
+extern int _rl_complete_mark_symlink_dirs;
+extern int _rl_completion_prefix_display_length;
+extern int _rl_completion_columns;
+extern int _rl_print_completions_horizontally;
+extern int _rl_completion_case_fold;
+extern int _rl_completion_case_map;
+extern int _rl_match_hidden_files;
+extern int _rl_page_completions;
+extern int _rl_skip_completed_text;
+extern int _rl_menu_complete_prefix_first;
+
+/* display.c */
+extern int _rl_vis_botlin;
+extern int _rl_last_c_pos;
+extern int _rl_suppress_redisplay;
+extern int _rl_want_redisplay;
+
+/* isearch.c */
+extern char *_rl_isearch_terminators;
+
+extern _rl_search_cxt *_rl_iscxt;
+
+/* macro.c */
+extern char *_rl_executing_macro;
+
+/* misc.c */
+extern int _rl_history_preserve_point;
+extern int _rl_history_saved_point;
+
+extern _rl_arg_cxt _rl_argcxt;
+
+/* nls.c */
+extern int _rl_utf8locale;
+
+/* readline.c */
+extern int _rl_echoing_p;
+extern int _rl_horizontal_scroll_mode;
+extern int _rl_mark_modified_lines;
+extern int _rl_bell_preference;
+extern int _rl_meta_flag;
+extern int _rl_convert_meta_chars_to_ascii;
+extern int _rl_output_meta_chars;
+extern int _rl_bind_stty_chars;
+extern int _rl_revert_all_at_newline;
+extern int _rl_echo_control_chars;
+extern int _rl_show_mode_in_prompt;
+extern char *_rl_comment_begin;
+extern unsigned char _rl_parsing_conditionalized_out;
+extern Keymap _rl_keymap;
+extern FILE *_rl_in_stream;
+extern FILE *_rl_out_stream;
+extern int _rl_last_command_was_kill;
+extern int _rl_eof_char;
+extern procenv_t _rl_top_level;
+extern _rl_keyseq_cxt *_rl_kscxt;
+extern int _rl_keyseq_timeout;
+
+extern int _rl_executing_keyseq_size;
+
+/* search.c */
+extern _rl_search_cxt *_rl_nscxt;
+
+/* signals.c */
+extern int _rl_interrupt_immediately;
+extern int volatile _rl_caught_signal;
+
+extern _rl_sigcleanup_func_t *_rl_sigcleanup;
+extern void *_rl_sigcleanarg;
+
+extern int _rl_echoctl;
+
+extern int _rl_intr_char;
+extern int _rl_quit_char;
+extern int _rl_susp_char;
+
+/* terminal.c */
+extern int _rl_enable_keypad;
+extern int _rl_enable_meta;
+extern char *_rl_term_clreol;
+extern char *_rl_term_clrpag;
+extern char *_rl_term_im;
+extern char *_rl_term_ic;
+extern char *_rl_term_ei;
+extern char *_rl_term_DC;
+extern char *_rl_term_up;
+extern char *_rl_term_dc;
+extern char *_rl_term_cr;
+extern char *_rl_term_IC;
+extern char *_rl_term_forward_char;
+extern int _rl_screenheight;
+extern int _rl_screenwidth;
+extern int _rl_screenchars;
+extern int _rl_terminal_can_insert;
+extern int _rl_term_autowrap;
+
+/* undo.c */
+extern int _rl_doing_an_undo;
+extern int _rl_undo_group_level;
+
+/* vi_mode.c */
+extern int _rl_vi_last_command;
+extern _rl_vimotion_cxt *_rl_vimvcxt;
+
+#endif /* _RL_PRIVATE_H_ */
static void _emx_get_screensize PARAMS((int *, int *));
#endif
-#define CUSTOM_REDISPLAY_FUNC() (rl_redisplay_function != rl_redisplay)
-#define CUSTOM_INPUT_FUNC() (rl_getc_function != rl_getc)
-
/* If the calling application sets this to a non-zero value, readline will
use the $LINES and $COLUMNS environment variables to set its idea of the
window size before interrogating the kernel. */
--- /dev/null
+/* terminal.c -- controlling the terminal with termcap. */
+
+/* Copyright (C) 1996-2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ This file is part of the GNU Readline Library (Readline), a library
+ for reading lines of text with interactive input and history editing.
+
+ Readline is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
+
+ Readline is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ along with Readline. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+*/
+
+#define READLINE_LIBRARY
+
+#if defined (HAVE_CONFIG_H)
+# include <config.h>
+#endif
+
+#include <sys/types.h>
+#include "posixstat.h"
+#include <fcntl.h>
+#if defined (HAVE_SYS_FILE_H)
+# include <sys/file.h>
+#endif /* HAVE_SYS_FILE_H */
+
+#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H)
+# include <unistd.h>
+#endif /* HAVE_UNISTD_H */
+
+#if defined (HAVE_STDLIB_H)
+# include <stdlib.h>
+#else
+# include "ansi_stdlib.h"
+#endif /* HAVE_STDLIB_H */
+
+#if defined (HAVE_LOCALE_H)
+# include <locale.h>
+#endif
+
+#include <stdio.h>
+
+/* System-specific feature definitions and include files. */
+#include "rldefs.h"
+
+#if defined (GWINSZ_IN_SYS_IOCTL) && !defined (TIOCGWINSZ)
+# include <sys/ioctl.h>
+#endif /* GWINSZ_IN_SYS_IOCTL && !TIOCGWINSZ */
+
+#ifdef __MSDOS__
+# include <pc.h>
+#endif
+
+#include "rltty.h"
+#include "tcap.h"
+
+/* Some standard library routines. */
+#include "readline.h"
+#include "history.h"
+
+#include "rlprivate.h"
+#include "rlshell.h"
+#include "xmalloc.h"
+
+#if defined (__MINGW32__)
+# include <windows.h>
+# include <wincon.h>
+
+static void _win_get_screensize PARAMS((int *, int *));
+#endif
+
+#if defined (__EMX__)
+static void _emx_get_screensize PARAMS((int *, int *));
+#endif
+
+#define CUSTOM_REDISPLAY_FUNC() (rl_redisplay_function != rl_redisplay)
+#define CUSTOM_INPUT_FUNC() (rl_getc_function != rl_getc)
+
+/* If the calling application sets this to a non-zero value, readline will
+ use the $LINES and $COLUMNS environment variables to set its idea of the
+ window size before interrogating the kernel. */
+int rl_prefer_env_winsize = 0;
+
+/* **************************************************************** */
+/* */
+/* Terminal and Termcap */
+/* */
+/* **************************************************************** */
+
+#ifndef __MSDOS__
+static char *term_buffer = (char *)NULL;
+static char *term_string_buffer = (char *)NULL;
+#endif
+
+static int tcap_initialized;
+
+#if !defined (__linux__) && !defined (NCURSES_VERSION)
+# if defined (__EMX__) || defined (NEED_EXTERN_PC)
+extern
+# endif /* __EMX__ || NEED_EXTERN_PC */
+char PC, *BC, *UP;
+#endif /* !__linux__ && !NCURSES_VERSION */
+
+/* Some strings to control terminal actions. These are output by tputs (). */
+char *_rl_term_clreol;
+char *_rl_term_clrpag;
+char *_rl_term_cr;
+char *_rl_term_backspace;
+char *_rl_term_goto;
+char *_rl_term_pc;
+
+/* Non-zero if we determine that the terminal can do character insertion. */
+int _rl_terminal_can_insert = 0;
+
+/* How to insert characters. */
+char *_rl_term_im;
+char *_rl_term_ei;
+char *_rl_term_ic;
+char *_rl_term_ip;
+char *_rl_term_IC;
+
+/* How to delete characters. */
+char *_rl_term_dc;
+char *_rl_term_DC;
+
+char *_rl_term_forward_char;
+
+/* How to go up a line. */
+char *_rl_term_up;
+
+/* A visible bell; char if the terminal can be made to flash the screen. */
+static char *_rl_visible_bell;
+
+/* Non-zero means the terminal can auto-wrap lines. */
+int _rl_term_autowrap = -1;
+
+/* Non-zero means that this terminal has a meta key. */
+static int term_has_meta;
+
+/* The sequences to write to turn on and off the meta key, if this
+ terminal has one. */
+static char *_rl_term_mm;
+static char *_rl_term_mo;
+
+/* The key sequences output by the arrow keys, if this terminal has any. */
+static char *_rl_term_ku;
+static char *_rl_term_kd;
+static char *_rl_term_kr;
+static char *_rl_term_kl;
+
+/* How to initialize and reset the arrow keys, if this terminal has any. */
+static char *_rl_term_ks;
+static char *_rl_term_ke;
+
+/* The key sequences sent by the Home and End keys, if any. */
+static char *_rl_term_kh;
+static char *_rl_term_kH;
+static char *_rl_term_at7; /* @7 */
+
+/* Delete key */
+static char *_rl_term_kD;
+
+/* Insert key */
+static char *_rl_term_kI;
+
+/* Cursor control */
+static char *_rl_term_vs; /* very visible */
+static char *_rl_term_ve; /* normal */
+
+static void bind_termcap_arrow_keys PARAMS((Keymap));
+
+/* Variables that hold the screen dimensions, used by the display code. */
+int _rl_screenwidth, _rl_screenheight, _rl_screenchars;
+
+/* Non-zero means the user wants to enable the keypad. */
+int _rl_enable_keypad;
+
+/* Non-zero means the user wants to enable a meta key. */
+int _rl_enable_meta = 1;
+
+#if defined (__EMX__)
+static void
+_emx_get_screensize (swp, shp)
+ int *swp, *shp;
+{
+ int sz[2];
+
+ _scrsize (sz);
+
+ if (swp)
+ *swp = sz[0];
+ if (shp)
+ *shp = sz[1];
+}
+#endif
+
+#if defined (__MINGW32__)
+static void
+_win_get_screensize (swp, shp)
+ int *swp, *shp;
+{
+ HANDLE hConOut;
+ CONSOLE_SCREEN_BUFFER_INFO scr;
+
+ hConOut = GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE);
+ if (hConOut != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
+ {
+ if (GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo (hConOut, &scr))
+ {
+ *swp = scr.dwSize.X;
+ *shp = scr.srWindow.Bottom - scr.srWindow.Top + 1;
+ }
+ }
+}
+#endif
+
+/* Get readline's idea of the screen size. TTY is a file descriptor open
+ to the terminal. If IGNORE_ENV is true, we do not pay attention to the
+ values of $LINES and $COLUMNS. The tests for TERM_STRING_BUFFER being
+ non-null serve to check whether or not we have initialized termcap. */
+void
+_rl_get_screen_size (tty, ignore_env)
+ int tty, ignore_env;
+{
+ char *ss;
+#if defined (TIOCGWINSZ)
+ struct winsize window_size;
+#endif /* TIOCGWINSZ */
+ int wr, wc;
+
+ wr = wc = -1;
+#if defined (TIOCGWINSZ)
+ if (ioctl (tty, TIOCGWINSZ, &window_size) == 0)
+ {
+ wc = (int) window_size.ws_col;
+ wr = (int) window_size.ws_row;
+ }
+#endif /* TIOCGWINSZ */
+
+#if defined (__EMX__)
+ _emx_get_screensize (&wc, &wr);
+#elif defined (__MINGW32__)
+ _win_get_screensize (&wc, &wr);
+#endif
+
+ if (ignore_env || rl_prefer_env_winsize == 0)
+ {
+ _rl_screenwidth = wc;
+ _rl_screenheight = wr;
+ }
+ else
+ _rl_screenwidth = _rl_screenheight = -1;
+
+ /* Environment variable COLUMNS overrides setting of "co" if IGNORE_ENV
+ is unset. If we prefer the environment, check it first before
+ assigning the value returned by the kernel. */
+ if (_rl_screenwidth <= 0)
+ {
+ if (ignore_env == 0 && (ss = sh_get_env_value ("COLUMNS")))
+ _rl_screenwidth = atoi (ss);
+
+ if (_rl_screenwidth <= 0)
+ _rl_screenwidth = wc;
+
+#if defined (__DJGPP__)
+ if (_rl_screenwidth <= 0)
+ _rl_screenwidth = ScreenCols ();
+#else
+ if (_rl_screenwidth <= 0 && term_string_buffer)
+ _rl_screenwidth = tgetnum ("co");
+#endif
+ }
+
+ /* Environment variable LINES overrides setting of "li" if IGNORE_ENV
+ is unset. */
+ if (_rl_screenheight <= 0)
+ {
+ if (ignore_env == 0 && (ss = sh_get_env_value ("LINES")))
+ _rl_screenheight = atoi (ss);
+
+ if (_rl_screenheight <= 0)
+ _rl_screenheight = wr;
+
+#if defined (__DJGPP__)
+ if (_rl_screenheight <= 0)
+ _rl_screenheight = ScreenRows ();
+#else
+ if (_rl_screenheight <= 0 && term_string_buffer)
+ _rl_screenheight = tgetnum ("li");
+#endif
+ }
+
+ /* If all else fails, default to 80x24 terminal. */
+ if (_rl_screenwidth <= 1)
+ _rl_screenwidth = 80;
+
+ if (_rl_screenheight <= 0)
+ _rl_screenheight = 24;
+
+ /* If we're being compiled as part of bash, set the environment
+ variables $LINES and $COLUMNS to new values. Otherwise, just
+ do a pair of putenv () or setenv () calls. */
+ sh_set_lines_and_columns (_rl_screenheight, _rl_screenwidth);
+
+ if (_rl_term_autowrap == 0)
+ _rl_screenwidth--;
+
+ _rl_screenchars = _rl_screenwidth * _rl_screenheight;
+}
+
+void
+_rl_set_screen_size (rows, cols)
+ int rows, cols;
+{
+ if (_rl_term_autowrap == -1)
+ _rl_init_terminal_io (rl_terminal_name);
+
+ if (rows > 0)
+ _rl_screenheight = rows;
+ if (cols > 0)
+ {
+ _rl_screenwidth = cols;
+ if (_rl_term_autowrap == 0)
+ _rl_screenwidth--;
+ }
+
+ if (rows > 0 || cols > 0)
+ _rl_screenchars = _rl_screenwidth * _rl_screenheight;
+}
+
+void
+rl_set_screen_size (rows, cols)
+ int rows, cols;
+{
+ _rl_set_screen_size (rows, cols);
+}
+
+void
+rl_get_screen_size (rows, cols)
+ int *rows, *cols;
+{
+ if (rows)
+ *rows = _rl_screenheight;
+ if (cols)
+ *cols = _rl_screenwidth;
+}
+
+void
+rl_reset_screen_size ()
+{
+ _rl_get_screen_size (fileno (rl_instream), 0);
+}
+
+void
+_rl_sigwinch_resize_terminal ()
+{
+ _rl_get_screen_size (fileno (rl_instream), 1);
+}
+
+void
+rl_resize_terminal ()
+{
+ _rl_get_screen_size (fileno (rl_instream), 1);
+ if (_rl_echoing_p)
+ {
+ if (CUSTOM_REDISPLAY_FUNC ())
+ rl_forced_update_display ();
+ else if (RL_ISSTATE(RL_STATE_REDISPLAYING) == 0)
+ _rl_redisplay_after_sigwinch ();
+ }
+}
+
+struct _tc_string {
+ const char * const tc_var;
+ char **tc_value;
+};
+
+/* This should be kept sorted, just in case we decide to change the
+ search algorithm to something smarter. */
+static const struct _tc_string tc_strings[] =
+{
+ { "@7", &_rl_term_at7 },
+ { "DC", &_rl_term_DC },
+ { "IC", &_rl_term_IC },
+ { "ce", &_rl_term_clreol },
+ { "cl", &_rl_term_clrpag },
+ { "cr", &_rl_term_cr },
+ { "dc", &_rl_term_dc },
+ { "ei", &_rl_term_ei },
+ { "ic", &_rl_term_ic },
+ { "im", &_rl_term_im },
+ { "kD", &_rl_term_kD }, /* delete */
+ { "kH", &_rl_term_kH }, /* home down ?? */
+ { "kI", &_rl_term_kI }, /* insert */
+ { "kd", &_rl_term_kd },
+ { "ke", &_rl_term_ke }, /* end keypad mode */
+ { "kh", &_rl_term_kh }, /* home */
+ { "kl", &_rl_term_kl },
+ { "kr", &_rl_term_kr },
+ { "ks", &_rl_term_ks }, /* start keypad mode */
+ { "ku", &_rl_term_ku },
+ { "le", &_rl_term_backspace },
+ { "mm", &_rl_term_mm },
+ { "mo", &_rl_term_mo },
+ { "nd", &_rl_term_forward_char },
+ { "pc", &_rl_term_pc },
+ { "up", &_rl_term_up },
+ { "vb", &_rl_visible_bell },
+ { "vs", &_rl_term_vs },
+ { "ve", &_rl_term_ve },
+};
+
+#define NUM_TC_STRINGS (sizeof (tc_strings) / sizeof (struct _tc_string))
+
+/* Read the desired terminal capability strings into BP. The capabilities
+ are described in the TC_STRINGS table. */
+static void
+get_term_capabilities (bp)
+ char **bp;
+{
+#if !defined (__DJGPP__) /* XXX - doesn't DJGPP have a termcap library? */
+ register int i;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < NUM_TC_STRINGS; i++)
+ *(tc_strings[i].tc_value) = tgetstr ((char *)tc_strings[i].tc_var, bp);
+#endif
+ tcap_initialized = 1;
+}
+
+int
+_rl_init_terminal_io (terminal_name)
+ const char *terminal_name;
+{
+ const char *term;
+ char *buffer;
+ int tty, tgetent_ret;
+
+ term = terminal_name ? terminal_name : sh_get_env_value ("TERM");
+ _rl_term_clrpag = _rl_term_cr = _rl_term_clreol = (char *)NULL;
+ tty = rl_instream ? fileno (rl_instream) : 0;
+
+ if (term == 0)
+ term = "dumb";
+
+#ifdef __MSDOS__
+ _rl_term_im = _rl_term_ei = _rl_term_ic = _rl_term_IC = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_up = _rl_term_dc = _rl_term_DC = _rl_visible_bell = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_ku = _rl_term_kd = _rl_term_kl = _rl_term_kr = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_mm = _rl_term_mo = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_terminal_can_insert = term_has_meta = _rl_term_autowrap = 0;
+ _rl_term_cr = "\r";
+ _rl_term_clreol = _rl_term_clrpag = _rl_term_backspace = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_goto = _rl_term_pc = _rl_term_ip = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_ks = _rl_term_ke =_rl_term_vs = _rl_term_ve = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_kh = _rl_term_kH = _rl_term_at7 = _rl_term_kI = (char *)NULL;
+#if defined(HACK_TERMCAP_MOTION)
+ _rl_term_forward_char = (char *)NULL;
+#endif
+
+ _rl_get_screen_size (tty, 0);
+#else /* !__MSDOS__ */
+ /* I've separated this out for later work on not calling tgetent at all
+ if the calling application has supplied a custom redisplay function,
+ (and possibly if the application has supplied a custom input function). */
+ if (CUSTOM_REDISPLAY_FUNC())
+ {
+ tgetent_ret = -1;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if (term_string_buffer == 0)
+ term_string_buffer = (char *)xmalloc(2032);
+
+ if (term_buffer == 0)
+ term_buffer = (char *)xmalloc(4080);
+
+ buffer = term_string_buffer;
+
+ tgetent_ret = tgetent (term_buffer, term);
+ }
+
+ if (tgetent_ret <= 0)
+ {
+ FREE (term_string_buffer);
+ FREE (term_buffer);
+ buffer = term_buffer = term_string_buffer = (char *)NULL;
+
+ _rl_term_autowrap = 0; /* used by _rl_get_screen_size */
+
+ /* Allow calling application to set default height and width, using
+ rl_set_screen_size */
+ if (_rl_screenwidth <= 0 || _rl_screenheight <= 0)
+ {
+#if defined (__EMX__)
+ _emx_get_screensize (&_rl_screenwidth, &_rl_screenheight);
+ _rl_screenwidth--;
+#else /* !__EMX__ */
+ _rl_get_screen_size (tty, 0);
+#endif /* !__EMX__ */
+ }
+
+ /* Defaults. */
+ if (_rl_screenwidth <= 0 || _rl_screenheight <= 0)
+ {
+ _rl_screenwidth = 79;
+ _rl_screenheight = 24;
+ }
+
+ /* Everything below here is used by the redisplay code (tputs). */
+ _rl_screenchars = _rl_screenwidth * _rl_screenheight;
+ _rl_term_cr = "\r";
+ _rl_term_im = _rl_term_ei = _rl_term_ic = _rl_term_IC = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_up = _rl_term_dc = _rl_term_DC = _rl_visible_bell = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_ku = _rl_term_kd = _rl_term_kl = _rl_term_kr = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_kh = _rl_term_kH = _rl_term_kI = _rl_term_kD = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_ks = _rl_term_ke = _rl_term_at7 = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_mm = _rl_term_mo = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_ve = _rl_term_vs = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_term_forward_char = (char *)NULL;
+ _rl_terminal_can_insert = term_has_meta = 0;
+
+ /* Reasonable defaults for tgoto(). Readline currently only uses
+ tgoto if _rl_term_IC or _rl_term_DC is defined, but just in case we
+ change that later... */
+ PC = '\0';
+ BC = _rl_term_backspace = "\b";
+ UP = _rl_term_up;
+
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+ get_term_capabilities (&buffer);
+
+ /* Set up the variables that the termcap library expects the application
+ to provide. */
+ PC = _rl_term_pc ? *_rl_term_pc : 0;
+ BC = _rl_term_backspace;
+ UP = _rl_term_up;
+
+ if (!_rl_term_cr)
+ _rl_term_cr = "\r";
+
+ _rl_term_autowrap = tgetflag ("am") && tgetflag ("xn");
+
+ /* Allow calling application to set default height and width, using
+ rl_set_screen_size */
+ if (_rl_screenwidth <= 0 || _rl_screenheight <= 0)
+ _rl_get_screen_size (tty, 0);
+
+ /* "An application program can assume that the terminal can do
+ character insertion if *any one of* the capabilities `IC',
+ `im', `ic' or `ip' is provided." But we can't do anything if
+ only `ip' is provided, so... */
+ _rl_terminal_can_insert = (_rl_term_IC || _rl_term_im || _rl_term_ic);
+
+ /* Check to see if this terminal has a meta key and clear the capability
+ variables if there is none. */
+ term_has_meta = tgetflag ("km") != 0;
+ if (term_has_meta == 0)
+ _rl_term_mm = _rl_term_mo = (char *)NULL;
+#endif /* !__MSDOS__ */
+
+ /* Attempt to find and bind the arrow keys. Do not override already
+ bound keys in an overzealous attempt, however. */
+
+ bind_termcap_arrow_keys (emacs_standard_keymap);
+
+#if defined (VI_MODE)
+ bind_termcap_arrow_keys (vi_movement_keymap);
+ bind_termcap_arrow_keys (vi_insertion_keymap);
+#endif /* VI_MODE */
+
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/* Bind the arrow key sequences from the termcap description in MAP. */
+static void
+bind_termcap_arrow_keys (map)
+ Keymap map;
+{
+ Keymap xkeymap;
+
+ xkeymap = _rl_keymap;
+ _rl_keymap = map;
+
+ rl_bind_keyseq_if_unbound (_rl_term_ku, rl_get_previous_history);
+ rl_bind_keyseq_if_unbound (_rl_term_kd, rl_get_next_history);
+ rl_bind_keyseq_if_unbound (_rl_term_kr, rl_forward_char);
+ rl_bind_keyseq_if_unbound (_rl_term_kl, rl_backward_char);
+
+ rl_bind_keyseq_if_unbound (_rl_term_kh, rl_beg_of_line); /* Home */
+ rl_bind_keyseq_if_unbound (_rl_term_at7, rl_end_of_line); /* End */
+
+ rl_bind_keyseq_if_unbound (_rl_term_kD, rl_delete);
+
+ _rl_keymap = xkeymap;
+}
+
+char *
+rl_get_termcap (cap)
+ const char *cap;
+{
+ register int i;
+
+ if (tcap_initialized == 0)
+ return ((char *)NULL);
+ for (i = 0; i < NUM_TC_STRINGS; i++)
+ {
+ if (tc_strings[i].tc_var[0] == cap[0] && strcmp (tc_strings[i].tc_var, cap) == 0)
+ return *(tc_strings[i].tc_value);
+ }
+ return ((char *)NULL);
+}
+
+/* Re-initialize the terminal considering that the TERM/TERMCAP variable
+ has changed. */
+int
+rl_reset_terminal (terminal_name)
+ const char *terminal_name;
+{
+ _rl_screenwidth = _rl_screenheight = 0;
+ _rl_init_terminal_io (terminal_name);
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/* A function for the use of tputs () */
+#ifdef _MINIX
+void
+_rl_output_character_function (c)
+ int c;
+{
+ putc (c, _rl_out_stream);
+}
+#else /* !_MINIX */
+int
+_rl_output_character_function (c)
+ int c;
+{
+ return putc (c, _rl_out_stream);
+}
+#endif /* !_MINIX */
+
+/* Write COUNT characters from STRING to the output stream. */
+void
+_rl_output_some_chars (string, count)
+ const char *string;
+ int count;
+{
+ fwrite (string, 1, count, _rl_out_stream);
+}
+
+/* Move the cursor back. */
+int
+_rl_backspace (count)
+ int count;
+{
+ register int i;
+
+#ifndef __MSDOS__
+ if (_rl_term_backspace)
+ for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
+ tputs (_rl_term_backspace, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ else
+#endif
+ for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
+ putc ('\b', _rl_out_stream);
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/* Move to the start of the next line. */
+int
+rl_crlf ()
+{
+#if defined (NEW_TTY_DRIVER) || defined (__MINT__)
+ if (_rl_term_cr)
+ tputs (_rl_term_cr, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif /* NEW_TTY_DRIVER || __MINT__ */
+ putc ('\n', _rl_out_stream);
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/* Ring the terminal bell. */
+int
+rl_ding ()
+{
+ if (_rl_echoing_p)
+ {
+ switch (_rl_bell_preference)
+ {
+ case NO_BELL:
+ default:
+ break;
+ case VISIBLE_BELL:
+ if (_rl_visible_bell)
+ {
+#ifdef __DJGPP__
+ ScreenVisualBell ();
+#else
+ tputs (_rl_visible_bell, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif
+ break;
+ }
+ /* FALLTHROUGH */
+ case AUDIBLE_BELL:
+ fprintf (stderr, "\007");
+ fflush (stderr);
+ break;
+ }
+ return (0);
+ }
+ return (-1);
+}
+
+/* **************************************************************** */
+/* */
+/* Controlling the Meta Key and Keypad */
+/* */
+/* **************************************************************** */
+
+static int enabled_meta = 0; /* flag indicating we enabled meta mode */
+
+void
+_rl_enable_meta_key ()
+{
+#if !defined (__DJGPP__)
+ if (term_has_meta && _rl_term_mm)
+ {
+ tputs (_rl_term_mm, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ enabled_meta = 1;
+ }
+#endif
+}
+
+void
+_rl_disable_meta_key ()
+{
+#if !defined (__DJGPP__)
+ if (term_has_meta && _rl_term_mo && enabled_meta)
+ {
+ tputs (_rl_term_mo, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ enabled_meta = 0;
+ }
+#endif
+}
+
+void
+_rl_control_keypad (on)
+ int on;
+{
+#if !defined (__DJGPP__)
+ if (on && _rl_term_ks)
+ tputs (_rl_term_ks, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ else if (!on && _rl_term_ke)
+ tputs (_rl_term_ke, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+#endif
+}
+
+/* **************************************************************** */
+/* */
+/* Controlling the Cursor */
+/* */
+/* **************************************************************** */
+
+/* Set the cursor appropriately depending on IM, which is one of the
+ insert modes (insert or overwrite). Insert mode gets the normal
+ cursor. Overwrite mode gets a very visible cursor. Only does
+ anything if we have both capabilities. */
+void
+_rl_set_cursor (im, force)
+ int im, force;
+{
+#ifndef __MSDOS__
+ if (_rl_term_ve && _rl_term_vs)
+ {
+ if (force || im != rl_insert_mode)
+ {
+ if (im == RL_IM_OVERWRITE)
+ tputs (_rl_term_vs, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ else
+ tputs (_rl_term_ve, 1, _rl_output_character_function);
+ }
+ }
+#endif
+}
if (v == 0 || readonly_p (v) || noassign_p (v))
return BADVAR_REDIRECT;
+ stupidly_hack_special_variables (w->word);
return 0;
}
--- /dev/null
+:; ./shx
+
+sh:
+<&$fd ok
+nlbq Mon Aug 3 02:45:00 EDT 1992
+bang geoff
+quote 712824302
+setbq defmsgid=<1992Aug3.024502.6176@host>
+bgwait sleep done... wait 6187
+
+
+bash:
+<&$fd ok
+nlbq Mon Aug 3 02:45:09 EDT 1992
+bang geoff
+quote 712824311
+setbq defmsgid=<1992Aug3.024512.6212@host>
+bgwait sleep done... wait 6223
+
+
+ash:
+<&$fd shx1: 4: Syntax error: Bad fd number
+nlbq Mon Aug 3 02:45:19 EDT 1992
+bang geoff
+quote getdate: `"now"' not a valid date
+
+setbq defmsgid=<1992Aug3.` echo 024521
+bgwait sleep done... wait 6241
+
+
+ksh:
+<&$fd ok
+nlbq ./shx: 6248 Memory fault - core dumped
+bang geoff
+quote getdate: `"now"' not a valid date
+
+setbq defmsgid=<1992Aug3.024530.6257@host>
+bgwait no such job: 6265
+wait 6265
+sleep done...
+
+zsh:
+<&$fd ok
+nlbq Mon Aug 3 02:45:36 EDT 1992
+bang shx3: event not found: /s/ [4]
+quote 712824337
+setbq defmsgid=<..6290@host>
+bgwait shx7: unmatched " [9]
+sleep done...
+:;
--- /dev/null
+#! /bin/sh
+for cmd in sh bash ash ksh zsh
+do
+ echo
+ echo $cmd:
+ for demo in shx?
+ do
+ $cmd $demo
+ done
+done